CONFERENCE PROGRAM
The Conference Program will be regularly updated before and during the conference on this page.
CONFERENCE PROGRAM
SESSIONS 1 (9.30 - 12.15)
LIT 1 - OPPRESSION AND INTERSECTIONALITY IN LITERATURE AND CULTURE (9.45 - 12.15 | Room 206)
Panel Chair: MILENA KALIČANIN, FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY, UNIVERSITY OF NIŠ
9.45 - 10.00
Natalija Stevanović, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Niš, Serbia
Ana Kocić Stanković, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Niš, Serbia
OPPRESSION AND TRANSGENERATIONAL TRAUMA IN OCEAN VUONG’S ON EARTH WE’RE BRIEFLY GORGEOUS
10.05 - 10.20
Anja Petrović, Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University of Niš, Serbia
RESISTING POWER, UNVEILING TRUTHS, AND SUBVERTING NORMS: FOUCAULDIAN THEMES IN THE OBSERVATIONS (2006)
10.25 – 10.40
Marija Nešić, Singidunum University, Serbia
THE POSTCOLONIAL INTERSECTION OF THE GLOBAL AND PERSONAL IN IAN MCEWAN’S LESSONS
10.45 – 10.55
COFFEE BREAK
10.55 – 11.10
Vesna Bratić, Faculty of Philology, University of Montenegro, Montenegro
GEORGE SAUNDERS’ UNDERPRIVILEGED CHARACTERS AND EMPATHY: MAKE THE SUM TOTAL OF SADNESS IN THE WORLD LESSER THAN IT WOULD HAVE BEEN
11.15 – 11.30
Ivana Đurić Paunović, Filozofski fakultet, Univerzitet u Novom Sadu, Srbija
THE COST OF CHANGE IN E. L. DOCTOROW'S RAGTIME
11.35 – 11.50
Antony Hoyte-West, Independent scholar, United Kingdom
EBONY AND IVORY: INTERSECTIONALITY AND THE PIANO IN BRANDON TAYLOR’S THE LATE AMERICANS
11.55 – 12.10 (PRESENTING ONLINE)
Anurima Chanda, Birsa Munda College, University of North Bengal, India
REVERSING POINT-OF-VIEWS, RESTORING BALANCE: A STUDY OF WORKS BY CONTEMPORARY NATIVE AMERICAN CHILDREN’S AUTHORS
LIT 2 - LITERATURE ACROSS BOUNDARIES (9.45 - 11.55 | Room 36)
Panel Chair: ARIJANA LUBURIĆ-CVIJANOVIĆ, FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY, UNIVERSITY OF NOVI SAD
9.45 – 10.00
Tatiana A. Ivushkina, MGIMO University, Russia
THE INTERSECTION OF LANGUAGE AND CLASS IN LITERATURE
10.05 – 10.20
Slađana Stamenković, Filozofski fakultet u Novom Sadu, Univerzitet u Novom Sadu, Srbija
TRANSHUMANISM IN JENNIFER EGAN’S THE CANDY HOUSE: AN INTERSECTIONAL APPROACH
10.25 – 10.40
Tijana Matović, Filološko-umetnički fakultet, Univerzitet u Kragujevcu, Srbija
INTERSECTIONAL IDENTITY CONFIGURATIONS IN NATASHA BROWN'S ASSEMBLY
10.45 – 10.55
COFFEE BREAK
10.55 – 11.10
Rayna Rosenova, Sofia University St Kliment Ohridski, Bulgaria
FUNGAL HORROR, EUGENICS AND COLONIALISM IN SILVIA MORENO-GARCIA’S MEXICAN GOTHIC (2020)
11.15 – 11.30
Aleksandra Stojanović, University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Philology and Arts, Serbia
EXPLORING INTERSECTIONALITY IN TEJU COLE’S EVERY DAY IS FOR THE THIEF
11.35 – 11.50
Adel Sliti, Manouba University, Faculty of Letters, Arts and Humanities, Tunisia
WRITING AGAINST THE ‘ORDERLY ALPHABET’: A READING OF HARRYETTE MULLEN’S INTERSECTIONAL POETICS
LIT 3 - ROAD MOVIES AS NODES OF INTERSECTIONALITY (10.00 - 12.10 | Room 207)
Panel Chair: SERGEJ MACURA, FACULTY OF PHILOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF BELGRADE
10.00 – 10.15
Sergej Macura, Faculty of Philology, University of Belgrade, Serbia
GREEN BOOK, WHITE FISTS, BLACK PLIGHT: A NEW TAKE ON THE DEEP SOUTH
10.20 – 10.35
Biljana Radovanović, Univerzitet u Nišu, Filozofski fakultet, Srbija
TOTALITARNI SISTEM I SLOBODA POJEDINCA – TEMATIZACIJA ODNOSA ČOVEKA I DRŽAVE U FILMU JASTOG
10.40 – 10.55
Azra A. Mušović, Državni univerzitet u Novom Pazaru, Srbija
„IZVAN PROŠLOSTI I BUDUĆNOSTI” – INTERSEKCIONALNOST, PATRIŠA HAJSMIT I ANATOMIJA PRIVLAČNOSTI U FILMU KEROL/ROMANU CENA SOLI
11.00 – 11.10
COFFEE BREAK
11.10 – 11.25
Dusty Keim, University of Vienna, Austria
“I SWEAR THIS SUMMER WILL BE SUMMER CAMP”: SUMMER CAMP, BLACK ADOLESCENCE, AND CONFLICTING BLACK MASCULINITIES IN CHILDISH GAMBINO’S CAMP
11.30 – 11.45
Irma Rusadze, Akaki Tsereteli State University, Georgia
Ekaterine Julakidze, Akaki Tsereteli State University, Georgia
METAPHOR-AS A WAY OF CREATIVE THINKING
11.50 – 12.05
Olha Voznyuk, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Institute of Slavonic Studies of the Czech Academy of Sciences
LITERATURE AND WAR: PECULIARITIES OF UKRAINIAN LITERATURE’S LANGUAGE DURING THE ONGOING WAR
LIT 4 - DISABILITY (9.30- 12.15 | Room 208)
Panel Chair: DANIJELA PETKOVIĆ, FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY, UNIVERSITY OF NIŠ
9.30 – 9.45
Душан Петровић, Филозофски факултет у Нишу, Србија
СТО ЛИЦА РАЗЛИЧИТОСТИ У КЊИЖЕВНОСТИ ЗА ДЕЦУ: ПРИПОВЕДНИ И ВИЗУЕЛНИ АСПЕКТИ КЊИГЕ 100 ЛИЦА СТОЛИЦА ЈАСМИНКЕ ПЕТРОВИЋ
9.50 – 10.05
Danjela Petković, Filozofski fakultet Univerziteta u Nišu, Srbija
“A GAUNT AND SHORN-HAIRED INVALID IN THE FINAL STAGES OF CONSUMPTION”: DISABILITY, VICTORIAN FEMININITY, AND CHILDHOOD IN BARBARA HAMBLY’S THE LOST BOY
10.10 – 10.25
Bojana Vujin, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Novi Sad, Serbia
Viktorija Krombholc, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Novi Sad, Serbia
THE BODY ELECTRIC: DISABILITY, MORALITY AND MONSTROSITY IN STAR WARS
10.30 – 10.45
Tatiana Martseva, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russia
PHENOMENON OF INCLUSIVITY AND ITS REPRESENTATIONS IN MODERN ENGLISH LANGUAGE (ANALYSIS OF PARALYMPIANS NOMINATIONS)
10.50 – 11.00
COFFEE BREAK
11.00 – 11.15
Ane Ferri, Nezavisni istraživač, Crna Gora
MOJ BRAT, DINOSAURUSI I INKLUZIJA: PROUČAVANJE INVALIDITETA U DELU ITALIJANSKOG PISCA
11.20 – 11.35
Александра Чебашек, Универзитет у Крагујевцу, Филолошко-уметнички факултет, Србија
СТРАХ: ЗАМЕТАК ЕМОЦИОНАЛНЕ ИНВАЛИДНОСТИ ЛИРСКОГ СУБЈЕКТА У ЗБИРЦИ ОКО НУЛЕ АНЕ РИСТОВИЋ
11.40 – 11.55
Наташа Станковић Шошо, Универзитет у Београду, Филолошки факултет, Србија
Невена Лукинић Јањуш, Универзитет у Београду Филолошки факултет, Србија
О СНАЗИ КРХКИХ: ЛИКОВИ ДЕЦЕ ИНВАЛИДА У ПРОГРАМИМА НАСТАВЕ И УЧЕЊА ЗА ОСНОВНУ ШКОЛУ
12.00 – 12.15
Jovana, Suvajdžić, Institut za srpsku kulturu Priština – Leposavić, Srbija
INTERSEKCIONALNO TUMAČENJE MOTIVA GLUVONEMOSTI U ROMANU NEČISTA KRV BORISAVA STANKOVIĆA
LANG 1 - THE DARK SIDE OF WORDS - ANALYZING VERBAL AGRESSION IN CONTEMPORARY PUBLIC DISCOURSE (11.00 - 12.15 | Room 209)
Panel Chair: NADEŽDA SILAŠKI, FACULTY OF ECONOMICS, UNIVERSITY OF BELGRADE
11.00 – 11.15
Jasmina Đorđević, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Niš, Serbia
DOES ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE KNOW I’M A WOMAN? GENDER BIAS IN THE DISCOURSE OF MACHINE-TRANSLATED JOB ANNOUNCEMENTS
11.20 – 11.35
Gordana Lalić-Krstin, Filozofski fakultet, Univerzitet u Novom Sadu, Srbija
Maja Bjelica Andonov, Filozofski fakultet, Univerzitet u Novom Sadu, Srbija
TEHNIKE UOKVIRIVANJA I JEZIČKI ISPOLJENA MIZOGINIJA U MEDIJSKOM PROSTORU: STUDIJA SLUČAJA
11.40 – 11.55
Maja Stevanović, Filozofski fakultet, Beograd, Srbija
THE STIGMA OF HOMELESSNESS IN METAPHORICAL TERMS
12.00 – 12.15
Nadežda Silaški, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Economics and Business, Serbia
Tatjana Đurović, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Economics and Business, Serbia
METAPHORS IN THE COMMENTS SECTIONS OF SERBIAN ONLINE NEWS ARTICLES REPORTING ON MIGRANTS
LANG 4 - EQUALITY AND DISCRIMINATION IN LANGUAGE (9.45 - 12.15 | Room 210)
Panel Chair: MARINA NIKOLIĆ, INSTITUTE FOR THE SERBIAN LANGUAGE (SASA), SERBIA
9.45 – 10.00
Anđela Ris, Odsek za italijanske i iberoameričke studije na Filozofskom fakultetu u Novom Sadu, Srbija
ZAŠTO BI ŠPANSKA KRALJEVSKA AKADEMIJA TREBALO RAZMOTRITI UPOTREBU RODNO OSETLJIVOG JEZIKA
10.05 – 10.20
Соња Леро Максимовић, Универзитет у Бањој Луци, Филолошки факултет, Босна и Херцеговина
ЈЕЗИК И ТЕРИТОРИЈА: ИНТЕРСЕКЦИОНАЛНОСТ И ПРИМЈЕР ДИСТРИБУЦИЈЕ АУТОРСКИХ ПРАВА ЗА ПРЕВОДЕ
10.25 – 10.40
Радмила Костић, Филозофски факултет у Нишу (ДАС), Србија
Тамара Арсић, Филозофски факултет у Косовској Митровици (ДАС), Србија
ПОРЕЂЕЊЕ ДРУШТВЕНЕ И ЈЕЗИЧКЕ СЛИКЕ ЖЕНЕ У ПИСАНИМ МЕДИЈИМА КРАЈЕМ ХХ И ПОЧЕТКОМ ХХI ВЕКА
10.45 – 11.00
Ljiljana Tasić, Univerzitet u Nišu, Filozofski fakultet, Srbija
Katarina Stamenković, Univerzitet u Nišu, Filozofski fakultet, Srbija
ANALIZA MAŠINSKOG PREVODA RODNO NEUTRALNIH ZANIMANJA SA ENGLESKOG NA SRPSKI I NEMAČKI JEZIK U PROGRAMIMA GOOGLE TRANSLATE, MICROSOFT BING I CHATGTP
11.05 – 11.15
COFFEE BREAK
11.20 – 11.35
Бојана Томић, Институт за српски језик САНУ, Србија
bojana.mojsilovic@gmail.com
О СЕМАНТИЦИ ПРИДЕВА АУТИСТИЧАН У СРПСКОМ ЈЕЗИКУ
11.40 – 11.55
Ивана Митић, Филозофски факултет, Универзитет у Нишу, Србија
Александра Јанић, Филозофски факултет, Универзитет у Нишу, Србија
СТАВОВИ СТУДЕНАТА СРБИСТИКЕ, АНГЛИСТИКЕ И СОЦИОЛОГИЈЕ ФИЛОЗОФСКОГ ФАКУЛТЕТА У НИШУ ПРЕМА УПОТРЕБИ ЗАНИМАЊА И ТИТУЛА ЖЕНСКИХ ОСОБА
12.00 – 12.15
Марина Николић, Институт за српски језик САНУ, Београд , Србија
Ненад Аритоновић, УГ „Правдослов“, Београд, Србија
СТЕРЕОТИПИ У МИШЉЕЊУ – ДИСКРИМИНАЦИЈА У ГОВОРУ (НА ПРИМЕРУ НАЗИВА ЗА ПРИПАДНИЦЕ СЛОВАЧКЕ НАЦИОНАЛНЕ МАЊИНЕ)
LANG 5 - ANALYSE DE DISCOURSE ET INTERSECTIONALITÉ (11.00 - 12.00 | Room 204)
Panel Chair: JELENA JAĆOVIĆ AND IVAN JOVANOVIĆ, FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY, UNIVERSITY OF NIŠ
11.00 – 11.15
Нина Манојловић, Филолошко-уметнички факултет, Универзитет у Крагујевцу, Србија
ПРАГМАТИКА СИТУАЦИОНЕ ИРОНИЈЕ НА ПРИМЕРУ ТРАГИЧКЕ ИРОНИЈЕ У РОМАНУ НЕ ДАЈ МИ НИКАДА ДА ОДЕМ КАЗУА ИШИГУРА
11.20– 11.35
Smiljana Igrutinović, Akademija strukovnih studija Šumadija, Odsek Trstenik, Srbija
Nevena Banković, Akademija strukovnih studija Šumadija, Srbija
PRIMENA MULTIMODALNE KRITIČKE ANALIZE DISKURSA NA UDŽBENIKE ZA ODRASLE UČENIKE ENGLESKOG JEZIKA TEHNIKE
11.40– 11.55
Jelena Jaćović, Filozofski fakultet Niš, Srbija
Ivan Jovanović, Filozofski fakultet Niš, Srbija
LES DÉNOMINATIONS DES GROUPES SENSIBLES DANS LE DISCOURS MÉDIATIQUE FRANÇAIS
PLENARY LECTURE - LITERATURE (12.30 - 13.30 | Room 36)
ANA KOCIĆ STANKOVIĆ, INTERSECTIONALITY IN CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN IMMIGRANT NARRATIVE
ANA KOCIĆ STANKOVIĆ, INTERSECTIONALITY IN CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN IMMIGRANT NARRATIVE
The paper considers the notion of intersectionality in relation to two contemporary American immigrant narratives: Ocean Vuong’s On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous (2019) and Jimmy Santiago Baca’s American Orphan (2021). Starting from Vivian May’s (2015: xi) idea of intersectionality being “a form of resistant knowledge” centered around the issues of oppression, social (in)justice and political activism, I argue that contemporary American immigrant literature shares some of these traits and goals. Immigrant literature, by definition, rests on the very notion of intersectionality and very often addresses the themes of inequality and giving voice(s) to those who suffer social, cultural, economic and psychological consequences of their minority status in the host country. I also try to consider Vuong’s and Baca’s novels in view of the contemporary considerations of American immigrant literature and culture (Pelaud 2011, Peché et al. 2023, Mukherjee 2011, Weiner 2018, Cowart 2006) which highlight agency, re-storying, dealing with individual and collective traumas, disruption of the narrative flow and fluidity (as opposed to fixity) and contradiction as its key features. The main argument is that Vuong’s and Baca’s narrative styles based on uncertainty, fragmentation and fluidity reflect the idea of cultural identity as an ever-changing process constituted within representation. Both novels have been critically acclaimed, written by immigrant authors, recipients of major American literary awards and both are fictional accounts largely based on authors’ lives and their family experiences. I argue that the main strength of Vuong’s literary representation lies in his efforts to find a new language to express his own immigrant experience (as well as the collective immigrant experience of his family), the language that emulates his grandmother’s storytelling style and defies the conventional narrative flow. Thus, the fragmentation, fluidity and uncertainty of the narrative correspond with the fragmentation of memory, fluidity of one’s identity and uncertainty of both one’s past and the future. Baca’s narrative is analyzed with view to its treatment of the themes of silence, trauma, minority group experience and acquiring one’s individual voice. Furthermore, I propose that Baca’s narrative owes its powerful expression to the American literary tradition as it draws upon some of the well-known literary tropes established by American classical writers. Both novels combine traumatic individual memories, lived-through life experiences shared by many members of the authors’ respective minority groups with a masterful narrative technique producing life narratives which can be read both as works of art and powerful testimonies of human suffering and resilience.
SESSIONS 2 (12.30 - 14.10)
LANG 1.1 - THE DARK SIDE OF WORDS - ANALYZING VERBAL AGRESSION IN CONTEMPORARY PUBLIC DISCOURSE (12.30 - 14.10 | Room 209)
Panel Chair: NADEŽDA SILAŠKI, FACULTY OF ECONOMICS, UNIVERSITY OF BELGRADE
12.30 – 12.45
Jasmin Halitović, Državni univerzitet u Novom Pazaru, Srbija
MEDIA FREEDOM VS POLITICAL POWER: A CRITICAL DISCOURSE ANALYSIS OF PEJORATIVE LANGUAGE USE IN POLITICAL PRESS CONFERENCES
12.50 – 13.05
Милица Рабреновић, Институт за српски језик САНУ, Србија
СТРАТЕШКА УПОТРЕБА ЈЕЗИЧКИХ СРЕДСТАВА ТОКОМ ПРЕДИЗБОРНОГ ПЕРИОДА (ОД 1. 11. 2023. ДО 17. 12. 2023)
13.10 – 13.25
Ivan Dinić, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Niš, Serbia
Miloš Tasić, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Niš, Serbia
VERBAL AGGRESSION IN A MULTIMODAL MEDIUM? THE CASE OF POLITICAL CARTOONS IN BRITISH AND GERMAN NEWSPAPERS
13.30 – 13.45
Tijana Vesić Pavlović, Univerzitet u Beogradu - Mašinski fakultet, Srbija
O „BEZUMNIM OLOŠIMAˮ, „BEDNICIMAˮ I „BOLESNIM UMOVIMAˮ: JEZIK UVREDA U DISKURSU SRPSKIH PARTIJA NA DRUŠTVENIM MREŽAMA TOKOM PREDIZBORNE KAMPANJE
13.50 – 14.05
Marijana Dimović, Institut za informacione tehnologije, Srbija
INTERRUPTING THE NARRATIVE: AN IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS OF SPEECH INTERRUPTIONS IN POLITICAL DISCOURSE
PLENARY LECTURE - LANGUAGE/LINGUISTICS (14.00 - 15.00 | Room 36)
TANJA PETROVIĆ, ON NATURAL AND UNNATURAL IN LANGUAGE (AND BEYOND)
TANJA PETROVIĆ, ON NATURAL AND UNNATURAL IN LANGUAGE (AND BEYOND)
This talk aims to scrutinize the nature and meanings of the ongoing debates on language in Serbian society by juxtaposing the ways the notion of un/naturalness is employed in these debates. I particularly focus on debates concerning two current issues: gender sensitive language use, on the one hand, and the language politics in Serbia (specifically, the relationship between Serbian standard idiom and other languages derived from once common Serbo-Croatian, as well as the relationship between the Serbian standard and dialects), on the other. I point to the discrepancy between the seemingly disinterested and »objective« nature of the the arguments that draw on un/naturalness (of language, its use, its patterns, and its speakers), and gendered, economic and social relations these arguments both depend on and produce, arguing that the un/naturalness in language is never an »objective« and universal category, but must always be observed through an intersectional lens.
SESSIONS 3 (13.40 - 15.15)
LIT 3.1 - ROAD MOVIES AS NODES OF INTERSECTIONALITY (13.40 - 15.15 | Room 207)
Panel Chair: SERGEJ MACURA, FACULTY OF PHILOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF BELGRADE
13.40 – 13.55
Miljana S. Pešić, Filozofski fakultet Univerziteta u Nišu
ŽENSKA MEMOARISTIKA U INTERSEKCIONALNOM KLJUČU: PISMA IZ SOLUNA JELENE DIMITRIJEVIĆ I ČITATI LOLITU U TEHERANU AZAR NAFISI
14.00 – 14.15
Kristina Stevanović, Filozofski fakultet u Novom Sadu, Srbija
PRILOG INTERSEKCIONALNOM PROUČAVANJU STVARALAŠTVA FRIDE FILIPOVIĆ
14.20 – 14.35
Aleksandra Popin, Državni univerzitet u Novom Pazaru, Departman za filološke nauke, Srbija
Violeta Janjatović, Državni univerzitet u Novom Pazaru, Departman za filološke nauke, Srbija
IDENTITETI NA RASKRŠĆIMA: INTERSEKCIONALNA ANALIZA ROMANA BALKANSKA TRILOGIJA I OČI SU IM GLEDALE U BOGA
14.40 – 14.55
Olivera Marković, Univerzitet u Nišu, Filozofski fakultet u Nišu, Srbija
AUTRE-BIOGRAPHY KAO POSTKOLONIJALNA AUTOBIOGRAFIJA
15.00 – 15.15
Катарина Лазић, Универзитет у Крагујевцу, Филолошко-уметнички факултет, Србија
DISCOURSE AS A MEANS OF ESTABLISHING OTHERNESS ON GOLI OTOK
LUNCH (14.45 - 16.00 | Room A23 - Ground Floor)
PLENARY LECTURE - SOCIOLOGY (16.00 - 17.00 | Room 36) (ONLINE)
MARTINA TOPIĆ, SOCIAL CLASS, MARKET ECONOMY AND HARMONY WITH THE ENVIRONMENT: AN ECOFEMINIST PERSPECTIVE
MARTINA TOPIĆ, SOCIAL CLASS, MARKET ECONOMY AND HARMONY WITH THE ENVIRONMENT: AN ECOFEMINIST PERSPECTIVE
…it is impossible, within patriarchy, to suppress a market economy. And it is impossible, in a market system, to not devastate the planet. It is up to women, now, to reclaim the voice of humanity… (d’Eaubonne, [1990]1997, p. 4).
The poignant quote above, from one of the mothers of ecofeminism, outlines what this form of feminism is about. It is a distinctive position to feminist research that, unlike many other approaches, tries to speak to everyone, women, indigenous people and ethnic minorities, those suffering discrimination because of their social class, speciesism, etc. It does so by focusing on the critique of capitalism and the environmental destruction capitalism inevitably brings, regardless of what proponents of the so-called green capitalism say (Topić, 2021), but it puts women at the centre of ecological struggle and also, tackles technology as an issue in environmental protection. In addition to that, ecofeminism speaks of speciesism which is seen as part of the masculine ideology where humanity dominates the planet first through speciesism and this discrimination then cascades down to enforce the domination of genders, races and classes through anthropocentrism (Topić, 2021, Warren, 1990, Alloun, 2015, Mayer, 2006, Iovino, 2013, Bahofen, 1990, Holy, 2007). In a nutshell, ecofeminism tackles -isms: racism, sexism, and speciesism and it is an anti-capitalist critique of economic and social conditions that lead to the inequality of races, species, and women (Salleh, 2000). In that, ecofeminism celebrates women’s role in preserving the environment and there are many studies outlining the historical role of women in the environmentalist movement (Mallory, 2006, Brownhill and Turner, 2019, Goldstein, 2006, Holy, 2007, Leahy, 2003, McStay and Dunlap, 1983).
However, another aspect of ecofeminism, which is not always tackled in other forms of feminism, is inequality that derives from social class. Ecofeminism is an anti-capitalist movement which looks at various forms of oppression that also including the issue of class inequality that goes together with patriarchal domination and oppression of women (Brownhill & Turner 2020). Ecofeminists have thus looked at the struggles of women across the world including, for example, women in Nigeria who shouted ‘fish, not oil’ in their protests against environmental degradation but also the struggles of women whose inequality is linked to city streets and white- and blue-collar workplaces. Ecofeminism looks at the global economic system and inequality that derives from the market economy deepening tensions between class, race, gender, and species since one-fifth of the world controls four-fifths of all resources, which derives from masculine and patriarchal system centred on free trade policies, competition in exporting all of which had an impact on the environment.
This talk will thus speak about the market economy and inequality that derives from it, focusing particularly on social class as an issue that should have a prominent place in feminist and intersectionality debates but often does not. In that, the talk will speak about this issue from an ecofeminist perspective arguing that the most pressing inequalities, which are at the root of all inequalities, are the way we treat the environment, speciesism and social class, thus arguing that poverty needs to be addressed first, whenever and wherever we can find it and that a harmony with the environment is needed before we can resolve other inequalities.
SESSIONS 4 (16.00 - 18.35)
LIT 1.1 - OPPRESSION AND INTERSECTIONALITY IN LITERATURE AND CULTURE (16.00 - 18.10 | Room 206)
Panel Chair: MIRJANA BOJANIĆ ĆIRKOVIĆ, FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY, UNIVERSITY OF NIŠ
16.00 – 16.15
Petra Mitić, Faculty of Philosophy, Niš, Serbia
THE INTERSECTIONALITY ISSUE IN CONTEMPORARY DEBATES WITHIN FEMINISM
16.20 – 16.35
Анђела Ђукић, Филолошки факултет Универзитета у Београду, Србија
ОДНОС ИЗМЕЂУ РОДА, ИДЕНТИТЕТА И НАЦИЈЕ: САВРЕМЕНО ЧИТАЊЕ АУТОРСКИХ ТЕКСТОВА Ј. Б. И ВИНКЕ БУЛИЋ ОБЈАВЉЕНИХ У ЧАСОПИСУ ЖЕНСКИ ПОКРЕТ (1920–1938)
16.40 – 16.55
Stevan Bradić, Filozofski fakultet, Univerzitet u Novom Sadu, Srbija
KNJIŽEVNI RAD, KLASA I IDENTITET
17.00 – 17.10
COFFEE BREAK
17.10 – 17.25
Sofia Vučković, Zhejiang University, China
CLASS CONVENTIONS IN TENNESSEE WILLIAMS’ A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE AND JOHN OSBORNE’S LOOK BACK IN ANGER
17.30 – 17.45
Мирјана Бојанић Ћирковић, Филозофски факултет Универзитета у Нишу
УНИВЕРЗАЛНЕ ХУМАНИСТИЧКЕ ПРЕТПОСТАВКЕ ЦРНОГ ФЕМИНИЗМА: ПРИЛОГ ИНТЕРКУЛТУРАЛНОСТИ
17.50 – 18.05
Radojka Jevtić, Filološki Fakultet, Univerzitet u Beogradu, Srbija
PODJARMLJENA BUDUĆNOST: DISTOPIJA MARDŽ PIRSI KAO TAČKA PRESEKA OPRESIJE PROŠLOSTI, SADAŠNJOSTI I BUDUĆNOSTI
LIT 1.2 - OPPRESSION AND INTERSECTIONALITY IN LITERATURE AND CULTURE (16.00 - 18.10 | Room 207)
Panel Chair: JELENA MLADENOVIĆ, FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY, UNIVERSITY OF NIŠ
16.00 – 16.15 (PRESENTING ONLINE)
Jelena Jovović, Filološki fakultet Univerziteta Crne Gore Nikšić, Crna Gora
PROSTOR DIJASPORE: IZMEĐU ALIJENACIJE I PRIPADNOSTI
16.20 – 16.35
Snežana Marković, Univerzitet u Beogradu, Filološki fakultet, Srbija
СПЕЦИФИКУМ КАСАБЕ КАО ОКВИР ЗА ОБЛИКОВАЊЕ МЕНТАЛИТЕТА У РОМАНУ ДЕРВИШ И СМРТ МЕШЕ СЕЛИМОВИЋА И ОСАМА ВЛАДИМИРА КЕЦМАНОВИЋА
16.40 – 16.55 (PRESENTING ONLINE)
Ђурђина Шијаковић Маиданик, Етнографски институт САНУ, Србија
КОЛЕКТИВ АНТИЧКОГ ГРЧКОГ ТЕАТРА КРОЗ СОЧИВО ИНТЕРСЕКЦИОНАЛНОСТИ
17.00 – 17.10
COFFEE BREAK
17.10 – 17.25
Elma Halilović, Državni univerzitet u Novom Pazaru, Srbija
TRAGIKA ŽENSKIH LIKOVA U ROMANIMA SAFETA SIJARIĆA
17.30 – 17.45
Хелена Арслан, Филолошки факултет, Београд, Србија
САВРЕМЕНО ЧИТАЊЕ БОЖЈИХ ЉУДИ БОРИСАВА СТАНКОВИЋА: ИНТЕРСЕКЦИОНАЛНОСТ И КЊИЖЕВНОСТ
17.50 – 18.05 (PRESENTING ONLINE)
Ana Živković, Filološki Fakultet, Univerzitet u Beogradu, Srbija
AUTOHTONIZAM KAO IDEJNA OSNOVA BALKANSKOG INSTITUTA (1934–1941)
LIT 2.1 - LITERATURE ACROSS BOUNDARIES (16.00 - 18.10 | Room 208)
Panel Chair: ARIJANA LUBURIĆ-CVIJANOVIĆ, FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY, UNIVERSITY OF NOVI SAD
16.00 – 16.15
Srebrenka Mačković, Filozofski fakultet Univerziteta u Sarajevu, Bosna i Hercegovina
SILENT NO MORE: A JOURNEY TO FINDING ONE’S OWN VOICE IN A LESSON BEFORE DYING
16.20 – 16.35
Ewelina Bator, Uniwersytet Warszawski (University of Warsaw), Poland
EXPLORING EXCLUSION AND CULTURAL CONTRASTS IN PAJTIM STATOVCI'S MY CAT YUGOSLAVIA
16.40 – 16.55
Sanja Ignjatović, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Niš, Serbia
Marko Mitić, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Niš, Serbia
TRANS AND QUEER REPRESENTATIONS IN CONTEMPORARY SHORT FICTION
17.00 – 17.10
COFFEE BREAK
17.10 – 17.25
Anamarija Šporčič, Faculty of Arts, Ljubljana, Slovenia
“AS REAL A GIRL AS ANYONE”: SUBVERTING THE SUPERHERO TROPE IN APRIL DANIELS’ DREADNOUGHT
17.30 – 17.45
Alexander Kozmin, MGIMO University, Russia
Nataliya Lavrova, MGIMO University, Russia
PSYCHOLINGUISTIC PORTRAIT AND DEMOGRAPHICS OF EATING-DISORDERED WOMEN (BASED ON ENGLISH NOVELS ABOUT FEMALES WITH EATING DISORDERS)
17.50 – 18.05
Natia Kvachakidze, Kutaisi Akaki Tsereteli State University, Georgia
“THEM INDIANS”: INTERSECTIONALITY IN ERNEST HEMINGWAY’S SHORT FICTION REFLECTED IN VARIOUS TRANSLATIONS
LANG 2 - DIALECTS IN CONTEMPORARY LINGUISTICS (16.00 - 17.40 | Room 209)
Panel Chair: TATJANA TRAJKOVIĆ, FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY, UNIVERSITY OF NIŠ
16.00 – 16.15
Dušan Nikolić, University of Calgary, Canada
DIALECTAL VARIATION IN THE PERCEPTUAL SIMILARITY SPACE OF SERBIAN ACCENTS
16.20 – 16.35
Danijela Radovanović, Filozofski fakultet u Nišu, Srbija
KAKO UPOTREBA RAZLIČITIH JEZIČKIH VARIJETETA U GOVORU UTIČE NA PERCEPCIJU IDENTITETA GOVORNIKA KOD ISPITANIKA SA PROSTORA PRIZRENSKO-JUŽNOMORAVSKOG DIJALEKTA
16.40 – 16.55
Милица Божић Синчук, Институт за српски језик САНУ, Београд, Србија
АНТРОПОЛОШКА ЛЕКСИКА У КЊИЗИ ДИЈАЛЕКАТСКЕ КЊИЖЕВНОСТИ ТОЈ ТИ ВИКАМ
17.00 – 17.15
Đorđe Božović, Univerzitet u Beogradu – Filološki fakultet, Srbija
ON DIALECT POLYPHONY IN CENTRAL SOUTH SLAVIC: A CASE STUDY
17.20 – 17.35
Branimir, Stanković, Faculty of Philosophy in Niš, Serbia
Predrag, Kovačević, Faculty of Philosophy in Novi Sad, Serbia
DIALECTAL DISCRIMINATION AT WORK: THE CASE OF INFINITIVE AND FINITE COMPLEMENTS IN SERBIAN
LANG 3 - MULTILINGUALISM THROUGH AN INTERSECTIONAL LENS (16.00 - 18.50 | Room 204)
Panel Chair: ALEKSANDRA SALAMUROVIĆ, REGENSBURG UNIVERSITY (GERMANY)
16.00 – 16.15 (PRESENTING ONLINE)
Gojko Ostojić, Filozofski fakultet u Novom Sadu, Srbija
METODOLOGIJA MIJENJANJA KODOVA SA UČENICIMA U MEĐUNARODOJ ŠKOLI
16.20 – 16.35
Silvija Tintor, Ekonomska šola Celje, Višja strokovna šola, Slovenia
INTERSECTIONALITY AND MULTILINGUALISM
16.40 – 16.55
Annemarie Sorescu-Marinković, Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Serbia
Dušan Vlajić, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Niš, Serbia
NAVIGATING VULNERABILITY: LANGUAGE ATTITUDES THROUGH AN INTERSECTIONAL LENS
17.00 – 17.15
Aleksandra Salamurović, University Regensburg, Germany
Björn Hansen, University Regensburg, Germany
EXPLORING MULTILINGUALISM AND INTERSECTIONALITY IN ACADEMIC VOICES FROM SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
17.20– 17.30
COFFEE BREAK
17.30 – 17.45
Milica Rodić, Ruprecht-Karls University Heidelberg, Germany
ON IMPERSONAL STANCE IN SCIENTIFIC WRITING: A CROSS-DISCIPLINARY AND CROSS-CULTURAL STUDY
17.50 – 18.05
Jelena Ćalić, University College London, United Kingdom
REVISITING THE NOTION OF ‘LINGUISTIC CULTURE’: MULTILINGUALISM AND LINGUISTIC DIVERSIFICATION IN LANGUAGE EDUCATION IN SERBIA
18.10 - 18.25
Nina Ilić, Filozofski fakultet u Novom Sadu, Srbija
Isidora Wattles, Fakultet za pravne i poslovne studije dr Lazar Vrkatić, Srbija
THE ETHNOLINGUISTIC VITALITY OF HUNGARIANS IN VOJVODINA
18.30– 18.45
Jelena Lepojević, Filozofski fakultet Univerziteta u Nišu, Srbija
SOCIJALNI FEMININATIVI: PUT KA RAVNOPRAVNOSTI ILI ORUŽJE DISKRIMINACIJE (NA MATERIJALU RUSKOG I SRPSKOG JEZIKA)
LANG 4.1 - EQUALITY AND DISCRIMINATION IN LANGUAGE (16.00 - 18.10 | Room 210)
Panel Chair: MARINA NIKOLIĆ, INSTITUTE FOR THE SERBIAN LANGUAGE (SASA), SERBIA
16.00 – 16.15
Daniela Matić, University of Split, Croatia
AT THE INTERSECTION OF AGE AND GENDER: CRITICAL DISCOURSE ANALYSIS OF NEWSPAPER DISCOURSES
16.20 – 16.35
Dragana Čarapić, Filološki fakultet, Univerzitet Crne Gore, Crna Gora
Vesna Bulatović, Filološki fakultet, Univerzitet Crne Gore, Crna Gora
LACK OF GENDER SENSITIVITY IN THE MACHINE TRANSLATION DATABASE: A CASE STUDY OF GOOGLE TRANSLATE FROM ENGLISH TO SERBIAN
16.40 – 16.55
Miloš Milisavljević, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Niš, Srbija
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF SPEECH ACTS IN TWO MEN'S FORUMS
17.00 – 17.10
COFFEE BREAK
17.10 – 17.25
Ivan Stamenković, PhD Student of Philology - Faculty of Philosophy, University of Niš, Serbia
AN ANALYSIS OF DISABILITY REPRESENTATION IN SERBIAN AND US PRESS THROUGH THE USE OF PEOPLE-FIRST LANGUAGE
17.30 – 17.45
Ana Jović, Filološki fakultet, Univerzitet u Beogradu, Srbija
NATIVE SPEAKERISM THROUGH AN INTERSECTIONAL LENS
17.50 – 18.05 (PRESENTING ONLINE)
Gordana Janjušević Leković, Independent Researcher, Montenegro
LANGUAGE IN CONTEXT: CHANGE IN SOCIAL ORDER AND LANGUAGE USE
SOC - INTERSECTIONALITY IN SOCIAL SCIENCES (17.00 - 18.00 | Room 36)
Panel Chair: DRAGAN TODOROVIĆ, FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY, UNIVERSITY OF NIŠ
17.00 - 17.15
Dragan Todorović, Filozofski fakultet u Nišu, Srbija
Ivan Đorđević, Etnografski institut SANU, Srbija
ROMSKI DEČJI BRAKOVI U SRBIJI: TRADICIJA ILI NE?
17.20 - 17.35
Ger Duijzings, Universität Regensburg, Germany
SOCIAL SORTING AND SPATIAL SEGREGATION: THE EMERGENCE OF THE SO-CALLED 'ROMA GHETTOS’ IN SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
17.40 - 17.55
Sara Pekić, University of Zagreb, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Croatia
Ivana Budimir, University of Zagreb, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Croatia
FROM FACTORIES TO STOREFRONTS: MAPPING THE MULTIFACETED STRUGGLES OF WOMEN WORKERS