- social norms, cultural patterns, life scripts and intimacies as constructed by gender-related fears and anxieties
- gendered figures and (collective) fears
- fears of gendered difference and/or difference encountered by variously gendered subject positions
- fears of intimate citizenship (related to rights, obligations, recognitions and respect around most intimate spheres of life) vs. fears of lacking the fundamental requisites of citizenship in terms of rights, equality and redistribution
- gendered fears of social exclusion, marginalization, invisibility vs. fears of being too exposed and unprotected in public realms and digital networks
- fears of gender binarism, sexual normativity, queer identities
- conservative fears of “gender ideology”
- intimidation, surveillance, and governance put in place in the name of protection
- articulations of gender and fear with landscapes and technologies of surveillance
- correlation between discourses praising (national) security and privileges, and the paranoid and anxious rhetoric in politics
- initiatives that explicitly mobilize gendered narratives of resistance to fear or of overcoming gendered bases of fear
- gender and popular cultures of fear
Lada Čale Feldman, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, Croatia, lcfeldma(at)ffzg(dot)hr
Francesca Maria Gabrielli, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, Croatia, fmgabrie(at)ffzg(dot)hr
Silvana Carotenuto, Università degli studi di Napoli “L’Orientale”, Italy, silcarot(at)gmail(dot)com
Elissa Helms, Central European University, Budapest, Hungary, Helmse(at)ceu(dot)edu
Sandra Prlenda, Centre for Women’s Studies, Zagreb, Croatia, sandra.prlenda(at)zenstud(dot)hr
Durre Ahmed, Centre for the Study of Gender and Culture, Lahore, Pakistan, durresahmed(at)gmail(dot)com Eligibility: IUC courses are conducted at postgraduate level. All interested postgraduate students may apply to participate, although the course targets young scholars and postgraduate students with a defined interest in women’s/gender studies, transnational studies, philosophy, sociology, literary and cultural studies, postcolonialism, or anthropology. The course will be limited to 25 participants (15 students) in order to provide sufficient space for discussion, seminar work and student presentations. Participants must seek funding from their own institutions for the costs of travel, lodging and meals. Limited financial support is available for participants from parts of Eastern Europe and some third countries (please see http://www.iuc.hr/iuc-support.php). The IUC requires a payment of 50 EUR for the Course fee. The working language of the course is English. Application Procedure: Please submit a proposal consisting of a short narrative describing your interest in the topic and your CV. Place all current contact information at the top of your CV. Send submissions by e-mail to fmgabrie(at)ffzg(dot)hr (Francesca Maria Gabrielli) and