What is BSSN?

The Brighton and Sussex Sexualities Network (BSSN) is an inter-university research network aimed at supporting research and researchers who work on issues of human sexuality within the Universities of Brighton and Sussex and the wider Sussex area.

LGBT Events

Friday, 11 April 2008

A day-conference at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, UCL

http://queering-cee.blogspot.com

Sexualities, as keys to identity and as part of the public language of the nation, are a controversial feature of post-communist transition in Central and Eastern Europe. Radical political changes have led to the emergence of new social actors, such as the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) movement, the airing of new public discourses surrounding sexuality, as well as the eruption of new social conflicts and divisions.

This day-conference devoted to the study of non-normative (or 'queer') sexualities in Central-Eastern Europe is a forum to reflect on the diversity of issues and approaches in this new research area. The scarcity of scholarly work concentrating on this region, in queer theory, in studies of gay and lesbian experience in the past and present, and in the sexual politics of the marginalised, is a significant gap. Indeed the emergence of sexualities studies for Central-Eastern Europe challenges canonical theoretical and interpretive frameworks grounded in North American and Western European contexts.

'Queering Central and Eastern Europe: National features of sexual identities’ adopts an interdisciplinary approach, bringing together scholars in the social sciences, history, Slavic and other area studies, as well as activists from LGBT communities, to examine the intersection of gender and nation as formative concepts for sexualities.

  • How, for example, did the emergence of revised national identities after 1989 overlap with new conceptions of non-normative gender and sexuality?
  • What were the local dimensions of the ‘lesbian and gay question', and why did they emerge?
  • How did queer sexualities in this region evolve historically, and what influence does that historical legacy impart today?
  • What is unique about Central and Eastern European sexual identities, when compared within the region and with Western and other non-Western formations?

REPRESENTATIONS
Djurdja Knezevic (Croatia): Nationalism, war, women, and men in Croatia.
Anna Gruszczynska (Aston, Birmingham): Education, Provocation or Inspiration? Exploring Meanings of LGBT Marches and Pride Parades in Poland.
Francesca Stella (Glasgow): " …they approached them and asked, are you tema?": Lesbian sexuality, visibility and everyday space in Ul'ianovsk, Russian Federation.

HISTORIES
Adi Kuntsman (Lancaster): “Beyond the Borders of the Human"
Same-sex Relations in the Gulag Memoirs.
Mark Cornwall (Southampton): City of Vice and Victims: Prague's Queer Space 1939-1945.
Dan Healey (Swansea): Hinterland as Sexualised Space: Sodomy and Homosociability in Leningrad Province in the 1950s.

EAST/WEST
Nicola Mai (London Metropolitan): Minor mobilities: the life trajectories of Albanian and Romanian young men migrating and selling sex.
Robert Kulpa (UCL SSEES): Queer Nation, or Why should we study nationalism with queer theories.
Joana Mizielińska (Warsaw University): Politics of decency and the limits of queer representation in Poland.

FOR DETAILS PLS VISIT:
HTTP://QUEERING-CEE.BLOGSPOT.COM