Sensory heritages & sensitive memories in the Balkans

Participation of the Culture-Borders-Gender/Lab in the 3rd Summer School (June 30th – July 5th in Sofia and Plovdiv), on the topic: “Sensory Heritages & Sensitive Memories in the Balkans”. This is an interdisciplinary and interuniversity collaboration between universities from France (EHESS, Lyon II, Aix-Marseille), the University of Sofia, Zadar, Slovenia, and Plovdiv, with the support of the French School of Athens.

The international summer school Sensory heritages & sensitive memories in the Balkans (1-5 July, Sofia and Plovdiv) gathers lecturers and students in different disciplines, addressing heritage and memory issues in the Balkan societies through the senses, sensoriality, sensibility, sensitivity. It articulates methodological and theoretical proposals based on concrete case studies and mobilizing senses not only as an object of study, but also as a modality of knowledge (including the use of different media). It will enhance innovative working formats and activities favoring shared experiences, reflections and discussions, beyond disciplinary boundaries and specializations. In situ sensory proposals and non-conventional approaches are encouraged, as well as concrete outputs at individual and collective levels.

https://www.academia.edu/121586742/Sensory_heritages_sensitive_memories_in_the_Balkans_program?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR2hJMuOZ0CaOYO4OoBGMNJX1zCljkHdnTC-VbwhZWxJilG_CMP-vj4c3f4_aem_wNVzESJm3_HHyRQ4I8CysA

Call for applications for GlobalMed PhD workshop from November 18 to 22, 2024

The Culture-Borders-Gender/Lab, of the Department of Balkan, Slavic and Oriental Studies of the University of Macedonia, as a member of the GlobalMed network, participates in the organization of the first doctoral workshop of the GlobalMed network “Did you say global? Objects, Methods and Limits of the Global Approach in Mediterranean Studies” to be held at the MMSH (Aix-en-Provence) and the Mucem (Marseille) from November 18 to 22, 2024.
This workshop, organized in collaboration with Mucem, is aimed at doctoral candidates and young postdoctoral researchers from the GlobalMed partner research teams.  Candidates from all disciplines should demonstrate an interest in the global approach as part of their doctoral or post-doctoral research topic.

The goals of the workshop are to provide participants with:

  • An in-depth look at the concept of “global”: history of the concept and issues of scale, epistemological issues, major publications/works, implementation of interdisciplinarity,
  • A reflection on the objects of study of the global approach and the methods and concepts mobilized in their respective fields of research and in other disciplines,
  • A reflection on the limits and critiques of the global approach.

Details of the call for proposals can be found in the attached document.

The deadline for applications is June 28, 2024, and applications should be sent to the e-mail address: maria-jose.jarrin-yanez@univ-amu.fr

Presentation of editions in Thessaloniki, Steki Metanaston, 20 Valaoritou, Thursday 23/5/2024, 7-9pm.

As members of the @Decolonize Hellas collective and the Culture Borders Gender Laboratory we will be happy to see you at the presentation of our publications (with the support of the Rosa Luxembourg Foundation-Greece Branch) on 23/5/24, where Anthropology, among other related disciplines, debates/interacts academically and cinematically on coloniality/decolonization in the Migrant House. The event will take place on the eve of the opening of the 2nd Conference of the SKAE Association of Social Anthropologists of Greece – SKAE in Thessaloniki, in the co-organization of which the Laboratory & Studio of the BSAS-PaMaK Departments Department of Balkan, Slavic & Oriental Studies of the University of Macedonia and IA-APTH participate , Department of History-Archaeology AUTH.

https://www.facebook.com/events/1466267190649131

http://tiny.cc/1603yz

Webinar: (De)facing Patriarchies at the Mediterranean Borders: the decolonial at stake for Mizrahi and Basque feminisms

Mural painting on the walls of an old factory in a suburb of San Sebastián by the Dominican graffiti-artist Eme. Source: https://basquemurals.wordpress.com/tag/feminism/

Date: December 13, 2021
Time: 18:30
Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89460449727?pwd=a2lITDBDUGJta2h3N21aY0RKQndrUT09

Organizer/Moderator: Fotini Tsibiridou (University of Macedonia)
Presentations:
·        Maggie Bullen (University of the Basque Country)
·        Smadar Lavie (University of California, Davis)
Discussants:
·        Christina Grammaticopoulou (University of Macedonia)
·        Sissy Theodosiou (University of Ioannina
Concept
This webinar would like to open the discussion on minority feminisms at the Mediterranean borders and its surrounding areas (i.e. the Balkans, the Caucasus, the Iberian peninsula, the Anatolia, the North Africa). We would like to engage with a comparative setting upon critical deconstructions of patriarchies, defaced through decolonial feminist struggles and possibilities. By putting the decolonial at stake for Basque, Kurdish, Mizrahi, Black Tunisian and other plural feminisms, we are locating the intersectional social struggles around gender, ethnicity, minority, class and race at the center of the discussion. We also pay attention to those feminisms’ praxis for social equality and emancipation, to their creative returns to the local knowledges and cosmologies, to their embodied habitus as social agents engaging with mainstream and global feminist discourses, to their advocacy of human rights, as well as to their replies on the challenges posed by art and digital technology. The analogies we can draw and the possibilities we can envision in those minority feminisms that are struggling to engage with dominant feminist critique and to find their own path to emancipation are setting an interesting decolonial framework against every dominant feminist attempt. The Greek feminisms, as any other kind of feminism, whether it is characterized as white, hegemonic, radical, liberal, activist or academic, should turn their attention to those minority decolonial feminist agendas and voices, as well as to other counter-publics and creative initiatives facing discrimination, racism, inequality and contempt. A decolonized feminism is not simply an annex of minority voices to an existing project. It is a reconsideration of feminism through these voices, acknowledging the limitations of white feminism in considering their struggles. At the same time, it questions the existing representations of colonized women that have effectively invisibilized them throughout history, while also providing the tools and practices to address inequalities and exceed them in praxis, from a position of agency in the local communities and their social struggles.

The Mizrahi feminism in Israel and the Basque feminism in the Iberian peninsula are setting an interesting comparative context to discuss the minority status and the gender perspective emerging through multiple discriminations and exclusions that shape a palimpsest of patriarchies, based on  social  inequality, race, language, religion, cultural repression, settler colonialism, national borders, state nationalism and bureaucracy, white male supremacy and structural violence, epistimicide etc. Patriarchy, as a matrix of coloniality, inscribes multiple submissions, consent, subversions and revolts, beyond those inscribed to female bodies, as the first colonized bodies. Following the paths of such minority feminist praxis struggling with specific patriarchal complexities, we could multiply our reflexive and decolonial stance on gender and feminist methodologies, and go beyond the advocacy of identity rights and/or performing activism on stage or within digital spaces. 

The webinar is a follow up of the thematic “Decolonizing Gender – Feminist Methodologies,” started in the symposium of our initiative Decolonize Hellas, see here

 https://decolonizehellas.org/en/defacing-patriarchies-at-the-mediterranean-borders-the-decolonial-at-stake-for-mizrahi-and-basque-feminisms/