A Seminar and Lecture with Emma Heaney
Working from trans historical archives and materialist trans feminist theories, Dr. Heaney explores the ways in which the social processes making cisness compulsory are also implicated in anti-Blackness, misogyny, Indigenous erasure, xenophobia, and bourgeois antipathy for working-class life. In her work, Dr. Heaney proposes a theory of sexual difference that rejects the narratives of cisness and calls for a feminism that does not depend on the ideology's counterrevolutionary pull. Taking up her call to action, we invite scholars and students of various backgrounds to join us for an interdisciplinary conversation aimed at rethinking how we conceptualise transness, sex and sexual difference.
Emma Heaney is a nationally recognized scholar of comparative literature, feminist studies and trans studies. Her first book, The New Woman: Literary Modernism, Queer Theory, and the Trans Feminine Allegory, (Northwestern UP 2017) traces the medicalization of trans femininity and the uptake of the resulting diagnostic in works of literature and theory. Dr. Heaney’s recent edited collection, Feminism Against Cisness (Duke UP 2024), gathers essays by trans studies scholars that demonstrate the potential of feminist critique freed of the ideology that assigned sex determines sexed experience.
Eva Hayward has taught as assistant professor in the Department of Media and Culture Studies at Utrecht University, the University of Arizona (USA) and the University of New Mexico (USA). A Fulbright Scholar (Austria), she has held postdoctoral fellowships at Duke University (USA) and Uppsala University (Sweden). Her research focuses on ecology, art, and trans studies.
Maxi Wallenhorst is a writer living in Berlin. Next to dance dramaturgy, translation, and art writing, Maxi works on dissociative poetics in capitalism. Recently, Maxi’s essays have appeared in e-flux journal and in Elif Saydam’s Two Cents (Mousse, 2022). In progress: A transvestite romance set in a half-allegorical ’20s Berlin.
The event is open to RMA students, PhD candidates and academic staff. To register, please email Imogen Grigorovich (m.grigorovich@students.uu.nl), stating which part of the event you are interested in attending.