Rage
  • Coffee, tea and pastries will be provided at 09:00, lunch will be provided at 12:55, and wine and beer at the close of conference, 17:40.
  • Levinsky Room, Roland Levinsky Building, sa国际传媒 or Online via Teams

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This FREE conference invites papers that mobilise rage as a critical, affective, and political lens through which to interrogate systems of normalisation and domination. Rage is often dismissed as irrational, dangerous, or unproductive. 
Drawing on Sara Ahmed鈥檚 figure of the feminist killjoy, this conference understands rage not as a failure of civility but as confirming evidence that something is wrong. The killjoy refuses the happiness scripts that sustain systems of domination, exposing how comfort, order, and common sense are secured through the silencing of anger and the normalisation of harm. 
Within criminology, killjoy practices disrupt demands for neutrality and compliance, insisting that critical knowledge often emerges from being difficult, angry, and out of place. Rage, in this sense, becomes a method: a way of noticing the violence of machines that work best when they go unnoticed, unquestioned, and unchallenged. By 鈥榤achines鈥 we refer not only to technological systems, but to the broader assemblages that structure and regulate social life. 
These include institutional practices, bureaucratic routines, legal frameworks, conceptual categories, and social norms that produce compliance, marginalisation, and control while often presenting themselves as neutral, necessary, or inevitable. 
Together, this conference seeks to ask:
What does rage reveal about contemporary systems of power, and how might it be mobilised to refuse, resist, and dismantle the machines that tell us to comply, obey, and accept violence in the name of order?
We encourage contributions that critically examine how such machines operate, whom they serve, and how they are resisted, disrupted, or reimagined. 
We welcome theoretical, empirical, methodological, creative, and experimental work that foregrounds affect, emotion, embodiment, and lived experience, particularly from perspectives historically marginalised within criminology. 
This free event is also available to .
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Schedule

Thursday 4 June 2026
09:0009:30 | Coffee, tea and pastries
09:3010:10 | Plenary 1: Gayle Letherby: Killjoy Epistemologies: Writing, Feeling and the Politics of Method/ology
10:1010:20 | Break
10:2011:35 | Panel 1: Killjoy critiques: Challenging Normative Logics of Compliance and Control
11:3511:45 | Break
11:4512:55 | Panel 2: 鈥楥reativity takes Courage鈥: Art as an Expression of Rage and Resistance
12:5513:30 | Lunch (provided)
13:3014:00 | Plenary 2: Jo Large: Raging Within the Machine: Experiencing and Negotiating Displaced Harms of Technological Solutions
14:0014:10 | Break
14:1015:10 | Panel 3: Rage in the New Age: Cyborg Selves and Surveillant Others
15:1015:20 | Break
15:2016:30 | Panel 4: Institutional Violence and Boundaries of Harm and Deviance
16:3016:40 | Break
16:4017:40 | Panel 5: The Harms of Unfeeling: Negotiating the Hostility of Carceral Systems
17:40 | Close of conference. Refreshments provided including wine and beer.

Presenters

Panel 1: Killyjoy Critiques: Challenging Normative Logics of Compliance and Control

  • Chloe Milsom (sa国际传媒) Rage as Method: Disrupting Compliance Machines in Higher Education鈥檚 Responses to Gender-Based Violence
  • Pedro Lima Marcheri Rage Against the Machine? Videogames, Risk, and the Legal Construction of the Dangerous Subject
  • Hanna S. Allegra (online) Power, subjugation and the PhD student: Exploring Resistance and 鈥淩age鈥 in the Academy
  • Josh Woods (University of West London) Rage and the limits of the pseudo-pacification process.
  • Janina Smietanka (sa国际传媒) The Lesbian Researcher as Killjoy

Panel 2: 鈥楥reativity takes courage鈥: Art as an Expression of Rage and Resistance

  • Dalton Harrison (Independent Researcher, University of Leeds Alumnus) A prison within a prison An Evocative Autoethnographic Approach to Being a Transgender Man in a Women鈥檚 Prison in England
  • Jo Higson (University of Bristol) Creating Informed and Informative Depictions of Domestic Abuse in Contemporary Narrative Fiction: Rage expressed as revenge
  • Doug Farrer (University of Exeter) Deviant Art and Spiritual Resistance: Vivid Spiritualities versus the Society of Control
  • Lola March Vicente (City St George鈥檚) Tunnel Vision: Emotions and addiction in graffiti writing
  • Jade Levell (University of Bristol) 鈥榊outh Voice鈥 and Craftivist Rage?: Children and Young People鈥檚 Sensory Expressions of Serious Violence Through Participatory Arts

Panel 3: Rage in the New Age: Cyborg Selves and Surveillant Other

  • Yiheng Lu (online) (Queen Mary University of London) Rage Against the Creative Machine: AI-Generated Content, Labour Displacement, and the Limits of Copyright
  • Liv Owens (City St George鈥檚) Wetware as Refusal: The Ontological Disruption of the Datafied Body"
  • Rongyou Gao (Emory University School of Law) The policing power: a brief history for panopticon surveillance on campus in the United States
  • Omar Khan (University of Bath) Palantir, Technofascism, & the Coloniality of AI Justice: Death-worlds & racialised policing in the UK

Panel 4: Institutional Violence and Boundaries of Harm and Deviance

  • Jordan Dawson (Swansea University) The Blame Game: Institutional Deflection and the Structural Exclusion of Sex Workers from Police Protection.
  • Alexandra Burgess (sa国际传媒) Rage, Risk, and Reality - Challenging the Conflation of Paedophilia and Sexual Offending in Prevention Work
  • Ahalya Bala (Oxford Brookes), Max Morris (Oxford Brookes), Kate West (King鈥檚 College London) A place to call home? Autoethnographic reflections on the 鈥渆mployability agenda鈥 in UK higher education
  • Henry Boone (University of Cambridge) and Bailey Chavez (Dublin City University) Evaluating the Criminalisation of Civilian Resistance to ICE in the United States
  • Thomas Raymen (Northumbria University) Dirty Green Money: The Systemic Fraud of the ESG Investing Industry

Panel 5: The Harms of unfeeling: Negotiating the Hostility of Carceral Systems

  • Tuulia Reponen (online) (University of Helsinki) 鈥橲mart' Carceral Machine Avoids Rage
  • Katie Hunt (University of Lincoln) Against the Carceral Machine: Why the Penal System is Not a Solution to Gender Violence
  • Julie Parsons (sa国际传媒) 鈥淚 Feel Safe Here鈥: Women鈥檚 Narratives, Quiet Rage and Relational Justice Beyond the Carceral Machine
  • Kate West and Anastasia Jablonska (King鈥檚 College London) Tombs of Liberalism: Carcerality, Coloniality, and Consent to Human Remains in the Pathology Museum
 

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