GUTS: CANADIAN
FEMINIST MAGAZINE
CALL FOR PAPERS
Next
up? GUTS talks about sex in issue 3
Conceptions of bodies, sexuality, and desire have been
rallying points for feminist activism, research, and advocacy in different historical
moments. Looking back to the 1970s, advocates of the Canadian
women’s movement made courageous and influential efforts to secure safe
access to abortion clinics, to establish supportive women’s shelters and rape
crisis centres, and to better understand women’s reproductive and sexual
health. The effects of this movement on Canadian society are undeniable. Take,
for example, the Abortion Caravan (1969-70), a national feminist protest that
mobilized over 500 activists from all over the country to demand that the
government amend its abortion policy. Although abortion was not removed from
Canada’s criminal code until 1988, the Caravan brought women’s reproductive
rights to the forefront of the country’s consciousness. Coinciding with the
Western world’s sexual liberation movement, second wave feminism in Canada made
space for conversations about women’s sexuality beyond the bedroom.
Despite clear advances made by early forms of feminist
organizing and advocacy in Canada, female and queer bodies remain contested
terrain in government social policy:provincially funded abortions are increasingly inaccessible
, sex
workers face anti-prostitution legislation, and women’s shelters, rape
crisis centres, and women’s rights advocacy groups are invariably strapped
for cash. All-too-frequent instances of sexual objectification of and
violence against women today indicate that sex remains relevant to feminist
analysis. And yet, despite the importance of sex to feminism in popular
sex-positive discourses, women’s struggles are too often configured as isolated
matters, rather than symptoms of a larger patriarchal structure.
For this issue, we set out to demystify sexuality while
attending to the ways sexual liberation has evolved into a new brand of
feminism that promotes sex as a means of achieving selfhood and financial
independence. Pop-feminist discussions of sexuality are too often reduced to a
crude consumerist notion of individuality, measured by one’s purchasing power
and an ability to sleep with whomever one wants. Although sex positivism once
provided a clear avenue toward instituting social and political change, its
contemporary manifestation in today’s fabulous, independent, sexually liberated
feminist icons only serves to conceal gendered and racialized forms of
oppression that continue to inform our daily realities.
Our sex issue invites contributors to recover the politics
of bodies, sexuality, and desire.
Potential topics for submissions might include:
Potential topics for submissions might include:
· * Abortion and reproductive rights
· * Critiques of monogamy
· * Non-heteronormative sexuality and love
· * The romanticization of two-spirited sexuality
· * Asexuality
· * Polyamorous culture
· * Sex-work activism in Canada
· * The contemporary anti-porn movement
· * Feminist porn (does it exist?)
· * Rape culture, consent, and sexual violence
· * Violence against and the disappearance of
Indigenous women
· * Online dating and post-physical relationships
· * Disability and sex
· * Beauty, consumerism, and self-marketing in a
neoliberal economy
· * Erotic fanfiction and feminine forms of escape
Submission Guidelines:
GUTS accepts personal and journalistic essays; poetry
and fiction; reviews of books, TV, music, and film; creative interviews and
conversations. GUTS also accepts images and videos relevant to our
theme.
Please submit a short proposal (150-300 words) describing
your project no later than July 15,
2014 to submit@gutsmagazine.ca
Final submissions (500-4000 words) will be due
on September 1, 2014.
For further information about the submission guidelines,
please email us at submit@gutsmagazine.ca
Yours,
GUTS
GUTS: http://gutsmagazine.ca/
GUTS Call for Papers: http://gutsmagazine.ca/4502/call-submissions-issue-3/
**END**
‘Human Herbs’ –
a song by Cold Hands & Quarter Moon: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Au-vyMtfDAs
Posted here by Glenn
Rikowski
Glenn Rikowski @ Academia: http://independent.academia.edu/GlennRikowski
Glenn Rikowski @ ResearchGate: http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Glenn_Rikowski?ev=hdr_xprf
Online Publications
at The Flow of Ideas: http://www.flowideas.co.uk/?page=pub&sub=Online%20Publications%20Glenn%20Rikowski
The Flow of Ideas: http://www.flowideas.co.uk
All that is Solid
for Glenn Rikowski: http://rikowski.wordpress.com
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