Liebe Kolleg:innen,
Anbei darf ich Sie auf einen CfP zum Verhältnis von Feminismus und radikaler Demokratie
aufmerksam machen.
Mit besten Grüßen
Sergej Seitz
Call for Papers
Futures Past
Feminism and the Radical Democratic Imaginary
International Essay Workshop
University of Vienna, Department of Political Science
July 6-7th, 2023
Conveners: Linda Zerilli & Oliver Marchart
Chicago–Vienna Faculty Grant & ERC Research Project Prefiguring Democratic Futures
Aims and rationale
The political history of Western feminism is typically described as encompassing various
“waves” of theory and practice, with each wave building on, but also going beyond, an
earlier wave. Thus, the second wave (1968-1980s) is seen as taking up and radicalizing the
first wave (1848-1920) struggle for political rights by expanding the concept of rights
and of politics itself beyond the confines of the formal political sphere; the third wave
(1991-?) is seen as taking up and radicalizing the second wave’s concept of “women” as the
political subject of feminism. Handy though this periodization may be, it has left many
feminists wondering which wave they are in anymore. Some feminists argue that the various
waves have given way to “intersectional feminism.” Still, that description does not
address the fundamental question of what kind of critical political work the concept of a
“wave” was supposed to do in the first place. It was not until 1968 that people started
talking about feminism in terms of different waves, and that feminism came to be
understood as having a history at all. This shift allowed feminists to root their
political demand for change in a historical democratic struggle for social justice, not
least as a way of countering the popular view of the women’s liberation movement as an
impossibly utopian project made up by a bunch of social malcontents.
In the workshop, we want to reflect on this periodization of feminism critically and
explore how conceptualizations of the past shape imaginative visions of possible futures.
How we understand the past directly affects what can count as a “realistic” course of
social, political, and economic activity. Furthermore, our conception of the past is
shaped by a projected future, and different societies have different ways of imagining the
relations between their future and the past. Originating in the revolutionary eighteenth
century, Western feminism’s conceptualization of this relation, its own “futures past” (to
speak with Reinhard Koselleck), is characterized by an anticipatory and distinctively
modern temporality that assumes the novelty and openness of the future. If the history of
feminism calls at times for rewriting, that is less because new facts are discovered than
because the ever-changing present opens new perspectives on the past and makes new demands
on what it can mean. As a result, the past is figured more in terms of projected futures
than fidelity to how things were. For this reason, feminist historiography is rife with
debates about whose story is told, and the idea of a “wave” itself has been criticized as
overly generalizing in ways that blind us to the far more fraught and complex histories
not captured in its conceptual net.
Thus, the workshop will provide space for scrutinizing the conceptual problems associated
with producing historical knowledge and forms of periodization concerning feminist
political futures. It is based on the premise that emancipatory politics is best described
as an ongoing creation of the social-historical world, animated by collective radical
imagination. Contributions will explore how an emerging new social movement like feminism
developed alternative temporalities in response to the rapidly unfolding political crises
of the time (e.g., the Vietnam War, nuclear arms race, the Cold War, desegregation and
racial terror, and anti-colonial struggles).
Like the new left politics in which many cut their political teeth, feminists sought to
reveal a hegemonic order in which democracy had been hollowed out. But also, like the
other new social movements (e.g., Black Power, the student movement, environmentalism, and
radical pacifism) that arose in the 60s and 70s in both Europe and the United States,
feminist visions of social change have been accused of being naïve forms of utopianism
doomed to founder on the shoals of political reality.
Contributions are welcome that discuss diverse texts and practices in which utopian
visions were articulated in temporal terms as forms of public freedom, as creative action,
and as “prefigurative politics.” No mere means to an end already secured by the linear
movement of universal history itself, prefigurative politics aims at creating “figures of
the newly thinkable” (Castoriadis) in the here and now, both as a way to interpret the
past and imagine different feminist futures critically.
Contributions can be motivated, for instance, by the following set of questions:
* In what ways has feminism’s radical political imaginary been enabled and constrained
by a specific practice of historiography?
* To what extent are the progressivism and presentism that tends to characterize
contemporary feminism’s relation to its past a problem for its future?
* In what ways and to what extent are feminist struggles embedded within an
emancipatory project of a radical democracy?
* How has feminism’s political imaginary been challenged and reconfigured, for
instance, in the context of Black feminist criticism?
* How can a critically renewed historiography of feminist struggles enrich today’s
feminist movements and contribute to the collective emancipatory effort to radicalize
democracy?
* In short: What are the “futures past” of feminism, and how do they speak to us
today?
Format
We strive towards creating a workshop atmosphere that allows for serious, productive, and
collaborative engagement with each other’s work. Workshop participants send in an essay
(max. 3000 words, deadline: June 15, 2023), with the expectation that all of the papers
are read in advance. In addition, each participant will prepare and present a commentary
on one of the other papers. Each session begins with a brief opening statement by the
author(s) on the background of the text (5 min), followed by a commentary (10 min) that
opens the general discussion of the text.
Venue and Accommodation
The workshop will take place in person at the University of Vienna. Online participation
is not possible. There is no participation fee. The organizers are happy to give
recommendations regarding travel arrangements.
Publication
We plan to publish the workshop’s proceedings as a special issue in a peer-reviewed
journal and/or edited volume.
Timeline
Deadline for abstracts: April 21, 2023
Communication of results: April 30, 2023
Deadline for essays: June 15, 2023
Submission & Contact
Please send your application with an abstract of max. 300 words and a brief biographical
note to predef.erc@univie.ac.at<mailto:predef.erc@univie.ac.at> (deadline: April 21,
2023). For any questions regarding the CfP, please contact the organizers Sara Gebh
(sara.gebh@univie.ac.at<mailto:sara.gebh@univie.ac.at>) and Sergej Seitz
(sergej.seitz@univie.ac.at<mailto:sergej.seitz@univie.ac.at>).
Web:
https://www.academia.edu/99389917/CfP_Futures_Past_Feminism_and_the_Radical…
Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the
author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or European
Research Council (erc). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held
responsible for them.