Séances de la conférence

Les séances de la conférence sont énumérées ci-dessous par ordre alphabétique.  Vous pouvez utiliser le champ de recherche en haut de la page pour trouver des sessions par mot-clé. D’autres événements sont en cours d’ajout.  Les renseignements peuvent changer.

(GAS4b) Théories, représentations et construction de l’intime

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Cette session vise à valoriser la recherche sociologique sur les formes contemporaines de relations intimes dans leurs dimensions plurielles (sentiments amoureux, sexualité, conjugalité, domesticité). Son objectif général est de promouvoir l'étude de l'intimité comme champ de recherche spécifique, indépendant – et pourtant connecté – des domaines de la sociologie de la famille et des études sur les sexualités. Dans l’optique de documenter et d’analyser la pluralité des formes d'intimité et créer un espace de débat autour de cet objet sociologique : les présentations porteront sur les conceptions, les représentations et les pratiques de l'intimité, tant sur le plan empirique que théorique.

Organizers: Lamia Djemoui, Université du Québec à Montréal, Noé Klein, Université du Québec à Montréal, Mario Marotta, Université du Québec à Montréal, Félix Dusseau, Université du Québec à Montréal

(GAS5a) Worldbuilding In and Around Schools: Mapping the Struggle over Gender and Sexuality I

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Homophobia and transphobia are rapidly spreading across North America and the globe, evidenced by shifts in public discourse, educational policy, and legislation that contribute to the structural, discursive, and physical violence faced by 2SLGBTQ+ people. This rise in hate is reflective of the ongoing ‘culture wars’ concerning gender and sexuality, of which schools have been a critical battleground. Using a sociological lens, this session will examine the ways in which anti-2SLGBTQ+ sentiment and the current sociopolitical climate of rising hate are being reinforced and resisted related to K-20 educational institutions. The session aims to outline how discourses of gender and sexuality are being mobilized in and around schools to uphold an increasingly rigid cisheteropatriarchal status quo, as well as trace how queer and trans youth and their allies are resisting hate and mapping new, more just worlds.

Organizer: JJ Wright, MacEwan University

(GAS5b) Worldbuilding In and Around Schools: Mapping the Struggle over Gender and Sexuality II

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Homophobia and transphobia are rapidly spreading across North America and the globe, evidenced by shifts in public discourse, educational policy, and legislation that contribute to the structural, discursive, and physical violence faced by 2SLGBTQ+ people. This rise in hate is reflective of the ongoing ‘culture wars’ concerning gender and sexuality, of which schools have been a critical battleground. Using a sociological lens, this session will examine the ways in which anti-2SLGBTQ+ sentiment and the current sociopolitical climate of rising hate are being reinforced and resisted related to K-20 educational institutions. The session aims to outline how discourses of gender and sexuality are being mobilized in and around schools to uphold an increasingly rigid cisheteropatriarchal status quo, as well as trace how queer and trans youth and their allies are resisting hate and mapping new, more just worlds.

Organizer: JJ Wright, MacEwan University

(GAS7) Centering Trans Joy: Challenging the Deficit-Based Approach in Sociology Research

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Sociological research on the experiences of marginalized groups is dominated by narratives of pain, suffering, and discrimination. Within research about transgender and nonbinary communities, this focus on trauma and dysphoria without a balancing focus on euphoria, pleasure, and happiness perpetuates the belief that trans lives are unlivable ones of misery and pain. By centering trans joy within research rather than exclusively focusing on dysphoria and inequalities, we can attend to the knowledge construction that is invested in both the survival and thriving of trans people. This session will focus on centering trans joy through research design, topic, methodology, and findings.

Organizers: J Overholser, University of Calgary, Kai Jacobsen, Caleton University