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Sunday, March 23
 

9:00am EDT

Dynamic Methodologies: How is the Work Done? Digital Storymaps, Data and Research Science, & Ephemeral Methods
Sunday March 23, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Taylor Marie Doherty, "Grounded Ephemerality: The Liberatory Potential of the Queer Feminist Archive/s"
This paper employs transdisciplinary queer, feminist, and trans, Black feminist, decolonial, critical, and assemblage theories to rework methodological assumptions that pose social movements as empirically discrete objects anchored in space and time. develop “grounded ephemerality” as an archival reading praxis that reads and reassembles materials from the archive, alongside the liveness of protest and what is left behind in its wake in the present. This paper draws on my ethnographic research at the New York City Women’s Strike and is grounded in my participation in a performance of “Un violador en tu camino” alongside queer feminist Latin American artist colectivas. I examine how fleeting traces of protest, like street art, posters, glitter, and pañuelos verdes stick to our bodies and spaces inviting ephemera as an embrace of disorderly space and a refusal of the normativity of permanence (Muñoz 1996; Bey 2022). This protest ephemera as it travels can transform into an invitation that prefigures feminist futures.

This project examines the relationship between archive/s and protest. I develop the term the archive/s to refer to the archive—as deployed in critical theory—and actual archives—as understood in archival science—as always becoming and co-constitutive. I attend to space, practice, and theory to make ephemera and fleeting, fugitive timescapes valuable to archive/s and protest. This reshapes how political science understands protest and how archival science understands records with the explicit aim of moving towards liberatory futures. I develop grounded ephemerality as an (auto)ethnographic method that reads archival materials alongside embodied experiences and tethers ephemera to community. This method offers ways of reading, feeling, sensing, and listening to the archive that foster more livable futures.

Liyang Dong, "Against the Narrative Crisis of Censorship: From Closed Hearings to Congressional Testimonies"
The grounding of the ship Golden Venture carrying 286 Chinese refugees in New York on June 6, 1993 brought undocumented immigration from China to national attention. Driven by national fear of the “Asian horde,” the ancient Orientalist rhetoric of the “yellow peril,” the Clinton Administration orchestrated dispersed mass detention and a sweeping denial of asylum of the Golden Venture asylees through inappropriate political interference and ex parte communication with the judicial agencies. Such abrupt administrative changes in asylum statute catalyzed by the Golden Venture asylees eventually prompted the enactment of the 1996 IIRIRA which normatized mass detention and expedited deportation of undocumented immigrants we are witnessing today.

This paper is a chapter of my digital dissertation using ArcGIS StoryMaps as a digital arm to present different forms of the detainees’ narratives in multimodal media genres. Drawing on legal case archives preserved by pro bono lawyers representing the Golden Venture detainees and neglected for three decades, this paper will illuminate how the U.S. government orchestrated a narrative crisis of censoring the testimonies of the detained Chinese asylum seekers, will foreground the collective fight of the female and male detainees alongside their attorneys and advocates against government agencies and engagement with the media, and center the “subaltern” Chinese detainees’ testimonies. The liberatory practices of their solidarity across national, racial, class, and religious overturned sweeping denial of asylum in closed hearings to publicly testifying in Congress, and offers us an alternative way to resist symbolic annihilation and racialization, against official Orientalist narrative, and a marvelous miracle of community building.

Daria "Dasha" Anikina Ogle, "Identifying Gendered Racial Spectacle in Scientific Research"
Racial spectacles are tools used to control the portrayal of race while deviating attention away from the systems of oppression. Scientific research can operate as a racial spectacle when we pathologize race, gender, and other intersecting identities that deviate from the norms put in place according to the white supremacy model. Often, comparative research reinforces presumptions about superior race (white), gender (male), and heteronormative sexual behavior, strategically placing those that do not subscribe to stated social constructs in the periphery. To assume that the notion of racial spectacle operates within and through racially charged research is to hypothesize that the intersectionality of race and gender in research will potentially operate in concurrence with gendered racial spectacle. To explore further, I look at two articles that conduct research by utilizing constructs of race, gender, and sexual behavior. I then identify the narrative created around women of color regarding drug use, promiscuity, and the risk of STIs. I point out statistical inconsistencies and research biases in these articles and reflect on the authors' failures to question the root cause of social disparities or address the structural obstacles inherent in systems of oppression. I situate gendered racial spectacles by evaluating the background assumptions of the noted articles. I explore the connections between the methods and frameworks used to interpret the findings. I present the ideologies and structures of power that help reinforce specific forms of knowledge. I expose the damaging nature of inserting data into gendered and racial formations. Finally, I propose a direction for future scientific inquiry to amend these problems.
Speakers
LD

Liyang Dong

PhD, Binghamton University
avatar for Daria

Daria "Dasha" Anikina Ogle

PhD Student, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
avatar for Taylor Marie Doherty

Taylor Marie Doherty

PhD Candidate, University of Arizona
Sunday March 23, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Room 124 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

9:00am EDT

Networks of Care: Collective Action Against Oppressive Structures
Sunday March 23, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Dyala Kasim, "(Un)Sanctioned: Community Building and Intrusion in the Contemporary Arab American Novel"
In my paper, I explore Arab American community building and non-Arab American community breaking practices within the post-9/11 United States — a place of "crisis" for Arab Americans facing anti-Arab sentiment, Islamophobia and the effects of pervasive neo-Orientalism, or the “new Orientalism” that emerged post-9/11 to subjugate Arab American individuals. I study this duality through the lens of “intrusion,” which I identify as invasive acts done without seeking permission from the individual(s) receiving them, splitting the concept into the subcategories of “sanctioned” and “unsanctioned.” Sanctioned intrusion is the socially-accepted allowance for Arab Americans to encroach upon each others’ spaces, homes and lives, and manifests in different social/cultural customs, cues and behaviors. Though it can feel invasive, sanctioned intrusion is always coming from a place of love and care for Arab Americans; thus, it is an internal practice that builds connection between people. Unsanctioned intrusion is an unauthorized encroachment tactic practiced by non-Arab Americans upon Arab American spaces, homes and lives. It is an explicit exertion of neo-Orientalist power and dominance, making it an external practice that destroys connection. Through the examination of seven key contemporary Arab American novels — Diana Abu Jaber’s Crescent, Mohja Kahf’s The Girl in the Tangerine Scarf, Laila Halaby’s Once in a Promised Land, Rabih Alameddine’s The Hakawati, Laila Lalami’s The Moor’s Account, Sahar Mustafah’s The Beauty of Your Face and Zaina Arafat’s You Exist Too Much — I argue that community building through sanctioned intrusion makes Arab Americans feel like U.S. insiders, while community breaking through unsanctioned intrusion makes Arab Americans feel like U.S. outsiders. Ultimately, intrusion becomes the channel through which these individuals humanize and liberate themselves by telling their own stories about their lives and experiences in their own words.

Moloud Soleimani, "Networks of Care: Exploring the Interconnection of Women and Children in the Woman, Life, Freedom Movement"
In 2022, the death of Mahsa Amini, who was in the custody of Iran’s morality police for “improper” clothing, sparked the Woman, Life, Freedom movement, which, despite not achieving regime change, is widely regarded as a social revolution. To sustain the spirit of this revolution, women and girls engage in daily acts of resistance against the morality police, and those who choose to wear what they love embody hope, signaling that the struggle is far from over.

In this paper, I explore how women and children together form an intertwined network of care that keeps the revolution alive. I am investigating the potential for dialogue between childhood studies and women’s studies by examining the interconnected roles of care within the context of the Zhina revolution.

While much of the discourse centers on “saving” children or on parental discussions about current events, children have frequently played an essential role in the caregiving network, supporting their mothers while sometimes requiring their mothers to take on additional responsibilities to manage their own anxieties. This dynamic includes not only women who resist the mandatory hijab by choosing not to wear it in public but also those who believe in the hijab and wear it outside of the government’s ideology. Children may encourage their mothers to wear what they love, reassure them not to worry, and even choose to stay home to allow their parents to participate in demonstrations. In some cases, children have actively joined these demonstrations, facing grave consequences, including the loss of life.

İlayda Üstel, "Emerging from Crisis: Vulnerability and Reimagining the Present"
In this paper, I explore the alternative worlds and ways of being together that emerge during moments of collective political action. Taking recent acts of resistance by women and LGBTQI+ communities in Turkey—and the interviews I conducted with activists—as my point of departure, I focus on the fleeting moments of protest and the vulnerability of protesters. Through these interviews, I examine the new relations of care that form during protests and re-conceptualize vulnerability, not only in connection to violence but as an opening to potential social relationalities and care. Drawing on Judith Butler’s ideas on vulnerability and precarity, I argue that this vulnerability can become a generative force during collective action, transforming individual precarity into collective strength. I further extend this idea by considering vulnerability not just as a condition to be minimized, but as an opportunity for new forms of relationality, where protesters’ shared openness to one another fosters deeper networks of care and solidarity. The moments of interruption where the dominant order is interrupted that collective action leads to embody the potential to reorder the world, allowing us to glimpse and enact alternative ways of being together. In moments of crisis, when vulnerability is heightened and temporality is reordered, the present becomes the only temporality in which we can maneuver. By centering the present as a site of transformation and vulnerability as essential to building relationalities between bodies, I suggest that collective action offers liberatory practices that disrupt oppressive structures and create new forms of relationality and care.

Xuyi Zhao, "The Crisis is Coming: Time and Togetherness in China’s Pandemic Community Building"
In this paper, I take the organization of universal COVID testing as a point of departure for understanding the lived experiences of China’s zero-COVID policy and look at “the Community” (shequ) as a dynamic interface between the state and urban residents during the liminal time of a global pandemic. From early 2020 to the end of 2022, China enacted its stringent “zero-COVID” strategy to eliminate local virus transmission through frequent lockdowns, testing, contact tracing, massive quarantine, and control over travel. To urban residents across the country, this top-down initiative passed through the urban bureaucratic system to be experienced on the ground as an unquestionable state of emergency, both collectively and repetitively. In particular, the “urgency” of forestalling a crisis was built into the temporal governance of the pandemic, working to justify the blurring of public/private boundaries, excessive overtime, and mandatory orders regulating the time and space of everyday life.

The primary goal of this paper is twofold. Empirically, I seek to present an ethnographic account of how shequ was caught in between paradoxical rationalities of social cohesion and political control as a result of both aggressive pandemic state-building and the irreplaceable role of shequ organizations in providing and coordinating essential care work. Theoretically, I draw on Rebecca Bryant and Daniel M. Knight’s notion of “vernacular timespace” (2019)—the collective sense of living within a period that has a particular temporality—to analyze the timespace of zero-COVID as a state-regulated future orientation interwoven with collective anticipation of crisis, bureaucratic temporal governance, and contestations over time as a form of agency in everyday life. Instead of assuming a unitary form of present-future relationship that was homogeneous and unchallenged, I argue that the collective anticipation of a public health crisis was constantly shaped, managed, and contested throughout the processes of pandemic community building.
Speakers
avatar for Dyala Kasim

Dyala Kasim

PhD, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Dyala Kasim earned her BA in English and Communication from Villanova University and MA in American Studies from Columbia University. She is currently a doctoral candidate in the English Department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and a teaching assistant in the American... Read More →
IU

İlayda Üstel

PhD, Ohio State University
MS

Moloud Soleimani

PhD, Rutgers University
avatar for Xuyi Zhao

Xuyi Zhao

PhD, Boston University
Xuyi Zhao is an urban anthropologist broadly interested in gender, (im)mobility, temporality, and placemaking. Her current research investigates the making of a brand-new urban area in Southwest China and various local efforts of community building, as the latter is often informed... Read More →
Sunday March 23, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Room 144 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

9:00am EDT

Identity Making & Displacing the Dominant Didactic
Sunday March 23, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Brianna Doe, "Black on Purpose: Studying Tragedy From an Africana Epistemology Toward a Black Cosmology Tragedy"
By chronologizing and captioning our family photos, this emergent and experimental archive is a continuation of quotidian praxis initiated by my research interlocutors, the women in my own family whose shared experiences form a genealogy of routinized violence. This work suggests that a queer of color critique intimates the ways that Black matriarchs make and keep life amidst the material constraints of antiblack violence. It is a working complement to my dissertation research, where I examine how Black women (re)produce black subjectivity in the thrust of modernity. In the wake of enslavement and its many afterlives (Sharpe 2016), and in a time-space where the plantation is the conceptual terrain of the inner-city (McKittrich 2013), some theorists argue that African-American culture-bearers operate "...in the absence of the rights of man or the assurances of the self-possessed individual [...]" (Hartman 2010:66), and are thus still enslaved. As a result of antiblackness in the modern world, places of origin, lines of descent, chronicles of cosmology and ritual practice are markedly ephemeral. My art is a sought articulation of something and somewhere else, an alternative metric or horizon through and upon which to tell the story of a family where men do and do not exist, where the worst has already happened, is happening, and is bound to happen again unless they stay anticipatory. For these women, family is counter-historical and alternatively made in the purposeful excommunication of men rather than despite them.

Elio Harlan, "Embracing the Queer Monstrous Body as an Act of Survival and Self-Love"
How is it possible to find joy, let alone live, in a society that desires conformation or cremation as your only path of existence? It is constantly demanded of queer people to somehow prove our own humanness and worth, yet measures of this are held to an entirely arbitrary standard that is infeasible short of self extermination. We are made demon, imp, mutant, and monster: the very borders of our bodies legislated by those willfully ignorant of our own experiences and humanity. But what happens when we embrace this image of monstrosity forced upon us rather than appeal to the humanity of those who choose not recognize us as human? we take the claws and fangs given to us and use them to finally bite back? How does the reclaiming of these narrative devices give us the means to survive and learn to not only accept, but love oneself in our entirety? Through this I want to look at queer monstrous bodies created or imagined in the works of Andrew Joseph White, bodies that are deemed broken and ill by an outside force, ones that are left marked by their own survival, that defy or otherwise confront a conformed society. In combining the creative work of Andrew Joseph White with the theoretical works of Jeffrey Jerome Cohen, Margrit Shildrick, and several additional scholars, I aim to construct a framework for embodying queer monstrosity as a source of empowerment and reenforce the notion of a queer monstrous—and especially current or post-transitioning—body as a healed body deserving of existence and love above all.

Jeiselynn N. Ríos Rivera, "When Existence is Denied: Identifying Crisis in the Bi+ Community"
How do we know when we are in a crisis?

As a group that has been relegated to the realm of non-existence, Bi+ people are disproportionately likely to suffer from chronic illness, mood disorders, and loneliness. Further, they experience a double constraint from both hetero- and homonormative understandings of sexuality, exposing them to inordinate amounts of violence from both groups. Within academia, this also becomes prevalent as research on Bi+ populations must still continuously justify the uniqueness of this group despite having scholarship since early 1900’s that may very well situate bisexuality studies as a distinct subfield of its very own. Activism faces a similar pitfall, where Bi+ activists are rarely mentioned despite being foundational in the development of the broader LGBTQ movement. How can Bi+ people know we are facing a crisis when there is still an open refusal to acknowledge our existence—never mind recognize the importance of Bi+ specific scholarship?

I argue that both academic and activist approaches must be deployed in order to understand what makes bi+ experiences unique. Through autoethnographic reflection, I examine the practical effects theoretical understandings of oppression can have, especially when articulated in highly accessible and sustainable ways. By grounding myself in a theoretically informed activist project Bisexual Killjoy Podcast, I reveal exactly what can be gained from articulating highly abstract concepts in relatable ways.

For this subjugated population faced by allied political interests in their oppression, theory can emerge as a liberatory practice. It is by asking what theory can do for this group of people that we can begin to understand how we know when we are in crisis – and what steps we can take to liberate ourselves from it.

Tiffany Thompson, "Women and 'the Troubles': Navigating Crisis and Displacement during the Northern Ireland Conflict, 1969--1979"
When studying Northern Ireland’s Troubles, scholars have largely focused on paramilitary violence, militant republicans and their imprisonment, and the peace process, all of which were not only male-dominated spheres, but also subsequently narrated in ways that obscured women’s involvement. My research investigates volatile moments in the first decade of the conflict with consideration to the intersectional, transnational, and post-colonial contexts of the Troubles in order to reflect a broader range of experiences, particularly in terms of working-class women on both sides of the sectarian divide. Burnt-out homes and barricaded neighborhoods were familiar sights in Belfast in the 1970s as the violence of the Troubles left entire families displaced, but it was overwhelmingly women, usually with children in tow, who fled the North. As such this paper will explore the relationship between the British state’s often heavy-handed attempts to manage the armed conflict and the crises that ensued. It also considers the role of institutions in Northern Ireland, Great Britain and the Republic of Ireland that responded in these moments of acute crisis. However, in doing so, my research recenters women and their place in this story, interrogating their particular experiences of violence at the hands of predominantly male crowds, police, and paramilitaries; asking about their experiences of displacement and life in refugee camps; and examining their decisions to accept or reject support offered by various states when navigating the conflict. Through a feminist analysis of Northern Irish women’s experiences of violence and displacement, I ultimately seek to highlight their agency, resiliency, and struggle to protect and care for their families and communities.
Speakers
BD

Brianna Doe

PhD, University of Virginia
JN

Jeiselynn N. Ríos Rivera

PhD, Boston University
EH

Elio Harlan

Masters, Northeastern University
TT

Tiffany Thompson

PhD, Boston College
Sunday March 23, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Room 141 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

9:00am EDT

Resounding Resilience: Sound Based Activist Practices
Sunday March 23, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Jeffrey Ng, "Resonant Resistance: The Role of Sound and Song in Hong Kong's Recent Liberatory Movements"
In times of crisis, artistic expressions often emerge as powerful tools of resistance and liberation. This paper examines the pivotal role of sound and song in Hong Kong's political movements from the late 20th century to the present, highlighting how music has served as a site of resistance and a catalyst for solidarity both locally and within the diaspora. Beginning with the 1967 Leftist riots, moving through the emotional aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests epitomized by the band Beyond, and culminating in the recent Umbrella Movement of 2014 and the 2019 protests featuring the banned, pseudo-anthem "Glory to Hong Kong," this study traces the sonic landscape of dissent in a region perpetually navigating crisis.

By analyzing these key historical moments, the paper argues that music and sound function as liberatory practices that transcend linguistic and cultural barriers, fostering a shared identity and collective memory among Hong Kongers. The chants, songs, and melodies not only mobilize protestors on the ground but also resonate with the Hong Kong diaspora, reinforcing ties of remembrance, solidarity, and a reaffirmation of core values amidst geopolitical upheaval.
Furthermore, the enduring impact of these sonic expressions extends beyond temporal and spatial confines, influencing intercultural dialogues and pan-Asian solidarity movements. This paper explores how the echoes of Hong Kong's protest music contribute to a larger narrative of resistance in the global context.
This paper underscores the necessity of acknowledging and studying non-traditional forms of resistance. It invites a reevaluation of how sound and song not only reflect societal tensions but also actively participate in the construction of new worlds and communities. Through this exploration, we aim to illuminate the transformative power of music as both a response to and a means of enduring crises, ultimately contributing to more caring and collaborative practices in scholarship and activism.

Hayley Qin, "Composing with Nature: How Can Music Respond to and Reimagine Data and Environmental Research"
I want to use the music examples from two ongoing projects - collaboration with forest researchers in New Hampshire to translate data of the forests into musical compositions and collaboration with Marine scientists in Massachusetts to compose music from field recordings of the ocean. The two projects go through drastically different approaches to how to integrate scientific data, technology, and environmental knowledge with music and sound art: one is based on data collected over years, where music reveals the patterns of climate change or potential threats to the forest systems and takes liberty of how to uses harmonies and pitches to display different layers of the issues. The other project builds acoustic and emotional experiences based on research and field recordings that still leave huge gaps of understanding the sounds and the narratives behind.
Sharing the process of accessing, studying, curating, composing, and reimagining scientific data and environmental research for a general audience as a composer is a way to deconstruct professional and social barriers of accessing environmental science and data, and advocate for environmental education and awareness. It is also a process of breaking the boundaries between arts and science and aiming for emotional and sensory experiences that will lead to an audience’s deeper, personal connections with science and nature.

Questions that I have been asking include: How can music express environmental changes, fluctuations, and crises over time? How can our senses, ears, hearts tell us beyond what our eyes and mind can read and think about? How can music evoke advocacy and activism differently than science does? What will future collaborations between arts and science look like and what does it mean for composers, for scientists, for the audience? How could these projects shape people’s connection with nature in the future?

Chao Tian, "Unheard Sounds: Exploring Immigrant Identities Through Sound in a Multicultural Context"
Unheard Sounds explores immigrant artists' identities and self-expression through musical improvisation in a multicultural context, presenting their experiences of "cultural drifting" within a host culture. As cultural drifters, immigrant artists continuously reshape their identities, navigating between their native culture and new surroundings. These drifting highlights both the fluidity of identity and the challenges of preserving personal and cultural memory during times of change. Through improvisation, Unheard Sounds invites audiences to sense the immigrant artist's movement between tradition, integration, and individual expression, exploring the balance of these interconnected facets.

There and Here, proposed as part of Unheard Sounds, combines the cultural heritage of the Chinese dulcimer with innovative techniques and a prepared setup. By placing objects on the instrument’s strings, I explore the boundary between musical tone and noise, expanding its expression between tradition and experimentation. Here, sound moves beyond melody to embody layers of culture and emotion. Notes and altered sounds interweave, creating a distinctive soundscape that blends historical depth with a modern edge. This sonic terrain invites audiences to experience both the beauty of musical tones and the nuanced, transformed sounds carrying personal and cultural memories.

Improvisation in this context becomes a liberating practice, allowing exploration between musical heritage and modern sound, carving a distinctive space for self-expression. Through this presentation, audiences gain insight into how immigrant artists achieve self-renewal while preserving cultural roots, transcending simple transmission or assimilation to form unique, marginal roles within a multicultural
Through Unheard Sounds, music becomes a ritual of self-narration, giving immigrant artists adaptive means of identity expression. This musical drifting lets audiences experience cultural continuity and transformation, revealing the resilience and regenerative potential of identity under multicultural influences.

Valentina Gabriel San Juan-Villamizar, "Ancestral Voices, Emancipatory Rhythms: Bullerengue as a Feminist and Decolonial Practice Against Crisis"
This paper examines Bullerengue, a traditional musical genre from the Caribbean Colombian Coast and UNESCO-recognized Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, through the lens of Latin American Afro-feminist theology, as articulated by thinkers like Maricel Mena Lo pez, and the Transforming Historical Harms approach developed by Amy Potter Czajkowski and David Anderson Hooker. Latin American Afro-feminist theology centers on the interconnected struggles against racism, sexism, colonialism, and classism, emphasizing that theological reflection must respond to the lived realities of oppressed women. These lenses allow us to understand Bullerengue as more than just a cultural expression; it is a resilient practice that embodies both spiritual and social liberation. Additionally, the Transforming Historical Harms framework informs this analysis by providing a structure for addressing the legacies of violence and marginalization through Facing History, Making Connections, Healing Wounds, and Taking Action. These elements are embedded in Bullerengue, where ancestral wisdom is orally passed down as a tool of healing, community cohesion, and resistance.

This paper argues that Bullerengue is not only a repository of the lived experiences and resilient identity of San Basilio de Palenque’s descendants—the first liberated Black pueblo in the Americas—but also a practice of resistance that has persisted despite the threats posed by armed conflict, and systemic violence. Central to this resilience are Afro-Colombian women, who play a crucial ro
Speakers
VG

Valentina Gabriel San Juan-Villamizar

Masters, Boston University
CT

Chao Tian

PhD, Boston University
JN

Jeffrey Ng

Masters, Harvard Divinity School
avatar for Hayley Qin

Hayley Qin

Masters, New England Conservatory of Music
Sunday March 23, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Room 155 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

10:30am EDT

New Technological Tools: From Autonomy to Community
Sunday March 23, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Michel Madanat, "Media Control and Palestinian Censorship: How American Media Manufactures Public Consent for Genocide"
Throughout the past year, the Israeli state has been systematically committing a genocide against the indigenous Palestinian population of Gaza as an extension of its settler colonial project. The last year has also seen an unprecedented paradigm shift in which public support for Zionism has diminished considerably, with protests held in major U.S. cities demanding an arms embargo on Israel and student encampments demanding that universities divest from the Israeli apartheid state and the corporations affiliated with it. However, this shift has rarely been recognized by major American news outlets and social media platforms, and the voices of Palestinians have been silenced and replaced with misinformation.

Relying on Edward Said’s Orientalism (1978) as a theoretical lens, this paper will examine how American media has taken control over the narrative of the Palestinian genocide. I argue that this has been executed on two dimensions, that of the perpetrator and that of the victim. I will first assert that American media outlets have consistently erased the perpetrator in the Palestinian genocide, using language and images that frame the massacres committed by Israel as humanitarian crises where the aggressor is absent. I will then demonstrate how Palestinian voices have largely been missing from American reporting or blatantly silenced if present. These two dimensions together alleviate the perpetrator of any accountability for war crimes and human rights violations and erase the voices of Palestinian journalists and activists calling for justice. Renowned newspapers such as The New York Times and The Washington Post manufacture a false narrative embedded within a censorship system that pacifies the American public and enables their consent for a US-sponsored genocide against the indigenous population of Palestine.

Finally, I will conclude by discussing forms of resistance that have been adopted by Arab academics and activists as liberatory practice. These forms of resistance include bypassing social media algorithms which attempt to silence their messages and establishing independent platforms outside of social media.

Soodeh Mansouri, "Iranian Women's Online Resistance for Bodily Autonomy"
“Neither East, Nor West” is the main slogan of the Islamic Revolution of 1979 in Iran. According to this slogan, the Islamic Republic of Iran has chosen various domains to demonstrate its anti-capitalistic and anti-imperialistic stance during its four decades of governance. One of these domains is the female body. The Iranian woman’s body, as a symbol to represent the Islamic government's values and its anti-imperialistic and anti-capitalistic position, has been a significant sphere through which socio-political issues are conveyed to the world. The enforcement of veiling (Hijab), the covering of the entire body with the chador, and the avoidance of colorful clothing are some of the key markers the Islamic government uses to project its values through the regulation of women’s bodies.

However, women’s resistance against the ideological commodification of their bodies by the Islamist regime has persisted over the last four decades. There have been numerous activities, such as street protests and civil resistance against compulsory veiling or restrictions on clothing choices. The latest protest against discriminatory rules toward women escalated into a social movement in Iran in 2022, known as “Woman, Life, Freedom.” While the “Woman, Life, Freedom” movement is often described as a failed movement, I believe that the resistance against the ideological use of women’s bodies is stronger today and continues with more intensity. In this paper, I will focus on the ongoing resistance by women for their right to control their bodies in the post-movement era in 2024, specifically on online platforms, with a focus on X (formerly Twitter). I will analyze the trending resistance tweets related to women’s bodily autonomy. My methodology involves content analysis of the tweet texts, and data collection will be based on the snowball sampling method by following tweets participating in this genre.

Kate Yuan, "Psychological Wage of Misogyny: An Existentialist Lens on Deepfake"
This paper examines the crisis of gender-based digital violence through the phenomenon of deepfake pornography and its use as a tool for mass humiliation within misogynistic communities like incel groups. Central to this crisis are “humiliation rooms”—digital spaces dedicated to sharing deepfake pornography targeting specific women, including mothers, sisters, and acquaintances. Here, sexual humiliation is weaponized to assert dominance, revealing a new dimension of technologically enabled gender violence that exploits anonymity and scale. Although humiliation is central to understanding digital gender violence, it remains under-explored. This paper addresses this gap by examining how deepfake technology amplifies large-scale, anonymous humiliation and misogyny, making these discussions urgent and timely.

To analyze this crisis, I draw on W.E.B. Du Bois’s concept of the “psychological wage of whiteness” to introduce a “psychological wage of masculinity,” wherein men derive compensatory value from subjugating women in the digital realm. Jean-Paul Sartre’s existentialist framework, particularly his concepts of “the look” and “bad faith,” illuminates the desire to reduce women to objects, reflecting existential anxiety over women’s autonomy. Simone de Beauvoir’s gendered parallel between racial and gendered oppression further reveals how patriarchal societies render women as the “Other,” positioning their bodies as sites of control and shame.

Through this existential lens, I propose solutions focused on dismantling objectifying structures and reinforcing subjectivity for both genders. Sartre’s concept of the “third person” suggests disrupting collective objectification through external accountability, advocating for legislative measures that enable third-party monitoring of digital spaces. Meanwhile, Beauvoir’s emphasis on self-assertion highlights the importance of cultivating digital and public realms where women can reclaim autonomy and resist objectification. These strategies contribute to a necessary rethinking of human dignity and autonomy in our technologically mediated world, bridging enduring human values with the pressing ethical challenges of our digital age.
Speakers
KY

Kate Yuan

PhD, Yale University
avatar for Michel Madanat

Michel Madanat

Masters, Simmons University
My academic research explores power and identity, post-colonial theory, and gender and sexuality in the Arab world. I am interested in understanding how to conduct research in a way that does not reproduce settler colonial structures.
avatar for Soodeh Mansouri

Soodeh Mansouri

PhD, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Sunday March 23, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Room 124 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

10:30am EDT

Speculative Futures: Reclaiming the Future & Reimagining Thriving
Sunday March 23, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Amorette Lyngwa, "Across Worlds: Transculturality, resistance and the making of Khasi identity in the 19th and 20th century"
For the Indigenous/tribal people of the Khasi Hills in Northeast India, the world did not end when colonialism and mass conversions to Christianity took over the community during the 19th century; it transformed. It was a period when new worlds, and new identities were built – some that were aligned with the new Christian religion and others that leaned more towards rebuilding native cultures and traditions. The ‘Khasi Renaissance’, as scholars have termed this period, was a watershed in this history that created the identity of the Modern Khasi. It involved the establishment of the Seng Khasi, a cultural and later religious organization that revived and strengthened Khasi heritage to resist colonial cultural destruction. It also kickstarted written literature for the previously unlettered tribe, creating new possibilities for the community.

My presentation explores this period of transformation through a closer look at the transcultural social life of Jeebon Roy, one of the founders of the Seng Khasi and the foremost leaders of the Khasi Renaissance of the 19th and 20th centuries. Through a close reading of a selection of early Khasi writing by Roy and his associates, published by his printing press, I argue that Khasi ‘worldmaking’ in the 19th and 20th century is an amalgamation of past heritage and the many transcultural experiences that leaders and ‘worldmakers’ of the century were exposed to during this time period. Further, this transculturality and transformation became a form of resistance that allowed the Khasi community to transition into the modern world. At a time when the tribe’s cultural heritage was at stake, I ask, what does it mean for a community to survive crisis and their world’s transformation through embracing new worlds and transcultural identities? What are the implications when this transcultural worldmaking becomes a core feature of Khasi identity in the century that followed?

Benvolio Nichols, "“Like Dying and Like Being Born”: The Portal, the Door, and the Closet in Mohsin Hamid’s Exit West"
Exit West by Mohsin Hamid is a novel of global, community, and interior crisis. The scholarship surrounding Exit West—concerningly little of which has emerged since its publication in 2017—has focused on the novel's fabulist conventions and speculative content as a commentary on xenophobia and colonialism. Using noted texts in queer theory including Sedgwick's Epistemology of the Closet, this paper draws further connections between Hamid's portal plot and the experience of coming out. Hamid’s central worldbuilding conceit—magical “doors” which allow passage all over the world, regardless of borders—compellingly troubles cultural narratives about refugees, while serving also as a concrete extension of the metaphorical closet door with which queer people must live. I center the intersectionality of migration and coming out to demonstrate that for characters like Nadia, a refugee and a bisexual woman, these experiences must overlap. Through close reading, I propose that the novel’s short and spare conclusion engages with global crisis on two levels: by showing us a city after violent upheaval, and by showing us the aftermath of a relationship shaped by displacement. In this last scene, set decades after their romantic relationship has ended, the novel’s dual perspective characters Nadia and Saeed finally come to an understanding of each other’s worldviews—particularly, Nadia’s view of intimacy as a queer woman. The conversation around the novel remains incomplete without an analysis of queer experience. Exit West reveals a multilayered perspective of the ways in which queer people and migrants—identities which Western media and culture assume, too often, must exist in opposition to each other—survive and rebuild through crisis.

Madeleine Stone, "Queer Temporalities and Crisis: Reimagining Survival Beyond Normative Time"
This paper explores how queer and trans theories of temporality offer alternative understandings of crisis and survival. By rejecting linear, normative conceptions of time, queer temporalities reframe the experience of crisis as non-catastrophic and open possibilities for non-normative survival strategies. Through the lens of queer studies, the paper examines how crises—environmental, political, and interpersonal—are often framed through dominant, future-oriented narratives that prioritize continuity and progress. Instead, this paper investigates how queer resistance and existence in the present challenge these frameworks, proposing radical reimaginings of living, thriving, and surviving in crisis-laden worlds. The study also considers how embracing queer temporalities allows us to cultivate new care practices and collaborative modes of being in community.
Speakers
AL

Amorette Lyngwa

PhD, Cornell University
BN

Benvolio Nichols

MFA, Cleveland State University
Benvolio Nichols is a first-year graduate student in the Northeast Ohio Master of Fine Arts creative writing program through Cleveland State University. He is a fiction writer with research interests in media studies and bisexual literature. He holds a B.A. in English and Gender Studies... Read More →
MS

Madeleine Stone

Masters, Boston College
Sunday March 23, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Room 144 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

10:30am EDT

Liberated Testimonies: Praxis in words, theater, and narratives
Sunday March 23, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Elizabeth Dell, "Young Women’s Diagnostic Experiences in an RVU-Driven Healthcare Market: Using Narrative Medicine to Illuminate the Unseen Girls of the Healthcare Crisis"
In the cacophony of the American healthcare crisis, who falls through the cracks of policy debate? Needing to trade anecdote for answers, the care of young women struggling to be heard in doctor’s offices often hinges on storytelling. While 46% of American teenagers live with chronic illness, their stories have gone largely unstudied. This project tells the stories left behind after the clinical encounter of the young women missing school, work, and extracurricular sports as their life is overtaken by chronic illness.

This project uses an academic theory and clinical modality known as narrative medicine to document chronically-ill young women’s experiences seeking diagnosis and explores relative value units (RVU), a healthcare policy, as a contextual factor in these healthcare experiences. This research asks: What is the timeline of diagnosis for a young woman with a chronic condition, how does this diagnostic process not only impact a patient’s understanding of their illness and treatment plan but also their identity and self-efficacy, and what are the constraints on this diagnostic process that may impede timely, effective care? This research uses three methods: narrative case studies on chronically-ill young women, a literature review of physician experiences related to healthcare payment policy, and an interview with a clinician and educator in pediatric and adolescent medicine. The findings indicated that while seeking care, participants experienced disjointed diagnostic timelines which persistently damaged identity formation and self-efficacy through invalidation, scarce information, and lapses in care. The crisis in care depicted concurrently across patient case studies and physician testimony is attributed to systemic barriers in the current healthcare system. This project employs narrative medicine as a modality of study and means of action to combat the inefficiency and erasure present in the practice and study of medical care for chronically-ill young women.

Fedra Cabrera Solano, "Looking Coatlicue in the eyes: Anzaldúa on writing and emancipation"
In Borderlands/La Frontera (1987), Chicana philosopher and activist Gloria Anzaldúa characterizes the process whereby members of oppressed groups acquire knowledge of the structures of dominance that marginalize them from society, and where they fit within those structures. She calls this process the ‘Coatlicue state’, referencing the Nahuatl name for a goddess representing ambiguity in the Aztec canon. At times she describes this state as paralyzing, and at others as divine and profound – as something that must be undergone in order to survive. In this presentation, I sketch an aesthetic reading of the Coatlicue state. In my view, this state should be understood as a crucial first step in the process of forming coalitional networks of insurrect action. This is because it can provide the basis for the creative act of writing, which Anzaldúa describes as crucial in making the experiences of marginalized individuals meaningful and shareable. Importantly for Anzaldúa, the task of writing requires us to rest in the paralysis brought about by the Coatlicue state. Once the agent allows themselves to process this paralysis, they can give it words, which then allows them to render their experience intelligible with the aim of finding allies and dismantling oppressive tropes and stereotypes.
Speakers
avatar for Elizabeth Dell

Elizabeth Dell

MA, Boston College
avatar for Fedra Cabrera Solano

Fedra Cabrera Solano

PhD student, Harvard University
Sunday March 23, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Room 141 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

10:30am EDT

“Palestine Will Be Free”: Visual, Spatial, Digital Resistance in Public
Sunday March 23, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Marybelle Issa, "Artistic Interventions in Times of Struggle: Resistance and (Re)Imagination Within the Palestinian Context"
Art has historically been at the center of resistance and has been studied as forms of protest (Lorde, 1988; Scott, 1986, 1990; Rich, 1993; Peteet, 1996; Vinthagen & Johansson, 2013, 2019; Awad, et al., 2017, among many others). In the Palestinian context for example, a call to freedom united artists across diverse creative fields during the First Intifada (1989), resulting in influential works merging symbolism and realism in the aesthetic articulation of Palestinian experiences (example: New Visions group). More recently, as Palestinians face unprecedented violence at the hands of the Israeli state, art serves as a major force in the expression of experiences across the diaspora. Beyond providing an aesthetic and intellectual dimension to processes of recovery and rebuilding in times of devastation, art serves “as a medium through which relationships with power and authority are formed” (Darkhabani, 2025). As such, art can be a generative way of thinking about liberation and can serve as a lens through which resistance is fostered. In writing on the necessity of art in post-Assad Syria, Syrian architect Ahmad Darkhabani defends that “only through art’s fragility and elasticity can we make sense of the incomprehensible conditions and insanity we have endured”. If art can serve as an expression of personal and collective views on a world in crisis, then what role does it play in resisting these conditions? 
From a linguistic anthropological lens, this early-stage project proposal explores art as a cultural artifact and a potential communicative tool. It explores artistic interventions across the Palestinian diaspora as forms of (re)narrativization and (re)inscription of the self in times of erasure. Using a semiotic approach to better understand the political and symbolic meaning that art can generate in the world, this project addresses the following central question: what does art narrate and can it serve to imagine new ways of living, being and thinking about identity, life, and liberation beyond the constraints of catastrophe? 

Mikaila Rummage, ""I Am Still Alive:" Bisan's Journalism as Livingness"
Since 7 October 2023, Palestinians in Gaza have experienced a rapid intensification of violence by the occupying Israeli forces, but their persisting, steadfast existence informs us, as observers to this crisis, of alternative modes of resistance. Through an analysis of Bisan Owda’s citizen journalism and her tireless work to document the genocide of her people, I demonstrate a genealogy of multimodal forms of resistance to erasure that are emblematic of the Palestinian ethic of sumud (steadfastness) and provide an example of McKittrick’s theorizing on livingness (2021). Further, Owda’s self-representation subverts narrow Western constructions of what Palestinian womanhood should look and sound like. Despite algorithms of oppression (Noble 2018) on social media that aid in both the censorship of Palestinian voices and the maintenance of a violent world order, I highlight how Bisan’s daily-to-weekly return to social media to inform the world that she is, indeed, still alive is indicative of liberatory Palestinian speculative futures; despite ongoing crises, displacements, and the weight of apartheid, Palestinians maintain the hope of emancipation, to return to the whole of their homeland. As Bisan boldly speaks truth to power, I contend that Bisan’s livingness and method of dissent is nested in her voicing, even as the threats of the war machine loom large over journalists in the Gaza Strip. Bisan’s online documentation that will forever showcase both the atrocities experienced by Palestinians and their relational care for human and non-human life under bombardment is made monument to the struggle for liberation.

Minh Hyunh Vu, "“there is less and less living room”: On the shifting shapes of crisis and the politics of refurbishment"
Writing amidst the 1982 Lebanon War and the ongoing Palestinian struggle for life and liberation, June Jordan observes how “there is less and less living room” due to the colonial encroachments of “bulldozer[s],” “observation posts,” and “soldiers.” The “living room” Jordan mentions, though, does not refer to a delineated space of the domicile/domesticity. It is not an actual living room; it is just living room: an amorphous shape diffusing across borders—of the nation, of the Human—and bringing relations of uneven life/death to close proximity, despite the sundering and siloing logics of colonial violence.

This paper is a meditation on the vital methods of living that emerge amidst and against the unlivable conditions of crisis manufactured by empire. I intend to move through a series of case studies on the everyday politics of refurbishment: the makeshift couches made by incarcerated Japanese American internees who were given “nothing but a big room”; the rearrangements around the Kitchen Table Series by Carrie Mae Weems; the bookcases and supply centers of student encampments across universities; and the blueprints for liberation by Palestinian martyrs and fighters. These ongoing acts of refurbishment—at the cusp of refuse and refusal—constitute what Christina Sharpe calls “beauty as a method,” which is “a way of creating possibility in the space of enclosure, a radical act of subsistence, an embrace of our terribleness.” Altogether, these acts of refurbishment orient us toward other geographies and geometries of care despite the “less and less living room” of the present world.

In her notebook, Jordan asks herself: “How to design tables and chairs for a really new life?” Altogether, this paper gathers its texts and theories as a series of overlapping blueprints that can inform us not just how to “imagine” otherwise, but how to inhabit otherwise, right here and now. These are some "designs of Revolution" (Jordan) that force us to reorient ourselves and "see in discrete angles, planes, plots" (Sharpe).
Speakers
avatar for Marybelle Issa

Marybelle Issa

PhD, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Marybelle is a Lebanese-Canadian PhD student in Linguistic Anthropology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Her research finds itself at the intersections between language, art, and resistance, with a particular interest in semiotic landscapes, protest rhetoric, poetics, and... Read More →
avatar for Mikaila Rummage

Mikaila Rummage

M.A., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
MH

Minh Huynh Vu

PhD, Yale University
Sunday March 23, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Room 155 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

12:00pm EDT

Lunch Break
Sunday March 23, 2025 12:00pm - 1:00pm EDT
TBA
Sunday March 23, 2025 12:00pm - 1:00pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

Fandom as method: Bringing imagination to reality & solidarity within a digital space
Sunday March 23, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Eleanor Carver, "The “Final Fantasy:” Magic, Climate Disaster, and a Survivable Future"
What does the end of Final Fantasy XVI (hereafter: FFXVI) imply about surviving apocalyptic climate disaster, and how can we use FFXVI as a model for using video games to understand the current world environmental crisis? FFXVI is the sixteenth video game title in the Final Fantasy anthology media franchise. This 2023 title explores what happens when anthropomorphous, anthropogenic magic-use wreaks havoc on nature and how ecoterrorism and bonds of kinship can create hope for a survivable future. The world in the beginning of the game teeters on the precipice of apocalyptic climate disaster reminiscent of the world in which we live currently, while the world after the end of the game demonstrates how active resistance is a path towards a better future. In this essay, I focus on the crystals, the Blight, and the end of the game as representative models for real-world climate change. I also look at how the medium (video game) affects the narrative scope and consequence for players of FFXVI. Roleplaying games (RPGs) place the player in the role of the main character; I explore the sense of agency this structure naturally implies for players. FFXVI has players inhabit the character Clive Rosfield, the leader of a magic-wielding group called the Cursebreakers fighting to save the world. I also think about what optional side quests do (or don’t do) to enhance the considerations of the worlds in crisis both in- and out-of-game. I also consider the implications of the platforms the game is available on (PS5 and PC). Ultimately, I argue that FFXVI makes players think about climate change and, in so doing, encourages them to begin to act against climate change, much like Clive and his Cursebreakers.

Kate Rose, "Affirmational Communities and Transformational Objects: utilizing non-literary fan creation in times of crisis"
Whether it’s rewatching a favorite show, repeating an inspirational quote from a comfort character, or listening to familiar music as a means to affect mood, fans regularly turn to their fandoms in times of emotional distress. Yet fandom can be used for more than escapism. Past fanstudies scholarship has explored the ways authors and readers utilize fanfiction, and especially slashfic (fanfiction depicting a relationship between two or more same-sex characters), to explore difficult or taboo topics in low risk, safe, and familiar environments. However, a narrow scholarly focus on fanfiction has resulted in limited research being conducted on the benefits of other (non-literary) forms of fan creation, especially in terms of fandom’s relationship to crisis. Past scholarship has shown the ways fanfiction works to help authors and readers name, define, and process various crises and traumas, yet these same benefits are being gained by fans through the utilization of non-literary forms of fan creation, including art, crafting, and collections, and through the creation and maintenance of fan communities. Furthermore, the physicality of engaging in tangible tasks serve as care practices for fans living in crisis, while the creation and maintenance of fan communities provides care networks and support systems. These fan communities, which are often online, are especially useful to fans who are members of marginalized populations and, as such, may struggle to find meaningful connections locally. Using interviews with individuals engaged in fan creation, as well as the analysis of fanworks submitted to Affirmation/Transformation: Fandom Created, a museum exhibition of fanworks inspired by fine art, this paper looks at the ways fans use their non-literary creations to name and process a variety of traumas and crises, as well as the ways creation of these works become part of a fan’s self-care practices.

Xiaoya Yang, "Digital Refugees: Queer Resistance and Care in Sinophone Fandom Communities"
Confronting the mass commercialization of fandom culture in mainland, China and intensifying censorship on queer-related topics, this paper provides an ethnographic exploration of how small Sinophone fandom community operates as a site of queer resistance and mutual care, particularly among young queer participants. Building on my previous research, which examined the impact of Queer imaginary media on identity construction among gen-z Sinophone readers, I found that readers and creators increasingly organize themselves within small, private group chats on social media rather than in larger, public digital spaces. Participants expressed concerns about capitalized fandom creation labor and intensified online censorship targeting public discussions of LGBTQ+ topics—common themes in fandom works. Describing themselves as “digital refugees,” they emphasized how this shift to small groups enables free writing environment and closer communication with care among each other.

Expanding on these findings, this paper takes a theoretical focus on queer theory, digital ethnography, and cultural anthropology. Drawing on Jack Halberstam’s concept of “queer alternatives,” I explore how small fandom communities serve as subversive spaces that resist exploitation on fandom economy, hetero-patriarchal norms, and digital censorship while simultaneously fostering solidarity (2). Besides in-depth interviews and digital ethnography methods, I integrate participants' fandom into ethnography as both a method of study and a practice of care. This approach contributes to discussions on alternative ethnographic methodologies, while critiquing academic orientalism and underscoring the activist dimensions of participant-researcher relationships.

By situating my research at the intersection of queer theory, Sinophone studies, and cultural anthropology, I aim to contribute this research in the knowledge of Sinophone queer culture. Providing a nuanced understanding of how small digital communities foster both solidarity and resistance, I also intend to study queer as a collaborative practice rather than a culture under gaze.

Reference
Halberstam, Jack. The Queer Art of Failure. A John Hope Franklin Center Book. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011.
Speakers
EC

Eleanor Carver

PhD, University of Delaware
KR

Kate Rose

PhD, Marquette University
avatar for Xiaoya Yang

Xiaoya Yang

Masters, Brandeis University
Sunday March 23, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Room 124 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

1:15pm EDT

Resistance & Activist Practices in Indigenous Liberation
Sunday March 23, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Mackenzie Butson, "Pa'u Riding: A Parade of Horsemanship, Hawaiian Culture, and Colonial Resistance"
Pa’u riding, an equine riding discipline with roots in Hawaiian culture, is a popular feature in Hawaiian parades, as the riders personify the Hawaiian Islands. Wearing kepola tops and pa’u bottoms held up with kukui nuts, lei-adorned pa’u riders carry their island's color of flowers on their body, as they ride their horses in Hawaiian cultural parades, like the King Kamehameha Celebration Floral Parade.

Beyond the pageantry of this performative parade unit, pa’u riding carries a complex history regarding Hawaiian culture, sovereignty, and the continued work of colonial resistance. This presentation discusses the 20th century evolution of pa’u parade riding, the importance of Hawaiian cultural preservation amid colonialism, and how the continued practice of pa’u riding brings forth cultural education for tourists while evoking a heightened sense of cultural community among Hawaiian people.

Through the lens of performance and ritual literature, the research compiled in this presentation covers how this equestrian tradition dates back to the 19th century after the introduction of horses to the Hawaiian Islands, how Hawaiian women chose to ride astride, contradictory to European influence, and colonial resistances amid the United States annexation of Hawaii in 1898 and later United States statehood in 1959.

Utilizing both imperative primary and contextual secondary resources, this presentation will also cover how this equestrian dicipline has evolved throughout the 20th and 21st century as a way to honor Hawaiian culture, such as the memorialization of Hawaii’s Queen Lilikuolani, and how pa’u riding withstands the test of time as both an opportunity to learn about the complexities of Hawaiian culture, and the resistance to a colonially-induced cultural crisis.

Kyle Cook, "Land back futurities: A reflection on community-led land rematriation in Hawai’i"
What is the connection, or lack thereof, between collapse and Indigenous Land Back? What are the world building possibilities that can arise from moments of economic and environmental collapse? What opportunities and frictions arise from building futures amongst moments of collapse? What does engaging pono (ethically) with Land Back as a visitor to Indigenous territories look like in practice?

Often referred to as the last Hawaiian island, Moloka’i is a sacred space for many Kānaka ‘Ōiwi (Native Hawaiians). With the introduction of off-island extractive corporations, tourism, and the State, this has left ‘āina (land, that which feeds) out of the hands of the Indigenous peoples of Hawai’i. In this content, many Kānaka ‘Ōiwi are joining Indigenous peoples internationally demanding for the return of Indigenous lands to Indigenous hands, often referred to as Land Back (Schneider, 2022).

In this paper, the author will examine the experiences of engaging in a year-long research project in a multigenerational community-led land back initiative on the island of Moloka’i. Through Tuck and Yang's (2012) framework of rematriation - the restoration of land and relationships to Indigenous peoples to advance Indigenous futures - this paper provides insight through the engagement with community leaders, kupuna (elders), and youth through interviews, sharing mo’olelo (stories), and mālama ‘āina (caring for the land) the opportunities, limitations, tensions, and love experienced through a multigenerational Indigenous-led land rematriation project.

Research findings include the embodiment of visitors understanding their kuleana (responsibilities) to the communities they serve, visitors embodying aloha 'āina (love for the land) in praxis, and the Indigenous futures built upon off-island owned economic collapse. The opportunities and tensions experienced by multigeneration projects such as the affiliation with the Western academy, mediating urgent disasters caused by climate change, and the interconnected need and desire for cultural survival are recurring themes featured throughout the paper.

Adriana Juárez, "Revolution Soundtrack: Indigenous Latin American Resistance Movements and the Use of Music as a Political Tool (1960s-1980s)"
The 1960s-1980s was a politically tumultuous period that impacted the world, characterized by the Cold War, the Civil Rights Movement, and anti-Communism. A largely ignored area within literature is the experiences in Latin American, which saw the rise of right- wing governments that violently targeted those who opposed these oppressive regimes. Mexico, Chile, and El Salvador, specifically, were three countries within Latin America who were impacted deeply during this time and had both similar and different experiences with state organized political violence, despite residing on different continents. More specifically, Indigenous peoples were those who experienced a vast majority of this organized state violence. Despite this unrest, activists were organizing, resisting, and surviving. One unique mode of resistance was the use of music. which created a strong sense of community, resilience and most importantly, supported identity and well-being of those directly and indirectly participating in resistance movements. This music spoke on the history of Indigenous peoples within Latin America, as well as the everyday experience of those living through wars, massacres, and other forms of political violence. Music was expressed through various forms of media, such as live street performances, guerrilla radio shows, guerilla camp performances, and during protests. Drawing on literature on the Cold War, global and cross-cultural social movements, political resistance, concepts of well-being, Indigenous music, political media, as well as interviews with those who experienced direct political violence (and were subsequently involved in various resistance movements and music), this paper explores the role of Indigenous resistance music in political movements within Mexico, Chile, and El Salvador, and what this meant individually and collectively. It is vital to understand how Latin American Indigenous resistance music contributed to individual and collective well-being historically, and how it encouraged people to continue to resist in creative ways during times of state-sanctioned violence.

Asia Parker, "Visual Politics, Human Rights, and Aboriginal Artwork"
Contemporary Aboriginal art challenges legacies of colonial violence that still persist in Australia. Art in this sense holds an interesting paradox to critically examine as Aboriginal people remain marginalized in Australia. They have minimal political self-representation and make up only 3% of the national population. This marginalization persists, evidenced by reconciliation programming to “close the gap” between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in Australia. On the other hand, Aboriginal art has been co-opted and embraced as “authentic” Australian mainstream identity and culture. Paradoxically while Aboriginal art is celebrated decoratively and culturally, it often contains overt, radical political messages. Aboriginal art is often used as a tool to communicate different human rights issues such as self-determination, rights to land, rights to reparations, and critiques legacies of colonialism. Reverence of Aboriginal art which is wholeheartedly embraced by the nation, and generates billions of dollars in revenue for the state yet this starkly contrasts how Indigenous people are treated in Australia (Butler and Bleiker 2017).

Art becomes political by determining what is seen, what is said, and what is remembered collectively as a nation. Aboriginal art holds deep historical and cultural significance as the first art of the nation. Aboriginal culture, dream time stories, and oral histories have been communicated through rock art, dot paintings and other visual arts forms for thousands of years, however there is scant work on how minorities articulate their understandings of ri
Speakers
avatar for Adriana Juárez

Adriana Juárez

Masters, University of Saskatchewan
AP

Asia Parker

PhD, The University of Georgia
avatar for Kyle Cook

Kyle Cook

Master of Arts in Indigenous Governance, University of Victoria
MB

Mackenzi Butson

Masters, Northern Illinois University
Sunday March 23, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Room 144 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

1:15pm EDT

Conceptions and Contexts of Decolonization
Sunday March 23, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Sukanya Bhattacharya, "An Exploratory Attempt to Contextualize Dominant/Western Abolitionist Thought in India"
During the independence struggle against British colonial rule, India saw countless political prisoners locked in jails and prisons. Many of the same colonial rules under which freedom fighters were imprisoned, however, still exist and have been widely used by the central government since 2014 (and before) to arrest dissenters, while the police have continued to serve as a loyal arm of the state by carrying out arrests, oppressing minorities, and beating up protestors. In this context, abolition of the prison and the oppressive state become a dream and a goal. However, even though abolition continues to be a liberatory thought and practice, there are unique challenges in applying it freely as it is built around and by North American academics and activists. Hence, to read and engage with dominant streams of abolitionist thought that has emerged in the Global North is also to reckon with how different the Indian context is. This paper is an exploratory effort to think through and engage with those differences based on my own experience in a summer school facilitated by the Feminist Autonomous Center (FAC) on ‘Abolitionist Care Practices’. The summer school and its participants dealt with questions of care practices but also found a tension in the relationship between scholarship (especially one that uses English language and mostly academic terms) and practice in India. The key questions that emerge are - Is abolitionist thought restricted to the academic class with access to social, cultural, and economic capital? How do we then attempt to de-westernize and contextualize abolitionist thought to address different socio-cultural contexts and roadways to abolition?

Işıl Karacan, "Decolonizing Turkish-rule Kurdistan: A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance"
The self is reflexive, historical, and contextual. I grew up listening to my grandmother (dayikê) lament in a language that the majority of the society I live in does not understand. I watched her mourn for every soul and soil she lost. In the following generations, I witnessed the exile of my father, uncles, and aunts. I was surrounded by generations of people weeping for a place, for a dream. It was a place that could not be described without mentioning the name of Turkey, where it was forbidden even to utter its name, a place only associated with backwardness and terrorism: “Eastern” Turkey, Kurdistan, or Bakur. As I grew up, I realized that people around me were traumatized by years of humiliation, assimilation policies, and state repression. When I got a little older, I noticed that trauma is not always disempowering. My family and relatives were, in fact, prominent Kurdish political activists in the struggle for equality and democracy.

Walter Benjamin argues, “The tradition of the oppressed teaches us that the ‘state of emergency’ in which we live is not the exception but the rule.” This approach to unveiling the “tradition of the oppressed” addresses the fact that there are alternative and often drastically different narratives circulating in the geographies of both the colonized and the colonizer. However, a subaltern-focused mode of history writing is less common for the Kurds who live under Turkish rule. Therefore, my paper aims to adopt an analytical lens—settler colonialism—to contextualize the northern part of Kurdistan within a longer history of, and intersection with, military occupation.

Settler colonialism does not have to be bound by certain presumptions derived solely from the New World contexts, which are reductive of the peculiar nationalist dimensions for the Middle East cases. Recent approaches have initiated a research dialogue that connects the histories of various settler colonialisms, aiming for a globally integrated model. My project emerges in response to this academic inquiry. Although recent studies linking the Ottoman Empire to global history and imperialism challenge former trends, only a few accounts explore the Turkish state from a broader perspective in relation to the colonial legacy. This paper seeks to situate the Kurdish experience within the global context and contribute to understanding distinct settler colonialism patterns in the Middle East.

Francesco Liucci, "Decolonizing a "postcolonial" world: A critical response to "Decolonization is Not a Metaphor""
This essay seeks to respond to and problematize Tuck and Yang’s article, “Decolonization is Not a Metaphor,” a seminal contribution to decolonial literature that has received surprisingly few direct responses despite being cited over 8,000 times since publication. For the authors, true decolonization demands a total land return to Indigenous peoples.

I agree with Tuck and Yang’s critique of performative uses of decolonization; genuine justice for Indigenous peoples requires foundational societal restructuring, including significant (not symbolic) land reclamation. Nonetheless, their rigid view of modern colonial violence may undermine broader efforts toward justice and transformation. In the first part of this essay, I argue that their notion of Indigenous struggles as separate from other liberatory movements represents a simplistic characterization of colonial-capitalist oppressions while depriving us of the mass organizing mechanisms necessary for substantive decolonial aims. I also discuss how their interpretation of decolonization on exclusively material grounds is insufficiently unimaginative and detached from broader human concerns in ways that may condemn decolonial projects to irrelevance. I hold that decolonization should be a holistic process that permeates every aspect of life. This project should attempt to respond to the all-consuming nature of colonialist violence with all-encompassing solutions, following the totality of various Indigenous cosmologies and the interrelated continuum of biological life.

In the second section, I make a case for a decolonial project defined by a myriad of transdisciplinary solutions – developed in deep dialogue and horizontal collaboration with and by Indigenous people – by exploring a diverse landscape of decolonial projects being implemented globally. Such an expansive interpretation of decolonization is strengthened by its mutually reinforcing pursuits, making decolonization more politically possible and impactful for humanity. Moreover, I contend that non-land-centric projects – focused primarily on ontological, epistemic, sociopolitical, and personal consequences of colonialism – are just as valid and urgent forms of decolonization.
Speakers
FL

Francesco Liucci

PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison
IK

Işıl Karacan

PhD, Rutgers University
SB

Sukanya Bhattacharya

PhD, University of Tennessee-Knoxville
Sunday March 23, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Room 155 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

1:15pm EDT

Re-Foresting & Sowing Seeds with Eco-Literature: Entanglements, Climate Joy & Annihilation
Sunday March 23, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
June Bumgardner, "To Love a Breaking World: Mediating Climate Crisis, Compassion, and Grief in Contemporary Literatures"
As the climate crisis creeps forward we experience many gradual losses: the passenger pigeon, the slowdeaths of reefs and rainforests, of communities, of stable weather patterns, and of the senses of place they inform. As things deteriorate, their old forms and the processes of their decay are recorded, modeled, thus used to (re)mediate our senses of loss, informing our imaginations of climate change/crisis. As part of a wider scholarly project of building affective, present-situated paradigm for understanding the creeping climate crisis indebted to theorists like Donna Haraway (Staying with The Trouble), Lauren Berlant, Deepesh Chakrabarty, Glenn Albrecht, and Terry Harpold, this critical-creative paper focuses on the feelings evoked by images of environmental decay and loss, asking how mediations aestheticize our temporalities of climate change/crisis and how we can improve those crisis mediations to engender climate joy and compassion in a changing world.

I begin by thinking about temporalities of crisis, moving towards a speculative, queering temporality wherein the present is caught up in a grief-laden, soon-to-be-always-already approaching future incident-horizon. I then explore how mediations of changing ecologies work within our temporalities, using specific examples of documentation (the passenger pigeon, Eastern Australian temperate forests, and Gauley mountain). Finally, I examine how those mediations are registered through three works of climate resilience literature: a speculative fiction video game Kentucky Route Zero, Ann Pancake’s watershed novel about disaster in rural West Virginia Strange As This Weather Has Been, and a speculative essay by Trans Caribbean writer Gabrielle Bellot “Starshift.” In my analyses, I ask how we can love a world as it fractures, and how to best mediate, record, and enable that love, working towards an imagination that liberates our crisis vision from the guilt, confusion, and anxiety about crises, and can instead focus on caring through them.

Kelsie Crough, "Abjection in Area X: An Eco-Psychoanalysis of Annihilation by Jeff Vandermeer"
Jeff Vandermeer’s 2014 eco-fiction and sci-fi horror novel, Annihilation, works to reshape the public understanding of the environmental crisis as an external, material that humanity must physically solve and shifting that understanding to include the crisis psychological, nearly existential impact it has on humans. Vandermeer achieves this shift in perspective on the crisis through the horrifying and unsettling setting of Area X in which his adventuring party of characters enter, try to understand, fail to understand, and come out changed—if they come out at all. Characters who survive Area X returned changed, not physically, but mentally, and readers see this mental change in the narrator as the story goes on and she increasingly encounters more and more of Area X’s creatures and landscape. This change occurs because the characters are facing something, in this case Area X as a living setting, known as the abject.

According to Julia Kristeva’s essay “Approaching Abjection,” the abject is a psychological phenomenon that people encounter that is not part of themselves, yet not part of the other or an object outside of themselves, but something entirely different that stands opposite of the person and upsets everything that person understands as true. This is true of Area X for the adventurers in Annihilation, in which characters question their own motivations, capabilities and even language through encounters with different parts of Area X.

Vandermeer uses Area X as a manifestation of the abject and, by having his characters encounter it, hands the reader uncomfortable questions about the environmental crisis, human life, and what it means for the environment to affect humans in the same detrimental ways humans affect the environment.

Lauren Rudewicz, "S/care Tactics: Tending to Entanglements Haunting Environmental Literature”
As the writers of Haunted Nature, ed. Sladja Blazan, have shown, entanglements haunt environmental literature. Narratives of entanglement in environmental literature are intended to inspire action in response to crisis, underscoring an urgent need to mitigate humans’ planet-sized capacity for harm (and being harmed) in the Anthropocene. These narratives, however, leverage feelings of fear, shame, and overwhelm that are ultimately contrary to action. Entanglement thus becomes itself a crisis in and for environmental literature, often more horrifying than it is inspiring. Building on the case Blazan makes in Haunted Nature for viewing environmental crisis through the lens of horror and the “Ecogothic,” I compare narratives of entanglement in environmental literature with the trope of the porous and multiple self of psychological horror. Although the nature of the fears here are similar, the meta-narrative concerning where these fears come from and what kinds of responses they inspire are importantly different. Environmental literature focusing on entanglement tends to take for granted the connection between the fear it generates and the action it encourages. Theorizing this gap between fear and action, I consider the “failed readers” environmental literature projects – ones who fail to be moved to action because they must not be scared enough, or ashamed enough, or simply don’t care enough. How might the narrative structures of psychological horror reframe this supposed failure?

While I approach this question in part through literary analysis, my paper is also interwoven with personal narrative, in acknowledgement and exploration of the fact that my analysis of the environment through psychological horror has been intimately shaped by my encounters with real-life psychology and experience with Internal Family Systems (IFS) therapy during graduate school. I consider how IFS might further frame a liberatory reading practice which challenges and re-interprets received narratives of entanglement and the environment.
Speakers
avatar for June Bumgardner

June Bumgardner

Graduate Student, University of Michigan
Right now, I'm interested in talking about time, togetherness, media, and affect. I am generally interested in transness, remediations, experimental writing, and studies of craft.
avatar for Kelsie Crough

Kelsie Crough

MA, Rhode Island College
Hello! My name is Kelsie Crough and I am a graduate student at Rhode Island College studying English and Creative Writing. My academic research pertains to 21st century speculative literature with a special interest in psychoanalytical and eco-critical approaches. My creative work... Read More →
avatar for Lauren Rudewicz

Lauren Rudewicz

PhD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
I am a PhD Candidate in English Language & Literature at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. I study contemporary American science fiction and fantasy through the lenses of queer theory and queer ecologies, affect theory, and genre studies. 
Sunday March 23, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Room 141 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

2:30pm EDT

Tea Break / Social Time / Networking Break
Sunday March 23, 2025 2:30pm - 3:15pm EDT
TBA
Sunday March 23, 2025 2:30pm - 3:15pm EDT
TBA

3:15pm EDT

The (Eco)immunity: Navigating Community Care & Survival in Climate Crisis
Sunday March 23, 2025 3:15pm - 4:30pm EDT
Jemima Duru, "Gendered Experiences of Climate Change-Induced Displacement: Exploring Inequality, Agency, and Resilience among Displaced Women in Nigeria"
The Intergovernmental Panel For Climate Change 2022 report states that with the rising sea level induced by climate change, Lagos will be among the urban centres at risk of submersion by 2050. This can already be seen in the annual displacement of twenty percent of the population in the region, fifty-five percent of whom are women. While men and women face displacement, women are disproportionately affected due to existing gender norms and socio-cultural practices. This study will explore the nuanced dynamics of gendered experiences of climate change-induced displacement, focusing on the agency and resilience of women, amidst displacement. Through a case study of internally displaced women in Lagos, Nigeria, the research aims to unravel the intricate interplay between climate change, displacement, and gender inequality. It will investigate how gender inequality manifests in Internally Displaced People’s (IDP) camps. The study aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of the nexus between climate change, displacement, and gender inequality while offering insights into developing inclusive, equitable, and gender-sensitive policies and interventions. To inform broader strategies that advocate for gender-responsive approaches to climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction. Through its comprehensive analysis and actionable recommendations, the study aims to foster dialogue, catalyse policy change, and pave the way for a more sustainable and equitable future in the face of climate change-induced displacement.

Taylor Gilliam, "Imagined Alternatives to Chronic Crisis in Appalachia"
This paper will consider the discursive production of the Appalachian region as a product of “crisis talk.” It is informed by the anthropological theorizations of crisis, chronicity, and anti-crisis developed by Janet Roitman and Henrik Vigh, and it will argue that Appalachia’s legibility as a region has virtually always been tied to a call for immediate intervention. This call has been sourced in media representations, federal organizations, and academic publications since the end of the 19th century. An analysis of these mobile “crises” makes plain that their definitions as such have presupposed a civilizationist narrative of modernity that both relies on and reifies settler-colonial logics and white supremacy. This has meant that techniques of intervention that might address the structural violence immanent to this naturalized narrative are foreclosed, and the material consequences of this are writ large on land and bodies. With this in mind, the paper will attend to ways the source-material for crisis narratives in Appalachia and the material consequences of crisis intervention are taken up, reformulated, or left behind by those who live in the region as they negotiate regional identity and transformation. In this way, the paper seeks to work against what Kyle Powys Whyte calls a “crisis epistemology” while attending to the potential for subversion and rearticulation it might leave in its wake. Particularly, it considers temporal and spatial production of a region as in a perpetually reoccurring state of rupture; I suggest that such a production offers a generative site for imagining, theorizing, and practicing alternative space-times that work against civilizationist narratives. Appalachian poetry and folklore are hypothesized as privileged mediums for this and are treated as primary objects of analysis.

Ashley McGraw, "Building Webs of Communicative Care in Western North Carolina after Hurricane Helene"
Housing insecurity, and the lack of resources available to food and housing insecure people in Appalachia, and the world more broadly, have been exacerbated by the rise of neoliberal approaches to social services as well as finance market systems. Pursuing my interest in how communication about resources is a form of care in unhoused communities, I have worked and volunteered at a homeless shelter called Hospitality House pre-Hurricane. I have seen how gendered ideas of care, the non-profit industrial complex or NPIC (INCITE! 2007), and the shift towards “clientization” (Gubrium & Järvinen 2015) were affecting how residents and staff interact with each other about resources. However, in the wake of Hurricane Helene, these conversations have shifted. Housing crises have increased in the area, as well as lack of access to basic necessities as communities recover from the impacts of disastrous flooding as well as evictions due to disaster capitalism (Citizen Times 2024; Klein 2007). Although the hurricane wreaked havoc and revealed existing weaknesses in institutional systems of care, communities have responded with consideration, empathy, and generosity. Investigating what new systems and landscapes of care emerge or are shed light on through this situation is imperative. How are communities and institutions engaging with landscapes ravaged by flooding in order to produce and enact care? How has the conversation about housing shifted, now that the unhoused community has grown in the area? In order to fully understand how communication acts as a form of care in the recent past (pre-Hurricane) and as a response to urgent effects of climate crisis, I use feminist and linguistic anthropological perspectives on care and landscapes of care to analyze the webs of organization and care across different communities in Western North Carolina, and discuss what futures of collective care can look like across reimagined therapeutic landscapes.

Lauren L. Taylor, "Intersecting resilience: a model of Disaster Racism, Intersectionality and Social Capital"
This paper presents the development of a theoretical model that integrates disaster racism, intersectionality, and social capital to enhance understanding of resilience and recovery following wildfires, with a specific focus on Lahaina, HI. As wildfires increasingly threaten communities, particularly BIPOC and NBPOC populations, it is essential to examine how these intersecting frameworks inform disaster preparedness and recovery outcomes. By synthesizing insights from existing literature and preliminary observations, this study explores the dynamics of how social identities and capital influence vulnerability and resilience in disaster contexts. The model posits that disaster racism exacerbates the challenges faced by marginalized communities, while intersectionality reveals the complexity of identities that shape individual and collective responses to disasters. Social capital is examined as a potential resource for recovery, illustrating how community networks can either mitigate or amplify disparities. Through this theoretical framework, the paper seeks to provide a nuanced perspective on community dynamics in disaster scenarios, emphasizing the necessity for equitable policy interventions tailored to the unique needs of vulnerable populations. This exploration aims to inform scholars and practitioners, highlighting the importance of an inclusive approach in disaster management and resilience planning.
Speakers
AM

Ashley McGraw

PhD, University of Massachusetts Amherst
JD

Jemima Duru

PhD, University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC)
avatar for Taylor Gilliam

Taylor Gilliam

PhD, University of Virginia
LL

Lauren L. Taylor

PhD, Howard University
Sunday March 23, 2025 3:15pm - 4:30pm EDT
Room 124 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

3:15pm EDT

Build Your Own Economy: An Interactive Storytelling Experience (Workshop)
Sunday March 23, 2025 3:15pm - 4:30pm EDT
Build Your Own Economy is an hour-long interactive storytelling experience that uses fictive micro-stories and poetry based on real-life happenings, to discuss transformative communal economies, which can be defined as group-based economics. The storytelling delves into global histories and logistics of collectives, exploring the ways they have allowed Indigenous and other diasporan people to survive (and sometimes thrive) throughout time, e.g. before money was invented; amid forced displacement; during enslavement, post-emancipation, and colonialism; in times of inflation; through financial meltdowns; or within war-torn areas.

The workshop will be an immersive experience where participants engage in collaborative decision-making to address specific financial scenarios the facilitator provides. The activity will showcase ways attendees can be economic agents of change and perhaps consider starting economic projects in their families and/or communities. The communal economy stories will weave in Indigenous knowledge around grassroots approaches to develop imaginative economic possibilities that foster collective responsibility and solidarity for families and communities.

As a scholar whose work is grounded in African ways of knowing and community economies, I designed the workshop format to embody the way that African Indigenous people have always shared knowledge, that is via stories. The workshop is committed to keeping the art of African oral histories and storytelling culture alive in an increasingly digital world. In the Build Your Own Economy experience, I will share African Indigenous Knowledge nuggets that will demonstrate the value and importance of ancestral wisdom, and show its relevance, even in modern times. My goal is to illustrate African ways of knowing, which are amenable, agile, and flexibly responsive to the needs of their localities, and reflect on how such knowledge might be adapted to attendees’ contemporary lives and spaces.
Speakers
SS

Sonya Squires-Caesar

PhD, University of Maryland - Baltimore County
Sunday March 23, 2025 3:15pm - 4:30pm EDT
Room 144 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

3:15pm EDT

Celebrating the Possible: Joy, Pleasure & Abundance
Sunday March 23, 2025 3:15pm - 4:30pm EDT
Aiman Rahman, "The Mycelium of Liberatory Delights: Ross Gay’s Exploration of Black Joy"
Despite the impression rendered by popular stereotypes, the Black experience is much more capacious and abundant than trauma narratives. In this paper, I shall be exploring how Black joy operates as a radical act of self-preservation and defiance, tapping into the phenomena of pleasure activism, nonconsumptive delight, counter-narratives of representation, and the surge of reformative hope through the lens of Ross Gay’s The Book of Delights. Gay challenges the idea of conflating pain with the Black experience by proclaiming his book as evidence of a Black creative’s potential to identify and produce beauty liberated from the entangled suffering enforced by white oppressors. My research will be backed up by Kleaver Cruz’s The Black Joy Project wherein he discovers the ‘double-bind’ nature of joy and grief, and Adrienne Brown’s Pleasure Activism wherein she examines the politics of healing and joy within social structures. I shall be probing how Black joy serves as a retaliatory mechanism for reclaiming Black Humanity in a world geared toward reducing Black communities to victims and overlooking their potential as agents of change. Consequently, these ‘delight-garnering rituals’ serve as methods of resistance in the face of anti-Blackness. I shall explicate how an alter order of compassion and tenderness can be laid down through the framework of Gay’s poetic amendments while also analyzing the way he goes against the grain of capitalism by advocating for an introspective, percolating pause. This paper hopes to unveil the ways Black people reimagine and re-envision their place in the world by radically and wholeheartedly embracing joy. I will examine how pleasure is not a signature of vanity or frivolity; it is freedom, especially for historically undermined groups for whom it was always inaccessible.

Avik Sarkar, "Possibility beyond the Present: Keioui Keijaun Thomas’s Black Trans Futures"
Anti-trans violence is nothing less than a global crisis. Tragically, it is well documented that Black trans women continue to be disproportionately targeted by fatal violence. In both the popular imagination and scholarly discourse, the Black trans woman is either located squarely in the past, where she has already passed (Marsha P. Johnson, for instance) or precariously in the present, where she is barely surviving. In other words, she is represented as a figure with no future, always dead or on the verge of death. As Dora Silva Santana reminds us, “there is a risk that… Black trans women are discussed only as a corpse” (215).

How might Black trans aesthetic practices reckon with this ongoing crisis? In my presentation, I will discuss visual and performance artist Keioui Keijaun Thomas’s project Come Hell or High Femmes: The Journey of the Dolls, which envisions a postapocalyptic world where only “the dolls”—Black trans women—remain. In her own words, Thomas investigates “camouflage and metamorphosis as modes of survival and transcendence,” strategies that allow the dolls to reproduce themselves from day to day. This speculative work challenges us to conceive of futures in which Black trans women can not only live but indeed flourish, beyond the persistent threat of premature death.

I will argue that Come Hell or High Femmes responds to José Esteban Muñoz’s call for “the rejection of a here and now and an insistence on potentiality or concrete possibility for another world” (1). In the spirit of Muñoz’s reflections on utopia, Thomas refuses the precarity and violence that marks the present, transporting us instead to a space of abundance and pleasure, where Black trans femininity represents possibility as opposed to negation. She invites us not to ignore the current crisis but to consider what could—and should—come next.

Works Cited:
“Keioui Keijaun Thomas.” Wexner Center for the Arts, June 2022. https://wexarts.org/exhibitions/keioui-keijaun-thomas.
Muñoz, José Esteban. Cruising Utopia: The Then and There of Queer Futurity. New York, NY: New York University Press, 2009.
Santana, Dora Silva. “Mais Viva!: Reassembling Transness, Blackness, and Feminism.” TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly 6, no. 2 (May 1, 2019): 210–22.

August Wei, "Queer Joy as Resistance: Reframing Transgender and Nonbinary Narratives"
Background: As the sociopolitical climate becomes increasingly hostile toward transgender and non-binary (TNB) individuals, celebration is an act of resistance. When research and media on TNB individuals is heavily focused on struggle and hardship, reframing TNB narratives to include joy is a necessary shift that demonstrates the complexities of the lived experiences of TNB people. In this proposed paper, we highlight the hope born out of crises and emphasize what is possible for TNB-centered research beyond documenting damage.

Aim: We aim to better understand how TNB individuals conceptualize the term and experiences of “queer joy”, including the contexts in which they experience queer joy. A secondary aim is to examine the impact of a queer joy brief expressive writing exercise on TNB individuals’ positive affect.

Method: We propose conducting a thematic analysis of written responses to prompts that assess understanding of and experiences with queer joy (e.g., “Think of a time when you experienced strong positive emotions (e.g., joy, happiness, euphoria) related to your sense of self as an LGBTQIA+ person.”; “Please define the term queer joy.”) A paired samples t-test will be used to compare positive affect prior to and after a queer joy brief expressive writing exercise. Data are from a TNB subsample of the International Queer Joy Survey (2023-2024), including 311 TNB participants residing in the United States and New Zealand (ages 16-71).

Discussion: This evidence of trans joy reflects a paradigm shift away from deficit-based TNB narratives and toward a growing literature base that accentuates the joyous resistance experienced by TNB individuals. In a period of anti-trans rhetoric, these results can radically inform how researchers, educators, and practitioners view and discuss TNB communities and their needs.
Speakers
avatar for Aiman Rahman

Aiman Rahman

Masters, James Madison University
Aiman, also known as the 'Youngest Novelist of Pakistan,' is an English graduate student and teaching GA at James Madison University. She is a former gold medalist from the Lahore University of Management Sciences. Aiman is a published literature aficionado who has written for The... Read More →
AW

August Wei

PhD, University of Delaware
avatar for avik sarkar

avik sarkar

Masters, University of Oxford
Sunday March 23, 2025 3:15pm - 4:30pm EDT
Room 155 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

3:15pm EDT

Transforming Family Formations: Protecting Queer Individuals & Reforming its Socio-Political Structures
Sunday March 23, 2025 3:15pm - 4:30pm EDT
Kamazhay Bermagambetova, “Liberatory Practices as Oppression: Why Parents Are Obsessed with the Queer Community in Kazakhstan”
In many countries, same-sex marriage remains illegal, yet queer communities continue to exist and fight for their basic rights, including the right to safety and visibility. In Kazakhstan, queer discourse was relatively present from the country’s independence through the early 2000s. However, in recent years, discussions of queerness have become increasingly taboo. Although there is no law explicitly criminalizing queer identities, anti-queer sentiment has intensified, driven in part by organized parent groups who claim that queerness is a “Western phenomenon.” These groups have systematically targeted and threatened queer individuals, framing queerness as a danger to Kazakh children and society.
Under the pretext of "protecting children from perversion," these parent groups have aggressively opposed new legislation aimed at addressing domestic violence, claiming that the law will undermine traditional family structures and leave children without parental guidance. This opposition reveals a paradox: while advocating for the "protection" of children from queer influence, these groups simultaneously defend forms of domestic violence, which have historically been normalized in Soviet and post-Soviet contexts. The conflict highlights a troubling contradiction in Kazakh society's stance on child welfare—a clash between an alleged moral imperative to shield children from queerness and an enduring tolerance for family violence.
This paper examines how these so-called “protective” practices mask an underlying resistance to progressive change and seek to scapegoat the queer community as a means of preserving authoritarian family structures. This analysis questions the true motives of ‘protecting the family’ and explores how the queer community in Kazakhstan has become a scapegoat in debates around children’s rights and domestic violence.

Miranda Dotson, “Gender Heritage: The Organization of Labor in Nonbinary Households”
At a time when diverse expression and identity configurations gain visibility and acceptance, little is understood about the influence of such gender configurations on social interactions within interpersonal relationships. To explore this question, my ethnography focuses on the organization of domestic labor and care work in households where at least one romantic partner identifies as non-binary. This paper combines data from in-depth interviews and field notes from non-participant observation from at least twenty diversely-configured households (n=45) across the United States to understand how nonbinary identity does (or does not) affect the organization of household labor. Preliminary findings suggest that it is the gender heritage of all partners that exerts the greatest influence on the distribution of household and care labor. Specifically, partners assigned female in relationships with partners assigned male (who are not transfeminine) are more likely to take on the cognitive labor in the maintenance of their household and relationship. This finding challenges the assumption that non-binary identities pave a clear path toward interactions wherein one's experience is not shaped by assigned gender. Rather, it is the confluence of binary heritage and identity that best predicts the distribution of historically gendered burdens. Households where all partners have a relationship to feminization, either by way of assigned heritage or trans-femininity, are most likely to report evenly distributed experiences with cognitive labor. This research addresses the persistence of gender-binary inequity, the extent that it is undermined by non-binary identities, and speaks to the broader question of how we get free.

Trung M. Nguyen, “Queering the Home & Care as Tactics for Environmental Crisis in Vietnam”
Lower-middle-class housing in Ho Chi Minh City is not the ideal accommodation for queer individuals in Vietnam, especially with the lack of personal space between family members due to the rising living cost in a post-colonial state. Utilizing the critical lens of autoethnography, the paper explores the author’s own journey of queer escapism to find hope to return to a house that is no longer the same: different boundaries yet wreaked with deterioration under the effect of the climate crisis. Constant and severe floods have led to inaccessibility to the toilet and hygiene-practicing space. Wielding concepts and theories from eco-feminist writers such as Dina Gilio-Whitaker and Jessica Hernandez, the author dissects the queer structure of their own “nuclear” family formation, troubling the easy contemporary understanding of the standard heterosexual Vietnamese family of two children, while facing such constant environmental threats of uninhabitable living space. At the center of critiques, the mother figure stands out as a survivor of various crises, family, gendered, and environmental, who keeps strategizing and reconstructing the family. Tapping in Patti Duncan’s work on motherhood in East/Southeast Asia, the paper maps out practices of hope and perseverance against the debilitating ecology of the Vietnamese governed state under the transnational context of the hierarchical global economy in relationship to consumerism and waste management. Lastly, there is a call for communal solutions where, in reality, it is the neighborhood that usually offers help, which complicates the issue of personal homes and undergirds the notion of collective hope in moments of crisis. Through that, the paper addresses how to center queer mode of families as praxis of care in the Global South communities where exacerbating climate crises threaten their livelihood & futures.
Speakers
avatar for Kamazhay Bermagambetova

Kamazhay Bermagambetova

MA in Women's Studies, The University of Alabama
avatar for Miranda Dotson

Miranda Dotson

PhD, Northeastern University
avatar for Trung M. Nguyen

Trung M. Nguyen

PhD Candidate, Oregon State University
Sunday March 23, 2025 3:15pm - 4:30pm EDT
Room 141 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167
 
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Liberatory Practices for Worlds in Crisis: 2025 GCWS Grad Student Conference
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