Course Syllabus

Gender, Sexuality, Race and Equality in Scandinavia

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 Cover Photo

Semester & Location:

Fall 2024 - DIS Stockholm

Type & Credits:

Core Course - 3 credits

Core Course Study Tours:

Oslo & Berlin via Copenhagen

Major Disciplines:

Gender Studies, Sociology, Anthropology

Faculty:

Iwo Nord (current students please use the Canvas Inbox)

Program Director:

Helle Rytkønen

Time & Place

Mondays & Thursdays, 08:30-09:50

Classroom: D410

Course Description

This course adopts a robust intersectional perspective to analyze patterns of equality and inequality in Sweden and the broader Scandinavia context. While Scandinavian countries are renowned for their gender equality and progressive policies, including generous parental leave, comprehensive sex education, and extensive LGBTQ+ rights, the implementation of these policies does not guarantee equal outcomes for everyone.

Through critical examination, the course delves into emerging criticisms surrounding the underlying notions of gender and sexuality within strategies aimed at achieving gender equality, uncovering issues such as heteronormativity, exceptionalism, and blindness to racism.

Is the Nordic gender equality model suited to overcome obstacles? By exploring the intersections of body, identity, gender, sexuality, race, and migration in contemporary debates, the course also addresses wider, transnational questions: Should Nordic equality principles serve as a model for other countries, and if so, what are pros and cons?

Topics covered include gender mainstreaming, changing family structures, Scandinavian laws surrounding sex work, disabilities and participation in society, the development of LGBTQ+ rights, gender nonconformity and legal frameworks, a gender-neutral approach to raising children, and the integration of norm-critical approaches in education. Moreover, the course examines equality through the lenses of race, racism, immigration, and segregation, offering a comprehensive understanding of societal dynamics.

We consider gender, sexuality, and race as central social categories that shape contemporary and historical relationships and life experiences, and simultaneously serve as points of discussion and contention within political spheres. Our stances on these matters often contribute significantly to the formation of our political identities.

We engage with community-building, advocacy, and resistance practices among women, queer and BIPOC NGOs and grassroots groups, for example by exploring DIY practices and drag as a tool for identity exploration and activism.

And amidst the contemporary rise of anti-gender movements, the course probes into the roots of backlash against inclusivity, diversity, and equity, exploring the transnational dimensions of these challenges.

Through analysis of minority mobilization, public discourse and ethical dilemmas, students will reflect on the variations observed between the United States, Sweden, and other Scandinavian countries.

Students will interact with the course content through a diverse range of assignments. Some assignments align with traditional academic methods, including group discussions, presentations, and the writing of an academic paper. Additionally, alternative assignments will encourage exploration of gender, sexuality, and race through different techniques, such as a photography project culminating in an exhibition at the Student Hub.

Learning extends beyond the classroom into the urban environments of Stockholm, Oslo, Copenhagen, and Berlin. By traversing these cities, and by meeting various people in different capacities, students gain insights into diverse life experiences and perspectives.

Learning Outcomes:

By the end of the semester, you will be able to:

  1. Analyze and evaluate patterns of equality and inequality within Sweden and the broader Scandinavian context through an intersectional lens.
  2. Critically assess the implementation and effectiveness of gender equality policies, considering their underlying assumptions and implications for diverse communities.
  3. Explore the intersections of body, identity, gender, sexuality, race, and migration in contemporary debates on equality and social justice.
  4. Explore community-building, advocacy, and resistance practices among women, queer, and BIPOC communities. 
  5. Examine the transnational relevance of Scandinavian equality principles.
  6. Engage in informed discussions on the challenges posed by anti-gender movements.
  7. Be familiar with the most “burning issues” in Scandinavian debates about gender, sexuality, race, and equality.

Faculty

Iwo Nord is a trans researcher and educator interested in transgender and queer lives and culture, nuances of agency and power, intersections of the transnational and the local, and questions concerning mobility (travel and migration). The past years he has been committed to building and strengthening Transgender Studies in both the Nordic region and in the former Yugoslav space. Devoted to social change for trans people, he is involved in trans academic and activist alliances, resulting in the collaborative volume In Transition: Trans Lives, Activisms, and Culture in the Post-Yugoslav Space, edited by Bojan Bilić, Iwo Nord and Aleksa Milanović (2022). He was one of the founding members of Trans Fest Stockholm, an activist collective that strives to create inclusive and empowering cultural and community events in the Swedish capital. Iwo is a PhD candidate in Gender Studies at Södertörn University, and is affiliated with the Center for Baltic and East European Studies. His doctoral project ethnographically explores Belgrade as a transnational destination for gender-affirming surgery. He holds an MA from the University of Oslo, Norway, and has formerly taught at the Institute of Scandinavian and Finnish Studies at the University of Gdansk, Poland. Iwo’s publications include “Routes to Gender-Affirming Surgery: Navigation and Negotiation in Times of Biomedicalization” in Body, Migration, Re/constructive Surgeries: Making the Gendered Body in a Globalized World, edited by Gabriele Griffin and Malin Jordal (Routledge 2018).

Contact info

Iwo Nord

Pronouns: he him his (or they them theirs)

In Swedish: han honom hans (or hen hen hens)

Cell: +46769170781

iwo.nord@disstockholm.se

 

Guest Lecturers

Together with Nyamusi Nyambok we will explore and discuss personal and professional dimensions of race and migration. Nyambok is our Student Life and Community Specialist at DIS Stockholm. She has a Bachelor in Philosophy and a Master in Human Rights. She has been an Integration Assistant in Nynäshamn Municipality and a Study Organizer as well as the International Coordinator at The National Organization of the Afro-Swedes. She has extensive knowledge about anti-black racism and is engaged in promoting the human rights of Afro-Swedes through activism.

Christine Bylund, disability rights activist and Gender Studies researcher, will speak about the disability rights movement in Sweden and the historical and contemporary situation for people with disabilities in Sweden.

Field Studies & Workshop

A travel along the red & blue metro line to Tensta & Tensta Art  Gallery:

We explore how Tensta Art Gallery tackles the complexity of segregation, culture, ethnicity, race, and intercultural approaches in the Stockholm suburb of Tensta. Tensta has one of the highest percentages of first and second generation immigrants in Sweden. This makes the suburb a multi-cultural community and a multi-ethnic area. It is also one of the most segregated urban areas in the Stockholm metropolitan region and in all of Europe. 

Visit (along the blue metro line) to Yalla Rinkeby. Segregation, Women and Solutions  

Many non-EU immigrants in particular face challenges when it comes to entering the Swedish labour market. Women are often in an even a more precarious situation than men. Yalla Rinkeby is a work integration social enterprise and women’s cooperative that is run by a non-profit association. The aim of Yalla Rinkeby is to create jobs and increased financial independence for immigrant women who are far from the Swedish labor market.  We will get information about Yalla Rinkeby before employees who work with Café and Catering Services will serve us lunch.

 

2-day Workshop with Photographer Lærke Posselt

Technologies of Gender in Photography: 
Gender is created in images that we see around us every day. How does gender shape photography and how does photography shape gender? Angle, body language, pose, gesture, posture, light, focus, environment, distance, whether the person is smiling or not, if it is several in the picture – what roles you give them, clothes, shoes, hair, makeup and props. What looks “right”? What happens if you do it “wrong”? How can we work with gender identity and expression in photography? What is written on the body? 

Together with photographer Lærke Posselt & the teacher of the course (Iwo Nord) you will learn about and explore how gender is constructed in photography through a range of different techniques. After an introductory workshop your assignment will be to create 5-10 photos where you work with gender and yourself as a canvas in a conscious way. We will have an exhibition at DIS where we display the photos you have made together with a short artist statement. 

Lærke Posselt (b. 1984) is a photographer based in Copenhagen, Denmark, working in documentary and art photography. She graduated from Fatamorgana, The Danish School of Art Photography in 2004 and from The Danish School of Media and Journalism, DMJX, in 2013. She is a recipient of numerous awards, including World Press Photo, Pictures of the Year International and the Danish Crown Prince Couple’s Rising Star Award. Her work has been exhibited widely and published in New York Times, The New Yorker, Newsweek, GEO, Stern, Der Spiegel, Le Monde among others.

Selected Readings

Steven Seidman (2011) "Theoretical Perspectives," in Introducing the New Sexualities Studies, 2nd Edition

Marie Gustafsson Sendén, Emma A. Bäck & Anna Lindqvist (2015) Introducing a gender-neutral pronoun in a natural gender language: the influence of time on attitudes and behavior, Frontiers in Psychology 6, 893

Liinason, M., & Sasunkevich, O. (2023) Tensions and Ambivalences of Pride Politics in Uncertain Times, Lambda Nordica28(2-3)

Eva-Maria Svensson & Asa Gunnarsson (2012) Gender Equality in the Swedish Welfare State, Feminists@Law, Vol 2, No 1

Maja Sager & Diana Mulinari (2018) Safety for Whom? Exploring Femonationalism & Care-Racism in Sweden, Women's Studies International Forum 68, 149-156

Tobias Hübinette, Catrin Lundstöm & Peter Wikström (eds) (2023) Race in Sweden. Racism and Antiracism in the World’s First ‘Colourblind’ Nation, Routledge (selected chapters)

Rydström, Jens, Mustola, Kati (eds) (2007) Criminally Queer Homosexuality and Criminal Law in Scandinavia 1842-1999, Aksant Academic Publishers( selected chapters)

Siim, Birte (2015) "Migration, Multiculturalism and Gender – a Nordic Perspective," in Peter Kivisto & Peter Kraus (Eds.) Challenging Power: Equality, Culture and Minorities

Jay Levy & Pye Jakobsson (2014) Sweden’s abolitionist discourse and law: Effects on the dynamics of Swedish sex work and on the lives of Sweden’s sex workers, Criminology and Criminal Justice 

Kristin Shutts, Ben Kenward, Helena Falk, Anna Ivegran, and Christine Fawcett (2017) Early preschool environments and gender: Effects of gender pedagogy in Sweden, Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 162: 1-17

Irina Schmitt (2022) Transgressing purity: Intersectional negotiations of gender identity in Swedish schools,  Journal of LGBT Youth, 1-18 

Janne Bromseth & Renita Sörensdotter (2013), "Norm-critical Pedagogy" in Gender Studies, Education and Pedagogy, Anna Lundberg & Ann Werner (Eds.), Swedish Secretariat for Gender Research: Gothenburg, 24-31

 

Approach to Teaching

Mutual learning atmosphere: The course is based on a student-centered approach with a strong emphasis on class discussions. My role as instructor is to facilitate the course and learning process, but all of us are responsible for creating the most beneficial atmosphere and environment for creation of knowledge. Different learning activities will occur during the course, such as group work, workshops, reflection tasks, field studies, film and text analysis and more. In addition to this, you will also be given the opportunity to add your own research and to get insights into the contemporary public debate.

Everyone’s opinion counts: Some of the topics covered in this course could be seen as controversial and sensitive. You should feel comfortable in expressing your personal opinions regarding issues discussed in class, and we are all responsible for creating the discussion climate where this is felt by all participants. In order to attain this, also be prepared to be open to other points of view than your own, and always express disagreement in a respectful and constructive way. See this as an opportunity to broaden your perspective by listening to other opinions. 

Names and Pronouns: Students should be referred to by the name they prefer by the teacher of this course and other students. As a teacher, I will gladly honor your request to address you by the name you prefer and the gender pronouns that correspond to your gender identity. We will introduce ourselves to each other with names and pronouns when we meet the first day of class. 

Disability Access: If you need accommodations related to disability, please let me know as soon as possible so that your learning needs can be appropriately met.

 

Expectations of the Students  

Assigned readings must be done prior to class to encourage active engagement and informed participation. I want to see your participation, understanding, and engagement with the material during our discussions.

Computers can be used in class, but please keep phones in your bag. You are encouraged to take notes (because you won’t remember everything), but the how and where is up to you to decide. Please be aware that failure to comply with these expectations will negatively affect your participation grade.


Evaluation

You will be evaluated in several ways. Each assignment will let you meet course objectives. All work has to be completed in order to pass the class.

Areas for assessment

  • Handling of course material 
  • Scholarly argumentation and analytical abilities 
  • Command of relevant terminology 

Grades

A - Excellent. The assignment is notably elucidative, knowledgeable, inventive and critical. 

B - Well above average. The assignment is sound, well-reasoned and independent.

C - Average. The assignment is competently understood with good individual reasoning. 

D - Below average but passing. The assignment shows adequate understanding and treatment of course contents. 

F - Failure or failure to complete

I = Incomplete - to be completed (only issued in place of final course grade if an agreement exists for completion by a definite deadline which is approved by the instructor and the DIS registrar)

 

Grading  

FORMAT

EVAL.

CRITERIA

Deadlines
Please see course calendar

Participation & Discussion Leading

20%

Includes attendance & in-class, field/study tour participation: engaged listening, speaking up in productive ways, participating actively in the learning activities, small group discussions, &/or group work.

 

Presentation / discussion leading

15%

Presentation / discussion leading, during one of the sessions marked with a rainbow: 🌈

 

Photography Workshop Assignment

 

10%

5-10 photos where you work with gender in a conscious way. We will have an exhibition at DIS where we display the photos you have made together with a short artist statement. Additionally, you will present your project. 

 

Study Tour Group Reflection Presentation

10%

Students will participate in a Group Reflection Presentation on an aspect of our Study Tour.

 

 2 Zines

10%

One zine that we make in Copenhagen where we explore our own resistance.

One zine where students identify & present a concept, problem, or issue that they have come across during the course. 

 

Academic Paper

35%

Academic paper on a chosen topic.

 

 

 

Further information about assignments will be presented in class.

 

 

Academic Regulations  

Please make sure to read the Academic Regulations on the DIS website. There you will find regulations on: 

 DIS - Study Abroad in Scandinavia - www.DISabroad.org

 

                                     Please note that the schedule and its content is subject to change

Course Summary:

Date Details Due