Gender, War and Coerced Labour

Gender, War and Coerced Labour

Veranstalter
Anders Ahlbäck, Christine de Matos, Fia Sundevall, Julia Heinemann
PLZ
1020
Ort
Wien
Land
Austria
Vom - Bis
11.01.2021 - 15.04.2021
Deadline
15.04.2021
Von
Julia Heinemann, Institut für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, Universität Wien

The special issue of Labour History will engage with labour and war in its many gendered forms, and will note that much of this labour is indeed coerced to various degrees. The time period is broad, inclusive of the early modern and modern periods, and there are no geographical limitations.

Gender, War and Coerced Labour

In recent decades there have been growing bodies of literature on gender and war, on war labour, and on various forms and degrees of labour coercion. Yet rarely have these areas – gender, coercion and war labour – been brought together and analyzed as intersecting and interdependent themes. In addition, much of this literature focuses primarily on the 20th century. This special issue of Labor History will examine these intersecting themes from a broader historical perspective to ask new questions and propose new conceptual frameworks to help understand degrees, forms and sites of coercion and their gendered dimensions in connection with war-related work and labour (military or civilian).

Paper proposals for the special issue should address all key themes of (1) gender, (2) war-related labour and (3) coercion. The following text further details the aims of the issue in relation to each of the intersecting themes.

The editors welcome paper proposals that address and historicize the intersections between all key themes: gender, war labour and coercion. The time period is roughly the 17th-21st centuries and there are no restrictions on geographical area.

Some general examples of how contributions might address all key themes include:

- Gendered and racial dimensions of prisoners of war labour camps
- Men, masculinities and compulsory soldiering (conscription, devshirme, press-ganging, veterans, postwar disabilities etc)
- The meanings of voluntarism and coercion in women's war labour
- Intersectional approaches to conscientious objection and/or desertion
- Forms and degrees of coercion in reproductive war labour
- Gendered sites of forced war labour
- Demobilization from coercive war labour.

Please send your 500-word proposal to the editors (contact details below) by 15 April 2021. Ensure your proposal addresses the intersections between all three key themes. The editors will review the proposals and advise of the outcome by May 2021. If you are invited to submit a full paper for further review, the paper will be due by January 2022.

Information about Labor History can be found here: https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/clah20/current.

Contact details for further information and to send your proposal:

Anders Ahlbäck (Åbo Akademi University, Finland, & Stockholm University, Sweden): anders.ahlback@historia.su.se

Christine de Matos (The University of Notre Dame Australia) christine.de.matos@nd.edu.au

Julia Heinemann (University of Vienna, Austria): julia.heinemann@univie.ac.at

Fia Sundevall (Stockholm University, Sweden and the Swedish Labour Movement's Archive & Library): fia.sundevall@ekohist.su.se.

Kontakt

Anders Ahlbäck (Åbo Akademi University, Finland, & Stockholm University, Sweden): anders.ahlback@historia.su.se

Christine de Matos (The University of Notre Dame Australia) christine.de.matos@nd.edu.au

Julia Heinemann (University of Vienna, Austria): julia.heinemann@univie.ac.at

Fia Sundevall (Stockholm University, Sweden and the Swedish Labour Movement's Archive & Library): fia.sundevall@ekohist.su.se.

https://www.worck.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Special_Issue_Gender-War-and-Coerced-Labour_CFP.pdf
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