Conference: Ageing, Experience and Difference: The Social History of Old Age in Europe since 1900, 12.-14.09.2024, London

German Historical Institute, London; Christina von Hodenberg and Helen McCarthy (Univ. of Cambridge) (Web)

Time: 12.-14.09.2024
Venue: London

To date, the social history of ageing and old people has received comparatively little attention from historians. Recent works have begun to explore the topic from multiple perspectives, building on oral history, archival materials, media sources, and quantitative and qualitative data produced by twentieth-century social science. From this scholarship it emerges that ageing was a dynamic process across the period and the aged themselves were a highly differentiated group. Gender, class, racial background, and marital status, among other intersectional categories, produced marked differences in the social experience of old people. This conference aims to bring together scholars working on ageing and old age in twentieth-century Europe, including Europe’s colonial and global entanglements: Papers will cover Germany, Austria, the UK, Ireland, Soviet and post-Soviet countries, France, and colonial India.
While engaging closely with the more established historiography on pension reform, welfare, and ideas of ageing, the organisers seek to centre the changing experience of ageing and the life worlds of old people in different European contexts.

Programme (PDF)

Panels: Work, Ageing and Retirement | Health, Ageing, Bodies and Minds | Ageing and the Family | Ageing, Gender and Feminism | Old Age, Agency and the Mass Media

The paper from Austria is: Brigitte Semanek (Institute of Rural History, St. Pölten), “My world became smaller and smaller”: Domestic care for the elderly in rural Austria from the 1960s to the 2000s. She compiled her findings also by using diaries from the Sammlung Frauennachlässe („Collection of Women’s Personal Papers“) at the Univ. of Vienna (Web).

Konferenz: Wissenschaft und Aktivismus: Historische Perspektiven und methodologische Herausforderungen der Wissenschafts-, Medizin- und Technikgeschichte, 25.-27.09.2024, Lüneburg

Gesellschaft für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, der Medizin und der Technik (Web)

Zeit: 25.-27.09.2024
Ort: Lüneburg

Programm (Web) | (PDF)

Vorträge mit frauen- und geschlechterhistorischen Zugängen (Auswahl):

  • Dietlind Hüchtker: (Un-)Sichtbarkeiten und Legitimierungen. Erfahrung und Wissensgenerierung in feministischen Diskursen der 1970er und 1980er Jahre
  • Dana Mahr: Challenges in Studying Feminist and Environmental Activism: Navigating calls for Co-Creation in the Horizon Europe program
  • Bettina Sophia Wagner: Die universelle Schwangerschaft? Blinde Flecken im Frauengesundheitsaktivismus ab den 1970er Jahren
  • Martina Schlünder: „Erst die Kuh, dann du!“ Zur Geschichte des feministischen Widerstands und Aktivismus gegen Reproduktionstechnologien in der Bundesrepublik der 1980er Jahren
  • Lisa Malich und Kerstin Palm: Die diverse Psyche in Therapie – Geschlechterwissen zwischen Aktivismus und Wissenschaft
  • Sybilla Nikolow: Wer das Elend von 1914-1918 nicht persönlich erlebt hat, kann gar nicht mitreden“. Aktivismus von Kriegsversehrten im Kampf um Anerkennung ihrer Leiden
  • Ulrike Klöppel: Die Entstehung feministischer Therapie als Alternative zu herkömmlicher Psychotherapie in den 1970er und 1980er Jahren
  • Viola Balz: Frauenalkoholismus: feministische Suchtkritik und ihre Gegenbewegung 1970-1985
  • Susanne Doetz: „Zum Verrücktwerden“. Die Generierung feministischer Psychiatriekritik am Beispiel der Zeitschrift Courage, 1978–1980
  • Karen Nolte: „Lesbische Frauen sind mit gemeint und allenfalls eine Randbemerkung wert…“ Lesbischer Aktivismus und Feministische Therapie in der westdeutschen Frauenbewegung zu Beginn der 1990er Jahre Continue reading

Ausstellung: Käthe Leichter. Und die Vermessung der Frauen, bis 01.03.2026, Wien

Waschsalon Nr. 2 (Web)

Laufzeit: 05.09.2024-01.03.2026
Zeit: Waschsalon Nr. 2, Karl-Marx-Hof, Halteraug. 7, 1190 Wien

2025 feiert das Frauenreferat der Arbeiterkammer sein 100-jähriges Bestehen, der Geburtstag seiner ersten Leiterin, Käthe Leichter, jährt sich zum 130. Mal. Käthe Leichter war eine der einflussreichsten Persönlichkeiten der Arbeiter­bewegung der Ersten Republik, „die intellektuelle Kraft der sozialistischen Frauenbewegung“. Als Leiterin des Frauenreferats führte sie detaillierte Studien zu den Lebens- und Arbeitsbedingungen berufstätiger Frauen durch und avanciert zu einer Pionierin der Sozialforschung. Käthe Leichters damals erhobene Forderung hat bis heute nichts an Aktualität verloren:

„Gleicher Lohn für gleiche Leistung!“
Käthe Leichter wußte, dass sie mit ihren Erhebungen für die Arbeiterkammer die Funktionärinnen im Parlament und in den Gewerkschaften mit validem Zahlenmaterial für ihren Kampf um eine Besserstellung der Frauen aufmunitionieren muss. Galt es doch, „Verschlechterungen abzuwehren und dabei doch da und dort kleine Verbesserungen durchzusetzen“. Weiterlesen … (Web)

KuratorInnen: Lilli Bauer und Werner T. Bauer | Grafik: Karin Pesau-Engelhart und Klaus Mitter | Lektorat und Übersetzung: scriptophil. die textagentur

CfP: Global Asexualities and Aromanticisms (Publication); by: 30.09.2024

Yo-Ling Chen (Independent Scholar) and Ela Przybyło (Illinois State Univ.) (Web)

Proposals by: 30.09.2024

In the past two decades, asexuality studies scholarship has grown exponentially, reflecting the rise of asexual and aromantic communities around the world. The majority of scholarship in asexuality studies, however, remains either on Anglophone ace communities, primarily in North America, or situated in Western sexual epistemologies. This edited volume seeks to explore a broader array of global asexualities and aromanticisms by gathering together scholarship on ace and aro identities, resonances, and their translations both outside of Western contexts and beyond Western colonial knowledge frames.
Acknowledging that modern Western notions of asexual and aromantic identities do not account for all nonsexual and nonromantic experiences across time and space, the editors intentionally make use of a porous and plural definition of ‘asexualities’ and ‘aromanticisms’ in framing this edited volume. In their understanding, asexualities and aromanticisms encompass identities, orientations, and sites of knowledge production and life invention that challenge compulsory sexuality and amatonormativity, or the universalized assumptions that equate sexual activity and romantic love with paramount human value. With this definition in mind, the editors seek to encompass both manifestations of asexual/aromantic identities as they occur in non-Western contexts and nonsexual/nonromantic explorations that exceed modern Western notions of sexual and romantic orientation. Likewise, they are also interested in work that draws on antiracist, Indigenous, decolonial, and non-Western bodies of knowledge to explore the intersections of compulsory sexuality and amatonormativity with race, Indigeneity, citizenship, location, geopolitics, coloniality, class, caste, gender, ability, language, and nation.
The editors envision a dynamic collection of academic research articles, non-academic essays, interviews, and English translations of the many manifesto/a/xs that have been written around ace/aro politics outside of the Anglophone world, as well as asexuality studies scholarship that is happening in languages other than English. They welcome submissions of abstracts from: activists, artists, writers, translators, and scholars at all stages of their careers who have an interest in challenging normative structures of sexuality and romance and have … read more (Web).

Source: Qstudy-l mailing list

CfP: Entangled Masculinities – Masculinities in the Context of Global Crises (Publication); by: 16.09.2024

Journal für Entwicklungspolitik (JEP); Special Issue Editor: Johannes Korak (Web)

Proposals by: 16.09.2024

Global political, social, and economic crises affect unequal gender relations and masculinities in various ways. Whereas in the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2008 more care work was already being offloaded onto the ostensibly private space of the household (cf. Dowling 2021), the reproduction of unequal gender relations became even more apparent during the COVID-19-pandemic. Despite spending more time at home – due to various measures in response to the pandemic – men in Europe and North America largely refrained from participating more in caring activities (cf. Wojnicka 2022). In the context of a more recent political crisis, namely the intensification of the Russian war against Ukraine, Ukrainian men are called upon to take up arms, are prohibited from leaving the country, and are confronted with legal pressure to return to Ukraine. This (re-)emerging “protective masculinity” (Wojnicka 2023), characterised by an inclination towards violence and the military, mainly affects Ukrainian men, but – through transnational media channels – (re-)affirms national and regional ideas that ‘real men’ are the ones willing to fight, protect and die.
Furthermore, masculine practices also contribute to the global ecological crisis. While driving large SUVs and emitting proportionally high amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere is often mentioned in this context, which the concept of “petro-masculinity” (Daggett 2018) tries to address, the ecological consequences of practices aligned with “ecomodern masculinities” (Pulé et al 2021) are largely ignored. Moreover, given the society-wide acknowledgment of the climate crisis and the promotion of technological fixes as part of a green capitalism, “ecomodern masculinities” (ibid.) can be considered as hegemonic in social fields directly related to the ecological crisis (e.g. mobility, energy transition, etc.). Meanwhile, national crises of democratic representation in liberal democracies have contributed to the (re-)emergence of far-right, populist right and conservative forces, whether in Argentina, India, Italy or the US (to name just a few), which are transnationally united in their aim to re-masculinise politics by promoting patriarchal values, denouncing queer theory and implementing anti-feminist policies, as well as by overturning the feminist achievements of the last decades (cf. Mellström 2023; Sauer/Penz 2023). Read more … (Web)

Präsentation: Irene Suchy: Musica Femina Vienna App – Fünf Stadtspaziergänge durch Wien, 17.09.2024, Wien

Verein Frauenhetz. Feministische Bildung, Kultur und Politik (Web)

Zeit: 17.09.2024, 18:00 Uhr
Ort: Frauenhetz, Untere Weißgerberstr. 41, 1030 Wien

Seit 2018 arbeitet der gemeinnützige Verein maezenatentum.at (Web) an einer digitalen Präsentation, die die künstlerischen Leistungen von Frauen in die Stadtgeschichte einschreibt. Nach Rundgängen zu Josephine Baker, Clara Schumann, den Wiener Klassikerinnen und den Zeitgenossinnen von Johann Strauss ist der neueste Rundgang den feministischen Orten der Demokratie gewidmet. Pazifismus – Bildung – Demokratie haben auch viel mit Musik zu tun.

Die Herstellung der App verdankt sich der engagierten Zusammenarbeit der Kamerafrauen Lisa Köppl und Edith Bachkönig, dem App-Designer Laurus Edelbacher und der Musikwissenschafterin Irene Suchy. Die App ist ein work in Progress, dank der Subventionen der MA 7 war es möglich, die bisherigen Spaziergänge zu recherchieren und zu gestalten – in Text, Audio und Video.

Moderation: Tara Pire | Die Veranstaltung ist für Frauen.

Verein Frauenhetz. Feministische Bildung, Kultur und Politik, Untere Weißgerberstr. 41, 1030 Wien (Web)

CfP: The Sexual Politics of Liberal Internationalism, 1990s to the Present (Event, 05/2025, Cambridge); by: 31.10.2024

Celia Donert, Cambridge (Web); Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann, Berkeley (Web); and Michal Kopeček, Prague (Web)

Time: 08.-09.05.2025
Venue: University of Cambridge
Proposals by: 31.10.2024

Liberal internationalism, with its emphasis on individual rights and freedoms, civil society, democracy and good governance, open markets and the rule of law, has been criticised for the complex sexual politics which underpin these universalist principles. This workshop aims to start a conversation between historians and scholars from other disciplines about the sexual politics of liberal internationalism since the 1990s in a longer historical perspective.
That the ‘universal subject’ of political liberalism is implicitly gendered male is a feminist argument as old as liberalism itself; feminist scholars of international law have made similar arguments about liberal concepts of human rights or humanitarian law. Feminist theorists of twentieth-century international relations have suggested that sexual and international orders of masculinism and militarism are mutually constitutive, whether in the boardrooms of foreign policy establishments, on military bases, or in other local sites of intervention in the name of liberal internationalism. Postcolonial, gender and queer theorists continue to challenge the western, masculine and heteronormative bias of the latest iteration of liberal internationalism, which since the Cold War places greater emphasis on the universal rights of women and minorities, while limiting their application by resurrecting discourses of cultural relativism, humanitarian suffering and moral value.
This workshop aims to start a conversation about the sexual politics of liberal internationalism after 1989 in Central Europe and beyond. The focus on Central Europe is driven by a desire to explore the rise and fall of liberal internationalism in the late twentieth century outside the Anglo-American world. Central Europe became a laboratory for experiments in international economic or political order during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, from the collapse of multinational empires, the rise and fall of democratic, fascist and state-socialist regimes, until the political and economic transformation that followed the 1989 revolutions. The conjunction between liberal internationalism and neoliberalism adds another dimension to the question of sexual politics in post-Cold War Central Europe, opening up space for comparisons with other parts of the world. Read more and source … (Web)

CfP: Homosexuality and judicial archives: new perspectives for a history of sexualities (Europe, 18th-20th centuries) (Event, 11/2024, Aubervilliers/FR); by: 20.09.2024

Sherine Berzig, Univ. de Cergy; Paul Durand and Quentin Trichard, EHESS; and Romain Jaouen, Sciences Po Paris (Web)

Time: 22.11.2024
Venue: Aubervilliers, France
Proposals by: 20.09.2024

This research workshop will explore new ways of writing the history of homosexuality using legal archives. It is open to all young researchers (doctoral students, young PhDs, authors of master’s theses) whose work falls within the theme. (The languages are French and English.)
Judicial material and the history of homosexuality: an encounter yet to come? The history of homosexuality, a growing field of enquiry in French academia over the past 20 years, has developed a paradoxical relationship with judicial material. While the legal framework for sexual encounters has been a central issue in historical reflections, the sources of judicial activities themselves – court decisions, judicial files, and others – have been singularly absent from the first major surveys devoted to love and sexuality between women and men. As early as the 1990s, historians expressed the ambition to write a „total“ history, capable of embracing the various dimensions of the homosexual experience (Tamagne, 2000). To achieve this, they built up large corpora of sources, including the press, written and oral testimonies, cultural productions, medical and legal writings, private and associative archives as well as public archives such as those of the police, but always leaving judicial archives at a distance (Merrick, 1996; Peniston, 2004; Revenin, 2005; Jackson, 2009; Pastorello, 2009; Buot, 2013). Beyond the French case, this can also be found in major European monographs (Cook, 2003; Benadusi, 2005; Houlbrook, 2005; Vazquez Garcia, 2011; Beachy, 2014; Kurimay, 2020).
The absence of these sources in French historiography is not entirely surprising. The notion of homosexuality does not have the same consistency in the French legal system which, unlike several others, did not explicitly criminalize homosexuality after the abolition of ancient criminal offenses such as sodomy. In Germany, Great Britain, Austria and Scandinavia, on the other hand, homosexual acts became (or remained) explicit criminal offenses after the modernization of criminal laws in the 19th century … read more (PDF).

Source: Gender Campus

Conference: Children, Dependency, and Emotions in the Early Modern World, 1500-1800: Archival and Visual Narratives, 12.-14.09.2024, Bonn

Bonn Center for Dependency & Slavery Studies (BCDSS); Joseph Biggerstaff, Susan Broomhall, Kristie Flannery, Claudia Jarzebowski, Jessica O’Leary, and Lisa Phongsavath (Web)

Time: 12.-14.09.2024
Venue: Bonn

Throughout history children have been subjected to violence, coercion, forced labor and separation. Children also developed strategies to cope with their oftentimes deplorable living conditions. This conference is interested in the archival, visual, and material traces some of these children have left – aiming at reconstructing social and emotional worlds of children in early modern global history.

Programme (PDF)

Panels: Children, Labour, and Mobility | Circulations and Imaginations | Circulations and Imaginations | Child-Authored Narratives | Apprenticeships and Education | Disease and Crisis | Creolization and Household Formations | Relationships and Separation | Orphans, Guardianship, and Legal Processes

Keynotes
– Ann Laura Stoler: Childhood Scenes of Resentment, Humiliation, Indignation: On the Making of Political Rage
– Bianca Premo: The Ethics of Writing Latin American Children’s History from Spanish Colonialism to the Internet
– Johanna S. Ransmeier: Reliable Narrators: Tracing the Perspective of Children in History

Source: H-Soz-Kult

CfP: ‚Mixed‘ Couples during Conflict: Comparing Cases and Approaches (Event, 02/2025, Amsterdam); by: 15.10.2024

NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust, and Genocide Studies Amsterdam; Laurien Vastenhout (Web)

Time: 24.-26.02.2025
Venue: Amsterdam
Proposals by: 15.10.2024

The aim of this workshop is to compare the coping mechanisms of ‘mixed’ couples and their networks during both historical and contemporary cases of conflict, war, and genocide. Research suggests that in times of uncertainty, couples seek stability through marriage. However, in both historical (the Holocaust, the Yugoslav Wars, the genocide in Rwanda) and contemporary (the Syrian civil war since 2011) cases of conflict, (civil) war, and genocide, marriage is not always a safe space. Due to changing or uncertain political circumstances, ‘mixed’ marriages – unions between partners across religious, national, class, political, or ethnic lines – often become vulnerable targets for persecution because of their perceived threat to homogeneous societies and/or social order. At the same time, the ‘in-between’ status of ‘mixed’ couples potentially provides them with unique opportunities: they can navigate between their own social groups and those of their partners and thus have latitude to seek refuge from persecution.
The aim of this workshop is to compare the coping mechanisms of ‘mixed’ couples and their networks during both historical and contemporary cases of conflict, war, and genocide. The workshop will explore how (the threat of) persecution affected family structures and intimate bonds as well as the role of kin support during crises. There will be a particular focus on multi-disciplinary analytical and theoretical concepts that are helpful to understand ‘mixed’ couples’ resilience (on an individual, family, or group level) and coping and survival strategies. Moreover, to better understand how outside pressure impacts the emotional bonds between partners in a ‘mixed’ union, scholars who work on the intersection between the history of emotions and ethnic and conflict studies are also encouraged to apply.

This Call for Proposals is part of the project ‘Intermarriage and Family: Survival during War, Occupation, and Genocide’ (Web) that is funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO). You can apply by sending a 300-word abstract and a CV (max 2 pages) to bestuurssecretariaat@niod.knaw.nl by 15.10.2024 latest. Participants will be asked to hand in a paper that will be pre-circulated. Questions about this CfP can be sent to Laurien Vastenhout: l.vastenhout@niod.knaw.nl. Funding for costs of travel and stay will be available.

Source: H-Soz-Kult