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CFP: Women in Action: Crisis, Activism, and Reconstruction (3/1/07; WTP, 7/24/07-7/25/07)full name / name of organization: Sara L. Warner contact email: dr_sara_warner@yahoo.com please circulate: WOMEN IN ACTION: CRISIS, ACTIVISM, AND RECONSTRUCTION The present historical moment offers an auspicious opportunity for artists, activists, scholars, and communities to renegotiate, and perhaps redefine, the complex relationship between art and activism. As wars and natural disasters ravage countries and populations around the world, many governments and social service providers have been unwilling or unable to adequately protect or supply aid to those most in need. On July 24 and 25, 2007, in New Orleans, the Women and Theatre Program, a division of the Association for Theatre in Higher Education, will convene for its annual conference almost exactly two years after Hurricanes Rita and Katrina devastated a large swath of the Gulf Coast. This year members of WTP are particularly mindful of the ongoing struggles in this region of the U.S., and we hope to find ways in the course of the panels, workshops, performances, and other activities at the conference to use the site of New Orleans as an intellectual, if not an actual, This year’s conference will include a feminist pedagogy workshop, some of Suzan-Lori Parks’ 365 Days/365 Plays, a reading of the Jane Chambers Student Play Competition, and a series of exciting performances. The Conference Committee encourages proposals that incorporate innovative formats, numerous voices, partnerships and active dialogue. Proposals are urged to go beyond the traditional 3-speaker presentation for seminars, roundtables, performances, workshops, and poster sessions. There are also a couple of special projects with which volunteers can help. WTP wishes to use the 2007 gathering as a moment to address this ideological phenomenon and other forms of social change and community response. Events that affect whole communities also shape the ways in which people perceive and construct individual and group identities. Ideas of nation, global alliances, ethnic groups, and legal and cultural citizenship shift become narrower or more expansive in times of crisis. Utopian performance/troubled geographies SUBMISSION PROCESS: Submissions for the conference should be emailed to Ashley Lucas at lucasa@email.unc.edu by March 1, 2007. In addition, feel free to contact Ashley with any questions or concerns about the submission process. Further information on WTP, its membership and events (as well as how to join the WTP listserv) can be accessed at http://www.athe.org/wtp/ For academic panels, seminars, and roundtables: While individual submissions will be considered, preference is given to proposals with a range of participants. You are encouraged to assemble these by networking on the ATHE and WTP listserves. (See “Resources” on the ATHE webpage for information on subscribing to the ATHECALL listserv.) If you are having difficulty assembling proposals, please contact Ashley Lucas at lucasa_at_email.unc.edu by February 22. For workshops, performances, and other creative ventures: To contribute to a multimedia tribute performance about Hurricanes Rita and Katrina and the aftermath of the storms: To direct or perform in one of Suzan-Lori Park’s 365 Days/365 Plays: The Women and Theatre Program is a self-incorporated division of the Association for Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE). Founded in 1974, our mission is to bring theater professionals together with academics and activists. In the years since our inception, WTP has sponsored panels and activities at ATHE’s annual conference. In 1980, WTP began holding its own annual pre-ATHE conference. The continuing goal of WTP is to enable feminist inquiry and to provide opportunities for discussion between those who teach, perform, and theorize about feminism, theatre, and performance. http://www.athe.org/wtp/ DEADLINE FOR ALL SUBMISSIONS: March 1, 2007
--Sara L. Warner, Ph.D.Assistant ProfessorCornell UniversityDepartment of Theatre, Film, & DanceSchwartz Center for the Performing Arts430 College AvenueIthaca, NY 14850607.254.2727http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/slw42/ ========================================================== From the Literary Calls for Papers Mailing List CFP_at_english.upenn.edu Full Information at http://cfp.english.upenn.edu or write Jennifer Higginbotham: higginbj_at_english.upenn.edu ==========================================================Received on Sun Feb 04 2007 - 13:54:30 EST cfp categories: gender_studies_and_sexuality
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