The uneasy relationship between women and work in
literature is widely studied through the novels published mostly in the 19th
century due to women’s participation to the work force in great numbers, which
was considered as a popular topic for women writers. Particularly female
factory workers and working-class women are particularly depicted in well-known
middle-class writers’ works such as Elizabeth Stuart Phelps’s The Silent Partner
(1871), Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women (1868) and Work (1873), and Lillie
Devereux Blake’s Fettered for Life (1874). Although the criticism of such
novels is the portrayal of mostly working-class white women’s struggle in the
work force, while women of color, unpaid work, voluntary/ social work, working
women and media, and stigmatized work are some of the topics that are neglected
in the scholarship about women and work.
To fill this void, the proposed edited volume aims to
examine the significant relationship between underrepresented woman and work.
We seek critical essays about literary works on woman’s labor written in 20th-
and 21st-century British and American literature and media. As a cross-cultural
study on woman’s work in capitalist economies, the proposed text seeks
contributions that discuss works of neglected, marginalized, and
underrepresented writers and filmmakers and aims to provide an intersectional
approach to previously unconsidered intellectual analysis of non-canonical
authors and genres.
Potential contributions include (but are not limited
to):
- Intersectionality of gender, class, and work
- Works of women of color, indigenous women, post-colonial women, subaltern women
- Social work and philanthropy
- Women’s work and well-being of underrepresented communities
- Stigmatized work
- Unconventional work and odd jobs
- Erotic Labour and sex workers
- Unpaid work
- Mothering and domestic work
- Contemporary representation of working women in media
- Social media and work
- Activism and work
- Discrimination at the work place
- Glass ceiling
- Wage gap
- Working women in academia
- Working from home
- Child workers
- Capitalism, women, and work
Deadline for proposals: July 30, 2020.
Deadline for chapter drafts: November 30, 2020.
How to submit your proposal: Please submit a 250-word
abstract and a short bibliographical note to Dr. Hediye Özkan at
ozkanhediye212@gmail.com. Complete chapter lengths should be between 5000-7000.
Previously published papers cannot be included.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario