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Dr. Dirk Gindt, PhD

Lecturer, Theatre


Dr. Dirk Gindt, PhD
Office: S-GM 500.59  
Guy-De Maisonneuve Building,
1550 De Maisonneuve W.
Phone: (514) 848-2424 ext.
Email: dirk.gindt@concordia.ca
Availability: office hours: Mondays, 5 PM - 6 PM in GM-500.71

Dirk Gindt holds a Ph.D. in Theatre Studies from Stockholm University (2007). His research attends to post-war and contemporary queer theatre and performance from an international perspective. His project 'Lest We Forget', supported by a four-year SSHRC Insight Grant, critically analyzes the history of queer theatre and performance as it intersects with the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Canada. Dr. Gindt's second research project, 'Tennessee Williams in Europe', unpacks the sexual anxieties and racial fantasies that the American playwright's works provoked in post-war Sweden and France. Dr. Gindt has also studied the myriad intersections between fashion and performance. He has published twelve refereed articles, including essays in Journal of Canadian Studies, Theatre Journal, Theatre Research in Canada, Theatre Survey and Nordic Theatre Studies, in addition to several book chapters. He is co-editor of the volume Fashion: An Interdisciplinary Reflection (Stockholm 2009) and as former editor-in-chief of lambda nordica: Journal for LGBT-Studies he edited special issues on masculinities and queer fashion. He currently serves as associate editor and book review editor of alt.theatre: cultural diversity and the stage.


Teaching activities

Dr. Gindt has taught numerous courses in theatre history, performativity and performance theory, theatre activism, cultural representations, fashion theory, intercultural theatre as well as gender and queer studies, in addition to supervising student theses at all academic levels.
Please see attached CV for detailed information.


Research activities

LEST WE FORGET

Lest We Forget: A Critical History of HIV/AIDS Theatre and Performance in Canada

Since the introduction of new anti-retroviral treatments in the mid-1990s, HIV/AIDS has gradually disappeared from political and cultural agendas in Canada and other western countries. Attempting to rectify this cultural amnesia, the research project Lest We Forget will be the first study to analyze the impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on queer theatre and performance in a Canadian context from the early 1980s to the present. Its core objective is to critically analyze the political complexity and aesthetic variety of HIV/AIDS theatre and performance, which cannot be characterized by a single, homogenous activist agenda or an overarching aesthetic cohesion. The number of plays and performances conceived and produced in Canada over the last thirty years is remarkable and this research project will serve as a necessary reaffirmation of the productive power of queer theatre and performance, as both a social process and creative practice, to respond to a public health crisis and act as modes of resistance against cultural amnesia, stigmatization and homophobia. Seven distinct modules identify and trace the defining strategies chosen by theatre artists and theatre activists to address the epidemic: pedagogical realisms; embodied absences; centre vs. periphery; feminist interventions; blood/disease/religion/metaphor; new silences; and cultural performances. Collectively, these seven modules do justice to the linguistic, regional and aesthetic diversity of the material, balance historical investigations with contemporary concerns and underscore the intellectual timeliness and social relevance of the project.

The research project will contribute to the vibrant study and enhance our knowledge of queer theatre and performance in Canada. It will appeal not only to theatre and performance scholars in Canada and beyond, but also to researchers, students and activists interested and invested in the cultural responses and reactions to HIV/AIDS in a large range of disciplines, including gender and sexuality studies, history, cultural studies, literature, visual arts and Canadian studies. Granting a voice and presence to theatre artists that have engaged with the challenges posed, the research will also prove relevant for practitioners. It firmly articulates the political necessity and social value of theatre and performance, namely its contributions to a democratic society, its ability to bring burning questions about politics and health to the forefront and its unique position to playfully and critically explore sexual identities.

‘PARIS SEX-APPEAL AMÉRICAIN'

‘Paris Sex-Appeal Américain': Cultural Translations of Tennessee Williams in Post-War France 

‘Paris Sex-Appeal Américain’ is a research project whose objective is to study the processes of cultural translation, production and reception of American playwright Tennessee Williams’s works on Parisian stages between 1945 and 1965.The immediate post-WWII period marks a pivotal moment in the internationalization of American theatre, when Williams’s plays became some of its most critically acclaimed and financially lucrative exports. This project explores the patterns of migration and the many cultural agents involved in the cultural translation of Williams’s plays in Paris in order to produce a complex and nuanced understanding of the transnational impact of one of the twentieth century’s most influential playwrights. Williams’s plays were translated and adapted by authors like Jean Cocteau and Françoise Sagan, staged by inter/national directors including Raymond Rouleau and Peter Brook, with sets and costumes created by Linda de Nobili and Coco Chanel, and starring actors such as Arletty (Léonie Bathiat) and Jeanne Moreau. How did the loose translations and creative adaptations of Williams’s plays affect the French interpretation and reception of his works? How were his plays staged in an era characterized by a creative tension between realism and anti-realistic modes of representation? Why did the initially hostile critical reception eventually turn into a more welcoming attitude? This research will enhance current knowledge and our understanding of the impact of post-war American drama and Broadway culture in Europe and contribute valuable new insights by focusing on heretofore-neglected aspects in Williams scholarship.

The primary theoretical principle guiding my analysis is the concept of cultural translation, which refers to the processes of interpretation that happen when audiences in one social, aesthetic and historical environment negotiate the meaning of a particular text that originated in another context. This concept will offer the methodological tool necessary to analyse four historical productions, all of which happened between 1945 and 1965, in the two decades following WWII, but just prior to the student riots in Paris and before the effects of the sexual revolution had made their full impact. The project will mine and analyze original, heretofore-unavailable sources (including reviews, articles in newspapers and magazines, photographs, sketches, audio recordings, memoirs and features in lifestyle magazines) and make them available to an English-speaking audience.


Publications

Books

Mode - en introduktion: En tvärvetenskaplig betraktelse / Fashion - an introduction: an interdisciplinary reflection. Co-edited with Louise Wallenberg. Stockholm: Raster, 2009 (ISBN 978-91-87215-902).

Playing Activists and Dancing Anarchists: Men and Masculinities in Cultural Performances in Contemporary Sweden. Stockholm: Theatron, diss., 2007 (ISBN 978-91-86434-33-5). Republished: Saarbrücken: VDM, 2008 (ISBN 978-38-36464-80-2).

Edited journal volumes

lambda nordica: Tidskrift för homo/lesbisk/bi/transforskning / lambda nordica: Journal for GLBT-Studies, special issue 'Fashion', vol. 14, no. 3-4 (2009).

lambda nordica: Tidskrift för homo/lesbisk/bi/transforskning / lambda nordica: Journal for GLBT-Studies, special issue 'Queera maskuliniteter' / 'Queer masculinities', vol. 13, no. 4 (2008).

Refereed journal articles

‘Medico-Artistic Complicities on Swedish Stages: The Boys in the Band and the Regulation of Gay Male Representation in the Welfare State’, Journal of Homosexuality (accepted and forthcoming, 2015).

‘Queer Embodied Absence: HIV/AIDS and the Creation of Memory in Gordon Armstrong’s Blue Dragons and Daniel MacIvor’s The Soldier Dreams’, Journal of Canadian Studies/Revue d’études canadiennes vol. 48, no. 2 (2014): 122-145.

'Sky Gilbert, Daniel MacIvor, and the Man in the Vancouver Hotel Room: Queer Gossip, Community Narrative, and Theatre History', Theatre Research in Canada/Recherches théâtrales au Canada vol. 34, no. 2 (2013): 187-215.

'Transatlantic Translations and Transactions: Lars Schmidt and the Implementation of Post-War American Theatre in Europe', Theatre Journal vol. 65, no. 1 (2013): 19-37.

'Creativity, Corporeality and Collaboration: Staging Fashion with Giorgio Armani and Robert Wilson', with John Potvin, Studies in Theatre and Performance, vol. 33, no. 1 (2013): 3-28.

'When Broadway Came to Sweden: The European Premiere of Tennessee Williams's Cat on a Hot Tin Roof', Theatre Survey vol. 53, no. 1 (2012): 59-83.

'The Diva and the Demon: Ingmar Bergman Directs The Rose Tattoo', New Theatre Quarterly vol. 28, no. 1 (2012): 56-66.

'Performative Processes: Björk's Creative Collaborations with the World of Fashion', Fashion Theory: The Journal of Dress, Body & Culture vol. 15, no. 4 (2011): 425-450 (republished in translation in Fashion Theory Russia no. 24 (2012)).

'Coming Out of the Cabinet: Fashioning the Closet with Sweden's Most Famous Diplomat', Critical Studies in Fashion and Beauty vol. 1, no. 2 (2010): 223-244 (republished in Critical Studies in Fashion and Beauty: Volume One, eds. Efrat Tseëlon, Ana Marta González and Susan Kaiser. Bristol, UK & Chicago: Intellect, 2012, pp. 233-54).

'Torn between the "Swedish Sin" and "homosexual freemasonry": Tennessee Williams, sexual morals and the closet in 1950's Sweden', The Tennessee Williams Annual Review no. 11 (2010): 19-39.

'Anxious Nation and White Fashion: Suddenly Last Summer in the Swedish folkhem', Nordic Theatre Studies vol. 21 (2009): 98-112.

'Heroes and Villains: Contesting Hegemonic Masculinity in a Peace Demonstration', Nordic Theatre Studies vol. 19 (2007): 56-67.

Chapters in books

"Your asshole is hanging outside of your body?": Excess, AIDS, and shame in the theatre of Sky Gilbert', in The Uses of Excess in Visual and Material Culture, 1700-2010, ed. Julia Skelly. Burlington & Aldershot: Ashgate, 2014, pp. 249-276.

'Williams and Bergman, Lust and Death: Culturally Translating A Streetcar Named Desire in Post-War Sweden', in Tennessee Williams and Europe: Intercultural Encounters, Transatlantic Exchanges, ed. John S. Bak. Amsterdam & New York: Rodopi Press, 2014, pp. 135-165.

'Tennessee Williams and the Swedish Academy: Why he never won the Nobel Prize', in Tenn at One Hundred, ed. David Kaplan. East Brunswick, NJ: Hansen, 2011, pp. 152-167, 302-304.

'"En gorillaliknande högpotent hanne som stank av kön": Anders Ek och gestaltningen av sexualitet i Spårvagn till Lustgården' / '"A gorillalike highly potent he-male reeking of sex": Anders Ek and the portrayal of sexuality in A Streetcar Named Desire', in Mode - en introduktion: En tvärvetenskaplig betraktelse / Fashion - an introduction: an interdisciplinary reflection, eds. Dirk Gindt & Louise Wallenberg. Stockholm: Raster, 2009, pp. 273-298, 358-361, 378-379.

Other scientific articles

‘Lest We Forget: HIV/AIDS and Queer Theatre and Performance in Canada’, Theatre Research International, Forum: Contemporary Queer Theatre and Performance Research, vol. 40, no. 1 (2015): 75-78.

‘Galen, kriminell och sjuk: Sprätthöken som modeoffer’ / Mad, criminal, and sick: The Swedish Sprätthöken as fashion victim’, conference proceedings Fri Dramatik i teori och praktik / Free drama in theory and practice, Stockholm: Dramawebben, 2012, www.dramawebben.se (15 p.).

‘Out of the Closet, Onto the Page: A discussion of Williams’s public coming out on The David Frost Show in 1970 and his confessional writing of the ’70s’, with Michael Paller, Annette Saddik and David Savran, panel debate from the 2010 Tennessee Williams Scholars Conference, New Orleans, USA, The Tennessee Williams Annual Review no. 12 (2011): 107-119.

‘Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick in memoriam’, lambda nordica: Tidskrift för homo/lesbisk/bi/transforskning / lambda nordica: Journal for GLBT-Studies, vol. 14, no. 2 (2009): 76-90.

‘Den teatrala vreden: Hiv/aids och gayidentitet i Larry Kramers drama The Normal Heart’ / ‘Theatrical anger: HIV/AIDS and gay identity in Larry Kramer’s drama The Normal Heart’, lambda nordica: Tidskrift för homo/lesbisk/bi/transforskning / lambda nordica: Journal for GLBT-Studies, special issue ‘Queera maskuliniteter’ / ‘Queer masculinities’, vol. 13, no. 4 (2008): 74-97.

‘Angels in America: Roy Cohn och konstruktionen av en frisk, heterosexuell  samhällskropp’ / ‘Angels in America: Roy Cohn and the construction of a healthy, heterosexual social body’, Farväl heteronormativitet / Farewell heteronormativity, lambda nordica: Tidskrift för homo/lesbisk/bi/transforskning / lambda nordica: Journal for GLBT-Studies vol. 8, no. 3-4 (2002): 95-107.

Introductions

‘Inledning: Reflektioner kring mode, feminism och homosexualitet’ / ‘Introduction: Reflections on fashion, feminism and homosexuality’, lambda nordica: Tidskrift för homo/lesbisk/bi/transforskning / lambda nordica: Journal for GLBT-Studies, special issue ‘Fashion’ , vol. 14, no. 3-4 (2009): 9-23.

‘Inledning’ / ‘Introduction’, with Louise Wallenberg, in Mode – en introduktion: En tvärvetenskaplig betraktelse / Fashion – an introduction: an interdisciplinary reflection, eds. Dirk Gindt & Louise Wallenberg. Stockholm: Raster, 2009, pp. 7-18.

‘En kort introduktion till kritiska maskulinitetsstudier’ / ‘A short introduction to critical studies on masculinities’, lambda nordica: Tidskrift för homo/lesbisk/bi/transforskning / lambda nordica: Journal for GLBT-Studies, special issue ‘Queera maskuliniteter’ / ‘Queer masculinities’, vol. 13, no. 4 (2008): 6-14.

Review articles

Book Review: ‘David Bateman, ed., Compulsive Acts: Essays, Interviews, Reflections on the Works of Sky Gilbert. Toronto: Guernica Editions, 2014. 340 pp.’. Theatre Research in Canada/Recherches théâtrales au Canada vol. 36, no. 2 (2015, forthcoming).

Book Review: ‘Samtidshistoria utan kritiska perspektiv’: Thorsén, David Den svenska aidsepidemin: ankomst, bemötande, innebörd. (diss.) Uppsala universitet: Institutionen för idé- och lärdomshistoria 2013 (527 sidor). lamba nordica: Tidskrift för HLBT-forskning / lambda nordica: Journal for GLBT Studies vol. 19, no. 2 (2014): 151-155.

Book Review: ‘Bastard or Playmate?: Adapting Theatre, Mutating Media and the Contemporary Performing Arts. Edited by Robrecht Vanderbeeken, Christel Stalpaert, David Depestel and Boris Debackere. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2012. Pp. 264 59 illus. €27.50. Pb.’, Theatre Research International vol. 38, no. 2 (2013): 159-160.

Book Review: ‘Performance, Fashion and the Modern Interior: From the Victorians to Today, edited by Fiona Fisher, Trevor Keeble, Patricia Lara-Betancourt and Brenda Martin. Oxford and New York: Berg, 2011, 293 pages, 100 b/w illustrations. PB 9871847887818. US $ 49,95’, Interiors: Design, Architecture, Culture vol. 4, no. 1 (2013): 95-98.

Book Review: ‘Staging and Performing Translation: Text and Theatre Practice. Edited by Roger Baines, Cristina Marinetti and Manuela Perteghella. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. Pp. xiv 277 1 b/w illus. 3 figs’, Theatre Research International vol. 38, no. 1 (2013): 73-74.

Book Review: ‘Community Theatre and AIDS. By Ola Johansson. Basingstoke & New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. Pp. xii 179 21 illus. 9 fig. £50.00/$80.00. Hb.’, Nordic Theatre Studies vol. 24 (2012): 142-144.

Book Review: ‘“Maskulinitetsstuder queerstudier=sant?”: Maskuliniteter: Kritik, tendenser, trender. By Marcus Herz & Thomas Johansson. Malmö: Liber, 2011, 173 p.’ lamba nordica: Tidskrift för HLBT-forskning / Lambda nordica: Journal for GLBT Studies vol. 17, no. 4 (2012): 199-203.

Book Review: ‘Lady Dicks and Lesbian Brothers: Staging the Unimaginable at the WOW Café Theatre. By Kate Davy. Triangulations Series. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2010; pp. 244’, Theatre Journal vol. 64, no. 4 (2012): 622-23.


Participation activities

Papers presented, invited lectures and panels chaired


2014:Conference paper: ‘Hegemonic Sexual Discourses on Stage: Early HIV/AIDS Theatre in the Swedish Welfare State’, Association for the Advancement of Scandinavian Studies in Canada/L’Association pour l’Avancement des Études Scandinaves au Canada (AASSC) 2014 conference, Brock University, Ontario, Canada.

2014:Conference paper: ‘“My Country. Pure. Sparking. Immaculate”: Michel Marc Bouchard and Queer Citizenship in Contemporary Canada’, Canadian Association for Theatre Research/Association Canadienne pour la Recherche Théâtrale 2014 conference, Brock University, Ontario, Canada.

2014:Invited panelist: ‘Influences and Intertextuality in Williams’s Writing’, 2014 Tennessee Williams Scholars Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.

2013:Conference paper: ‘In the Theatre of Excess: Sky Gilbert and the Commodification of HIV/AIDS in Canada’, Canadian Association for Theatre Research/Association Canadienne pour la Recherche Théâtrale 2013 conference, University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.

2013:Conference paper: ‘“The Dick of Death”: HIV/AIDS, Queer Theatre, and the Doorman at the Local Pub’, The 44th Annual NeMLA Convention, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

2013:Invited panelist: ‘Gunnel Broströms insatser inom svensk teater’/‘Gunnel Broström’s contributions to Swedish theatre’, Department of Literature and History of Ideas, Stockholm University.

2013:Associate Professor lecture: ‘Medlidande och fruktan: hiv/aidsteater i Sverige och Kanada’/‘Pity and Fear: HIV/AIDS theatre in Sweden and Canada’, Stockholm University.

2012:Conference paper: ‘Staging the Dead: Disembodied Presence and Embodied Absence in Canadian HIV/AIDS Theatre’, Canadian Association for Theatre Research/Association Canadienne pour la Recherche Théâtrale 2012 conference, University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University, Ontario, Canada.

2012:Conference paper: ‘From Gothenburg to Paris: Tennessee Williams and his Scandinavian Impresario’, 2012 Tennessee Williams Scholars Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.

2012:Invited panelist: ‘Tennessee Williams seen from a Canadian Perspective’, 2012 Tennessee Williams Scholars Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.

2012:Invited speaker: ‘Den Swenska sprätthöken: Mode och maskulinitet i Sveriges första komedi’/‘The Swedish Sprätthöken: Fashion and masculinity in Sweden’s first comedy’, Dramawebben, Stockholm.

2011:Invited speaker: ‘“Une cochonnerie commerciale”: Katt på hett plåttak i Göteborg (1955) och i Paris (1956)’/ ‘“Une cochonnerie commerciale”: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof in Gothenburg (1955) and in Paris (1956)’, Theatre Seminar Stockholm University & Uppsala University.

2011:Conference paper: ‘Williams and Bergman – Lust and Death’, Tennessee Williams in Europe: A Centenary Celebration, 1911-2011, Université Nancy, France.

2011:Invited panelist: ‘Tennessee Williams: America’s First International Playwright’, Tennessee Williams in Europe: A Centenary Celebration, 1911-2011, Université Nancy, France.

2011:Panel chair: ‘Tennessee Williams et le cinéma espagnol’/‘Tennessee Williams and Spanish Cinema’, Tennessee Williams in Europe: A Centenary Celebration, 1911-2011, Université Nancy, France.

2011:Conference paper: ‘Creativity, business and the art of collaboration’, Canadian Historical Association Conference, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada.

2011:Panel organizer and chair: ‘Performing Otherness: Gender, Sexuality and Nation in Popular Culture’, Popular Culture Association of Canada, Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada.

2011:Conference paper: ‘Representations of queer masculinities in the plays of Sky Gilbert’, Popular Culture Association of Canada, Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada.

2011:Invited speaker: ‘Medlidande, fruktan och skull-fucking: Svenska teateruppsättningar om hiv/aids på 1980-talet’/‘Pity, fear and skull-fucking: Swedish theatrical performancs on HIV-AIDS in the 1980s’, Queer Seminar, Uppsala University, Sweden.

2010: Conference paper: ‘The aesthetics of babbling: Speech, censorship and the control of the female body in Tennessee Williams’ Suddenly Last Summer’, Universities Art Association of Canada (UAAC), University of Guelph, Canada.

2010:Conference paper: ‘Fashion, theatre and sinful eroticism in 1950’s Sweden’, Fashion and European Identities panel. Europe in its Own Eyes / Europe in the Eyes of the Other: 2010 European Identities Conference, University of Guelph, Canada.

2010:Conference paper: ‘Public violence in contemporary Sweden’, Performance Studies International # 16, Performing Publics, Faculty of Fine Arts, York University & the Ontario College of Art & Design, Toronto, Canada.

2010:Invited panelist: ‘Out of the Closet, Onto the Page: A discussion of Williams’s public coming out on the David Frost show in 1970 and his confessional writing of the 70s’, 2010 Tennessee Williams Scholars Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.

2009:Invited participant: ‘The European Première of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof’, seminar ‘Theatre, image, museum, research’, Gothenburg City Museum, Gothenburg, Sweden.

2009:Conference paper: ‘Contemporary fashion as a performative process’, After the Wall was Over: Performing the New Europe conference, University College Drama Program, University of Toronto, Canada.

2009: Conference paper: ‘“A gorillalike highly potent he-male reeking of sex”: Sexuality and forbidden homoeroticism in Ingmar Bergman’s production of A Streetcar Named Desire’, International Federation for Theatre Research (IFTR/FIRT) conference, University of Lisbon, Portugal. 

2009:Panel discussant: ‘A Nordic Design’, Fashions: Business Practices in Historical Perspective, Joint Annual Meeting of the Business History Conference and of the European Business History Association, Università Bocconi, Milan, Italy.

2009:Invited lecture: ‘Contemporary Performance Artists and Fashion Designers’, Teaterbiennalen 2009, Borås, Sweden.

2009:Invited lecture: ‘Queering Bergman’, The Unknown Ingmar Bergman Symposium, Stockholm, Sweden.

2009:Panel chair: ‘Fashion, Appearance, & Consumer Identity XI’, National Popular Culture & American Culture Associations Conference, New Orleans, USA.

2009:Conference paper: ‘Dressed for the occasion: The Collaboration between Björk, Alexander McQueen and Nick Knight’, National Popular Culture & American Culture Associations Conference, New Orleans, USA.

2009:Conference paper: ‘Cat in the Closet: Williams Does Sweden’, 2009 Tennessee Williams Scholars Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.

2009:Invited lecture: ‘A gorillalike highly potent he-male reeking of sex: Ingmar Bergman's production of Tennessee Williams’s A Streetcar Named Desire’, School of Fine Art and Music, Art History, University of Guelph, Canada.

2008:Conference paper: ‘The Gentleman in the Closet: The Fabulous and Contradictory Coming Out of Sverker Åström’, Nordic Research Workshop on Fashion Studies, Centre for Fashion Studies, Stockholm University, Sweden.

2008:Panel chair: ‘Fashioning Body and Gender’, Nordic Research Workshop on Fashion Studies, Centre for Fashion Studies, Stockholm University, Sweden.

2008: Conference paper: ‘“But I do know what morals are”: Tennessee Williams’s visit to Sweden 1955’, Theatrical Emotions: Actors, Spectators, Characters Symposium; Association of Nordic Theatre Scholars (NTF), Theatre and Dance Studies, Department of Musicology and Performance Studies, Stockholm University, Sweden.

2006: Conference paper: ‘Cultural performances as theatrical events’, Playing Politics: Current Approaches to Performance Studies Symposium, Theatre and Dance Studies, Department of Musicology and Performance Studies, Stockholm University, Sweden.

2006:Seminar paper: ‘When a girl loses her – currency: Political theatre against the Euro’, Queer Seminar, Centre for Gender Studies, Stockholm University, Sweden.

2004:Conference paper: ‘Den evige soldaten’/‘The universal soldier’, Nordic Conference on Men and Masculinities, Södertälje, Organizer: Centre for Gender Studies, Stockholm University, Sweden.

2004:Conference paper: ‘Men and Masculinities in Cultural Performances’, International Federation for Theatre Research (IFTR/FIRT), St. Petersburg, Russia, New Scholars Forum.

2004:Invited participant: Tal och tystnad om sexualiteter forum/Speech and silence on sexualities forum, Centre for Gender Studies, Stockholm University, Sweden.

2003: Conference paper: ‘Män i det offentliga rummet: Teatervetenskapliga perspektiv på maskulinitet’/‘Men in public: Approaching masculinities with Performance Studies’, Tema: Män! Manlighet och maskulinitet från 1700-talet fram till modern tid/Men! Maleness and masculinity from the 18th century to the modern era, Department of Literature, Uppsala University, Sweden.

2002:Conference paper: ‘Angels in America’, Farväl heteronormativitet/Farewell heteronormativity conference in Gothenburg, organizer: Gothenburg University, Sweden.

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