- Description
- Date
- Info
- Link
CfP: Queer Pasts: What’s Queer in Queer History
The international conference Queer Pasts: What’s Queer in Queer History aims to discuss and critically explore the “queer” in queer and trans history. We invite dialogues about and engagement with methodologies, temporalities, theories and analytical approaches that interpret, imagine and preserve queer and trans history as queer.
Queer history commonly refers to the study and documentation of the lives, experiences, cultures, and struggles and joys of LGBTQ+ people in the past. It covers a wide range of topics, including how gender and sexual diversity has been expressed, understood, and regulated in different societies, as well as how political, social, and cultural movements have sought to challenge discrimination and promote LGBTQ+ rights. In this sense, queer history is about carving out the contours of queer and trans lives, communities and cultures of the past.
Queer history is about challenging traditional ideas about archives and representation. Much of queer history has been erased, suppressed, silenced, or ignored by mainstream historical narratives. Queer historians have had to work creatively to uncover queer histories, using letters, diaries, court records, photographs, and oral histories to reconstruct the lives of LGBTQ+ people.
CALL FOR PAPERS
We invite individual papers and panels including but not limited to explore the following:
• What makes history "queer" beyond the documentation of LGBTQ+ figures and events?
• How can we locate and study queer in historical times, where same-sex relationships and same-sex sexual practices did not have particular names nor carried particular associations with them? How can we locate and study trans in historical times, where trans identities, practices and communities had other names and forms? How can we talk about LGBTQ+ history when historical subjects and societies did not use modern LGBTQ+ identities or terms?
• How can queer historians use archives that reflect oppressive or discriminatory structures (such as medical and criminal records) to tell the stories of queer and trans people? How do we methodologically engage with such archives and how do we tell queer stories of the past without reiterating the violence, inherited in the archive and historical sources?
• How do queer and trans histories intersect with other axes of identity, such as race, class, and disability? How have histories of slavery, colonialism, and imperialism shaped modern understandings of gender and sexuality?
• How can queer history disrupt linear historical narratives that portray progress from repression to liberation? How can we work with queer temporalities in history research?
• How do queer historians address the erasure, silence, and suppression of LGBTQ+ people and communities in archives? How do we provide voice to silenced individuals and groups?
• What does a ‘queering’ of contemporary historical studies and history research entail, for example, queering histories of the welfare state, transnational connections, or popular culture?
• What new historiographical methods and approaches are needed to uncover and accurately represent queer histories? Relatedly, which types of empirical sources can be fruitful to uncover new queer histories? E.g., photographs, fiction literature, folk tales, etc.
Send abstract of 300 – 500 words (excl. references) to queerhistoryconference@hum.ku.dk.
Panels should comprise 3-4 individual contributions. Please write a panel rationale (of 300 – 500 words, ex. references) along with 3-4 individual panel paper abstracts (each of 300 – 500 words, ex. references).
Send to queerhistoryconference@hum.ku.dk.
Queer history is about challenging traditional ideas about archives and representation. Much of queer history has been erased, suppressed, silenced, or ignored by mainstream historical narratives. Queer historians have had to work creatively to uncover queer histories, using letters, diaries, court records, photographs, and oral histories to reconstruct the lives of LGBTQ+ people.
CALL FOR PAPERS
We invite individual papers and panels including but not limited to explore the following:
• What makes history "queer" beyond the documentation of LGBTQ+ figures and events?
• How can we locate and study queer in historical times, where same-sex relationships and same-sex sexual practices did not have particular names nor carried particular associations with them? How can we locate and study trans in historical times, where trans identities, practices and communities had other names and forms? How can we talk about LGBTQ+ history when historical subjects and societies did not use modern LGBTQ+ identities or terms?
• How can queer historians use archives that reflect oppressive or discriminatory structures (such as medical and criminal records) to tell the stories of queer and trans people? How do we methodologically engage with such archives and how do we tell queer stories of the past without reiterating the violence, inherited in the archive and historical sources?
• How do queer and trans histories intersect with other axes of identity, such as race, class, and disability? How have histories of slavery, colonialism, and imperialism shaped modern understandings of gender and sexuality?
• How can queer history disrupt linear historical narratives that portray progress from repression to liberation? How can we work with queer temporalities in history research?
• How do queer historians address the erasure, silence, and suppression of LGBTQ+ people and communities in archives? How do we provide voice to silenced individuals and groups?
• What does a ‘queering’ of contemporary historical studies and history research entail, for example, queering histories of the welfare state, transnational connections, or popular culture?
• What new historiographical methods and approaches are needed to uncover and accurately represent queer histories? Relatedly, which types of empirical sources can be fruitful to uncover new queer histories? E.g., photographs, fiction literature, folk tales, etc.
Send abstract of 300 – 500 words (excl. references) to queerhistoryconference@hum.ku.dk.
Panels should comprise 3-4 individual contributions. Please write a panel rationale (of 300 – 500 words, ex. references) along with 3-4 individual panel paper abstracts (each of 300 – 500 words, ex. references).
Send to queerhistoryconference@hum.ku.dk.
Submitted by: NIKK
Tweet
Share
Related events
22.05.2025 - 23.05.2025
Copenhagen, Denmark
Queer Pasts: What’s Queer in Queer History
The international conference Queer Pasts: What’s Queer in Queer History aims to discuss and critically explore the “queer” in queer and trans history. We invite dialogues about and engagement with methodologies, temporalities, theories and analytical approaches that interpret, imagine and preserve queer and trans history as queer.
Read moreThe international conference Queer Pasts: What’s Queer in Queer History aims to discuss and critically explore the “queer” in queer and trans history. We invite dialogues about and engagement with methodologies, temporalities, theories and analytical approaches that interpret, imagine and preserve queer and trans history as queer.
Conference