There's a CFP for the conference "Domesticity in Educational Architecture: The Spatial Politics of Learning Environments," taking place in Valencia, Spain, in January 2027, with abstracts due March 15. (They're referring to it as a "seminar," but it seems to be the same thing as a conference...)
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Beyond
their pedagogical functions, school buildings have long served as
discrete instruments of cultural and ideological articulation.
Domesticity, so far little explored in contrast to other approaches,
offers a way to examine how educational architecture unsettles the
traditional hierarchies of public institutions —hierarchies that
privilege authority, surveillance, and rational order— by introducing
spatial qualities associated with care, intimacy, and welfare. During
the twentieth century, educational institutions were increasingly
interpreted as affectively charged environments —a ‘second home’ for
children— yet such framings often rested upon particular cultural
assumptions about what a home is and for whom it is meant. This call
invites reflections on how domesticity, as an architectural and
ideological construct, has shaped the spatial practices of schools
across cultural and historical contexts. Domesticity is understood
here as a culturally and historically situated mode of spatial
organisation through which social ideologies are both articulated and
contested.
In order to explore how the concept of ‘home’ is spatialised in
educational architecture, we ask contributors to focus on how
domesticity mediates socio-political conditions, including post-World
War Two welfare reform, colonial legacies, and shifting norms around
childhood, care, and citizenship. In what ways is the notion of ‘home’
spatially and materially reimagined within institutional environments
for children and the youth? How are notions of familiarity, safety, and
belonging spatially constructed, and how are they specific to diverse
cultural and historical conditions? We are particularly interested in
contributions that consider the school as a site of socio-material
practices—where care, discipline, resistance, and identity are enacted
—and which approach domesticity as a situated concept. The aim is to
foreground exceptionality rather than generalisation, emphasising the
specificity of cultural responses to the question of what it means to
render a school ‘home-like’. By extending the analysis across
elementary, secondary, and university spaces, this call also seeks to
trace how domesticity is differentially interpreted according to age and
curriculum.
Selected participants will be invited to contribute to an
international seminar in January 2027 to be held at the Faculty of
Architecture, Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain, leading to an edited publication.
Please submit a 300 word proposal and short (2-page) CV.
Abstracts are due by March 15, 2026.
Submissions and inquiries should be directed to bodies...@arq.upv.es
Authors will be notified of the Organizing and Scientific board’s
decision in early May 2026. Authors of accepted abstracts will be asked
to submit a full paper, 2000–3000 words before the seminar.