Worn Out! Motherwork in the Age of Austerity Friday and Saturday, March 6th and 7th, 2015

full name / name of organization: 
Women's History Graduate Program at Sarah Lawrence College
contact email: 

CALL FOR PAPERS

The 17th Annual Women's History Conference at Sarah Lawrence College
Bronxville, NY (20 minutes north of Manhattan)
Friday and Saturday, March 6th and 7th, 2015

Worn Out! Motherwork in the Age of Austerity

Featuring:
Roksana Badruddoja, member of the Academic Advisory Board for the Museum of Motherhood (MOM), Board Member of the Council on Contemporary Families (CCF), and Professor of Sociology and Women's Gender Studies at Manhattan College

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that more than 60% of mothers of preschool children are in the paid workforce, and for mothers of school-age children, that figure nears 80%. If paychecks were all it took to liberate women, we would be well on our way. Instead, we're exhausted, and while this problem is hardly unique to the United States, the American system of long hours on the job and scant provision for public welfare makes the challenges of motherwork all the more acute. It's not hard to figure out what brought us to this pass: wage stagnation, increasingly lengthy workweeks, proliferating numbers of single-parent households and two-income couples, gaping holes in the social safety net, erosion of labor unions, mounting violence against our children by both civilians and the state, and diminished public spending on youth recreation, daycare, afterschool programs and other services crucial to working families. The question is: what can we do to turn things around? This conference will explore answers to that question.

Sharing Patricia Hill Collins's belief that "individual survival, empowerment and identity require group survival, empowerment and identity," we especially seek collective solutions, from proposals for new legislation and public services to reports on the work of grassroots organizations of mothers that are making a way out of no way.

Specific panel topics may include, but are not limited to:

· Community Mothering

· Family Policy: What Can the US Learn from the Rest of the World?

· Global Families: Mothering Across Borders

· Media Representations: Bad Mothers/Supermoms

· Mommy Wars: The Race to the Bottom

· Motherhood and the Penal State: Women and Children Behind
Bars

· Mothers on the Job: Where are the Family Friendly Policies?

· Mothers Organizing Mothers

· Motherwork as Paid Labor: Childcare Workers Speak Out!

· Motherwork as Unpaid Labor

· Parenting While Black

· Special Needs Moms: Mothers and Children with Disabilities

· Welfare Rights as Human Rights

· Writing Motherhood

Proposals should be no more than two pages. Please include a short description of each presentation and a one-page C.V. for each presenter. Proposals for panels are especially welcome but we will also consider individual papers. Email submissions are preferred.

Deadline: December 5, 2014

Send proposals to:

Tara James
Graduate Program in Women's History
Sarah Lawrence College
1 Mead Way, Bronxville, New York 10708
914-395-2405
tjames@sarahlawrence.edu