NEW EVENT: “Prostitution: decriminalisation v legalisation”, Ariane G., Crossroads Women’s Centre, 5 June 2013

“Prostitution: decriminalisation v legalisation,
Which is better for sex workers’ rights and safety?”

Speaker: Ariane G., Berlin, Germany.

Ariane G. has worked for nearly 20 years in brothels, flats and as an independent escort in Germany and throughout Europe. She will speak on working within a legalised system, the risks of proposed law reform in Germany, the impact on sex workers’ safety, health and working conditions, and sex workers’ demands for change.

Where: Crossroads Women’s Centre
25 Wolsey Mews
Kentish Town
London, NW5 2DX

When: Wednesday 5 June, 7-9pm

PUBLIC LECTURE by Ann Anagnost on ‘Embodiments of Value in China’s Economic Reform’, 5pm 20 May 2013, University of Warwick

 

‘Bodies of Value’

 

PUBLIC LECTURE

 

Embodiments of Value in China’s Economic Reform

 

Ann Anagnost (Anthropology, University of Washington)

 

Monday, 20th May, 5pm

 

Wolfson Research Exchange, University of Warwick

 

followed by a wine reception, 6–6.30pm

 

ABSTRACT

 

The term suzhi (quality) first began to circulate the PRC in the late 1970s in relation to the problem of “population quality” in discussions of rural poverty and the unreadiness of the rural population for modernization. By the early 1990s, it had become the cultural determination of the value form of labor marking a divide between urban residents and rural migrants flowing to the cities in search of low-waged work. The “low quality” of the rural masses is what positions rural migrants as an army of reserve labor. What can we learn from how the suzhi discourse works ideologically within the Chinese context that might tell us something about the workings of the global economy more generally? I argue that we can use suzhi as a way of interrogating whether the global economy has truly entered a new phase of capitalism in which value is viewed as being “without measure” or “beyond measure” and in which so-called “immaterial labor” producing intangible intellectual products has become or is becoming the hegemonic form of value production.

 

Ann Anagnost’s public lecture will be preceded by a research colloquium, open to all:

 

‘Life-Making in Neoliberal Times’ and other work by Ann Anagnost

 

Monday, 20th May, 1–3pm, Wolfson Research Exchange, University of Warwick

 

An informal buffet lunch at 1pm will lead directly into the colloquium, chaired by Ann Anagnost.

 

Participants are expected to complete the following readings in advance:

 

Ann Anagnost (2013) “Introduction: Life-Making in Neoliberal Times”. In Global Futures in East Asia.
Ann Anagnost, Andrea Arai, and Ren Hai, eds. Stanford University Press.

 

Ann Anagnost (2011) “Strange Circulations”. In Patricia Ticineto and Craig Willse, eds.
Beyond Biopolitics: Essays on the Governance of Life and Death. Duke University Press.

 

Ann Anagnost (2004) “The Corporeal Politics of Quality”. Public Culture 16, 2: 189-208.

 

Readings available from janet.smith@warwick.ac.uk

 

Finally, please register your intention to come to either or both events with
Janet Smith (janet.smith@warwick.ac.uk) so we may order adequate refreshments!

 

These events are the third in a series funded by the Institute of Advanced Studies at
Warwick see: http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/sociology/rsw/bodiesofvalue/

Click here for the conference poster: anagnostposter3

 

CALL FOR PAPERS: Subjects and Practices of Resistance, 9-11 September 2013, University of Sussex

CALL FOR PAPERS

For two inter-linked, consecutive workshops under the theme of Subjects and Practices of Resistance to be held 9-11 September 2013 at University of Sussex.

The first workshop (9-10 Sept) is on Discipline(s), Dissent and Dispossession and the second on Counter-Conduct in Global Politics (10-11 Sept).  The workshop convenors encourage attendance at both workshops.  However, paper proposals should specify the intended workshop and which days participants would be able to attend.

The workshops are generously sponsored and supported by the BISA Poststructuralist Politics Working Group (PPWG) and the Centre for Advanced International Theory (CAIT) at the University of Sussex

 

Workshop 1: Discipline(s), Dissent and Dispossession

9-10 September 2013

Contemporary struggles against dispossession – from the 2011 Occupy movement to ongoing land rights conflicts in the Ecuadorian rainforest – not only remind us of existing forces of domination and exploitation, but also challenge the ready-made concepts and frameworks through which such struggles are often interpreted.   Building on a previous project – “Disciplining Dissent”* – this workshop aims to open up discussion on the intersections between the politics of resistance and the politics of knowledge. How might we conceptualise dissent or resistance in ways that are sensitive to the social and epistemic relations within which anti-systemic struggles are embedded? How might we frame the complementarity and tensions between political dissent and intellectual critique? How might available concepts and frameworks occlude the complex interplay between resistance and repression, discipline and dissent, obscuring what is at stake politically in existing practices of struggle?

We welcome contributions that consider these themes from diverse theoretical perspectives and academic disciplines, including international relations, international political economy, sociology, philosophy, geography and anthropology.

Questions that might be addressed include (but are not limited to): how is dissent rendered intelligible in ways that serve to contain, nullify or depoliticize struggles; the politics of knowledge in political dissent; the place of normative political critique in the absence of universal categories or emancipatory blueprints; the ways in which dissenting communities are building their own theories of dissent or are theorising out of their own dissenting practices; the forms of subjectivisation incited, subverted or arrested through practices of dissent and/or their relation to the types of dissenting subjects assumed by intellectuals and experts; the ways in which academic disciplines interpret, appropriate and discipline both dissent and critique; the nature and purpose of academic critique at a moment of austerity and economic “crisis”.

It is hoped that the workshop will serve as a basis for a journal special issue, as well as for further collobarations around these themes.

Abstracts of approx. 300 words should be sent to L.Coleman@sussex.ac.uk and cait@sussex.ac.uk by 31 May 2013 (please indicate whether or not you plan to attend both workshops).  

Convenors:

Lara Montesinos Coleman, University of Sussex

Doerthe Rosenow, Oxford Brookes University

Karen Tucker, University of Bristol

 

*published as Lara Montesinos Coleman and Karen Tucker (eds.), Situating Global Resistance: Between Discipline and Dissent (Abingdon: Routledge, 2012) and as a special issue of Globalizations 8:3 (2011).

 

Workshop 2: Counter-Conduct in Global Politics: Theories and Practices

10-11 September 2013

Resistance, and its study, is on the rise. Protesting, agitating, dissenting, and occupying inter alia have received increased attention and theorisation in the past tumultuous decade since 11 September 2001. However, such academic and public attention has tended to focus on the visible and politically discernible practices of dissent against sovereignty, economic exploitation, dispossession and other forms of oppression. Little systematic attention has been paid to potentially less visible practices of resistance or those who do not participate in an expressly political register but that attempt to resist ‘power that conducts’ (Foucault 2007). To this end, the workshop has four main aims. First, to theoretically develop, refine and critically interrogate the concept and theorisation of ‘counter-conduct(s)’, a term that, until recently, has received scant attention within the social sciences. We encourage the further critique, development and modification of Foucault’s initial attempts to understand subjects’ ‘possible inventions’ as counter-conduct (1982, 2007). Second, to provide a space in which empirical, multi-disciplinary investigations of counter-conduct in a variety of thematic areas and spaces of global politics can be presented. Third, to facilitate reflection on the variable and contingent forms of counter-conduct, examining its close relationship with conducting power and revealing the processes of invigilation of resistance and adjustment of conducting strategies. Finally, to reflect on the methodological implications and issues, which affect the study of the variegated practices of counter-conduct.

We welcome contributions that consider these themes not only from a Foucaultian perspective but also that bring diverse theoretical perspectives  — and views from a variety of academic disciplines, including politics, international relations, international political economy, sociology, political theory and philosophy, geography and anthropology – to bear on the study of counter-conduct.

Format: consisting of longer paper presentations, followed by substantial constructive feedback from discussants and audience, the format of the Counter-Conduct in Global Politics workshop aims to facilitate intensive and extensive engagement among participants with a view to producing article length contributions to a significantly placed journal special issue. Given the lack of systematic focus on practices and subjects of counter-conduct, it is hoped that such a special issue will engender further debate and consideration of the study of counter-conduct in global politics and potentially act as a reference for postgraduate and doctoral research as well. Abstracts of approx. 250 words should be sent to L.Odysseos@sussex.ac.uk and cait@sussex.ac.uk by 31 May 2013 (please indicate whether or not you plan to attend both workshops).

Convenors:

Carl Death, University of Manchester (as of August 2013)

Helle Malmvig, Danish Institute of International Studies

Louiza Odysseos, University of Sussex

 

 

Centre for Advanced International Theory

Department of International Relations

University of Sussex

Falmer

East Sussex

BN1 9SJ

 

E cait@sussex.ac.uk

T 01273 876615

 

Sex Worker Open Uni, Glasgow! 5th – 10th of April FINAL PROGRAM!

Dear Sex Workers, Friends and Allies,

(please forward widely )
 
Sex Worker Open University Co-operative is very excited to invite you to Scotland’s first ever Sex Workers’ Rights and Community Building Festival, taking place in Glasgow (Scotland) form the 5th-10th of April!
 
Scotland is one of the most recent countries to come under scrutiny over its sex work laws. This has led to an uprise of anti-sex work groups campaigning for the introduction of an “End Demand” approach to legal change. This event is extremely timely for us to stand together and say NO to further criminalisation of our work, including the criminalisation of our clients.
 
The programme includes films, cultural events, debates, international speakers, skill-sharing workshops and much more! The week will include public events and sex worker-only spaces.  (See below for programme in text)
 
We are very grateful and excited to welcome guest speakers both from around the UK; including SCOT-PEP (our Scottish partners), X:Talk Project and English Collective of Prostitutes; and from more distant places such as STRASS (France) and Scarlett Alliance (Australia).
 
This is a unique opportunity to make our voices heard and to organise as a community for our rights and we really hope you can join us! Please spread the word about all our events and we will make sure to develop and distribute many resources (videos, press releases etc) following the festival that can be used in our ongoing fight for access to the rights we deserve.

Check our new website www.swou.org to see what we are up to! ( it seems it has some issues depending on your browser  though!) and click on our facebook event to keep updated: 
http://www.facebook.com/events/347770968675060/?fref=ts
 
With love, rage and solidarity, 
 
Sex Worker Open University Coop”
Click here for a PDF version of the programme: Programme_prf04 final SWOU

NEW PUBLICATION: Body/State edited by Angus Cameron, Jen Dickinson and Nicola Smith

CAMERON PPC(240X156)path

  • Body/State brings together original essays addressing various aspects of the evolving interaction between bodies and states. While each essay has different empirical and/or theoretical focus, authors consider a number of overlapping themes to appreciate the state’s engagement with, and concern about, bodies. Divided into five parts, the first part, ‘Bodies Modified and Divided’ considers how the production, regulation, policing and maintenance of borders (physical, social, sexual, political, religious, etc.) are used to enable or constrain the physical (re)shaping of the body. Part two, ‘Capital Bodies’, extends the state’s concern with the flows of bodies that make up the nation to consider how they are enrolled in the complex structures of capitalist exchange that form the basis for maintaining and contesting a set of relationships between states and markets. Part three, ‘Deviance and Resistance’, examines both how states seek to discipline ‘non-normal’ bodies and appreciates the capacity of changes in the socio-cultural meaning and nature of bodies to resist and/or escape states. Part four, ‘Sovereignty and Surveillance’, develops themes of deviancy and resistance by considering the impact of new technologies both on the intimate regulatory reach of states into and across bodies and on the nature of embodiment itself. Finally, Part five, ‘The Body Virtual’, examines the impact of new technologies and online spaces both on the intimate regulatory reach of states into and across bodies and on the nature of embodiment itself. A varied collection of essays that address important and complex topics in a readable and creative way.
  • Contents: Bodies, states and body-states, Angus Cameron, Jen Dickinson and Nicola Smith; Part I Bodies Modified and Divided: Female circumcision vs designer vaginas: surgical genital practices and the discursive reproduction of state boundaries, Emma A. Foster; Hunger strike: the body as resource, Reecia Orzeck; Organ transplantation: the debt of life?, Jen Dickinson and Matthew Sothern. Part II Capital Bodies: The body in capitalist conditions of existence: a foundational materialist approach, Ian Bruff; Money bodies, Bill Maurer and Elham Mireshghi; Corporeal capitalism: invisible male bodies in the global sexual economy, Nicola Smith; Asian bodies/Western states (of mind): a postmodern feminist reading of reproduction in East Asian cultures, Ming Lim. Part III Deviance and Resistance: Bodies of the state: on the legal entrenchment of (dis)ability, Katie Ledingham; Unruly bodies (standing against apartheid), Gavin Brown; Moments of withdrawal: homeschooling mothers’ experiences of taking their children out of mainstream education, Peter Kraftl; Greatest treasures of the Pacific: multicultural genders and HIV prevention on Aotearoa/New Zealand, Matt Sothern. Part IV Sovereignty and Surveillance: Governing mobile bodies: human trafficking and (in)security states, Claudia Aradau; The smell of power: a contribution to the critique of the sniffer dog, Mark Neocleous; The faceless map: banning the cartographic body, Angus Cameron. Part V The Body Virtual: Placing the virtual body: avatar, chora, cypherg, Tom Boellstorff; The story of the ‘I’, Heather Palmer; Act 3, Chapter 12, authority, goldin+senneby (with introduction by Angus Cameron); Index.
  • About the Editors: Angus Cameron, University of Leicester, UK; Jen Dickinson, University of Leicester, UK and
    Nicola Smith University of Birmingham, UK.
  • Reviews: ‘We need much more work on embodied political economy to understand power in its deepest senses. The breadth of this volume is an excellent indication of how rich this terrain is for critical understanding towards a better world.’
    Gillian Youngs, University of Brighton, UK‘Body/State offers an innovative take on how relationships between money and politics, representation and embodiment, visibility and political participation increasingly detour through flesh and blood, leaving our bodies at once ruled and unruly sites for political transformation.’
    Kath Weston, University of Virginia, USA
  • For the full table of contents, click here
  • To read a sample chapter, click here
  • Link to Ashgate’s website