FW: [EWA2000] Gender, Identity and Nationalism in Europe

Szabó Erzsébet Erzsebet_Szabo at E34.KIBERNET.HU
2001. Már. 26., H, 18:36:02 CEST


FYI,
Szabó E.
-----Original Message-----



Gender, Identity and Nationalism in Europe: From the Nineteenth to the
Twenty First Century

 International Conference

 11-14 October 2001

 Call for Papers

 The fall of communism generated particular expectations about the future of
Europe.

The expectation of a united Europe, inclusive of East Central Europe, has
not fully recognised the tensions created by different perceptions of the
role of national identity in the East and in the West. The preoccupation of
Western Europe with the preservation of some sense of national identity
within a united Europe runs parallel to the preoccupation of Eastern Europe
with securing and finalising the structure of the nation-state. In other
words, the current aspirations of Eastern European nationalism, in many
ways, reflect the aims of earlier European nation-builders. A key factor in
the process of nation-building has been the assigning of specific symbolic
roles to women in a national community. To what extent do current
differences in perceptions of national identity impact upon debates about
gender in different ‘Europes’?



This conference aims to explore the relationship between gender images and
national identities in Europe since the end of the nineteenth century. It
will focus particularly on the construction of gender identity and the use
of stereotypical images of gender in shaping nationalist discourse across
Europe. The conference will compare and contrast debates surrounding the
historical construction of national and gender identities in Western and
Eastern Europe and will explore the implications of the differences in this
area between the West and the East for the political processes in Europe
post-1989.



We are especially interested in receiving proposals for papers in the
following areas: (1) How and why specific images of gender have been
selected to generate both nationalist discourses and assumptions about
national identity and the means by which these images have been
disseminated; (2) The impact these images have on political processes,
particularly the development of gender emancipation movements; (3) The
impact of nationalist discourse on renewed debate around civil society and
gender in contemporary multi-ethnic states;  (4) Nations and issues of
gender in post-1989 Europe.



Plenary speakers will include
Cherie Booth Q C

Professor Sylvia Walby (Leeds)



Offers of papers, accompanied by an abstract of 300-500 words, should be
sent by post, e-mail or fax by 7 May 2001 to Miss Louise Graham, European
Studies Research Institute, University of Salford, Salford M5 4WT, UK

Tel. +44(0)161 295 5614, Fax. +44 (0)161 2955223,

e-mail: l.j.graham at salford.ac.uk.



For further information about the conference, please contact

Vera Tolz and Stephanie Booth, European Studies Research Institute,
University of Salford; Tel. +44 (0)161-2955606, Fax +44(0)161 2955077,

e-mails: v.tolz at salford.ac.uk and agb at globalnet.co.uk



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