lundi 28 mars 2022

Histoires globales des menstruations et de la ménopause

Global Histories of Menstruation and Menopause

Call for Submissions
to a Special Issue of the Journal of Women’s History


In the second decade of the twenty-first century, a wide range of social movements across the Americas, Europe, Africa, and the Asia-Pacific have highlighted the injustices and inequalities faced by those who menstruate and initiated public discussions of this physiological phenomenon long rendered private, shameful, or hidden. Similar conversations on menopause—the cessation of menstruation—challenging its stigma as “unspeakable” are slowly gaining ground as the global pandemic has forced old and new discussions on the intersections of gender, race, health, and working conditions for waged and non-waged laborers.

Modern biomedical interpretations generally understand menarche (the onset of menstruation) and menopause as the physiological bookends of an individual’s reproductive potential and abilities, and as such, the menstrual cycle is often embedded in narratives of giving birth. The history of reproduction has garnered significant academic attention and study. Scholars have explored the intricate intertwining of the social, cultural, political, scientific, spiritual (among others) interests on how humans are born (or not), and the global connections and encounters of these ideas, as seen in recent works by Heywood et al eds. Reproduction: Antiquity to the Present Day (Cambridge University Press, 2018). Menstruation—its commencement, absence, and cessation—has been understood in diverse ways over time and space, yet the myriad interpretations also share similarities that provokes further analyses of physiological functions and menstruation’s importance to the construction of cis- and transgender identities. Anthropologists have explored the ritual and symbolic manifestations of menstruation and menopause, yet numerous intellectual voids remain to be filled by historical narratives and analyses.

It is within this context that the Journal for Women’s History is calling for papers focusing on the histories of menstruation and menopause around the globe. This special issue aims to highlight the historical changes, continuities, diversities, and experiences of those who menstruate, and those who do not. We are looking for historical studies that incorporate transdisciplinary and transnational approaches and explore hitherto underexplored questions, themes, peoples, and regions.

This special issue invites submissions that consider, but are by no means limited to, the following thematic approaches involving menstruation and menopause:

· History of emotions and senses

· History of material and design technologies

· History of bodily and biohacking practices

· History of pharmaceuticals and local/indigenous medicaments

· History of literary and visual cultural productions

· History of intersexual, transsexual, and other non-menstruators

· History of racial socio-cultural constructions, ethnicity, and medicalization

· History of labor movements, labor standards, industrial hygiene, and legislations

· History of consumption cultures, media, and advertisement

· History of economic and political legislations, policies, and infrastructures

· History of science and technologies

Please submit an abstract (300 words max) and a CV by MARCH 30, 2022 to: JWHGuestEditor@gmail.com

The submission deadline for completed articles will be Oct 30, 2022.

The Journal of Women’s History is a quarterly, peer-reviewed scholarly journal published by Johns Hopkins University Press that showcases the dynamic international field of women’s history. The JWH features cutting-edge scholarship from around the globe in all historical periods. For more information, see: https://jwomenshistory.org/.

JWH Style Guide: https://jwomenshistory.org/jwh-style-guide/

Please contact Special Issue Editor Izumi Nakayama (nakayama@hku.hk, Hong Kong Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Hong Kong) with any questions.

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