CFP: Bookselling as Resistance
September 10-12, 2025
Conference in Münster, Germany, combined with the annual meeting of the Bookselling Research Network (BRN)
Book historical work has been increasingly highlighting books - their publication, distribution and reception - in intersectional activist contexts, shining light on interconnections between community-building, politics and the book. In our conference, scheduled for September 2025 in Münster, Germany, we plan to hone in on bookselling as a practice and consider the ways in which resistance can be interpreted vis-à-vis bookselling and bookstores.
As Kimberley Kinder has shown, bookstores - and booksellers - play a central role in social activism and for “activist placemaking” (Kinder 2021). In the wake of the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States in 2016, independent bookstores received heightened media attention for offering readers and community members spaces to exchange ideas and organize, with the stores “taking on roles ranging from meeting place to political war room” (Bosman 2017). Adjacently, feminist bookstores experienced a resurgence after the 2016 US election (Kirch 2018). Doyle Highland has considered “how the material space of bookstores shapes social engagement [...] and cultural values” (2023), and recent work by Dhingra (2024) and Srinivasan (forthcoming, 2025) puts pressure on these concepts from an Indian perspective. Internationally, independent bookselling per se has come to be understood as a mode of resistance against Amazon’s market dominance and destructive human and ecological (Caine 2021).
Beyond these examples, our conference invites delegates to explore the theme of bookselling - past and present - as resistance.
Works Cited and Bibliography
Bosman, Julie. “Bookstores Stoke Trump Resistance With Action, Not Just Words.” The New York Times, February 15, 2017. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/15/us/bookstores-stoke-trump-resistance-with-action-not-just-words.html.
Caine, Danny. How to Protect Bookstores and Why: The Present and Future of Bookselling. Portland: Microcosm Publishing, 2023.
Caine, Danny. How to Resist Amazon & Why: The Fight for Local Economies, Data Privacy, Fair Labor, Independent Bookstores, and a People-Powered Future. Portland: Microcosm Publishing, 2021.
Farrell, Greg.On the Books: A Graphic Tale of Working Woes at NYC’s Strand Bookstore. Portland: Microcosm Publishing, 2014.
Garber, Jeremy. “Bookselling in the 21st Century: There Will Always Be Bookstores.” Literary Hub, November 9, 2016. https://lithub.com/bookselling-in-the-21st-century-there-will-always-be-bookstores/.
Hogan, Kristen. The Feminist Bookstore Movement: Lesbian Antiracism and Feminist Accountability. Durham: Duke University Press, 2016.
Kinder, Kimberley. The Radical Bookstore: Counterspace for Social Movements. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2021.
Kirch, Claire. “Trump Presidency Reinvigorates Feminist Bookstores.” Publishers Weekly, March 09, 2018. Accessed July 24, 2024. https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bookselling/article/76289-trump-presidency-reinvigorates-feminist-bookstores.html.
Noorda, Rachel, Corinna Norrick-Rühl, and Elizabeth Le Roux. “Exploring Transnational Dimensions of Activism in Contemporary Book Culture: Introduction.” Mémoires Du Livre 13, no. 2 (June 14, 2023): 1–12. https://doi.org/10.7202/1100559ar.
Thomas, June. A Place of Our Own: Six Spaces That Shaped Queer Women's Culture. London: Virago, 2024.