[Air-L] CFP: Consuming Gender

Megen De Bruin DeBruinMJ at cardiff.ac.uk
Fri Apr 22 02:24:21 PDT 2016


Please find attached a CFP for a special journal edition of Assuming Gender (www.assuminggender.com<http://www.assuminggender.com>) – an online, peer-reviewed academic journal from Cardiff University.

For this special edition, Assuming Gender invites articles that focus specifically on the idea of ‘Consuming Gender’. How has consumer culture constructed (and how has it been constructed by) gender through the ages?

Proposals of roughly 500 words should be sent to Megen de Bruin-Molé, Akira Suwa and Daný van Dam at gender at cardiff.ac.uk<mailto:gender at cardiff.ac.uk> under the subject line ‘CFP Consuming Gender’, including your name, e-mail institutional affiliation (if any), and a biographical note (100 words maximum). We welcome papers from scholars of all backgrounds, disciplines, and career stages. The deadline for proposals is 16 October, 2016, and completed papers of 5000 to 8000 words will be expected no later than 16 April, 2017.

If you could circulate this to any potentially interested parties, we would be much obliged.

Kind regards,

Megen de Bruin-Molé
School of English, Communication and Philosophy
Cardiff University

John Percival Building, Rm. 1.07
Colum Drive
Cardiff CF10 3EU
UK

Email: DeBruinMJ at cardiff.ac.uk<mailto:DeBruinMJ at cardiff.ac.uk>
Social media: @MegenJM | facebook.com/megenj<http://facebook.com/megenj>
Website: angelsandapes.com<http://angelsandapes.com>





Call for Papers: ‘Consuming Gender’


This special issue of Assuming Gender – an online, peer-reviewed academic journal from Cardiff University – seeks to explore the way gender is both presented and consumed through popular media and advertising. As Ann Herrmann points out in the article ‘Shopping for Identities’, commodities ‘are characterised by their dual nature: material composition and symbolic meaning’ (Herrmann 2002: 539). Consumer culture plays a significant role in constructing valid (and normative) identity categories with which consumers are encouraged to identify.

Scholars as diverse as Americus Reed, Laura C. Nelson, and Henry Jenkins have theorised the ways in which identity and consumer culture are intertwined. Reed, for example, claims in ‘Activating the Self-Importance of Consumer Selves’ that ‘[s]ocial identities are mental representations that can become a basic part of how consumers view themselves’ (Reed 2004: 286). In a later article on ‘Identity-Based Consumer Behaviour’, Reed and others use the example of athletics to illustrate their point: ‘if consumers view themselves as “athletes”, they are likely to behave in ways that are consistent with what it means to “be” an athlete’ (Reed, Forehand, Puntoni and Warlop 2002: 310). Consumption thus becomes defined by identity, and identity becomes defined by consumption.

While the construction of identities based on athleticism seems relatively benign, the case quickly becomes more complicated when consumer identities are racially, economically, or sexually coded. In addition to delineating the borders between various interest groups, consumer culture plays a significant role in establishing and maintaining binary identity distinctions (male/female, gay/straight, black/white), undermining the validity of those identifying across or in-between one or more categories, or who refuse categorisation at all. Those identities not classified as valid consumer groups are not seen as valid identities at all.

For this special issue of Assuming Gender, we invite articles that focus specifically on the idea of ‘Consuming Gender’. How has consumer culture constructed (and how has it been constructed by) gender through the ages?

Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:

•       Consuming gender/gendered consumption

•       Historical contexts of gendered consumption

•       Feminist/postfeminist approaches to consumption

•       Consumption and intersectionality

•       Queer consumption

•       Media constructions of (gendered) consumer identities

•       Post/colonialism and gendered consumption


Please send a proposal of roughly 500 words to Megen de Bruin-Molé, Akira Suwa and Daný van Dam at gender at cardiff.ac.uk<mailto:gender at cardiff.ac.uk> under the subject line ‘CFP Consuming Gender’, including your name, e-mail institutional affiliation (if any), and a biographical note (100 words maximum). We welcome papers from scholars of all backgrounds, disciplines, and career stages. The deadline for proposals is 16 October, 2016, and completed papers of 5000 to 8000 words will be expected no later than 16 April, 2017.

Assuming Gender is an electronic journal dedicated to the timely analysis of constructions of gendered texts, practices, and subjectivities. This journal seeks to continue and shift debates on how gender is problematized in contemporary discourses as well as participate in the dialogue and tensions that maintain the urgency of such conversations. Prior issues can be viewed on www.assuminggender.com<http://www.assuminggender.com/>.

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