Call for Abstracts: 4S Open Panel “Socionatural Bodyminds: Imagining an Environmental Disability Studies”

RM
rebecca.monteleone@utoledo.edu
Wed, May 3, 2023 2:46 PM

Hi all!

We are now accepting 250 abstract submissions for our open panel, “Socionatural Bodyminds: Imagining an Environmental Disability Studies” at the Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S).

In-person and online presentations welcome!

4S will take place November 8-11, 2023 in Honolulu, HI

Submissions are due May 26. Submit now!

Open Panel Description:

In the age of the Chthulucene (Haraway 2016), we need new epistemic and ontological resources to make sense of the entanglements between our bodyminds and our worlds. This panel seeks innovations at the intersection of disability studies, environmental sociology, and STS. We invite submissions that contextualize disability as embodied experiences derived from interactions with material environments, and likewise, seek to strengthen underdeveloped relationships between disability studies and areas of study that grapple with materiality, knowledge production, and power. Our intention is to (re)ignite discussions regarding the complexity, challenges, and exciting possibilities concurrent with interdisciplinary knowledge production, with environmental disability studies representing one iteration of such projects. Through this panel, we seek to disrupt disciplinary boundaries and naturalized assumptions about our bodyminds, our environments, and our futures in order to open up possibilities for futures that reimagine justice expansively. We explicitly invite innovative and artistic abstracts, in addition to more traditional scholarly presentations. Potential topics could include:

·       Models of understanding disability rooted in material relationships between human and nonhuman actors;

·       Labor, capitalism, colonialism, and environmental injury;

·       The inequitable distribution of environmental harms;

·       The environment as a site of political, social, and cultural interventions on 'deviant' bodyminds;

·       Disablement through climate change;

·       Ableism and other forms of oppression in environmental activism;

·       Critical innovations on method and praxis in disability studies and environmental sociology;

·       Environmental rhetorics that deploy disability as metaphor;

·       Climate futures that draw on crip wisdom;

·       Embodied environmental harms as indicators of environmental injustice

Contact: rebecca.monteleone@utoledo.edu, Jennifer.Lai@uvm.edu

View full panel information here: https://4sonline.org/news_manager.php?page=31365

Submission Link: https://www.4sonline.org/call_for_submissions.php

 

Hi all! We are now accepting 250 abstract submissions for our open panel, “Socionatural Bodyminds: Imagining an Environmental Disability Studies” at the Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S). In-person and online presentations welcome! 4S will take place November 8-11, 2023 in Honolulu, HI **Submissions are due May 26. [Submit now!](https://www.4sonline.org/call_for_submissions.php)** **Open Panel Description:** \ \ In the age of the Chthulucene (Haraway 2016), we need new epistemic and ontological resources to make sense of the entanglements between our bodyminds and our worlds. This panel seeks innovations at the intersection of disability studies, environmental sociology, and STS. We invite submissions that contextualize disability as embodied experiences derived from interactions with material environments, and likewise, seek to strengthen underdeveloped relationships between disability studies and areas of study that grapple with materiality, knowledge production, and power. Our intention is to (re)ignite discussions regarding the complexity, challenges, and exciting possibilities concurrent with interdisciplinary knowledge production, with environmental disability studies representing one iteration of such projects. Through this panel, we seek to disrupt disciplinary boundaries and naturalized assumptions about our bodyminds, our environments, and our futures in order to open up possibilities for futures that reimagine justice expansively. We explicitly invite innovative and artistic abstracts, in addition to more traditional scholarly presentations. Potential topics could include: ·       Models of understanding disability rooted in material relationships between human and nonhuman actors; ·       Labor, capitalism, colonialism, and environmental injury; ·       The inequitable distribution of environmental harms; ·       The environment as a site of political, social, and cultural interventions on 'deviant' bodyminds; ·       Disablement through climate change; ·       Ableism and other forms of oppression in environmental activism; ·       Critical innovations on method and praxis in disability studies and environmental sociology; ·       Environmental rhetorics that deploy disability as metaphor; ·       Climate futures that draw on crip wisdom; ·       Embodied environmental harms as indicators of environmental injustice **Contact:** [rebecca.monteleone@utoledo.edu](mailto:rebecca.monteleone@utoledo.edu), [Jennifer.Lai@uvm.edu](mailto:Jennifer.Lai@uvm.edu) View full panel information here: <https://4sonline.org/news_manager.php?page=31365> Submission Link: <https://www.4sonline.org/call_for_submissions.php>  
DM
Dr. Michael Jeffress
Fri, May 5, 2023 5:58 PM

Hello,

Happy to announce the release of The Palgeave Handbook of Disability and
Communication
, the first handbook of disability and communication to be
published since 2000. For more information and editorial reviews, please
visit:  https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-14447-9

Dr. Michael S. Jeffress, PhD
Professor & Counselor
1-869-469-9177, ext. 313
appointments:
https://www.calendly.com/drjeffress

Hello, Happy to announce the release of _The Palgeave Handbook of Disability and Communication_, the first handbook of disability and communication to be published since 2000. For more information and editorial reviews, please visit: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-14447-9 Dr. Michael S. Jeffress, PhD Professor & Counselor 1-869-469-9177, ext. 313 appointments: https://www.calendly.com/drjeffress > >