Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women’s Writing (CCWW) Seminar Series.
As a concept, metaphor, and sensation, ‘heat’ evokes some of the most urgent issues of the contemporary period. We are currently faced with the climate, energy, and cost-of-living crises, in which we inhabit the paradox of cold, unheated homes in an ever-warming global climate. Bound up with ecological and economic injustice, heat is unevenly distributed within society and across the planet. Heat is also something that we feel, on our skin and beneath it, as our bodies face illness and change: from fevers and flushes, to burning pain and blushing cheeks. It is equally an affective and sensory term that connotes love, sex, and anger. This particular triad of feminist concerns has renewed significance in the wake of the #MeToo movement, and undergirds current protest movements demanding access to healthcare, contraception, abortion, and safety for everyone, including non-binary and trans people.
In this series, the conceptual focus on heat brings together speakers whose research covers such topics as illness and ageing; sex and intimacy; protest and rage; and the global climate emergency. Our speakers explore contemporary women’s writing across languages and cultures, and work in and between such fields as feminist, gender, and sexuality studies; postcolonial studies; affect studies; and the medical and environmental humanities. The seminars in this series will move between the cellular and the planetary, and the personal and the collective, asking how heat figures in contemporary literature by women from across the globe.
Wednesday 19 April 2023, 5–6:30pm, Zoom
‘The Sun Never Sets: On (Post)colonialism and Global Heating’
‘Claude Lorris’s Dans le Moghreb en flammes (1921): “Heating up” the French Colonial Conquest of Morocco’
Siham Bouamer (University of Cincinnati)
‘“Seeing through the end of the world”: Floods and Futurity in the work of Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’
Rebecca Macklin (University of Edinburgh)
'Beyond Hot Spots: Global Climates and Ordinary Crises in Recent Haitian Writing’
Kasia Mika (Queen Mary University of London)
All are welcome to attend this free seminar being held online via zoom. Booking is essential to receive the online joining link. To register and attend this final seminar in the series taking place on 19 April at 17:00 BST please follow the Book Now link at the top of this page.
Series schedule:
Launch Event: Wednesday 8 March 2023, 4:30–6:30, Zoom
‘Burning Up: Reading Hot Bodies’
‘Getting Heated: Rage as Feminist Praxis’
Wednesday 19 April 2023, 5–6:30pm, Zoom
‘The Sun Never Sets: On (Post)colonialism and Global Heating’
Wednesday 26 April 2023, 5–6:30pm, Zoom (Rescheduled from 15 March)
‘It’s Getting Hot in Here: On Sex, Pleasure, and Intimacy’
This series is organised by Alexandra Pugh (alexandra.pugh@kcl.ac.uk) and Elly Walters (elly.walters@mod-langs.ox.ac.uk).