Hi all: Here's the announcement for a conference I'm organizing at MIT.  It
should be great!
Please circulate widely and post to your lists. There are posters linked to
the conference website for printing and distribution.
--Sally

Apoligies for cross-posting.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________


*Adoption: Secret Histories, Public Policies*
A conference sponsored by the Alliance for the Study of Adoption and Culture
at MIT, Cambridge, MA
April 29-May 2, 2010
http://web.me.com/shaslang/ASAC_2010_Conference/

Keynote speakers:

*Anita L. Allen <http://www.law.upenn.edu/cf/faculty/aallen/>*, Deputy Dean
for Academic Affairs, Henry R. Silverman Professor of Law and Professor of
Philosophy, University of Pennsylvania Law School. Allen’s work has focused
on the law and ethics of privacy and data protection, race relations and
feminist philosophy.  She is the author of numerous articles and several
books: Privacy Law: and Society (2007);  *Why Privacy Isn’t Everything:
Feminist Reflections on Personal
Accountability<http://www.amazon.com/Privacy-Isnt-Everything-Accountability-Constructions/dp/0742514099>
,* (Rowman and Littlefield, 2003); *Uneasy Access: Privacy for Women in a
Free Society<http://www.amazon.com/Uneasy-Access-Anita-L-Allen/dp/0847673286/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpt_2>
* (Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield, l988) and *The New Ethics: A Guided
Tour of the 21st Century Moral
Landscape*<http://www.amazon.com/New-Ethics-Twenty-First-Century-Landscape/dp/078686897X>(Miramax
Books/distributed by Hyperion Books, 2004).

*Ann Fessler *is an installation artist, filmmaker, adoptee and author of *The
Girls Who Went Away: <http://www.thegirlswhowentaway.com/>The Hidden History
of Women Who Surrendered Children for Adoption in the Decades Before Roe v.
Wade <http://www.amazon.com/Girls-Who-Went-Away-Surrendered/dp/1594200947>.
*(The Penguin Press, 2006) based on oral history interviews she conducted
between 2002 and 2005 with surrendering mothers across the country. In 2008
Fessler received the Ballard Book Prize given annually to a female author
who advances the dialogue about women's rights and in 2006 her book was
selected by the National Book Critics Circle as one of the top 5 nonfiction
books of the year. Hear Ann Fesssler on Fresh
Air<http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5408449>.


*Lynn Lauber <http://www.lynnlauber.com/>, *birth mother, writer, teacher,
and book collaborator, has published three books with W.W. Norton. White
Girls <http://www.amazon.com/White-Girls-Lynn-Lauber/dp/1401042082>
(1990)and 21
Sugar Street<http://www.amazon.com/21-Sugar-Street-Lynn-Lauber/dp/0393312356/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1263675043&sr=1-1>(1993),
both fiction, that deal with the topics of birth families and adoption. Listen
to Me, Writing Life into
Meaning<http://www.amazon.com/Listen-Me-Writing-Life-Meaning/dp/0393338274/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpi_1>(2003),
is part memoir, part exploration of writing as self-discovery. Her essays
have appeared in the New York Times and a number of anthologies.  She
currently teaches personal writing workshops and is writing a memoir on her
experience as a birth mother.

*Deann Borshay Liem* is Producer, Director, Writer for the Emmy
Award-nominated documentary, First Person Plural
<http://www.pbs.org/pov/firstpersonplural/>(PBS 2000), Executive Producer
for Spencer Nakasako’s Kelly Loves Tony (PBS 1998) and AKA Don Bonus (PBS
1996, Emmy Award), and Co-Producer for Special Circumstances (PBS, 2009) by
Marianne Teleki.  A Sundance Institute Fellow and a recipient of a
Rockefeller Film/Video Fellowship, Deann is the Director, Producer, Writer
of the new documentary, In the Matter of Cha Jung
Hee<http://www.katahdin.org/sponsored/precious/intro.html>,
which will be broadcast nationally on PBS in Fall 2010.  She is currently
Executive Director of Katahdin Productions, a non-profit documentary
production company based in Berkeley and Los Angeles, California. Learn more
about DeAnn Borshay Liem on PBS’s Point of
View.<http://www.pbs.org/pov/pov2000/firstpersonplural/filmmaker.html>

Other invited speakers include Marla Brettschneider, Naomi Cahn,, Meredith
Hall, Craig Hickman, Kate Livingston, Karen McElmurray, Adam Pertman, John
Raible, Lisa Marie Rollins, Elizabeth Samuels, Sarah Tobias.

There will be a day of documentary films on Thursday. Panels later in the
conference will cover topics such as: Secrecy and Policy; Lesbian/gay
Secrecy Issues and Adoption; Complications of Search, Reunion and Aftermath;
Transnational Adoption as Immigration Policy; Secrecy and Adoption:
Historical Perspectives on the U.S., Europe, and Asia after World War II;
Birthmothers: Agency and Activism; Biological Preference Critiqued and
Analyzed; Secrecy and Openness: Legal Issues; Transracial Adoption in
Contemporary American Literature; Adoptive Parents, Race, Difference.  There
will also be an evening of creative writing and performance on Friday,
4/30/10; this evening and all keynotes are free and open to the public.  All
sessions free to MIT affiliates, and special rates are available for non-MIT
students and the un/underemployed.
For more information, visit our website (link above) or contact:
[log in to unmask]

Sponsored by Mass Humanities; MIT Office of the Dean of Humanities, Arts and
Social Sciences, Department of Linguistics and Philosophy, Literature
Section, Program in Women's and Gender Studies; University of New Hampshire
Center for the Humanities, College of Liberal Arts, Philosophy Department;
Rutgers-Camden, Department of English.

-- 
--------------------------------------------------------
Sally Haslanger
Professor of Philosophy
Director, Women's and Gender Studies
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
http://www.mit.edu/~shaslang/home.html<http://www.mit.edu/%7Eshaslang/home.html>