Conferences

Roundtable at AAS 2021 - Theory as reproduction 2: reflections on the history and the contemporary practices of doing feminist anthropology in Australia.

Building on the history of feminist anthropology roundtable in 2019, this roundtable invites emerging feminist anthropologists to join the conversation with established scholars to reflect on the history and contemporary practices of doing feminist anthropology in Australia.

In the 2019 roundtable, “Theory as Reproduction,” five established feminist anthropologists reflected on their own experiences during fieldwork and in the university. Informed by feminist perspectives, the panel served as an opportunity – in a format that combined oral history – to take stock of the gender relations that animate the reproduction of anthropological knowledge. Looking “through the maternal line,” the work of remembering what anthropology has been honed our attention on the inequalities that are sustained through knowledge practices in the present. Despite many changes, tracking the history and future of a feminist tradition in Australian anthropology remains a vital mode of interrogating the exclusions that our knowledge practices entail.

Two years on, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have further transformed the university as a site for contestations over gender and power. As feminist scholars have observed, the pandemic exacerbated gendered patterns of inclusion and exclusion in the production of knowledge. How might anthropological knowledge, starting with a focus on knowledge practices within anthropology, establish critical vocabularies with which to address the present moment? Building on the 2019 roundtable and The Familiar Strange two-part podcast based on it, this roundtable invites emerging feminist anthropologists to join the conversation with established scholars to continue the discussion on the work of producing theory and the labour involved in its reproduction through the maternal line.

https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/aas2021/p/10802

Keynote at Spring Encounters - Queer, feminist, and other critical theories: new lenses for urban spaces

I am delighted to be giving a keynote presentation at the 19th October Spring Encounters conference - on “Queer, feminist, and other critical theories: new lenses for urban spaces.”

Further details are available below. Thank you to APR for the kind invitation!

“Run by Alliance for Praxis Research (APR), one of our intentions is to nurture transdisciplinary collaborations across faculties, research programs and labs, as academics are often confronted with the challenges to break through disciplinary and institutional silos. That is significant for students and early careers, particularly when coming from overseas, who are not familiar with universities’ organisation of research centres and local networks of scholars - especially in Melbourne, where several leading universities are located but improvements on their interconnections are still much needed.

As a way to encourage more vibrant exchanges and collaborative knowledge production between fellows with related research interests, The Alliance (or APR) is organising and promoting the 2021 Spring Encounters, a space for HDRs and ECRs to network through a series of presentations led by a panel where HDRs can present and discuss their research with a broader audience. It is an HDR-led event for HDR candidates, hosted by Monash Art, Design and Architecture (MADA) and facilitated by Monash Graduate Association (MGA).

https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/2021-spring-encounters-tickets-163318246271

Cultural Studies Association Conference Panel

I am presenting at the Cultural Studies Association (USA) on Saturday 12:00-1:00pm CST, 12 June 2021.

https://docs.google.com/document/d/18HEW_27VDtM16T-CtSQkqi6ZSH8nTQ_nRAT15qp1G8c/edit#

The Force of Images: Digital Media, Bodies, and Data in Southeast Asia

Chair: Benjamin Hegarty, The University of Melbourne

Respondent: Tom Boellstorff, University of California Irvine

Indonesian Youth Protesting for/with Social Media

Annisa Beta, The University of Melbourne

Violent Visibilities: Campus Sexual Misconduct Facilitated by Technology in Singapore

Michelle H. S. Ho, National University of Singapore

The Biosocial Body: Data and Visibility Among MSM in Indonesian HIV Programs

Benjamin Hegarty, The University of Melbourne

This panel considers the force of images in shaping the meanings attached to bodies and embodiment in contemporary Southeast Asia. Throughout the region, political upheaval, contestation and technological developments related to the digital are producing new relationships between bodies and the meanings attached to their representation. In this environment, moral harms are transformed into physiological risk in new ways, resulting in emergent forms of exclusion and claims for inclusion. This is transforming both the possibilities and the modes through which claims to autonomy and representation unfold. In an era of new appropriation and force of images what kinds of political mobilisation are possible? What “boundary objects” act as an interface between them? What new models for critical engagement with “data” as and with visual culture can we consider? And how do these operate in and between Asian contexts with specific political cultures rooted in visual culture and appearances, frequently tied to the body and its appearances?

This panel addresses these questions across two intersecting domains through which to consider the force of images: “social media” and “data.” Investigating the way that images are generating new forms of political investment and engagement tied to the body, each paper offers insights into emergent political investments in Southeast Asia. Michelle Ho’s paper addresses the generative role that “violent visibilities” — encompassing data gathering and their life in social media — have had in creating new possibilities for mobilizing against sexual harassment on Singaporean campuses. Annisa Beta’s paper reflects on the “jocular” use of images on social media by young people — in the form of memes and photographs — as an influential political vocabulary in Indonesia’s fraught postauthoritarian political landscape. Benjamin Hegarty considers the way that data-driven cultures of transparency in global programs for HIV targeting “men wo have sex with men” intersect with extant cultural meanings tied to the body, requiring new forms of discipline.

In each case, digital media and data do not live “outside” of culture or of the realm of the body, but emerges from and through it. By drawing on data that illustrates examples of the “force of images” against broader patterns of social and political change in Southeast Asia, this panel will offer insights into the intersections between digital media, data and the body. Remaining attuned to the cultural meanings of images not as a representation but a force in the world refuses a teleological view of cultures of data and the digital, instead opening new horizons for political mobilization and critique.