2 CFPs — Religion, Spirituality, and Inequality in Communities of Color — Panel and Special Issue

 In All, Call for Papers

Religion, Spirituality, and Inequality in Communities of Color

CALL FOR PAPERS FOR ASSOCIATION OF BLACK SOCIOLOGISTS CONFERENCE PANEL

Religion, Spirituality, and Inequality in Communities of Color

Women, Gender, and Families of Color (WGFC) is sponsoring a panel on Family and Spirituality for the Association of Black Sociologists Annual Conference August 8-10, 2013 at the InterContinental New York Barclay in Manhattan. Submit papers to Assata Zerai (azerai@illinois.edu) for consideration. Papers presented at the panel will be considered for publication in WGFC (please see the Call for Papers for a special issue of the journal below).


CALL FOR PAPERS FOR SPECIAL ISSUE ON RELIGION, SPIRITUALITY, AND INEQUALITY IN COMMUNITIES OF COLOR

Guest Editors
Assata Zerai, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Sandra Weissinger, Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville

Recent public discourse on women’s reproductive rights and abortion, full-time homemakers and working mothers, and LGBTQ partnership and marriage, has highlighted the pervasive role and power of organized religion and spirituality in daily life, as well as related issues of oppression and resistance. For this special issue of Women, Gender, and Families of Color (WGFC), we seek historical, and social science manuscripts that explore the intersectionalities of race, class, gender, sexuality, and other socioeconomic categories in U.S. religious and spiritual settings.

Topics may address, but are not limited to, the following:

1. Spheres of social inequality, such as race, class, gender, and sexuality and their reproduction and/or practice in U.S. religious/spiritual organizations or spaces;

2. The use of resources (e.g. human and financial) to impede or promote the reproduction of inequalities;

3. The meaning of relationships, and the practice of religion/spirituality, in these organizations and spaces for women, men, and LGBTQ communities;

4. The practice of social and/or economic privilege among groups in U.S. religious/spiritual organizations and spaces;

5. U.S. religious/spiritual structures as intransigent sites from which to challenge persisting inequalities; U.S. transnational comparisons on any of the above.

Please send queries and electronic versions of manuscripts (Microsoft Word) to:

Assata Zerai, Ph.D.
Department of Sociology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
E-Mail: azerai@illinois.edu

SUBMISSION DEADLINE: OCTOBER 1, 2013

Manuscripts should be a maximum of 30 pages, inclusive of title page, abstract (150 words or less), main body of text, figures, tables, and Chicago Style, 16th edition references. Only title pages should contain authors’ names, affiliation, phone & FAX numbers, in addition to the email address of the corresponding author.

WGFC is a multidisciplinary journal that centers the study of Black, Latina/o, Indigenous, and Asian American women, gender, and families. In addition to special issues, WGFC welcomes general submissions on a rolling submission policy.

Please visit www.womengenderandfamilies.ku.edu for more information.

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