Call for Proposals
Beyond Boundaries: Gender, History and the Futures We Imagine
The Berkshire Conference of Women Historians invites proposals for its 2027 Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, Gender, and Sexualities, also known as the “Big Berks,” which will be held at the Hilton Minneapolis June 10-13, 2027. Since its founding, the Big Berks has consistently served as a vital space where historians, educators, activists, and artists from around the world come together for intellectual exchange, mentorship, interdisciplinary collaboration, and community-building, while also adapting to reflect new directions in feminist and historical scholarship. The Big Berks offers plenaries, sessions, workshops, performances, and social events that promote scholarly rigor and transformative dialogue.
Our 2027 theme, “Beyond Boundaries: Gender, History and the Futures We Imagine,” calls us to reaffirm the centrality of feminist, queer, Black, Brown, and trans histories to our collective understanding of the past and to the preservation and progress of democratic life. At a moment when histories of women, gender, and sexualities are under attack—in classrooms, archives, museums, parks, and public discourse—the Berks stands in defense of historical truth and the right to teach, research, and tell stories that reflect the complexity of human experience.
In the face of escalating challenges to equity and inclusion, it is imperative that we recognize and defend against the global anti-gender movement that seeks to undermine decades of progress in human rights and academic freedom while actively erasing women’s, queer, trans, and Black and Brown histories of resistance, knowledge, and care.
Reaffirming the truth that higher education and public institutions are critical sites of resistance against oppression, we emphasize their enduring role as spaces for social justice, transformative scholarship, and collective action. These institutions are not only sites of learning but also living archives of resistance, shaped by generations of scholars, students, and activists who have challenged inequality, preserved marginalized histories, and imagined more just futures.
As a collective and global community of gender scholars, broadly defined, we are called to protect these histories, defend the integrity of truth-telling, and build futures rooted in equity, accountability, and collective liberation.
We welcome proposals that engage a wide range of topics, approaches, and formats, including but not limited to:
- Histories of resistance to censorship, erasure, and political repression.
- Trans, queer, feminist, and intersectional approaches to the study of the past.
- Archival and methodological innovations that recover silenced violences and challenge disciplinary traditions and boundaries.
- Histories of reproductive justice, disability, bodily autonomy, and gender self-determination.
- Public, community, and digital history projects that democratize access to and knowledge of history.
- Global, transnational, and decolonial feminist perspectives that reimagine the scope of the history of women, gender, and sexualities.
The Berkshire Conference of Women Historians is committed to diverse, intergenerational, and interdisciplinary exchange. In recent years, the organization has taken important steps to strengthen this commitment and continues to work toward building a more inclusive and supportive scholarly community. We invite submissions from historians, primary and secondary educators, archivists, curators, artists, independent scholars, community activists and practitioners across disciplines and geographies, representing all career stages from emerging to established professionals. We encourage creative formats—performances, workshops, exhibitions, and digital projects—that foster dialogue and build solidarity across fields and communities.
We strongly encourage pre-constituted panels. If you are looking for collaborators, we invite you to fill out the Big Berks Collaborator Form to connect with others whose research complements your own. It’s a great way to meet potential co-panelists and build new intellectual partnerships.
We’re also delighted to share that the conference will be free for all K–12 educators in Minneapolis and the surrounding area. We welcome your participation and look forward to learning from the important work happening in local classrooms and communities.
Nine Thematic Tracks
Resistance, Censorship & Repression
Histories of resistance to political or social censorship, state or institutional repression, and heteropatriarchy.
Intersectional, Trans & Queer Histories
Analyses that foreground race, gender, sexuality, and intersectional identities in shaping historical experiences.
Archival, Public & Digital Histories
Projects and methodologies that recover silenced histories and violences, reimagine archives, and democratize historical knowledge by expanding public access and engaging communities as co-creators in the production of history.
Reproductive Justice & Bodily Autonomy
Histories of reproductive politics, bodily autonomy, and struggles for gender self-determination.
Disability, Embodiment & the Life Course
Histories that analyze and interrogate norms of health, ability, age and maturity, and (re)productivity.
Migration, Empire & Decolonial Frameworks
Studies of movement, displacement, and contact that reimagine the histories of women, gender, and sexualities in relation to imperial, colonial, and national frameworks.
Power, Precarity, and Unfreedom
Histories of political and economic inequity, including labor movements, underground economies, and our changing relationship with the environment.
Religion, Magic & Systems of Belief
Interrogations of faith and belief, including the role of organized religion, heterodoxy, and other cosmologies in gendered history.
The Joys of Sex?
Histories of romance and play, courtship, marriage and family dynamics, and sexual practices and identities.
Accessibility & Inclusion
The Program Committee is committed to fostering an inclusive, equitable, and accessible conference environment. We encourage session proposals that include participants from diverse backgrounds and perspectives, particularly scholars and practitioners from historically underrepresented and marginalized communities. We welcome proposals bringing together participants across a range of professional paths and career stages.
If you require accommodations such as ASL interpretation, CART captioning, wheelchair-accessible seating, a room near an elevator, dietary accommodations, lactation space, quiet or low-stimulation space, or scheduling considerations, please note this in your submission. This information will be used solely to support accessibility and will not impact consideration for the conference program. We approach accessibility and inclusion as ongoing practices and are committed to working with participants to ensure the conference is accessible and welcoming to all.