Go to the U of M home page

Pages

Friday, October 4, 2019

GWSS Newsletter 10/04/2019

Events

1. GWSS Magic Open House
2. GWSS Talk
3. "Dangerous Blooms: Hout Bophana and the Emplotment of Exemplary Death." by Emily Mitamura
4. Spotlight Series: Environmental Justice
5. Artistic Perspectives on Environmental Justice
6. Oxford Women's Leadership Symposium
7. Meet the Author: Zack Linmark
8. Visting Artist: Fidencio Fifield-Perez
9. Gender liberation as healing justice
10. Politics of Personal Responsibility and Health Consequences of Working Twice as Hard to Get By
11. ERA 2020 Annual Fundraiser
12. Solidão e Bem Viver: Trajectories of Black Feminist Activists in Bahia
13. Her Stories: Gender and Race in the History of the US Daytime TV Soap Opera 
14. Book Talk and Author-Meets-Critics Panel

Scholarships/Fellowships/Job Opportunities

1. The Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowships in Women’s Studies 
2. The Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowships 
3. The Mellon Emerging Faculty Leaders Award 
4. Dissertation and Pre-Dissertation Funding for Graduate Students
5. Tenure Track Assistant Professor level in Global Labor and Gender at William & Mary College
6. UCSB Assistant Professor in Global Race/Ethnicity and Inequality, Department of Global Studies
7. University of Maine, tenure-track, academic-year, assistant professor in History and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (WGS) with a specialization in the modern transnational history of women

Call for Papers/Proposals

1. The Black Midwest Initiative
2. 2020 Global Conference on Women and Gender
3. Interdisciplinary Conference on “Democracy under Threat in Times of Populism and Racial Nationalism
4. Gender Studies Symposium "Possibility" - Lewis & Clark College
5. Gender, Race, Community, & Conflict: Pursuing Peace & Justice Conference
6. Oxford Women's Leadership Symposium 

Recognitions/Awards



Miscellaneous

1. Spring 2020 Course: "Education, citizenship, and belonging in times of populism and nationalism"
2. Ghana's Business of Doing Good: Social Startups & Public Affairs   
3. LGBTQ activism and human rights in Jamaica - special discount for University of Minnesota





Events

1. GWSS Magic Open House

GWSS Majors, GWSS & GLBT Minors, and Interested Third Parties... Join us for the first annual GWSS Magic Open house on October 17th at 11:30 in Ford 400. Meet


2. GWSS Talk

Friday, October 11, 2019
1:30pm-3:00pm - 432 Bruininks Hall
Reception to Follow

On April 11, 2019, the Constitutional Court of South Korea finally ruled that the abortion ban was unconstitutional. Feminist Activist NaYoung will share how South Korean feminists shifted the paradigm of discourse on abortion by applying the analysis of historical contexts of South Korean population policy and its intersectionality. Na Young is a Co-Chairperson of the Joint Action for Reproductive Justice and a Planning Committee of the Sexual and Reproductive Rights Forum, South Korea. Seung Gyeong Ji,  Ph.D. is a candidate in Feminist Studies and will add the transnational history of abortion to the conversation. Elizabeth Taylor, Evaluation Studies PhD Student, will add comment from the perspectives of Native American Reproductive Justice. 

3. "Dangerous Blooms: Hout Bophana and the Emplotment of Exemplary Death." by Emily Mitamura

The MNPTC is happy to announce that Friday, October 11th, we will be joined by our very own Emily Mitamura who will present her wok, "Dangerous Blooms: Hout Bophana and the Emplotment of Exemplary Death."

The colloquium will be held from 1:30-3:00pm in Social Sciences 1314 (Lippincott Room). The abstract of the paper is included below and look for the paper to be circulated in the coming days. 

Abstract: This paper interrogates the hauntings which sediment in the global circulation of “exemplary” victims of mass violence. Tracing the flow of her iconic mug shot and archival remains from the 1970s Khmer Rouge prison S-21 through print media, film, and art, I excavate the gendered and racialized labors extracted from Hout Bophana, variously termed “the Flower of Dangerous Love,” “A Cambodian Tragedy,” and “the Anne Frank of Cambodia." Reviewing theories and modes of emplotment into which she is drawn, this paper additionally builds on the works of Mimi Thi Nguyen, Saidiya Hartman, and others to ask: how do such ghosts propagate fierce excess in relation to the nationalist, colonial, and neoliberal imaginaries that attempt to circumscribe and deploy them?

4. Spotlight Series: Environmental Justice

The IAS, Northrop and the Honors Program announce their 2019-20 Spotlight Series: Perspectives on Environmental Justice. Six events bring together academics and practitioners across disciplines around this critical topic.

5. Artistic Perspectives on Environmental Justice

Thursday, October 10, 2019 | 3:30-5:00 p.m. | Northrop’s Best Buy Theater

Minnesota artists working in several media forms, including Ananya Chatterjea & Shanai Matteson, discuss environmental justice on a regional and global scale. Part of the IAS’ Spotlight Series: Perspectives on Environmental Justice.

6. Oxford Women's Leadership Symposium 
Held at Somerville College at the University of Oxford, UK.
Attendees may participate as observers, panel members and presenters of papers, reports, and commentaries concerning aspects relevant to the theory and practice of Women's, Gender and Justice issues. Poster presentations are also welcome. Presenters are allocated 20 minutes to present followed by a ten-minute question session. 

Symposia participants may submit complete papers after the conclusion of their meeting. Articles will be peer-reviewed by external readers for possible inclusion in Symposium Books or sponsored academic journals. See our website for suggestions on topics and accommodation.  Save our contact information; info@oxfordwomensleadershipsymposium.com
FALL Session 4–6 December 2019, Somerville College
Abstract submission  – 15 November
Regular registration  – 17 November

SPRING Session 23-24 March 2020, Somerville College
Abstract submission  – 8 March
Early registration  – 15 December
Regular registration  – 10 March 
We accept all abstracts on a rolling basis and send notifications within a week of submission. 

7. Meet the Author: Zack Linmark
Zack is an important voice in queer Filipinx Studies and queer Filipinx diaspora literature. He’s the author of "Rolling the Rs" and "Leche". His latest, "The Importance of Being Wild at Heart" is a YA (young adult) queer novel.

Book Review here.
Zack’s wikipedia page here

8. Visting Artist: Fidencio Fifield-Perez

Thursday, October 10th at 12:15PM in Regis Center for Art East. 
You can see more of Fidencio's work here on his webpage or read his DACA story here
BIO: Fidencio Fifield-Perez was born in Oaxaca, Mexico, but raised in the U.S. after his family migrated. His work examines borders, edges, and the people who must traverse them. In his work, Fifield-Perez manipulates paper surfaces and maps to refer to the crafts and customs used to celebrate festivals and mourn the dead. Fifield-Perez is an Assistant Professor and Head of Painting at the University of Missouri, Columbia. 


9. Gender liberation as healing justice

The School of Nursing will host certified sex therapist, family therapist, somatic experiencing practitioner, clinical supervisor, writer, and independent scholar Alex Iantaffi. A coauthor of How to Understand Your Gender: A Practical Guide for Exploring Who You Are, and Life Isn’t Binary, Iantaffi also hosts the podcast Gender Stories. 12:15-1:15 p.m., Mayo Memorial Auditorium and via livestream.

10. Politics of Personal Responsibility and Health Consequences of Working Twice as Hard to Get By

Join us for the inaugural Distinguished Visiting Scholar Series on Health Equity Research: Susie Nanney Memorial Health Equity Policy Lecture on Wednesday, October 9, 2019. Dr. Darrick Hamiliton, Executive Director of the Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity at The Ohio State University, will present on, "Politics of Personal Responsibility and Health Consequences of Working Twice as Hard to Get By."
Objectives:
  • Understanding the paradox of why Black health disparities persist even when Blacks achieve high socio economic status.
  • Understanding negative health consequences of the politics of personal responsibility in the context of racial discrimination and social stigma.
11. ERA 2020 Annual Fundraiser 



12. Solidão e Bem Viver: Trajectories of Black Feminist Activists in Bahia 


13. Her Stories: Gender and Race in the History of the US Daytime TV Soap Opera 

Dr. Elana Levine (University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee) 
Friday, November 1st
Ford Hall 130
12:15 - 1:15pm 

In this talk, Dr. Elana Levine, Professor of Journalism, Advertising, and Media Studies at the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, offers an overview of her book, Her Stories: Daytime Soap Opera and US Television History, to be published by Duke University Press in March 2020. Her Stories is an in-depth history of the US daytime television soap opera as a uniquely gendered cultural form and a central force in the economic and social influence of network television. This talk focuses in particular on the intersections of race and gender in the history of soap opera storytelling, including the soaps’ inconsistent patterns of racially diverse representation and problematic relationship with non-white audiences from the 1960s to the present.


14. Book Talk and Author-Meets-Critics Panel
Northrop Auditorium -- Crosby Seminar Room 240
Thursday, October 17, 2019, 3:30pm

Feminist anthropologist Dána-Ain Davis will give a talk about her new book Reproductive Injustice: Racism, Pregnancy, and Premature Birth (NYU Press) followed by an author-meets-critics session with faculty and a graduate student from the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities— Zenzele Isoke (Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies), Jaime Slaughter-Acey (Center for Leadership Education in Maternal and Child Public Health), Aaron Mallory (Geography Environment, and Society)—and Carly Thomsen from Middlebury College (Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies). 

Co-sponsored by the Institute for Advanced Study; Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies; Anthropology; Geography, Environment & Society; the Center for Leadership Education in Maternal and Child Public Health; the Center on Women, Gender, and Public Policy; and the Race, Indigeneity, Gender and Sexuality Studies Initiative

Scholarships/Fellowships/Job Opportunities

1. The Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowships in Women’s Studies 
Deadline: October 15, 2019
Encourages research about women and gender that crosses disciplinary, regional, or cultural boundaries. Recent Fellows have explored such topics as reproduction in the context of chronic disease, algorithmic detection of child abuse images, and changing feminist visions at the UN from 1975 to 1995. Download the program flyer here. Questions may be directed to hogans@woodrow.org.


2. The Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowships 
Deadline: November 15, 2019
Designed to encourage original and significant study of religious and ethical values in fields across the humanities and social sciences, the 2020 Newcombe Fellowships are available to Ph.D. and Th.D. candidates who expect to complete their dissertation between April and August 2021. Download the program flyer here. Questions may be directed to hogans@woodrow.org.

3. The Mellon Emerging Faculty Leaders Award 
Deadline: December 2, 2019
Supports tenure-track junior faculty as they work toward achieving tenure. Applicants must successfully pass their third-year review no later than January 31, 2020. The program is open to faculty in any field of the humanities or social sciences; preference will be given to those working on 20th- and 21st-century American history, politics, culture, and society, with emphases including African American issues, women’s issues, and/or higher education. Download the program flyer here. Questions may be directed to facultyleaders@woodrow.org


4. Dissertation and Pre-Dissertation Funding for Graduate Students
Event: October 18, 2019, 1:30-3:00 pm

Attend the Dissertation and Pre-Disseration Funding for Graduate students event to prepare for the upcoming American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) Fellowships.
 
Additionally, be sure to mark your calendars for upcoming National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) grant opportunity deadlines. Register Here

5. Tenure Track Assistant Professor level in Global Labor and Gender at William & Mary College


The Department of Sociology and the Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies (GSWS) program at William & Mary seeks applications for a jointly appointed tenure track position at the Assistant Professor level in global labor and gender. Appointment will begin August 10, 2020. We are particularly interested in candidates with specialization in law and justice as well as research and teaching in gender, sexuality, and women's studies. Possible areas of expertise could include: transnational flows of labor and gender, gender and work, sex work, intersectional approaches to labor, transnational feminist organizing, informal or criminalized labor, and the politics of domestic work. The candidate is expected to establish and maintain an active research program that inspires a highly motivated undergraduate student body and to teach two courses per semester, split between the Sociology Department and the GSWS Program.  The successful candidate will be expected to teach "Introduction to GSWS" courses on a regular rotation. Required Qualifications: Applicants must hold a Ph.D. in Sociology or a related field at the time of appointment (August 10, 2020). Applicants must apply online at https://jobs.wm.edu. Submit a curriculum vitae, a cover letter that includes a description of research and teaching interests, and a statement outlining your potential contributions to diversity on campus. You will be prompted to submit online the names and email addresses of three references who will be contacted by the system with instructions for how to submit a letter of reference. For full consideration, submit application materials by the review date, November 1, 2019. Applications received after the review date will be considered if needed. William & Mary values diversity and invites applications from underrepresented groups who will enrich the research, teaching and service missions of the university. The College is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer and encourages applications from women, minorities, protected veterans, and individuals with disabilities. The College conducts background checks on applicants for employment. Direct questions to Chair of Search Committee, Caroline Hanley, at cehanl@wm.edu.

6. UCSB Assistant Professor in Global Race/Ethnicity and Inequality, Department of Global Studies

The Department of Global Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara invites applications for a tenure-track faculty position at the level of Assistant Professor, with an anticipated start date of July 1, 2020. The Department is looking for individuals with particular emphasis in the area of Global Race/Ethnicity and Inequality.
The UCSB Global Studies Department accepts candidates with background in the social sciences, humanities, or interdisciplinary fields, and emphasizes transregional or multiregional case studies and approaches. Topics of interest in this search might include the global construction and dissemination of racialized and ethnic inequality; comparative history of political/social/economic inequalities linked to race and ethnicity; intersectional critiques of global inequality; global racialization of poverty and racialization of other global socioeconomic processes such as labor, migration, and environmental injustice. We are particularly interested in candidates with transregional approaches to race/ethnicity with expertise in Africa and/or the Middle East, or in comparative studies between one of those world areas and other regions.
Applications should be submitted electronically, and must include:
• Cover letter (detailing your research interests, teaching philosophy and experience, and professional activities)
• Curriculum vitae
• Writing sample (25-30 page maximum)
• Two sample syllabi (as one merged PDF)
• Statement of Contributions to Diversity (optional)
• Applicants will need to arrange for 3 references to submit letters of recommendation on their behalf via the recruitment website
• Other optional documents can include: Statement of Research or Statement of Teaching
We strongly encourage applicants to submit an optional Statement of Contributions to Diversity. These statements, if submitted, will be reviewed for evidence of teaching, research, professional and/or public service contributions that promote diversity and equal opportunity, such as effective strategies used for the educational advancement of students in various under-represented groups; demonstrated contributions to the advancement of equitable access and diversity in education; and contributions furthering diversity and equal opportunity in higher education through participation in such activities as recruitment, retention, and mentoring of scholars and students.
Applications received by NOVEMBER 1, 2019 will be given priority consideration, but the position will remain open until filled. To apply please visit https://recruit.ap.ucsb.edu/apply/JPF01608

7. University of Maine, tenure-track, academic-year, assistant professor in History and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (WGS) with a specialization in the modern transnational history of women

The University of Maine invites applications for a tenure-track, academic-year, assistant professor in History and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (WGS) with a specialization in the modern transnational history of women. The candidate should specialize in one or more regions outside North America. Qualified scholars should focus on aspects of race, class, ethnicity, nationality, or citizenship and employ feminist approaches and methodologies.
The WGS Program offers an undergraduate major and minor, a graduate specialization, and a corresponding major in International Affairs. More information is available at http://umaine.edu/wgs  The History Department offers BA, MA, and PhD degrees. Further information can be found at http://www.umaine.edu/history/

Qualifications:
Required:
  • The successful candidate must have a PhD in History, or a closely related field, by the time of appointment.
  • Specialization in the modern transnational history of women in one or more regions outside North America.
  • A focus on aspects of race, class, ethnicity, nationality, or citizenship.
  • Demonstrated teaching experience.
  • Evidence of scholarship employing feminist approaches and methodologies to scholarship.
Preferred:
  • Interest and skill in facilitating dialogues across diverse perspectives.
Other Information:
Materials must be submitted via "Apply For Position" at https://umaine.hiretouch.comYou will need to create a profile and application; upload:
1) a cover letter which describes your experience, interests, and suitability for the position
2) a curriculum vitae
3) contact information for three professional references
4) a statement of teaching philosophy
Further materials, such as transcripts, writing samples, and letters of recommendation, may subsequently be requested.


Search Timeline is as follows:
Review of applications to begin: November 15, 2019
Tentative start date: September 1, 2020
For questions about the search, please WGS Director Susan Gardner at susan.k.gardner@maine.edu.
Appropriate background checks are required.

Call for Papers/Proposals

1. The Black Midwest Initiative


The Black Midwest Anthology: Call for Submissions
 
Submission Deadline: DECEMBER 1, 2019
 
Belt Publishing, in conjunction with the Black Midwest Initiative, is developing an anthology of essays, poems, and artwork to be published in 2020. Submissions are encouraged by participants of the inaugural Black Midwest Symposium being held at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities from October 17-19, 2019, as well as members of the wider public.
 
This anthology is meant to explore the various meanings and experiences of blackness throughout the greater Midwest and Rust Belt regions of the United States. We’re looking for compelling narratives, thought-provoking analyses, and impactful commentaries that are able to render the complexities of the region meaningfully to a broad audience and will be relevant for years to come. While we anticipate the stories of major cities like Detroit and Chicago will be represented, we’re also looking to represent the stories of people living in smaller cities and rural areas where the lives of black residents have more often gone unacknowledged by traditional news and media outlets. We also especially encourage submissions that explore issues around immigration, queerness and sexuality, religious difference, and disability.
 
We will consider nonfiction personal essays and critical commentaries between 300 and 2000 words, as well as poetry and artwork that is directly related to the region. We are not accepting fiction.
 
Authors can submit multiple pieces. Original pieces will be given priority, but we will consider previously published pieces if the author has the rights to the piece and provides the original publication information. Accepted submissions will be edited in coordination with the author. Contributors will each receive a small honorarium.
 
The anthology will be edited by Peoria-native Terrion Williamson. She is author of Scandalize My Name: Black Feminist Practice and the Making of Black Social Life, associate professor of African American & African Studies at the University of Minnesota, and director of the Black Midwest Initiative.
 
To submit a piece for consideration, please:

  • Include the author’s full name, contact information (email, phone number, and address), and a short bio of 50-100 words in the body of the submission email.
  • Provide a short abstract or explanation of the piece of 50-100 words.
  • Write “Submission” in the subject line of the email.

Submit contributions and questions to: blackmidwestanthology@gmail.com
 
For details about the Black Midwest Symposium: theblackmidwest.com/symposium


2. 2020 Global Conference on Women and Gender

This interdisciplinary conference brings together participants from all academic fields to engage in wide-ranging conversations on gender and politics around the world. While formal politics loom large in 2020, we encourage an expansive understanding of political action and expression, inspired by Carol Hanisch’s essay, “The Personal is Political,” which sees all relationships of power as political and connects women’s experiences, self-expression, and values to their lives as political actors and subjects.
Topics may include but are not limited to the past and/or present intersection of gender and politics in:
• Suffrage Expansion
• Feminism
• Voting and Candidacy
• Organizing and Activism
• Media Representation
• Artistic and Literary Expression
• Motherhood and Family Life
• Sexuality and Gender Identity
• Reproductive Rights
• Race and Racism
• Disability Rights 
• Employment
• Poverty
• Education
• Health
• Violence
• Religion
• Law
• Business and Management
• Leadership
• Social Media

Submissions from any academic discipline are welcome, including but not limited to art, history, philosophy,
religious studies, sociology, psychology, environmental science, medicine, biomedical ethics, economics,
political science, gender studies, communication studies and literature. We also invite professionals in
nonacademic settings to submit proposals.

Both panel and individual paper proposals are welcome.
Please submit a 350 to 500-word abstract by October 15th, 2019 at: http://cnu.edu/gcwg


3. Interdisciplinary Conference on “Democracy under Threat in Times of Populism and Racial Nationalism” 

April 10-11, 2020
University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

Please click here for more info - call for papers deadline is December 1, 2019

4. Gender Studies Symposium "Possibility" - Lewis & Clark College

We invite submissions for panel discussions, individual papers, interactive workshops, and artistic productions, especially these focused on questions of gender, sexuality, innovation, and possibility. Proposals due by 5 p.m. on November 8th, 2019. For more information go to: go.lclark.edu/gender/call


5. Gender, Race, Community, & Conflict: Pursuing Peace & Justice Conference

Southern Connecticut State University
The 2020 Women’s & Gender Studies Conference
“Gender, Race, Community, & Conflict: Pursuing Peace and Justice”
Friday and Saturday, April 24th and 25th, 2020
Submission Deadline: December 16th, 2019

How do feminists and their communities, Indigenous and settler colonial, address these
problems and heal the breaches that have divided and torn communities apart? How have
feminists and activists creatively used the existing power structures to reverse the fragmentation
of peoples and break down hierarchies? In the pursuit of peace and justice, what are feminist
activists doing within their families and communities to stop the divisions and violence and
counter the hatred and demonization against “the other”? How are peace and justice achieved
through the intersectional and transnational coalitions across gender, race, class, sexuality,
religion, nationality?

We invite proposals that investigate the past, the present, and the future of the intersections of
gender, race, and community that showcase feminist interventions in the tackling of conflicts. In
what ways can feminist practices and movements counter the negative consequences of hate and
white supremacy? What can we do to support communities struggling to align with the feminist
agendas of peace, justice and unity while honoring differences? How is the feminist body
involved in community, conflict and the pursuit of peace and justice? How does feminism
contribute to the pursuit of equity and equality? How has feminist storytelling narrated these
struggles and contributed to/reshaped intellectual discourse? What can we do to ensure a more
just and equitable world?

Please submit proposals and supporting materials to womensstudies@southernct.edu, with
attention to Conference Committee. If you have any questions, please call the Women’s & Gender
Studies Office at (203) 392-6133. Include name, affiliation, e-mail, and phone number. Proposals
should be no longer than one page (250-400 words). Panel proposals are encouraged.

6. Oxford Women's Leadership Symposium 
Held at Somerville College at the University of Oxford, UK.
Attendees may participate as observers, panel members and presenters of papers, reports, and commentaries concerning aspects relevant to the theory and practice of Women's, Gender and Justice issues. Poster presentations are also welcome. Presenters are allocated 20 minutes to present followed by a ten-minute question session. 

Symposia participants may submit complete papers after the conclusion of their meeting. Articles will be peer-reviewed by external readers for possible inclusion in Symposium Books or sponsored academic journals. See our website for suggestions on topics and accommodation.  Save our contact information; info@oxfordwomensleadershipsymposium.com
FALL Session 4–6 December 2019, Somerville College
Abstract submission  – 15 November
Regular registration  – 17 November

SPRING Session 23-24 March 2020, Somerville College
Abstract submission  – 8 March
Early registration  – 15 December
Regular registration  – 10 March 
We accept all abstracts on a rolling basis and send notifications within a week of submission. 


Recognitions/Awards



Miscellaneous

1. Spring 2020 Course: "Education, citizenship, and belonging in times of populism and nationalism"

ICGC will offer a 1 credit 7 week course in Spring 2020 entitled:
"Education, citizenship, and belonging in times of populism and nationalism" 


More information on schedule and course description forthcoming 
Taught by: Professor Roozbeh Shirazi, Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy, and Development 

2. Ghana's Business of Doing Good: Social Startups & Public Affairs   

Global Seminar Winter Break 2019-2020: Learn how public policy and social enterprises are shaping Ghana into West Africa’s most stable emerging countries. 

Academics:
• Meet a diverse range of entrepreneurs, policymakers, and public servants while learning about Ghanaian diplomacy.
• Examine the opportunities and challenges of social entrepreneurship in an emerging developing country.

Receive Credit for:
• 3 weeks, 3 Credits
• PA 3852 or 5880 (graduate students)
• Fulfills Global Perspectives & Social Sciences Core Liberal Education requirements.
• Elective in the Public and Nonprofit Management co-major, an elective in the Entrepreneurial Management major/minor, and a depth course in the International Business co-major

https://umabroad.umn.edu/programs/africa/entrepreneurship-diplomacy-ghana/academics

3. LGBTQ activism and human rights in Jamaica - special discount for University of Minnesota

We want to share a special discount on a resource to support the work you are doing at University of Minnesota. Many Loves, One Heart tells the story of courageous members of the LGBTQ movement in Jamaica and their allies. Challenging an often one-sided depiction, the film presents brave Jamaicans who are seeking to transform their island into a space of inclusivity. Scenes of Jamaica’s second ever PRIDE week depict the safe spaces carved out by the movement. Read what educators and experts are saying about this film on our website and request a full preview of the film here

University of Minnesota Discount
Receive 25% off through 11/1 with code 

25%MLOH*11/1


This Week's Grad School Memes....







Have a great weekend!


No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.