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Friday, November 02, 2018
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Women in American Soccer and European Football: Different Roads to Shared GlorySocial Sciences Building, S0.19Runs from Tuesday, May 15 to Wednesday, May 15. Prof Andrei Markovits is at 糖心TV as a Visiting Fellow in IAS. In this seminar he will talk about the opposite paths that women have traversed in the game of Association Football on both sides of the Atlantic. Whereas the women in North America entered a field that was virtually open for them since men busily covered the playing fields and cultural space of the hegemonic team sports of baseball, football (American and Canadian), basketball and ice hockey; their European counterparts were forced to contest what has arguably been the most male-dominated space in European public life throughout much of the 20th century. Both of these roads harbored immense obstacles. Both entailed challenges of their own that these pioneering women had to overcome. However, spurred by the massively important and popular World Cup tournaments, the last three decades have led to a rapprochement of developments on both sides of the Atlantic by catapulting women's soccer onto hitherto unexpected, maybe even unimaginable heights. He has written a book on the subject. Andy is the Karl W Deutsch Collegiate Professor of Comparative Politics and German Studies and an Arthur F Thurnau Professor at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. All are welcome to this seminar. Drinks and nibbles will be available afterwards. No registration necessary. |
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Public Lecture - Nadje Al-Ali: "Feminist dilemmas: How to talk about gender-based violence in relation to the Middle East?"MS.05 (Zeeman Building)Speaker: Prof Nadje Al-Ali (SOAS) Discussant: Dr Nicola Pratt (糖心TV) Event Details: This event is free and open to all (no registration required), and will be followed by a reception. Abstract: The talk will chart my trajectories and dilemmas as a feminist activist/academic to research, write and talk about gender based violence (GBV) with reference in to the Middle East. More specifically I will be drawing on research and activism in relation to Iraq, Turkey as well as Lebanon to map the discursive, political and empirical challenges and complexities linked to scholarship and activism that is grounded in both feminist and anti racist/anti-Islamophobic politics. The political and academic aim to challenge essentialised ideas of Middle Eastern exceptionalism and conflated notions of Muslim, Arab/Middle Eastern culture has clearly been an on-going and familiar motivation for many academics/activists researching and writing on women and gender issues. Maybe more controversially I will reflect on my increasing discomfort with narratives about GBV that focus solely on the impact of external factors, mainly framed with reference to imperialism and neo-liberalism , instead of recognising not simply complicity but pro-active involvement of various local and regional actors. Drawing on my previous work on Iraq, and my more recent work on the Kurdish women's movement and queer feminist activism in Lebanon, I will share the dilemmas and tensions of involved in a transnational feminist knowledge production and activism. Speaker Bio: Nadje Al-Ali is Professor of Gender Studies at the Centre for Gender Studies (CGS), SOAS University of London. She is currently chair of CGS but will leave SOAS to take up a new position in anthropology with reference to the Middle East at Brown University in January. Her main research interests revolve around feminist activism; transnational migration and diaspora moblization; war, conflict and peace; as well as art & cultural studies; mainly with reference to Iraq, Egypt, Turkey and the Kurdish political movement. Her publications include What kind of Liberation? Women and the Occupation of Iraq (2009, University of California Press, co-authored with Nicola Pratt); Women and War in the Middle East: Transnational Perspectives (Zed Books, 2009, co-edited with Nicola Pratt); Iraqi Women: Untold Stories from 1948 to the Present (2007, Zed Books); New Approaches to Migration (ed., Routledge, 2002, with Khalid Koser); Secularism, Gender and the State in the Middle East (Cambridge University Press 2000) as well as numerous book chapters and journal articles. Her co-edited book with Deborah al-Najjar entitled We are Iraqis: Aesthetics & Politics in a Time of War (Syracuse University Press) won the 2014 Arab-American book prize for non-fiction. Her more recent research and publications focus on the Turkish-Kurdish conflict and the Kurdish women鈥檚 movement. Professor Al-Ali was President of the Association of Middle East Women鈥檚 Studies (AMEWS) from 2009-2011. She has been a member of the Feminist Review Collective, and is on the editorial board of Kohl: a journal of body and gender research. She was involved in several projects with Iraqi academics and women鈥檚 rights activists with the aim to facilitate the introduction of women and gender studies and increase evidence-based research capacity in Iraq.
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