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LAG: Labor, Aesthetics, Geopolitics - 2025 DC Queer Studies Symposium

Black text on a light background next to a decorative image of by Shyam Thandar

LAG: Labor, Aesthetics, Geopolitics - 2025 DC Queer Studies Symposium

American Studies | Arabic | Art History and Archaeology | Arts for All | Center for East Asian Studies | Center for Literary and Comparative Studies | Cinema and Media Studies | College of Arts and Humanities | English | French | Italian | Language House | Latin American and Caribbean Studies Center | Roshan Institute for Persian Studies | Russian | School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures | School of Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies | Spanish and Portuguese Thursday, April 3, 2025 - April 4, 2025 Adele H. Stamp Student Union, Margaret Brent Room

Dark brown writing on a white poster featuring artwork from Shyam Thandar and the full schedule along the side

The Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies is proud to announce LAG: Labor, Aesthetics, and Geopolitics, the 2025 DC Queer Studies Symposium. 

The 2025 edition of the DC Queer Studies symposium builds on the renewed emphasis on geopolitics in North America-based queer and transgender studies by gathering together scholars and artists who engage productive tensions between sites and citations and who go beyond the case study model to generate theoretical frameworks that think area and trans and queer life together. Rather than lump together diverse concerns from the “elsewhere” into a single panel under the rubric of “transnational,” this two-day symposium gathers thinkers whose scholarship centers questions of political economy, the global division of labor, and aesthetics, and how they are informed by relations of colonialism, geopolitics, and racial capitalism (among much else).

Our title for the symposium is LAG. Here we hope to play with theorizations of temporality in postcolonial studies and queer studies. Scholars of postcolonial studies dwell on the civilizational time of the West that consigns the global South to the waiting room of history thus producing an other who lags behind developmental time. Queer theorists have also explored how those who exceed the norms of gender and sexual normativity are out of time with the linear temporality of heteronormativity. Besides these formulations of lag time, LAG also stands for our central keywords of this year’s convening: Labor, Aesthetics, and Geopolitics. Focusing on these keywords helps us move beyond the US exceptionalism of the fields of queer and transgender studies.  

This year our keynotes will be given by Aslı Zengin (Rutgers, a scholar of transgender life and death and trans negotiations with Islam in Turkey); Cole Rizki (University of Virginia, a scholar of transgender cultural production in the wake of totalitarianism in Argentina); Kwame Otu (Georgetown, a scholar of gender and queerness and the geopolitics of waste management in Ghana); Lucinda Ramberg (Cornell, a scholar of religion, caste, and sexuality in India), and Tara Asgar (an artist and scholar whose performance practices engage themes of trans/gender aesthetics, trauma, humanitarian regimes of precarity, and migration in and between Bangladesh and the United States). Taken together, our speakers address many critical questions from interdisciplinary perspectives that are foundational to how the humanities respond to contemporary political, social, and cultural challenges such as climate change, democracy, migration, gender and sexual diversity, and the importance of art to visions of justice. Additionally, we will have lunch time programming with student speakers; details will be forthcoming soon.

Program

Thursday, April 3, 2025

2:00 PM 

Welcome

Violent Intimacies: The Trans Everyday and the Making of an Urban World
Aslı Zengin (Rutgers University) with discussant Sayan Bhattacharyra (WGSS)

 

4:00 PM 

Death as Queer Possibility: Waste and the Normative of Life in Neoliberal Ghana
Kwame Edwin Otu (Georgetown University) with discussant Neda Atanasoski (WGSS)

 

Friday April 4, 2025

11:00 AM 

Belated: Queer Futures in the Anthropology of Gender
Lucinda E.G. Ramberg (Cornell University) with discussant Neel Ahuja (WGSS)

12:30 PM 

Lunch & Student Panel
Moderated by Christina B. Hanhardt (AMST)

2:00 PM 

Aesthetics of Survival, Art of Repair: Anti: Authoritarian Trans Politics and Resistance 
Cole Rizki (University of Virginia) with discussant Ryan Long (SPAN, CLCS)

4:00 PM 

Performance Talk: Performing Identities: Navigating Visibility, Violence and Resistance
Tara Asgar (artist, activist, & educator), with discussant Karin Zitzewitz (ARTH)

About the Artist and Speakers


This program is brought to you with the generous support of our co-sponsors: 

Logos for the College of Arts and Humanities, MICA, Arts for All, The Center for Literary and Comparative Studies, the LGBTQ+ Equity, and the School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures
  • School of Theater, Dance, and Performance Studies
  • Department of American Studies
  • Department of African American and Africana Studies 
  • Department of Anthropology
  • Department of Arabic Studies
  • Department of Art History and Archaeology
  • Department of French and Italian
  • Department of German Studies
  • Program in Cinema and Media Studies
  • Center for East Asian Studies
  • Center for Literary and Comparative Studies
  • The Language House
  • Latin American and Caribbean Studies Center
  • Roshan Institute for Persian Studies
  • Russian Program at Maryland
  • Department of Spanish and Portuguese

 

 

RSVP

This event is free and open to the public. RSVP is highly encouraged to attend but not required. To RSVP, please register using the link in the "Get Tickets" section

Get Tickets

RSVP

Cost

Free

Event Dates

  • Thursday, Apr 03, 2025 2:00 pm
    04/03/25 14:00:00 04/03/25 17:30:00 America/New_York LAG: Labor, Aesthetics, Geopolitics - 2025 DC Queer Studies Symposium

    Dark brown writing on a white poster featuring artwork from Shyam Thandar and the full schedule along the side

    The Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies is proud to announce LAG: Labor, Aesthetics, and Geopolitics, the 2025 DC Queer Studies Symposium. 

    The 2025 edition of the DC Queer Studies symposium builds on the renewed emphasis on geopolitics in North America-based queer and transgender studies by gathering together scholars and artists who engage productive tensions between sites and citations and who go beyond the case study model to generate theoretical frameworks that think area and trans and queer life together. Rather than lump together diverse concerns from the “elsewhere” into a single panel under the rubric of “transnational,” this two-day symposium gathers thinkers whose scholarship centers questions of political economy, the global division of labor, and aesthetics, and how they are informed by relations of colonialism, geopolitics, and racial capitalism (among much else).

    Our title for the symposium is LAG. Here we hope to play with theorizations of temporality in postcolonial studies and queer studies. Scholars of postcolonial studies dwell on the civilizational time of the West that consigns the global South to the waiting room of history thus producing an other who lags behind developmental time. Queer theorists have also explored how those who exceed the norms of gender and sexual normativity are out of time with the linear temporality of heteronormativity. Besides these formulations of lag time, LAG also stands for our central keywords of this year’s convening: Labor, Aesthetics, and Geopolitics. Focusing on these keywords helps us move beyond the US exceptionalism of the fields of queer and transgender studies.  

    This year our keynotes will be given by Aslı Zengin (Rutgers, a scholar of transgender life and death and trans negotiations with Islam in Turkey); Cole Rizki (University of Virginia, a scholar of transgender cultural production in the wake of totalitarianism in Argentina); Kwame Otu (Georgetown, a scholar of gender and queerness and the geopolitics of waste management in Ghana); Lucinda Ramberg (Cornell, a scholar of religion, caste, and sexuality in India), and Tara Asgar (an artist and scholar whose performance practices engage themes of trans/gender aesthetics, trauma, humanitarian regimes of precarity, and migration in and between Bangladesh and the United States). Taken together, our speakers address many critical questions from interdisciplinary perspectives that are foundational to how the humanities respond to contemporary political, social, and cultural challenges such as climate change, democracy, migration, gender and sexual diversity, and the importance of art to visions of justice. Additionally, we will have lunch time programming with student speakers; details will be forthcoming soon.

    Program

    Thursday, April 3, 2025

    2:00 PM 

    Welcome

    Violent Intimacies: The Trans Everyday and the Making of an Urban World
    Aslı Zengin (Rutgers University) with discussant Sayan Bhattacharyra (WGSS)

     

    4:00 PM 

    Death as Queer Possibility: Waste and the Normative of Life in Neoliberal Ghana
    Kwame Edwin Otu (Georgetown University) with discussant Neda Atanasoski (WGSS)

     

    Friday April 4, 2025

    11:00 AM 

    Belated: Queer Futures in the Anthropology of Gender
    Lucinda E.G. Ramberg (Cornell University) with discussant Neel Ahuja (WGSS)

    12:30 PM 

    Lunch & Student Panel
    Moderated by Christina B. Hanhardt (AMST)

    2:00 PM 

    Aesthetics of Survival, Art of Repair: Anti: Authoritarian Trans Politics and Resistance 
    Cole Rizki (University of Virginia) with discussant Ryan Long (SPAN, CLCS)

    4:00 PM 

    Performance Talk: Performing Identities: Navigating Visibility, Violence and Resistance
    Tara Asgar (artist, activist, & educator), with discussant Karin Zitzewitz (ARTH)

    About the Artist and Speakers


    This program is brought to you with the generous support of our co-sponsors: 

    Logos for the College of Arts and Humanities, MICA, Arts for All, The Center for Literary and Comparative Studies, the LGBTQ+ Equity, and the School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures
    • School of Theater, Dance, and Performance Studies
    • Department of American Studies
    • Department of African American and Africana Studies 
    • Department of Anthropology
    • Department of Arabic Studies
    • Department of Art History and Archaeology
    • Department of French and Italian
    • Department of German Studies
    • Program in Cinema and Media Studies
    • Center for East Asian Studies
    • Center for Literary and Comparative Studies
    • The Language House
    • Latin American and Caribbean Studies Center
    • Roshan Institute for Persian Studies
    • Russian Program at Maryland
    • Department of Spanish and Portuguese

     

     

    Adele H. Stamp Student Union false
  • Friday, Apr 04, 2025 11:00 am
    04/04/25 11:00:00 04/04/25 17:00:00 America/New_York LAG: Labor, Aesthetics, Geopolitics - 2025 DC Queer Studies Symposium

    Dark brown writing on a white poster featuring artwork from Shyam Thandar and the full schedule along the side

    The Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies is proud to announce LAG: Labor, Aesthetics, and Geopolitics, the 2025 DC Queer Studies Symposium. 

    The 2025 edition of the DC Queer Studies symposium builds on the renewed emphasis on geopolitics in North America-based queer and transgender studies by gathering together scholars and artists who engage productive tensions between sites and citations and who go beyond the case study model to generate theoretical frameworks that think area and trans and queer life together. Rather than lump together diverse concerns from the “elsewhere” into a single panel under the rubric of “transnational,” this two-day symposium gathers thinkers whose scholarship centers questions of political economy, the global division of labor, and aesthetics, and how they are informed by relations of colonialism, geopolitics, and racial capitalism (among much else).

    Our title for the symposium is LAG. Here we hope to play with theorizations of temporality in postcolonial studies and queer studies. Scholars of postcolonial studies dwell on the civilizational time of the West that consigns the global South to the waiting room of history thus producing an other who lags behind developmental time. Queer theorists have also explored how those who exceed the norms of gender and sexual normativity are out of time with the linear temporality of heteronormativity. Besides these formulations of lag time, LAG also stands for our central keywords of this year’s convening: Labor, Aesthetics, and Geopolitics. Focusing on these keywords helps us move beyond the US exceptionalism of the fields of queer and transgender studies.  

    This year our keynotes will be given by Aslı Zengin (Rutgers, a scholar of transgender life and death and trans negotiations with Islam in Turkey); Cole Rizki (University of Virginia, a scholar of transgender cultural production in the wake of totalitarianism in Argentina); Kwame Otu (Georgetown, a scholar of gender and queerness and the geopolitics of waste management in Ghana); Lucinda Ramberg (Cornell, a scholar of religion, caste, and sexuality in India), and Tara Asgar (an artist and scholar whose performance practices engage themes of trans/gender aesthetics, trauma, humanitarian regimes of precarity, and migration in and between Bangladesh and the United States). Taken together, our speakers address many critical questions from interdisciplinary perspectives that are foundational to how the humanities respond to contemporary political, social, and cultural challenges such as climate change, democracy, migration, gender and sexual diversity, and the importance of art to visions of justice. Additionally, we will have lunch time programming with student speakers; details will be forthcoming soon.

    Program

    Thursday, April 3, 2025

    2:00 PM 

    Welcome

    Violent Intimacies: The Trans Everyday and the Making of an Urban World
    Aslı Zengin (Rutgers University) with discussant Sayan Bhattacharyra (WGSS)

     

    4:00 PM 

    Death as Queer Possibility: Waste and the Normative of Life in Neoliberal Ghana
    Kwame Edwin Otu (Georgetown University) with discussant Neda Atanasoski (WGSS)

     

    Friday April 4, 2025

    11:00 AM 

    Belated: Queer Futures in the Anthropology of Gender
    Lucinda E.G. Ramberg (Cornell University) with discussant Neel Ahuja (WGSS)

    12:30 PM 

    Lunch & Student Panel
    Moderated by Christina B. Hanhardt (AMST)

    2:00 PM 

    Aesthetics of Survival, Art of Repair: Anti: Authoritarian Trans Politics and Resistance 
    Cole Rizki (University of Virginia) with discussant Ryan Long (SPAN, CLCS)

    4:00 PM 

    Performance Talk: Performing Identities: Navigating Visibility, Violence and Resistance
    Tara Asgar (artist, activist, & educator), with discussant Karin Zitzewitz (ARTH)

    About the Artist and Speakers


    This program is brought to you with the generous support of our co-sponsors: 

    Logos for the College of Arts and Humanities, MICA, Arts for All, The Center for Literary and Comparative Studies, the LGBTQ+ Equity, and the School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures
    • School of Theater, Dance, and Performance Studies
    • Department of American Studies
    • Department of African American and Africana Studies 
    • Department of Anthropology
    • Department of Arabic Studies
    • Department of Art History and Archaeology
    • Department of French and Italian
    • Department of German Studies
    • Program in Cinema and Media Studies
    • Center for East Asian Studies
    • Center for Literary and Comparative Studies
    • The Language House
    • Latin American and Caribbean Studies Center
    • Roshan Institute for Persian Studies
    • Russian Program at Maryland
    • Department of Spanish and Portuguese

     

     

    Adele H. Stamp Student Union false