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Home » For and about students » Events: Conferences, Workshops, Lectures, Talks » 2023 » April 2023 » Visceral Bodies Symposium

 

Visceral Bodies Symposium 

27th Apr 2023 - 28th Apr 2023 

Sexuality, Motherhood and Social Reproduction: a transdisciplinary symposium on representing the visceral body in theory & creative practice

 

A two day, in person symposium at Kingston University London

Register here, selecting Techne student ticket: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/visceral-bodies-symposium-27-28th-april-2023-tickets-504393112377 

For more information and full schedules, please visit visceralbodies.squarespace.com

It is often assumed that questions regarding the bodily dimension of human life have primarily to do with biological or medical inquiries and are not central in the humanities field. Over time, this excluded topics such as motherhood, sexuality and reproduction from philosophical and political landscape. Recent feminist, post-colonial, and critical theories have offered perspectives that deconstruct artificial notions of subjectivity and thematize corporeality in relation to questions of normativity, identity and political visibility.

This two-day, transdisciplinary symposium will explore how renewed attention to the human (and specifically female) body in philosophy, politics, literature and psychosocial studies has paved the way for a rethinking of motherhood, reproductive loss, disability and death beyond the biological category. How does this reflection contribute to naming, elaborating, and making visible concrete aspects of human life in their connection to gender, race, sexuality?

The event will present creative writing, poetic works, lectures and performances that illustrate, inform or question how we represent the visceral body within text and in philosophical /political inquiries when we attempt to give voice to experiences and events that are, by their nature (within cultural frameworks of course) graphic, shocking, bloody, illicit...

We ask, how do we navigate the ‘horror’ or embarrassment of these subjects through writing and theoretical reflection? How do we share real and even brutal experiences without them becoming sensational or shocking in a way that negates their complexity? What kind of literary forms, what kinds of language, do we turn to in our attempts? This is not about how we make these experiences palatable, but, rather, how we battle to make them communicable in a way that does not underestimate the experience and allows us to see it from multiple perspectives.

We will address these questions through a combination of presentations and performances by PhD students, academics, writers and dancers.

Keynote speakers: Professor Lisa Baraitser, poet Rachel Long, Dr Anna McFarlane, Professor Tracey Reynolds and Professor Stella Villarmea.

 

 


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