Extended Deadline: Special Issue: East-South Interaction in the Global Sixties through the Lens of Gender

Extended Deadline: Special Issue: East-South Interaction in the Global Sixties through the Lens of Gender

Veranstalter
Malgorzata Fidelis, Chiara Bonfiglioli
PLZ
-
Ort
-
Land
United States
Findet statt
Digital
Vom - Bis
29.02.2024 -
Deadline
15.11.2023
Von
Connections Redaktion, Leipzig Research Centre Global Dynamics, Universität Leipzig

This thematic issue aims to open new conversations regarding the exchange of ideas related to gender roles and gender equality between the Global East and the Global South.

Extended Deadline: Special Issue: East-South Interaction in the Global Sixties through the Lens of Gender

The Global Sixties: An Interdisciplinary Journal is inviting submissions for a special thematic issue focusing on Global East-Global South relations during the "long sixties" (circa mid-1950s to mid-1970s), with an emphasis on women's and gender history.

Recent scholarship has explored the Second World-Third World interactions during the Cold War era, challenging the conventional perspective on “closed” societies of the communist world. It has demonstrated that Eastern European and Soviet actors engaged in varied interactions with the Global South, ranging from cultural diplomacy to political and economic cooperation. Yet, with a few notable exceptions (e.g. works by Kristen Ghodsee, Yulia Gradskova and Francisca de Haan), the issues of women and gender have been underrepresented in this scholarship.

This thematic issue aims to open new conversations regarding the exchange of ideas related to gender roles and gender equality between the Global East (defined as any member state of the Eastern Bloc, the Soviet Union, Albania, and Yugoslavia) and the Global South (referring to countries then classified as “developing” or “Third World.”)

We invite contributions that present perspectives from Eastern Europe about the Global South and/or Global South perspectives on Eastern Europe.

Possible topics may include, but are not limited to:
- Female leaders’ transnational diplomacy between East and South.
- Interactions between women’s activists and organizations, and their representation in public narratives.
- International events, such as festivals, conferences, and other gatherings that involved women from the Second and Third World.
- Narratives, memoirs, or travelogues of women from the Global South visiting Eastern Europe and/or Eastern European women visiting the Global South.
- Media representations generated by transnational encounters, particularly in relation to gender, class, and ethnicity/race.
- Expressions of transnational solidarity but also of Eurocentrism and Orientalism in East-South women’s encounters.
- The circulation of feminist ideas between the East and South, including reactions to and perceptions of contemporary Western feminism.
- Perceptions of gender and decolonization in Eastern Europe.
- Propagation and/or reception of the socialist model of gender equality in the Global South.
- Debates and attitudes about sexuality and reproductive rights in the context of East-South exchanges.

We are open to any other ideas that involve women and gender within the East-South dynamic during the global sixties.

To Apply:

Please send a short abstract (300 words) and a short bio (one paragraph) directly to Malgorzata Fidelis (gosia01@uic.edu) and Chiara Bonfiglioli (chiara.bonfiglioli@ucc.ie) latest by October 30, 2023. If you are invited to submit a paper, the deadline for a completed manuscript for peer review is February 29, 2024.

The Global Sixties: An Interdisciplinary Journal is the only academic, peer-reviewed journal to focus solely on this transformative impact and legacies of this decade in our history. Originally launched in 2008 as The Sixties: A Journal of History, Politics, and Culture, it was renamed in 2022 to account for the broader and more globally inclusive trajectory of scholarship in this area.

Generally focusing on the concept of “the long Sixties” and welcoming approaches from all disciplines, the journal addresses how this period continues to be examined and redefined across the world, encouraging global, regional, and local perspectives, as well as transnational and comparative analyses.

Kontakt

Malgorzata Fidelis
Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Department of History
University of Illinois at Chicago
gosia01@uic.edu

Chiara Bonfiglioli
Lecturer in Gender & Women’s Studies
University College Cork
chiara.bonfiglioli@ucc.ie

https://www.globalsixtiesjournal.com/special-issue-gender