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CFP - Rasanblaj Fanm: Stories of Haitian Womanhood, Past, Present and Future - British Association for American Studies

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CFP - Rasanblaj Fanm: Stories of Haitian Womanhood, Past, Present and Future

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Call For Papers: Rasanblaj Fanm: Stories of Haitian Womanhood, Past, Present and Future

Institute for Black Atlantic Research, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United Kingdom, 10-12 July 2024

Haitian women are regarded as the poto mitan (central pillar) of Haitian society. As caregivers, warriors, healers, artisans, traders, cultivators, manbos, storytellers, companions and agitators, they have been vital agents in shaping the fortunes of Haiti’s revolutionary anticolonial encounters and its quest for sovereignty and legitimation as an independent state. However, this term of veneration conceals diverse forms of political, social and discursive exclusion that women in Haiti and across the dyaspora confront in the present, and the myriad forms of silence and neglect to which they have been subjected in the historical record.

The little that we know of the women whose courage, ferocity, resilience and generosity paved a course for independence, postcolonial statehood and the universal and permanent abolition of slavery in 1804 is often shrouded in mythology, which, as Colin Dayan has highlighted, “not only erases these women but forestalls our turning to [their] real lives.” Moreover, these legendary “sheroes” of Haiti’s past have often been exploited for the sake of political opportunity, symbolically deployed in the service of nationalist sleights of hand which obscure the precarity, insecurity, exploitation and vulnerability of Haitian women in the present. Piecing together the scattered fragments produced by the violence and ruptures of the colonialist archive and the continuing violence, neglect and co-optation of the dominant political oligarchy necessitates a form of rasanblaj, or (re)assembly, a practice advocated by Gina Athena Ulysse which “demands that we consider and confront the limited scope of segregated frameworks to explore what remains excluded in this landscape that is scorched yet full of life, riddled with inequities and dangerous and haunting memories.” Through rasanblaj, multiple modalities and disciplinary perspectives offer pathways of intersection.

This conference invites opportunities to (re)assemble narratives, theorisations, performances, mobilisations and representations of Haitian womanhood, past, present and future. It welcomes proposals for 15-20-minute presentations from scholars, artists, activists, performers, creators and organisers that grapple with these diverse assemblages of Haitian womanhood. Potential topics of discussion include (but are not limited to):

  • (Under)representations of women in histories of the Haitian Revolution
  • Literary, artistic and filmic re-imaginings of Haiti’s revolutionary “sheroes” and women of Haiti’s pre- and post-revolutionary history
  • Haitian women as creators of art, literature, film, music and dance
  • Haitian women as subjects in art, literature, film and other media
  • The history of the feminist movement in Haiti
  • Haitian girlhood and education: where it’s been, where it is, where it’s going
  • The restavek system in Haiti and its particular impact on girls and young women
  • Land-tillers and Haiti’s moun andeyo
  • Makers, artisans and Madan Sara
  • Women and culinary traditions in Haiti
  • Cultural veneration of women icons and the notion of the poto mitan
  • Haitian women in the dyaspora
  • Manbos and the primacy of women in Vodou
  • Women elders, matriarchs and oral storytellers
  • Fashion icons and beauty queens from Haiti’s past and present
  • Women’s fashion in Haiti and the dyaspora
  • Women-led social justice organisations in Haiti and across the dyaspora
  • Stateswomen and women of the judiciary in Haiti

This event marks 220 years of Haitian independence, 200 years since Marie-Louise Christophe, first and only Queen of Haiti, departed Britain, and 90 years since the end of the U.S. Occupation of Haiti (1915-1934). It also celebrates the tenth anniversary of the Institute for Black Atlantic Research, whose record of hosting international events celebrating Haitian history and culture is established. As a radically transnational, interdisciplinary, collaborative, anticolonial and feminist endeavour, we aspire to create a conference that is inclusive in its structure and its mode of dissemination, and will make provisions for presenters in English, French and (where possible) in Kreyòl. Though we hope to assemble as many delegates in one common space as possible for this ambitious project, we recognise the challenges and potential barriers to travel (especially for our Haitian contingent). For this reason, and in order to promote inclusive discussions, there will be some opportunities for remote and hybrid participation.*

A selection of the accepted papers may be invited to further develop their research for inclusion in an edited volume that may be produced after the conference.

Confirmed keynote speakers include the Haitian-born artist Patricia Brintle, Ayitian Ourstorian and Vodouvi Professor Bayyinah Bello and filmmaker and journalist Etant Dupain

Proposals for papers, panels, film/video presentations, workshops, and roundtables are due by 13 January 2024. Please submit an abstract of up to 300 words (these should be “blinded”, with names and affiliations removed, for peer review), along with a separate document containing a short biography of no more than 200 words (to include name and institutional/organisational affiliation if applicable). Proposals for complete panels of three speakers (or up to a maximum of four, keeping in mind that sessions will run for 90 minutes) are also welcomed. For full panel submissions, a designated group representative should collate abstracts and speaker biographies. All materials should be sent to the conference organisers, Dr M. Stephanie Chancy and Dr Nicole Willson at rasanblajfanm@gmail.com by the deadline date.

* Proposals should indicate language requirements and any needs for remote participation.

Conference Committee

Dr M. Stephanie Chancy, Digital Library of the Caribbean, University of Florida

Dr Nathan Dize, Washington University in St. Louis

Dr Rachel Douglas, University of Glasgow

Dr Raphael Hoermann, Institute for Black Atlantic Research, University of Central Lancashire

Isabelle Dupuy, Writer and Trustee of the London Library

Dr Alyssa Goldstein Sepinwall, California State University San Marcos

Dr Nicole L. Willson, Institute for Black Atlantic Research, University of Central Lancashire