{"id":1956,"date":"2017-12-12T10:41:25","date_gmt":"2017-12-12T16:41:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/?page_id=1956"},"modified":"2025-10-19T19:23:20","modified_gmt":"2025-10-20T00:23:20","slug":"in-terms-of-gender","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/in-terms-of-gender\/","title":{"rendered":"In Terms of Gender"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>In Terms of Gender: Crosscultural and Interdisciplinary Perspectives<\/strong><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6059\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6059\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Back-web.jpg\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-6059 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Back-web-300x232.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"232\" srcset=\"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Back-web-300x232.jpg 300w, https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Back-web-768x594.jpg 768w, https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Back-web.jpg 1000w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6059\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">In Terms of Gender Conference Schedule<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>May 4 &amp; 5, 2007<\/p>\n<p>On Friday and Saturday, May 4 and 5, the Center welcomed an international group of scholars from a variety of fields to UWM for its major, two-day conference for 2006-07. The conference grew out of discussions among friends, colleagues, and former students of <strong>Joan W. Scott<\/strong> about how to honor her pioneering work in gender studies and feminist theory. Organized by <strong>Daniel J. Sherman<\/strong> (History, Center Director) and <strong>Mary Louise Roberts<\/strong> (History, UW-Madison) in close consultation with Professor Scott (Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study), the conference sought to be prospective rather than retrospective in spirit, a survey of the place of the term \u201cgender\u201d in a number of disciplinary settings with a view to the challenges it might continue to pose to scholarly inquiry in the future. The conference, which featured brief presentations on pre-circulated papers, as well as a keynote and closing round-table, generated consistently high turnout and lively discussion throughout.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_6060\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-6060\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Front-web.jpg\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-6060 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Front-web-300x232.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"232\" srcset=\"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Front-web-300x232.jpg 300w, https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Front-web-768x594.jpg 768w, https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/359\/2020\/02\/Conference-Brochure-05.04.-05.05-2007-Front-web.jpg 1000w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-6060\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">In Terms of Gender Conference Flyer<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The meetings kicked off early Friday afternoon with papers by <strong>Lynne Huffer<\/strong> (Women\u2019s Studies, Emory University) and <strong>Gayle Salamon<\/strong> (English, Princeton University). Huffer presented a paper entitled \u201cFoucault and Feminism\u2019s Prodigal Children.\u201d Central to this project was Huffer\u2019s exploration of the original French edition of Michel Foucault\u2019s 1961 History of Madness. Translations of this work have long been based on an abridged version of the French original, Huffer reminded the audience, keeping readers from fully appreciating its arguments. Huffer proposes an ethical project that can speak to queers and feminists alike and may \u201cexpand Foucauldian conceptions of sexuality to encompass the problems of lived experience in relation to our historical and political present.\u201d In her paper, \u201cThe Sexual schema: Transposition and Transgenderism in the Phenomenology of Perception,\u201d Salamon argued for a re-engagement with philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty\u2019s 1945 work by the same name as a useful vehicle to understand trans-sexual embodiment. \u201cIn Merleau-Ponty\u2019s work,\u201d Salamon argued, \u201cthere is something essentially ambiguous in sexuality.\u201d This ambiguity, according to Salamon, \u201ccan become the means for understanding bodies, lives, and especially relationality outside of the domains of male or female.<\/p>\n<p>\u201dThe second panel, \u201cEngaging Power,\u201d first featured <strong>Carol Quillen<\/strong> (History, Rice). Her paper, \u201cGender and the Subject of History,\u201d sought to think through the implications of the entanglement of \u201cconceptions of the subject and the methods through which historians produce and represent knowledge.\u201d Focusing on the rise of humanism through a 1345 letter from Francesco Petrarca to Cicero, Quillen emphasized the potential usefulness of feminist and post-structuralist theory to \u201cimagine the relationship between an historian and the past not as one between an observer and an object of study, but rather as one between or among subjects.\u201d More than working within a scientific framework, the historian should draw on ethics in doing so, she argued, urging her colleagues to understand their work as entailing obligations both to those they write about and to their readers. In a paper entitled \u201cHistorically Speaking: Gender and Citizenship in Colonial India,\u201d <strong>Mrinalini Sinha<\/strong> (History, Penn State) sought to consider the value of the concept of gender\u2014arguably a European notion\u2014for the interpretation of colonial Indian history, and vice versa. She did so through the significant traces she found of liberal notions of citizenship in early Indian feminism. Sinha argued that the \u201clanguage of citizenship-based individual rights\u201d in Europe and colonial India, however partial and context-specific, and its history in both places can offer a new framework for understanding individual rights in terms at once gendered and universal. <strong>Elizabeth Weed<\/strong> (Modern Culture and Media, Brown) examined critics and critiques of Joan Scott\u2019s 1984 article \u201cGender: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis.\u201d Professing herself \u201cmystified\u201d by certain vehement reactions to Scott\u2019s article, Weed argued that these really targeted the promotion of \u201ctheory\u201d in historical scholarship, and particularly the work of Michel Foucault. For Weed, Scott\u2019s arguments do not disable history but, with critique at their core, instead open it up to many new avenues of investigation.<\/p>\n<p>The conference\u2019s first afternoon concluded with the keynote address by <strong>Judith Butler<\/strong> (Rhetoric and Comparative Literature, UC\u2013Berkeley) entitled \u201cJoan\u2019s Arc: Speaking Up, Talking Back, and Other Career Trajectories.\u201d In analyzing the reasons for Scott\u2019s importance for many academic disciplines, Butler discussed her own reliance on Scott, as a constant interlocutor. Scott\u2019s early work drew wide attention with its focus on questions of causality and agency, and especially the role of women in history. Moving on to the relevance of Scott\u2019s scholarship for, and Scott\u2019s own interest in, present-day questions, Butler focused on Scott\u2019s writing on the 1978 Sears sex discrimination case. Of central importance here is Scott\u2019s view that if sexual difference is contingent and contested it can also be changed. Also compelling, Butler continued, is Scott\u2019s argument for (sexual) equality that depends on difference. Butler concluded with a discussion of Scott\u2019s long-standing support for freedom of academic speech, reminding the audience that for Scott the contest of ideas is key\u2014not their resolution, and not necessarily balance. The standing room-only audience contributed to an extended discussion, covering many of the themes of Butler\u2019s talk.<\/p>\n<p>The conference resumed at UWM Hefter Conference Center on Saturday morning. <strong>\u00c9ric Fassin<\/strong> (Sociology, \u00c9cole normale sup\u00e9rieure, Paris) presented a paper explaining how, under the influence of several socio-political controversies, recent French debates on gender have maintained (or developed) a vibrancy missing nowadays from discussions in the English-speaking world. Fassin\u2019s particular interest is in the intersection of gender and race in contemporary French debates, most prominently on the veiling of Muslim women in public spaces. The second speaker, <strong>Elora Shehabuddin<\/strong> (Humanities and Political Science, Rice) also addressed contemporary issues, in a paper entitled \u201cGender at the \u2018Grassroots\u2019: Islamic Politics, NGOs, and Democracy in Bangladesh.\u201d She explained how leaders of the Bangladeshi Jamaat-i-Islami (Society of Islam) employ a maternalist discourse strategically, to counter claims made by Western NGOs that Islam has harmed women, rather than to confine women to domestic roles. Specific to a country with a thriving democratic tradition, Jamaat-i-Islami makes clear the value of gender analysis to dispelling simplistic Western notions of a \u201cclash of civilizations.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The next panel, \u201cSubversive Strategies,\u201d featured papers by <strong>Jeff Nunokawa<\/strong> (English, Princeton) and <strong>Mary Louise Roberts<\/strong>. Nunokawa\u2019s paper, \u201cFeminizing Reification: The Case of Dickens,\u201d took up \u201cthe presentation of the self in reified form\u201d in the work of Charles Dickens, especially in female characters. Nunokawa noted that signifiers of femininity\u2014or female subjects\u2014are almost always part of what he labeled \u201cmoments of awayness,\u201d or symbols of failed agency. Roberts\u2019s presentation featured two late 19th-century French artists and celebrities, Sarah Bernhardt and Rosa Bonheur. Eccentricity for these two women, Roberts argued, was a strategy of subversion against conventional bourgeois gender roles. Viewing eccentricity this way clarifies both its force and its limits because eccentricity operated at an individual, not a social, level. As such, it did not represent a serious threat to established social norms. In this sense, Roberts concluded, \u201ceccentricity was its own worst enemy.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The last session of pre-distributed paper presentations examined the work of gender in visual studies, broadly construed. Daniel Sherman began by summarizing the paper by <strong>Mary Sheriff<\/strong> (Art History, North Carolina-Chapel Hill), who could not attend in person. Sheriff\u2019s paper traced the role and impact of feminist analysis in art history, noting its long preoccupation with the role of women artists, and their exclusion from the canon, rather than with gender as such. Despite the lack of a decisive theoretical intervention in the field, Sheriff argued that feminist theory could have an impact on scholarship in art history, most productively by fusing critique with careful attention to historical context. <strong>Janis Bergman-Carton<\/strong> (Art History, Southern Methodist University) followed with a paper entitled \u201c\u2018Convulsive Beauty\u2019: The Gendering of Print Technology in the French Fin-de-Si\u00e8cle.\u201d The paper examined the possible origins and functions of \u201cunlikely couplings of printing presses and erotically charged women\u201d in French advertising material and decorative arts of the Belle Epoque. In the final presentation, <strong>Mary Ann Doane<\/strong> (Modern Culture and Media, Brown) focused on the cultural force of representations of the (female) face in its role as a screen and as a medium between viewer and filmmaker. In particular, she raised questions about the relationship between aesthetics and politics in feminist film theory.<\/p>\n<p>The closing discussion featured commentary by <strong>Joan Scott<\/strong>, who also served as chair, <strong>Jane Gallop<\/strong> (English, UWM) and <strong>Wendy Brown<\/strong> (Political Science, UC-Berkeley). Brown expressed concern about the rise of ethics at the expense of politics (with its preoccupation with power and potential for change) in academic discourse, while Gallop wondered about the risks when gender becomes established within institutional academic hierarchies. In conclusion, Scott argued that gender remains a \u201cuseful category of analysis,\u201d as long as it does not become a prescriptive list of questions scholars tick off in lieu of more probing, contextual inquiry. Participation from many of the conference speakers and from a diverse group of participants from the UWM and the wider Milwaukee community made this closing session an especially lively one.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In Terms of Gender: Crosscultural and Interdisciplinary Perspectives May 4 &amp; 5, 2007 On Friday and Saturday, May 4 and 5, the Center welcomed an international group of scholars from a variety of fields to UWM for its major, two-day &hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":690,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":44,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_tec_requires_first_save":true,"_EventAllDay":false,"_EventTimezone":"","_EventStartDate":"","_EventEndDate":"","_EventStartDateUTC":"","_EventEndDateUTC":"","_EventShowMap":false,"_EventShowMapLink":false,"_EventURL":"","_EventCost":"","_EventCostDescription":"","_EventCurrencySymbol":"","_EventCurrencyCode":"","_EventCurrencyPosition":"","_EventDateTimeSeparator":"","_EventTimeRangeSeparator":"","_EventOrganizerID":[],"_EventVenueID":[],"_OrganizerEmail":"","_OrganizerPhone":"","_OrganizerWebsite":"","_VenueAddress":"","_VenueCity":"","_VenueCountry":"","_VenueProvince":"","_VenueState":"","_VenueZip":"","_VenuePhone":"","_VenueURL":"","_VenueStateProvince":"","_VenueLat":"","_VenueLng":"","_VenueShowMap":false,"_VenueShowMapLink":false,"_tribe_blocks_recurrence_rules":"","_tribe_blocks_recurrence_description":"","_tribe_blocks_recurrence_exclusions":"","footnotes":"","uwm_wg_additional_authors":[]},"class_list":["post-1956","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.3 (Yoast SEO v27.3) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Center for 21st Century Studies<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/uwm.edu\/c21\/in-terms-of-gender\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"In Terms of Gender\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In Terms of Gender: Crosscultural and Interdisciplinary Perspectives May 4 &amp; 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