[Reader-list] Panel Discussion: Gender, Risk & Public Space; Date: 22nd March, 2015; Time: 14:00 @Paradigm Shift

Kabir Khan kabirkhan1989 at gmail.com
Thu Mar 19 15:03:27 CDT 2015


Panel Discussion: Gender, Risk & Public Space; Date: 22nd March, 2015;
Time: 14:00 @Paradigm Shift

In their ideal, cities allow the reimagining of selves, expanding the reach
and grasp of one's hopes. This is, however, a deeply gendered story.Spaces
within the city present themselves differently depending on one's gender or
even just perceptions of it.Public spaces become conditionally public,
marked by risks of violence that shape any negotiation (chosen or imposed)
of mobility and freedom. This violence must be understood not just as
spectacular incidents of sexual violence but as a set of everyday practices
ranging from socio-cultural norms on honour and shame to legal codes
against those who use public space as spaces of work and life, among
others. In all of these, gender never acts alone - its intersections with
class, caste, ethnicity, religion, ability and age, among others, together
shape and determine the experience of men, women, and transgender people.
Particularly lately, notions of "safety" and "security" have come to
dominate discussions on gendering the Indian city, underlined by tales of
often horrific, but just as equally everyday,sexual harassment and
violence. These are undoubtedly critical discussions. Yet it is imperative
that they not be had in isolation. Feminist and queer politics have both
long challenged the assumptions of the "menacing" public and the "safe"
private, arguing against both ends of a false dichotomy as well as any easy
delineation between the "public" and the "private" in the first place. They
have shown that the slip from "safety" to deeply patriarchal constructions
of honour and shame is a quick one, and that in the name of "protection,"
different forms of violence emerge in their own right. They have reminded
us that gender is irreducible to neat categories of "men" and "women."

The conversation on safety has silenced many other conversations: on
access, use, risk, and pleasure. The risk of encountering violence,
especially on account of one's gender, is used to justify the narrowing of
the choices we make when living in a city. One is advised to keep safety in
mind all the time; we strategize our comportment, clothing, work, living
spaces and leisure activities with respect to safety. Each of us has a
different ability and privilege to do so. Yet where in this imagination of
a safe city is an imagination of equal access to space, of questions of
equity and power as well as safety? Does the avoidance of risk
inadvertently result in the perpetuation of unsafe cities? There is a case
to be made for the subversion of such narratives and practices of safety,
for moving past threats of violence and threats to honour, towards seeing
risk as a choice that is willingly taken. What then does it mean to court
risk in spite of gender barriers to public space, and how does courting
risk also transform our public spaces?
Courting Risk- Gender, Public Space and Freedom is a three day inquiry into
exploring notions of equity, access, risk, pleasure and violence in the
contemporary Indian city.

Panel Discussion at Paradigm Shift is a part of the three day series. A
panel of local experts will be exploring public space and how the risk of
gendered violence produces conditional access to public space.

We on behalf of Institute for Human Settlements Trust & Paradigm Shift
invite you for the panel discussion.

Date: 22nd March, 2015

Time: 14:00

Venue: Paradigm Shift, 3rd Floor, 8, Above GKB Opticals, 80 Feet Road,
Koramangala-4th Block, Near Sony Signal, Bangalore-34

For more details: you can write to paradigmshiftbangalore at gmail.com, or
call +919663427315, visit the website:www.iht.org,www.paradigmshift.org.in


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