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Researching Sex and Sexualities
A two day conference at the University of Sussex:
May 8th and 9th 2015
Call for Contributions – Deadline February 6th 2015
Confirmed Speakers:
Professor Ken Plummer, University of Essex;
Professor Rachel Spronk, University of Amsterdam;
Professor Rachel Thomson, University of Sussex with Dr Laura Harvey, University of
Surrey;
Professor Andrea Cornwall, University of Sussex
The Researching Sex and Sexualities conference aims to open up new conversations
about doing research and being a researcher on sexual practices, lives and
subjectivities. Researchers from across the disciplines are invited to shed light upon
the multiple problems, possibilities and questions that arise from the lived experience
of exploring this ostensibly private and intimate area of social life.
Responding to keynotes from, and conversations with, leading international scholars
in the field, the event will have a participatory focus. Instead of traditional paper
presentations participants will be asked to submit a piece of writing prior to the event.
Papers will be available ahead of the conference to provide a shared starting point for
discussions. Contributors are invited to submit papers along two potentially
overlapping strands of enquiry: Methodologies and Interdisciplinarity.
The Methodologies strand will explore the often unspoken embodied, emotional and
reflexive facets of researching sex and sexualities. Questions that we aim to explore
within this theme include:
Who is a ‘sex researcher’ and in what ways is that identity brought to bear not only
upon the knowledge we produce but on our social and sexual lives?
How do we analyse the many cultural representations and discursive framings of sex
and sexualities?
How are creative or innovative methodologies used to research sex and sexuality and
what issues and possibilities do they represent in practice?
How does the process of ethical review shape or even limit the framing of research in
this area, and how do ethical concerns play out across the life of a project?
Reflections on the research encounter in all its messiness, emotion, unknowability,
problems and potential are particularly sought.
Secondly we invite contributions to the Interdisciplinarity strand, examining the
position of sex and sexuality studies both within and beyond the academy. Sex and
sexualities research is a field of enquiry with a stake in many disciplines but situated
wholly within none. Exploratory questions within this thematic strand include:
What possibilities for collaboration and conversation are really offered by this inbetween space?
Do the various structures of the University tend to pull us back towards disciplinary
affinities despite the familiarity of ‘interdisciplinarity’ as a buzzword?
How are researchers involving and engaging non-academic publics in their research?
How do innovations in teaching allow students to participate in the epistemology of
sex and sexualities?
What concepts and theoretical frameworks can enable us to understand and research
sex and sexualities across the disciplines?
This strand encourages contributors to reflect on the lived experience of being an
interdisciplinary researcher; to lay bare the frustrations and obstacles alongside the
pleasures and prospects that are revealed when we speak across, in-between and
beyond disciplines.
If you wish to take part in this event we ask you to submit the following:
1. A Word document containing: a 200 word abstract outlining your written (or
workshop) contribution; a 100 word biography and your full contact details
– deadline Friday 6th February 2015
2. (Pending acceptance of / feedback on your abstract) a short written
contribution of 1,500-3,500 words – deadline Friday 27th March 2015
Please submit to Charlotte Morris: cam40@sussex.ac.uk
Selected papers will be made available for participants to read one month before the
conference (please note participants may choose to read as many or as few papers
as they wish before the event). We hope that these papers will be revised following
discussions at conference and that they will form the basis for a future published
collection. In addition to the short written contribution, we also invite proposals for
participatory workshops that speak to the conference themes. Interactive workshops
dealing with innovative or creative methods in sex and sexualities are particularly
sought.
Contributions are welcomed from researchers and students at all career stages.
Although contributors’ pieces of writing should follow a rigorous academic style, the
guidelines for content are flexible. Your contribution may take the form of:
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A reflection on one or both of the conference themes.
An examination of a particularly rich research encounter.
A reflection on some aspect of your experience of being a sex and sexualities
researcher.
A reflection on your current work in progress.
A concept note.
A more conventional short academic paper that speaks to the conference
theme.
If also proposing a workshop, a reflection on themes and questions emerging
from your workshop.
If you would like to discuss your submission or require any help / advice with your
abstract, please contact Charlotte Morris cam40@sussex.ac.uk
Rachel Wood
R.Wood@sussex.ac.uk or Tianyang Zhou (Oscar) T.Zhou@sussex.ac.uk
This is a Centre for Gender Studies Event, hosted by the School of Global Studies
and co-sponsored by the School of Law, Politics and Sociology, School of Media,
Film and Music and the Centre for Life History and Life Writing Research at the
University of Sussex.
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