keynotes


We are delighted to share with delegates Tracey McIntosh‘s keynote title and abstract:

Transgress, translate, transcend, transform? Criminalised women and creative writing

Prisons are receptacles of confined experience. This ability to simultaneously reveal and conceal the nature of the experience of prison in Māori life-worlds shows the power of a discourse that renders the prison a natural part of the social environment for particular groups. It is important to recognise that the Māori experience of prison is gendered.

We deal 1371436917890with difference in every part of our lives, much of it passing unremarked, or accepted as contributing to the colour and vibrancy of everyday life. Yet there are other responses to difference that critically shape the social and cultural parameters of our collective existence. In my work difference has too often meant devastation, disappearance, disintegration and dislocation to vulnerable sectors of society. Amnesia initiated by the dominant group can be seen as a wilful forgetting or a legitimated ignorance of the social processes and the exercising of unequal power relations that has resulted in an embedded marginalisation. Responses to difference can be mapped over time and place and in this paper I draw on the writing of women in prison that articulates raw experience and responses to their environment in the recognition that they are experts of their own condition.

Tracey is an Associate Professor and Head of Sociology at the University of Auckland. She will be delivering her Keynote address at 9am on 23rd November 2015. Check out our tentative timetable here: http://transformingfeminisms.noblogs.org/post/2015/09/25/tentative-timetable/

keynotes


Our fourth, and final, keynote has been confirmed! Constance Penley works in film and media studies at the Carsey-Wolf Centre at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Constance’s work is interdisciplinary and includes research on the intersections between women and technology, pornography and sci fi. Constance is also a practicing artist and has written the libretto for an Biospheria: An Environmental Opera.

Find out more about Constance here.

keynotes


We are pleased to announce our third keynote speaker, Tracey McIntosh, from the Department of Sociology at the University of Auckland. Tracey works on a number of projects, including research on women, particularly Indigenous women, in prisons.

You can find out more about Tracey, including a list of publications here.

keynotes


We are pleased to announce that Associate Professor Audrey Yue will be presenting a keynote at trans/forming feminisms. Audrey works on the intersections between queer theory (in particular queer Asia) and transnationalised cultural formations.

Most recently, Audrey has published (with Belinda Smaill and Olivia Khoo) Transnational Australian Cinema: Ethics in the Asian Diasporas through Lexington books. In 2012, Audrey also edited (with Jun Zubilaga-Pow) Queer Singapore: Illiberal Citizenship and Mediated Cultures published by HKUP.