Call for Article Proposals/2024 Special Issue “Small and Subtle Feminisms: Reconsidering Who or What Is Feminist Enough”

This open invitation calls for authors to submit 500-750 word abstracts for Peitho’s Summer

2024 Special Issue: “Small and Subtle Feminisms: Reconsidering Who or What Is Feminist

Enough.” This CFP is available at https://tinyurl.com/subtlefeminisms.

 

The extremity of violence and dehumanization especially toward queer folk, trans folk, women,

and BIPOC demands action that is radical. In other words, these ongoing injustices require

feminist rhetorical action that recognizes the systemic nature of oppression and how people’s

experiences within patriarchal systems are also affected by race, class, and sexuality. As such,

radical action has recently been prioritized as loud, visible, and big–it’s in the Women’s

Marches, the BLM protests against police violence, and the #MeToo movement. Volume and

visibility contribute to radical change, but we hesitate to dismiss feminist acts that are small,

subtle, or quiet.

 

Jennifer Baumgardner and Amy Richards provide an early exploration of this

tension in Manifesta (2000), explaining “We dedicated it to the people who say ‘I’m not a

feminist, but. . .’ and to the people who say ‘I am a feminist, but . . .’ It was our observation that

many people felt like they were “disqualified” from feminisms because they hadn’t worked out

all of their shit” (qtd. in http://signsjournal.org/bad-feminist). Inherent in their observations is the

notion of being a “good feminist” or “feminist enough,” which Roxane Gay explores in Bad

Feminist (2014). Qualifying feminism and what it means to do feminist rhetorical work has been

an ongoing conversation, one worth revisiting in the face of proliferating injustices and

increasing calls for transformation. This conversation resurfaced in a keynote talk at the 2019

Feminisms and Rhetorics Conference with Lisa Melonçon’s talk on “Quiet Feminism,” which

triggered strong responses about the importance of being loud and visible in order to make

change. Melonçon’s notion of quiet feminism sparked our curiosity: Where does quiet feminism

fit with radical feminism, and how are we understanding different enactments of feminism? This

special issue calls for contributors to engage with the question: What constitutes “feminist

enough,” particularly in feminist rhetorical acts that are considered small, subtle, or quiet?

 

More than 30 years of feminist rhetorical scholarship has grappled with recovering, remembering,

enlarging, and amending women’s lived experiences throughout history (see e.g.,

Bizzell; Enoch; Ghimire; hooks, Ratcliffe; Rawson; Moraga; Anzaldua; Jarratt; Royster; Kirsch;

Logan; Wu; Lunsford; Glenn). What is “feminist enough” persists in fourth wave feminisms, and

postcolonial scholarship challenges the Western, democratic assumption that activism must be

loud, fierce, and visible (Koggel). Western feminisms have not only ignored the differences

between women, they have also privileged the same patriarchal tools to make equitable changes

that have oppressed many women (Lorde). Scholars argue that gender relations and practices are

deeply embedded in cultural, economic, and political institutions that necessitate a better

understanding of the many forms of feminist action in the West and across the world that can’t

look the same in place and time or satisfy a monolithic notion of “feminist” (Mohanty). In recent

years, scholarship has been published on feminist material practices, embodied rhetorics, and

feminist practices of remembering (e.g., Boling, et al; Clary-Lemon; Gruwell). Small and subtle

feminisms might be seen across a range embodied and material contexts: from women in sports

who hesitate to call themselves feminists, colleagues in rhetorics of science or technical

communication who have felt on the periphery of the Coalition, and LGBTQIA+ students who

are both vulnerable and called to take risks to exist on campus.

 

Contributors will be asked to rethink the potential of small, subtle, and quiet feminisms, even

when our moment seems to call for big, radical action. We are a Coalition because each of our

smallness adds to greater possibilities. Even as we turn up the volume; even as we dismantle

harmful stereotypes such as the so-called “angry Black woman”; even as we wave rainbow flags,

stand with/as trans folk, and chant “live loud and proud”–how do we also maintain and create

spaces for the small, the quiet, the subtle? What are the rhetorical choices we are making in how

we talk about feminist identities, experiences, practices, and activisms that call into question

what is and is not enough? A former student, of intersecting marginalized identities, once

explained that they created pockets of resistance in chats with janitors and whispered friendships

at the back of classrooms. This special issue seeks to recognize, recover, and reconsider these

pockets, these moments of small and subtle feminist rhetorical action that may not be loud but

are every bit as crucial–and are “feminist enough”–for our collective survival and movement

toward transformation.

 

Possible questions and trajectories:

• How do we hold space for small and quiet feminisms alongside big and loud activism?

• In what ways might we invite a diversity of feminisms–disrupting the system from

without and from within, being loud and quiet, acting both overtly and subtly, locally,

nationally, and globally, and engaging in ways that are big and small?

• How might we value small and quiet feminisms while recognizing contributions across

differences in race and class, which have been historically mischaracterized and

dismissed as “too loud” or “aggressive”?

• How is the notion of “feminist enough” linked to identity, performance, and politics?

• How might feminist rhetorical practices look different across different fields (i.e.,

technical and professional writing, rhetorics of science, medical rhetorics)?

• How might we more effectively describe the radical nature of mentoring and

administrative work if we recognize small and quiet feminisms?

• How might craftivism and other material/embodied feminist rhetorical practices work

alongside louder activisms?

• How do we engage in small, quiet, and subtle feminist rhetorics without being silenced,

rendered invisible, and/or dismissed?

• If all feminisms are inherently radical, then how do we reclaim the parts of it that are

small, quiet, and subtle?

Texts will be accepted based on reviewer guidelines for Peitho, including evidence of feminist

and rhetorical scholarly foundation, readiness for publication, and commitment to feminist

practices and methods. We welcome a range of genres associated with the special issue’s theme,

such as scholarly articles, essays, organizing/advocacy frameworks, creative works, or

multimodal works. Please submit queries and abstracts to Tammie M. Kennedy and Jessi

Thomsen at subtlefeminisms@gmail.com.

 

Timeline

• Abstracts with Working Bibliography due by November 1, 2023

• Acceptance notifications by December 1, 2023

• Full manuscripts due March 1, 2024

• Estimated date of publication September 2024

 

Bibliography

Baumgardner, Jennifer; Richards, Amy (2000). Manifesta: Young Women, Feminism, and the

Future. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Boling, Brooke, Laura R. Micciche, Katie C. Monthe, and Jane E. O. Stone. “‘Go and Love

Some More’: Memorializing and Archiving Feminist Grief.” Peitho, vol. 24, no. 4, 2022.

https://cfshrc.org/article/go-and-love-some-more-memorializing-and-archiving-feminist-grief/

Breyer, Abby. The Blanks at Our Beginnings: A Graduate Student’s Reflection on Peitho’s

Contributions to New Scholars. Peitho, vol. 24, no. 4, Summer 2022

Clary-Lemon, Jennifer. “Selvedge Rhetorics and Material Memory.” Peitho, vol. 24, no. 3, 2022.

https://cfshrc.org/article/selvedge-rhetorics-and-material-memory/

Ghimire, Asmita. “Yogmaya Neupane: The Unknown Rhetorician and the Known Rebel”

Peitho, vol. 24, no. 3, 2022. https://cfshrc.org/article/yogmaya-neupane-the-unknownrhetorician-

and-the-known-rebel/

Goggin, Maureen Daly, and Shirley K. Rose, eds. Women’s Ways of Making. Utah State UP,

2021.

Gruwell, Leigh. Making Matters: Craft, Ethics, and New Materialist Rhetorics. Utah State UP,

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Koggel, Christine M., ‘ Global Feminism’, in William Edelglass, and Jay L. Garfield (eds), The

Oxford Handbook of World Philosophy, Oxford Handbooks (2011; online edn, Oxford

Academic, 2 Sept. 2011), https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195328998.003.0047, accessed

10 May 2023.

Lorde, Audre (1984). Age, Class, Race, and Sex: Women Redefining Difference. Sister Outsider:

Essays and Speeches. Freedom, CA: Crossing Press. pp. 114–123.

Melonçon, Lisa. “Quiet Feminism.” Plenary Talk at Feminisms and Rhetorics Conference, 2019.

Mohanty, Chandra Talpade (2003-01-01). “”Under Western Eyes” Revisited: Feminist Solidarity

through Anticapitalist Struggles”. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 28 (2): 499–

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“Short Takes: Provocations on Public Feminism. Bad Feminist by Roxane Gay”. Signs: Journal

of Women in Culture and Society. Retrieved February 2, 2016.