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En savoir davantage:
The dark times of neoliberalism are not only about the devastation that hyper-capitalism has unleashed on the living and labouring “precariat” (Guy Standing: 2011). It is also about the ways in which neoliberalism and its misogynist vicissitudes in imperial-militarism are appropriating the agendas of left movements, marking the emergence of their own dark sides. Many left movements — particularly the queer and feminist movements — have been at the receiving end of a sophisticated co-option of their politics by the seductions of neoliberal capital and secular law, especially in postcolonial and settler colonial nation-states.
Agency, autonomy and pleasure continue to be the queer-feminist emancipatory buzzwords, just as their articulation is being increasingly decorated in the celebratory attire of individuation and responsibilisation (Cossman: 2007). In addition, collective action in queer-feminist politics, and its alliances with other social justice movements have been deeply fractured through neoliberalism’s assaults, as well as through its complicity in neoliberal agendas. As a result, there is a sense of despair that has overtaken the ranks.
The complicities and contradictions of queer-feminist politics demands a revisiting of its positions as well as a taking account of its failures. This requires a committed engagement in the task of asking and answering (at least attempting to) hard questions: why have progressive political projects produced so little in terms of change and transformation, while the neoliberal market and state legalism appears to be offering so much more to formerly stigmatised and oppressed groups? Is queer-feminism partly to blame for the current disconnect between the goals of its progressive politics and the options afforded by the market? Have we reached a moment when, as Janet Halley has written, it is time to take a break from feminism (Split Decisions, 2006)? Or is it time to take a break from specific kinds of feminism? Anglo-American Feminism? Dominance Feminism? Omnipotent Feminism? Should we also take a break from similar conservative avatars of queer politics: from queer imperialism? Queer Islamophobia? Queer racism? Queer orientalism? From ‘Pinkwashing’ and ‘Homonationalism’? (Puar: 2007; Schulman: 2012)
What are the possibilities then for queer-feminist activism and theory in accounting for failure: To what extent do they remain sites of both excitement as well as trouble? While refusing to relinquish engagement with the terrain of gender or sex, what theoretical possibilities exist to recapture the radical/disruptive or affective dimensions of these notions? How do we rethink our politics in the neoliberal academic space while intellectually engaging with queer-feminism on the one hand, and serving the ends of global capital on the other?
This international conference seeks to address these concerns by entering into a conversation about sex and gender politics in post/settler colonial spaces, in neo-liberal times. While law, legalism and the juridical will remain some of the central sites of critical inquiry, the conference is committedly interdisciplinary in its orientation.