This event has now finished.
  • Date and time: Thursday 5 December 2024, 6pm to 8pm
  • Location: In-person only
    Room SLB/118, Spring Lane Building, Campus West, University of York (Map)
  • Audience: Open to alumni, staff, students, the public
  • Admission: Free admission, booking required

Event details

Centre for Women's Studies 40th Anniversary Lecture

Feminist, queer and critical race work, as well as the people associated with those fields, are under consistent attack within universities and communities. Attacks on migrants, gender non-conformists and trans people, queers and feminists are on the rise transnationally, underpinned by securitised states and militaries, religious fundamentalists, and far-right ‘anti-gender’ idealogues. What resources do we have in queer feminist work that will help us counter these developments, resist the negative impact of these attacks, and strengthen community responses to aggression?

This lecture will introduce a new project that seeks to expand queer feminist methodologies as a way to intervene in this often horrifically hostile present.

From Prof. Hemmings: “I want to propose two tactics here - recitation, which is a methodology I initially offered in 2011 to challenge received histories of feminism and universalism, a much maligned epistemological position – as interventions to resist the certainties of ‘anti-gender’, homophobic, transphobic and racist aggression. With the first tactic, I want to ‘recite’ a feminist history of ‘sex’ to incorporate the fields’ materialist, radical and black or decolonial interrogations of it as a site of struggle. Here I will work with Christine Delphy, Katherine MacKinnon and Hortense Spillers to think about ‘sex’ as having a history very far from claims that essentialise it. With the second, I revisit Sedgwick’s understanding of the ‘epistemology of the closet’ as a universal condition for knowledge claims, suggesting ways in which that impulse might be expanded productively to think about affective dissonance as a universal condition for solidarity politics in our grim times. With this lecture, I want to honour the radical thought we have, and the histories of pedagogy that have laid the ground for present resistance.”

About York’s Centre for Women’s Studies

Founded in 1984, the Centre for Women's Studies (CWS) at the University of York is among the most well-established bases for feminist and gender-oriented teaching and research, both in the UK and internationally. We deliver unique interdisciplinary Master’s, PhD, and research programmes in the areas of social science, arts and humanities, politics, cultural studies, history, and activism. We also host local and international research fellows and visitors, and maintain projects and relationships with both academic and non-academic partners from feminist organisations within and beyond the UK.

Drawing on social science and arts-based methods, our programmes explore and critique gendered ways of knowing while harnessing the power of transnational, intersectional, and inclusive trans-/feminist knowledge and solidarity. Learn more at https://www.york.ac.uk/womens-studies/.

Banner Photo by Barbara Zandoval on Unsplash

About the speaker

Clare Hemmings is Professor of Feminist Theory and CWS alumna. She has been working at the Department of Gender Studies at the London School of Economics since 1999.

She has two main areas of research focus – feminist and queer studies – and is particularly interested in thinking through the relationship between these, as well as the ways in which both fields have been institutionalized at national and international levels. Clare has published 3 books – Bisexual Spaces (2002); Why Stories Matter (2011) and Considering Emma Goldman (2018). In all her work she’s interested in form as well as content, and in interdisciplinary and creative methods. Clare has recently been gathering family stories for a project Inheritance: a Memory Archive. Combining fiction and memoir, the project foregrounds the moments in family dynamics that challenge what we think we know about gender roles, sexuality, race and citizenship. She has also been actively engaged in writing against ‘anti-gender’ mobilisations, often as part of the network ‘Transnational “Anti-Gender” Movements and Resistance' with Sumi Madhok.

Clare is now beginning work on a new project entitled Feminist Knowledge Struggles: Telling Stories Differently, where she proposes translatable methodologies for a range of queer feminist projects to intervene in the categorical and political certainties of the hostile present. It’s this work that she will draw on for the talk.

Venue details

  • Wheelchair accessible
  • Hearing loop