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Saturday, March 22
 

9:00am EDT

Carcerality in Conversation with Abolitionist Care
Saturday March 22, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Samantha Davis, “Anti-Carcerality, ‘Esoteric Aid’, and the Sacred”
Carceral logic works in many often invisible ways; transcending prisons and policing it operates by severing us from each other, from community, and from the spiritual. Drawing from the Abolition Collective’s anthology Spirituality and Abolition my paper recognizes a diversity of spiritual traditions as foundational to prison abolition understood as a social movement. However, my paper goes further by suggesting that certain practices— for example, the pouring of a libation to honor one’s ancestors— is not just a nod of respect to ancestral traditions, but that it is a pluriversal technology–an actual enactment of, or making of, multidimensional support, what I call “esoteric aid.” I define ‘esoteric aid’ as the traditions, practices, and rituals that draw upon resources from realms beyond the material and argue that they have liberatory effects. I suggest that esoteric aid is an often-overlooked territory of counter-carceral knowledge production that occurs in non-traditional organizing spaces. I inquire how, in particular, ceremonies are used to create pluriverses for emancipation that allow people to embody liberation even for a fleeting moment. Rooted in an ethos of transitoriness, migration, and Pan-Africanism, several of the customs disrupt the boundaries of what is formally accepted as social movement strategy in the West. Moreover, many traditions I engage with rearrange the temporality of crises by centering apocalypse, not as an endpoint, but as an opportunity or portal to these other realms. Overall, I ask how the wisdom of ‘esoteric aid’ can transform modern US prison abolition organizing into a more whole, well, and sustainable movement to build futures in what many see as the end of the “world”. Finally, I seek to hold the tension of understanding the anti-carceral labor that occurs in sacred practice, and the danger in drawing mainstream attention to healing art forms that were born on the margins.

Bella Fiorucci, ""What is Left?": The Imprint of Incarcerated Bodies"
Assata Shakur arose as a poet in response to the prison. As such, her poetry is deeply concerned with exactly what it means for poems to be created from a place of unfreedom. As attention to prison studies develops, we must seek to define a poetics of the carceral. To accomplish this goal, I study the relationship between inmate authors, the space of the prison, and the sensory experiences they reproduce. The most recent direction of my work is in the exploration of accounts of women inmates, with specific attention to their physical beings, disembodied beings, and carcerality. This most directly takes shape in the poetry of Assata Shakur, as her existence proved so dangerous to US political systems that she was forcibly erased from her community. Her exploration of this erasure and the broader systems that imprison her provide a deep understanding of the sensory experience of prison for the reader of her poetry. The attempts to erase Shakur translates to others, as the pursuit of her imprisonment results in the removal of others from their landscapes as well. The legacy of her image and the consequences of its attempted erasure allow us to draw a visual environment created by and through the prison, especially as seen through the lyrics of Tupac Shakur. We best understand the significance of the image Shakur creates when we look at the way she gives voice to the conditions of captivity from a place of exile. Her continued impact, especially in modern social movements like Black Lives Matter, reinforces the importance of analyzing her unbodied presence. Her poetry expands our understanding of how the prison leaves its mark within a poem, as she articulates the prison experience in unique ways, reconstructing and experimenting with sight to push back against a dehumanizing, carceral space.

Monica Ramsy, "From “social workers not cops” to “social workers are cops”: Threading the needle between the welfare state, the carceral state, and an anarchist vision for abolition"
Why turn to anarchism and the welfare state when discussing abolition? When contemporary U.S. progressive movements invoke the language of “abolition,” the term’s often-implied shorthand is for a movement to abolish prisons, jails, and other explicitly carceral institutions. An ideal world within this abolitionist imaginary is one in which the welfare state is left reformed, but intact. This paper calls for the integration of a wider and deeper lens in prevailing abolitionist discourse. In particular, this paper seeks to highlight the intellectual and political purchase of applying anti-state, social anarchist critiques to abolitionist analyses of the U.S. welfare state, generally, and U.S. social work practices, specifically. By looking at social work practices, this paper builds out, clarifies, and deepens arguments that the “caregiving” or “nurturing” parts of the U.S. state–the welfare state, the social work that brings this state to life–are inextricable from the carceral operations of the state. Likewise, in examining social(ist) work, we have an opportunity to examine the gaps, tensions, and cross-hatching of anti-state and statist socialist frameworks, goals, and projects.

These questions point to the urgent and critically important need for deeper discussion around the “caregiving” arms of the state and, in particular, the welfare state. Looking more closely at the welfare state’s operations and history reveals how this “benevolent” face of the state both creates structural violence, itself, and also aids the ascribed “malevolent” (read: explicitly carceral) faces of the state. In examining this carceral-welfare state interrelationship, this paper draws from Beckett and Murakawa’s concept of the “shadow carceral state,” or the “legally hybrid and institutionally variegated ways'' (222) in which U.S. carceral structures operate today, to argue that–contrary to prevailing contemporary abolitionist discourse–the U.S. welfare state is more accurately characterized as part of the shadow carceral state.

Jadelynn Zhang, "Writers Against Cop Cities: Recentering Protesters and Challenging Dominant Narratives as a Cultural Process"
In Atlanta, GA, the Stop Cop City movement emerged on the heels of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests following the police murder of George Floyd. The movement opposes the construction of the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, or “Cop City,” due to the multidimensional, intersectional, harms that it would cause to surrounding, predominantly Black communities, including but not limited to environmental racism, over-policing and police brutality, and violations to Indigenous land rights. Throughout the course of the movement, movement writers have documented the diversity of tactics used by protesters and established abolitionist aims for the movement, enabling its expansion to other communities across the United States protesting their own Cop Cities. Defined broadly, movement writers refer to all movement participants who produce literature in service of the movement, including but not limited to organizers, cultural workers, historians, journalists, guerrilla writers, and content creators. This study asks the following questions: How do movement writers challenge dominant narratives of abolition and abolitionist movements? How do they recenter the experiences of movement participants? To study these questions, I utilize a toolkit of mixed qualitative methods of in-depth interviews, qualitative content analysis, and archival methods while also embedding this research in a community-based approach. This analysis provides insight into how movement writers challenge dominant narratives in their written work and organizing and how these are put in conversation with historical lineages of social movements. This sociological inquiry builds upon existing literatures of abolition feminism, social movements, and culture yet challenges long-held perspectives on movement success as defined solely by institutional change.
Speakers
avatar for Bella Fiorucci

Bella Fiorucci

PhD, Loyola University Chicago
MR

Monica Ramsy

PhD, University of California, Los Angeles
avatar for Samantha Davis

Samantha Davis

PhD, George Washington University
Samantha Davis (she/her) is a Ph.D. candidate in American Studies at the George Washington University. She graduated from UNC-Chapel Hill in 2022 where she studied Global Studies and Public Policy. Sam is a social movements scholar focusing on how the modern prison abolitionist movement... Read More →
avatar for Jadelynn Zhang

Jadelynn Zhang

PhD, Emory University
Saturday March 22, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Room 155 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

9:00am EDT

Methods of Resistance: Black Feminisms, Abolitionist Consciousness, and Reimagining Education
Saturday March 22, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Alliyah Moore, "Black Feminist Place-making and Spatial Practices"
This paper explores the ways Black feminist theory reimagines space, place-making, and radical utopian visions within the contexts of crisis. Utilizing the prompt of crisis as an entry point, this research examines how Black women’s engagement with space functions as both resistance and resilience within structures of oppression. Drawing on frameworks from Black geography and Black ecology, this work highlights how Black women’s creation of space—whether through literal homemaking, community organizing, or rural relocation—subverts dominant narratives of power and cultivates spaces of care, autonomy, and safety.

Grounded in Black feminist theorists such as bell hooks, whose notion of "homeplace" underscores the home as a site of refuge and resistance, this research considers homemaking as a radical act of self-definition and community building (hooks 1990). By situating Black women’s space-making practices in dialogue with Black feminist utopian thought, the study proposes that such methods foster possibilities for alternative worlds and communal resilience amidst crisis. These efforts not only question existing power structures but also offer actionable blueprints for liberatory futures that prioritize well-being, environmental stewardship, and interdependence.

Ultimately, this paper argues that Black feminist approaches to space and place-making are essential in visualizing and constructing utopian possibilities within dystopian realities. This research builds on existing research into Black feminist spatial practices, emphasizing their importance as methods of resistance. It seeks to further explore how these practices foster radical imagination, boundary-breaking scholarship, and pathways toward transformative futures.

Maya Revell, "(Re)Imagining Desirable Futures through Archival and Speculative Methodologies"
Black feminists have long situated education as a method of liberation. As we contend with ongoing environmental degradation and climate catastrophe, Western education systems continue to forward colonial, neoliberal, and techno-scientific solutions that perpetuate systems of harm (Nxumalo et al., 2022). These curricular models and solutions are deemed effective and promising in colonial, capitalist systems. However, decolonial scholars and critical theorists have noted that these solutions and curricular frames are foundational to the construction of white and settler futurities that erase Black and Indigenous peoples (Curley and Smith, 2023).

In striving for futures that center relationality, liberation, and ecological resilience, this paper tends to the methods that Black feminists have used to survive overlapping crises. Building on Mbembe’s assertion that the “decolonization project” requires deconstructing epistemic coloniality and imagining alternative models, this paper engages with Brian Lanker’s “I Dream a World” archival collection containing interviews and works of Black feminist organizers in the 1980s including Angela Davis, Lucille Clifton, and Sonia Sanchez (2015). This archive contains intimate Black feminist ecological knowledge which are necessary for transformative education. Black (feminist) ecologies provide “a way of historicizing and analyzing the ongoing reality that Black communities…are most susceptible to the effects of climate change…it names the corpus of insurgent knowledge produced by these same communities, which…[should] have bearing on how we… historicize the current crisis and how we conceive of futures outside of destruction” (Roane and Hosbey, 2019).

Grounded in my experience processing the Black Feminist “I Dream a World” archival collection, this paper will make visible how Black women and communities have continuously navigated environmental catastrophes while using speculative methodologies to envision and gesture toward the necessary ethics, praxis, and curriculum for creating more desirable futures.
Speakers
AM

Alliyah Moore

PhD, Howard University
MR

Maya Revell

PhD, University of Oregon
Saturday March 22, 2025 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Room 141 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

10:30am EDT

Do No Harm: Holding the Health Care System Accountable Against Intersectional Violence
Saturday March 22, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Lara Alahdeff, “Contemporary Protest: The Enduring Women’s Health Movement”
The nineteenth-century introduction of germ theory, which posits that infectious diseases are caused by a single, observable pathogen, allowed for the extensive elucidation and treatment of diseases. However, this long history of western biomedicine remains incomplete because of its exclusion of women from biomedical and pharmaceutical testing. This has created substantial gaps in the understanding of women’s health and their bodies. The refusal to take seriously women’s health, veiled by the rhetoric of its confounding nature, was exposed by the 1960s- and 1970s-Women’s Health Movements (WHM), in which gatherings of groups of women across the United States of America protested centuries long medical misogyny. However, the twenty-first century epidemic of chronic illnesses which predominantly affect women, such as Fibromyalgia Syndrome (FMS), marks these illnesses as a contemporary crisis in biomedicine. This presentation argues that women’s narrative representations of chronic illnesses, such as FMS, stage an enduring crisis in women’s healthcare mirroring the political will of the WHM. I suggest that women’s FMS narratives depict the persistent figuring of women with conditions such as FMS as ‘hysterical’ within the discourses of western biomedicine, which remain vested in dated theories of the womb and psychological instability. In insisting on the legitimacy of their corporeal suffering in their narrative portrayals of FMS, women’s chronic illness narratives reflect, not just a practice of care, but also a powerful disruption of the medical gaze, to borrow from Michel Foucault’s The Birth of the Clinic. Accordingly, these texts offer women an opportunity to resist the dismissive and lasting stigma of hysteria in twenty-first century biomedicine.

Megan Guzman, “Radical Care and Direct Action: The Forgotten Women of ACT UP/Atlanta”
This project is motivated by the dearth of information around the AIDS advocacy organization ACT UP, particularly in the south, as well as contemporary interest in effective organizing strategies. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, scholars have increasingly focused on analyzing effective organizing strategies for radical social change, particularly in response to the continue growing crises around health, the environment, and failing governmental structures. In dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, both scholars and activists looked to past pandemics for historical inspiration, finding ACT UP as one model of successful, anti-hierarchical community organizing during a time of crisis. Members of ACT UP used multiple, simultaneous organizing strategies to support the survival of people with AIDS and pushed the U.S. government to redefine AIDS symptoms, fast-track experimental drugs, and set up needle exchanges across the country, among other success. This project focuses on women’s involvement in ACT UP, specifically their integral work campaigning at the CDC to broaden the symptomology of AIDS. The women of ACT UP’s commitment to direct action and radical care to each other across racial, class, and carceral statuses illustrates one successful framework for responding to crisis. I use the work of Sarah Schulman, a former member of ACT UP/NY, as well as primary sources from the Lesbian History Project to argue that women’s involvement in southern factions of ACT UP was integral to the organization’s success, and that these women’s political strategies should inform contemporary activists groups committed to collective liberation. The collective, direct action and radical community care exemplified by the women of ACT UP provide frameworks for contemporary organizing.

Grace Osusky, “Life and Death in a Southern Town”
The Southern United States experienced a surge in racially motivated violence in the early 20th century. Political, economic, and social policies that aimed to improve the lives of Black people during Reconstruction (1863-1877) were met with backlash from White Southerners during what became known as the Jim Crow era (1865-1967). While it is recognized that the lived experience of Black and White Southerners was dramatically different, demographic analyses of the health and survival consequences of discrimination are lacking during this period. Consequently, I seek to explore how changing social and political landscapes affect survival outcomes for Black and White individuals both during and after segregation. For this research, I use data collected on 6,831 individuals from death certificates of residents who lived and died in a small southern town between 1915-2015. Results from my analyses clearly demonstrate a dramatic life expectancy gap during the Jim Crow period that then significantly narrows with the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964. During segregation, life expectancy was ~55 years for White residents and ~43 for Black residents. Post-segregation, life expectancy increased for both groups (71 and 65 respectively) and the life expectancy gap shrank in half. Ultimately, while the explicitly racist policies of the Jim Crow period were repealed, structural racism has remained embedded within our cultural institutions in ways that perpetuate cycles of poorer health outcomes for Black Americans. However, findings presented here emphasize the consequences of legislative change on survival and the effects of a paradigmatic shift in social conditions on reducing health inequalities. While a survival gap is still present at the end of the time period under study here, my results highlight the potential for the continued promotion of policies that dismantle racial disenfranchisement to further decrease disparities in life expectancies.
Speakers
avatar for Grace Osusky

Grace Osusky

MA Student, East Carolina University
I am an MA student with a focus on biocultural anthropology in the Department of Anthropology at East Carolina University. The main focus of my work lies in the realm of biodemography. My thesis research focuses on the embodiment of health due to social conditions across time. Specifically... Read More →
avatar for Lara Alhadeff

Lara Alhadeff

PhD, Stellenbosch University
avatar for Megan Guzman

Megan Guzman

Masters, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Saturday March 22, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Room 155 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

10:30am EDT

Trans Futures: Trans Care, Counter-Colonial & Non-Heteronormative Societies
Saturday March 22, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Michael Barry, "Showtime: Queer Archival Formation and Sexual Labor in Sirena Selena (Vestida de Pena)"
Mayra Santos-Febres’s acclaimed contribution to the growing archive of trans Caribbean literature: Sirena Selena (Vestida de Pena), occupies a vexed position in literary criticism, while often being subsumed into arguments endemic to queer theory regarding the subversive potential of trans characters. This subsumption, exemplified by a critical preoccupation with the novel’s use of the terms “real woman” and “real lady,” not only results in an oversaturated, hegemonic strain of reading, but analyses that are fundamentally complicit in the (re)concretization of monolithic gender conceptions through a necessary investment in the fabrication of “real” genders. Furthermore, contentions that arise from these narrow, “tragic misreadings” routinely ignore the specific social contexts of Caribbean translocality, a critical absence that evokes Viviane Namaste’s critique of Judith Butler (published in 2000, the same year as Sirena Selena). As a consequence of this limited theorization, the narrative’s environment of constant crisis for trans subjects, characterized by state-sanctioned police violence, sexual exploitation, and class conflict, is frequently written about obliquely, or not at all. Attempts to wrest meaning from Santos-Febres’s trans characters, in pursuit of a uniform narrative of subversion, ultimately negate, then overwrite, how those characters narrate their survival within and against dominant social structures.

This paper reconceptualizes Sirena Selena’s drag performances, alongside moments of intercharacter gossip, as labors of queer archival formation, rather than individualized moments of supposedly verifiable subversion. Through this theoretical reorientation, off-stage dialogue and enacted performance work reciprocally to vocalize the resistant existence of distinctly Caribbean trans subjects, while also actively naming queer predecessors and a present queer translocality. In doing so, Santos-Febres’s novel explores the temporo-spatial potentialities of a queer archive without abandoning the lived realities of the characters’ present, violent crisis.

Caylee Weintraub, "Climate Change, Community, and Coral in Ada Patterson’s “Broken from the Colony”"
In an interview, Ada M. Patterson, a semifinalist in Grist’s “Imagine 2200” climate contest, described the driving premise of her short story, “Broken from the Colony”: “I’m trying to imagine what comes after the grief. Once the island is lost, then what?... I wanted to approach it in a way that honored the truth of what’s probably going to happen while thinking that there could still be life afterwards, even if it’s not human life.” Asked to envision the year 2200 through climate fiction, or “cli fi,” an emerging subgenre of work that seeks to envision new kinds of futures in the wake of anthropogenic climate change, “Broken from the Colony” envisions an alternate reality wherein the entirety of Barbados, Patterson’s home island, has been drowned by Hurricane Dorian. The only people who survive are Black trans girls who have taken estrogen, which enables them to breathe underwater. They emerge at the end of the story as a novel species of human-coral hybrids who will ultimately join together to form a coral reef and remake the drowned Barbados anew. Patterson’s use of the coral reef to represent a political imaginary is not entirely novel; it is grounded in a long legacy of writers—particularly Black writers—who have utilized the metaphorical capacities of coral communities to articulate progressive visions of community. I historicize Patterson, herself a Black trans woman, as part of a long literary history of Black writers who turn to coral as a way to envision new kinds communities that are forged through kin relationships and exist as alternatives to violent colonial, heteronormative societies. By engaging the material and metaphorical capacities of coral reefs, Patterson depicts a new kind of interspecies collective polity that is grounded in the idea of a dynamic, knotted unity that is continually in the process of becoming, and, therefore, always has the potential for transformation.
Speakers
avatar for Caylee Weintraub

Caylee Weintraub

PhD, University of Florida
I am a second-year Ph.D. student at University of Florida. My research interests are blue humanities, ecocriticism, critical animal studies, and new media studies. My personal interests include running, swimming, and houseplant care taking :)
avatar for Mike Barry

Mike Barry

PhD, Boston University
Mike (he/him) is a second-year PhD student in the English department at Boston University after having received his BA from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and his master’s degree from the University of Connecticut. His primary research interests are in postcolonial theory... Read More →
Saturday March 22, 2025 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Room 141 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

12:30pm EDT

Plenary Panel
Saturday March 22, 2025 12:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
Join us on Saturday, March 22 for our plenary session! The panel features wonderful practitioners, artists, and scholars whose work spans speculative futures, care practices, and alternative methods of study. Our panelists are:

Dr. Nadia Alexis, Poet and Photographer: Her writing has appeared in Poets & Writers, The Global South, Shenandoah, Wild Imperfections: An Anthology of Womanist Poems, and numerous others. Her photography has been featured in Forgotten Lands, The Southern Register, Mfon: Women Photographers of the African Diaspora, and more. She has received several awards and honors, including a 2025 Literary Arts Fellowship and a 2024 Artist Mini-Grant from the Mississippi Arts Commission, a 2024 Mississippi STAR Teacher Award, a 2024 Vance Fellowship from the Natchez Literary and Cinema Celebration, the 2023 Poet of the Year Honoree of the Haitian Creatives Digital Awards, a semifinalist position in the 2020 92Y Discovery Poetry Contest, a nomination for the 2020 Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters photography award, and an honorable mention prize in the 2019 Hurston/Wright College Writers Award for poetry.

Dr. Alexis’s photography has been exhibited in the U.S., Cuba, and virtually. As part of an Independent Scholars Fellowship for early-career artists and scholars of color, she exhibited at the 2019 Havana Biennial in a show titled The Spirit That Resides, with Carrie Mae Weems as her mentor. A fellow of the Callaloo Creative Writing Workshop, The Watering Hole, and the Poets & Writers Get the Word Out Publicity Incubator, she holds a PhD and an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Mississippi. She currently resides in Mississippi, where she teaches creative writing to youth and adult writers.

Alison Kafer, University of Texas at Austin: Alison Kafer is Director of LGBTQ Studies, Embrey Associate Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, and a member of the Crip Narratives Collective at the University of Texas at Austin. She is the author ofFeminist, Queer, Crip, and her work has appeared in a number of journals and anthologies, most recently, Crip Authorship and Fighting Mad: Resisting the End of Roe v. Wade. In collaboration with Mel Y. Chen, Eunjung Kim, and Julie Avril Minich, she co-edited Crip Genealogies. Her research is focused on disability and queer crip world-making in the contemporary United States, particularly as they intersect with movements and theories for reproductive, environmental, gender, and racial justice.

Dr. Shoniqua Roach, Brandeis University: Dr. Shoniqua Roach is a queer black feminist writer and Assistant Professor of African and African American Studies and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Brandeis University. Her peer-reviewed work appears in American Quarterly, boundary 2, differences, Feminist Theory, Signs, and The Black Scholar, among other venues. Her editorial work appears in differences, Signs, and The Black Scholar. Roach’s forthcoming book manuscript, Black Dwelling: Home-Making and Erotic Freedom, offers an intellectual and cultural history of black domestic spaces as tragic sites of state invasion and black feminist enactments of erotic freedom. Roach has been awarded a number of awards, fellowships, and grants, including those from the American Council of Learned Societies, the American Studies Association, and the Ford Foundation.

Sonya Soni, Writer-Activist and Prison Abolitionist: Sonya Soni (She, her, hers) is a Brooklyn-based writer-activist, community organizer, freedom dreamer, prison abolitionist, and the descendent of freedom fighters and caste abolitionists in India. From Kashmir to Nepal to South Los Angeles, she works alongside young people who have been incarcerated, unhoused, and/or in foster care to re-imagine public systems rooted in youth liberation.

With a passion for the arts as the vehicle for movement building and protest, Sonya designed and conducted “Policymaking through Poetry” workshops with youth organizers and aspiring policymakers in South Los Angeles. She co-led the Los Angeles County Youth Commission, the first youth-led government body in Southern California to center the voices of systems-impacted youth in policymaking. She helped co-create the movement to abolish youth prisons, camps, and detention centers across the state of California.

Sonya has worked for social justice organizations including Partners In Health, Boston University’s Center for Antiracist Research, PEN's Prison & Justice Writing Program, and Covenant House International. Sonya graduated from the University of Southern California and Harvard University, and was selected as a Harvard Women & Public Policy Fellow and Harvard Humanitarian Initiative Child Rights Fellow.

Sonya currently serves as a Kweli Literary Fellow, working on her forthcoming book “The Gorra, the Gringa, and the Muzungu.” She often writes about decolonized dreams, diasporic longing, and transborder solidarities. She is also a Bandung artist resident under the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporic Art and the Asian American Arts Alliance, documenting the community oral histories of shared Black-South Asian social movements.
Speakers
NA

Nadia Alexis

Poet and Photographer
AK

Alison Kafer

Director of LGBTQ Studies, Embrey Associate Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, University of Texas at Austin
SR

Shoniqua Roach

Assistant Professor of African and African American Studies and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Brandeis University
Saturday March 22, 2025 12:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
Room 123 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02147

2:45pm EDT

Crafting and Creating A Revolution
Saturday March 22, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
Margarita Rivera Arrivillaga, "This is our land: Participatory mapping of forced displacement through collective embroidery"
Forced internal displacement has surged globally in recent decades, as exemplified in the Sierra Madre Occidental of Chihuahua, Mexico, where organized crime groups wield violence to exploit natural resources and control critical transit routes. These groups’ pervasive and violent presence has forced many mestizo, Rarámuri, and Ódami families to abandon their homes and lands. Entire communities have sought refuge in Chihuahua City, confronting severe disruption to their livelihoods and cultural practices. Among displaced individuals, women have turned to textile work for economic support. Beyond selling embroidered items such as napkins and bags, they have also transformed this craft into a powerful medium for sharing personal narratives of displacement and resilience. In one community, a multidisciplinary team comprising a journalist, a photojournalist, and myself, an anthropologist, has collaborated with a community’s internal initiative to share their experience through a series of four embroidered maps on blanket cloth. These visual narratives reflect the community’s pre- and post-displacement histories, articulating loss, survival, and resistance memories. Utilizing a participatory methodology, we facilitated spaces for dialogue, enabling workshops that provided tools for mapping and drawing. This community-based, art-centered project endeavors to connect a broader audience with the community’s displacement story, fostering empathy and advocacy. The completed maps illustrate a personal and collective narrative, engaging viewers in a dialogue on the human cost of displacement. The project aims to elevate these stories beyond the immediate community, contributing to a larger discourse on displacement and cultural resilience. In doing so, it offers a compelling example of how art can serve as a vehicle for advocacy, promoting a deeper understanding of the lived experiences of displaced populations.

Hatim Rachdi, "Oxidizing the Past"
This presentation explores Tamazgha, an unbounded vision of Indigenous North Africa, through a series of artworks that center queer and non-normative gender expressions within Amazigh culture. Using my ME-ThOD practice—an experimental, “oxidized” approach to archival reading—I engage with “other-archives”: fragments of poems, graffiti, songs, and images that challenge traditional archival limits, revealing Tamazgha as a relational space of kinship that transcends colonial frameworks. These pieces position Tamazgha as a space where gender and sexuality exist beyond the binaries imposed by state and colonial histories. My digital works like EfE-ture and Tassa capture unfiltered expressions of freedom and desire, envisioning Amazigh futures that fully embrace queer and liberated identities. Awal and Loubiya Al Ama challenge state control, reimagining authority through queer Amazigh resilience, while Oho rejects orientalist myths, reclaiming Moroccan queer narratives on local terms. By unsealing these layered archives, I offer Tamazgha as a dynamic, trans-sovereign identity where gender and sexual diversity are not deviations but central to a liberated, evolving Amazigh culture. This Tamazgha lives beyond borders, inviting a future grounded in radical belonging and ungovernable queer possibilities.

Maya Wadhwa, "Crafting Protest Posters: Embodied Art and Resistance in Post-Roe Era"
Through the lens of craftivism (the combination of the practices of craft and activism), I will examine a selection of protest posters made, held, and waived at protests after the release of the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization Supreme Court decision. In these posters, gathered from news sources published after June 24, 2022, themes of guns and snakes are drawn, painted, and printed. Each thematic representation and accompanying words indicate the sociopolitical and cultural perspective of the protester, and subsequently, how they are positioning themselves vis-a-vis abortion.

I answer the questions: How does craftivism help protesters address cultural and reproductive fear and anger? What symbols, motifs, and rhetoric are protesters using to situate themselves in relation to other protesters and the broader Reproductive Justice movement?

By close-reading posters containing snakes and guns imagery and rhetoric, I reveal that protesters are using a rights-based approach to frame their claims to reproductive and bodily autonomy. In addition, I argue that protesters draw from ideas of agency and embodiment to make their claims legible to other protesters. I find that the diversity of representation captured in the snakes and guns motif reveals the protester’s unique positions and understandings of abortion rights.

This research will add to a growing body of scholarship that combines, feminism, craft, and activism. I posit the value of crafting as a meaningful and powerful way to channel fear, anger, and hopelessness about reproductive futures. Importantly, I read handmade posters as Art and a site of cultural knowledge production, a perspective that is absent from poster studies.
Speakers
HR

Hatim Rachdi

PhD, Yale University
avatar for Margarita Rivera Arrivillaga

Margarita Rivera Arrivillaga

PhD, University of Kansas
Ella / She / HerBorn and raised in Guatemala, currently based in Kansas, USA.Margarita has a B.A. degree in Anthropology (UVG), a M.A. degree in Demography (El COLMEX) and diplomas in Anthropology of Art (LATIR-CIESAS) and Anthropology of the Cities (URL-CIESAS). She is currently... Read More →
avatar for Maya Wadhwa

Maya Wadhwa

Masters, The Ohio State University
Saturday March 22, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
Room 155 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

2:45pm EDT

Love, Hope & All That Sustains Us
Saturday March 22, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
Daphne Fietz, "Decentering modern hope: Hope as virtue in the climate crisis"
Hope is generally regarded as a critical motivation for individuals to pursue change, while the 'decline of hope' and the concept of 'utopia' are identified as significant social problems. Although these themes are not new, the catastrophic consequences of climate change have intensified hope as a problem.

Drawing on interviews and ethnographic observations with climate activists from Germany and Britain, this presentation explores how hope is cultivated among those confronting the climate crisis in the Global North. I will argue that hope manifests in various forms, each reflecting distinct relationships with the future.

‘Modern hope’, a hope that is tied to the outcomes of one’s action and directed towards the broader future, becomes problematic but retains a hold on activists’ imaginary. Hope in this sense does not emerge as a key motivation but as a source of despair. In contrast, hope as virtue shifts the possibility of change into capacities of human beings and resistance itself. Because virtue is tied to the temporality of the self and to praxis, the catastrophic future loses its paralyzing effect.

I propose a more nuanced theory of hope that considers its various modalities, enabling us to comprehend both its demotivating and motivating aspects. In the modern temporal landscape, humans are seen to have the agency to transform the sociopolitical structures through praxis to approximate a better future. However, with the advent of the Anthropocene and the irreversible damage to the planet—foundational to any action—this model has become problematic, yet many narratives of hope continue to rely on it. I would like to use this presentation to instigate a discussion on the various modalities of hope, their temporal structures, and their historicity.

Asher Firestone, "The Hermeneutics of Love in Mizrahi Diaspora"
This paper will investigate the often-overlooked racial dynamic of Arab Jews’ (Mizrahi) presence in Palestine, to envision the concretized call for decolonization of Palestine. To invite Mizrahi Jews into an anti-Zionist diaspora outside of the state of Israel, we must use the praxis stage of the hermeneutics of love to investigate how we confront decolonizing worlds, when marginalized subgroups replicate the violence initially used against them.

Using the scholarship of Ella Shohat, I will unpack the violent history of Ashkenazi Jews baiting Arab Jews from SWANA to immigrate to 1950’s “Israel” and creating a secondary class of citizens who would serve as cheap labor for the newly established state. Zionism necessitates a deep dissociation with Arabness to produce a pure Israeli identity, and yet Israel has relied on Mizrahi people’s Arabness precisely to delineate a settling buffer between elite Israelis and Palestinians fighting to return to their land. As Israeli society subsumed Mizrahi history in propagandized hyper-memory of the Holocaust, the space to remember and mourn their Arab nations of origin withered. Frantz Fanon’s theory of double consciousness will reveal this to be a peak cognitive dissonance, where Israeli refusal of Arabness has constructed Mizrahi self-hatred and racism towards Palestinians.

Love is the only thing that can break through this dissociation, as Chela Sandoval’s work reveals. But it will not likely be the morally implored love towards Palestinians, that so many peace processes have attempted (and failed) to negotiate. Instead, love must be part of a larger abolitionist project-- one where, as Daniel Boyarin articulates, a global Jewry turns back to 2000 years of diasporic tradition. Jewish communities must reengage Mizrahi leadership to call for Israelis to mournfully and lovingly leave the homes that were stolen from Palestinians, and join a liberatory Jewish diaspora.

Nourhane Kazak, "Grievability and Resistance: Feminist Witnessing in Fatima Joumaa’s Photography of South Lebanon"
"What is the space between collective grief and love?"
— Sarah Ihmoud

Through obfuscation of history, linguistic gymnastics, regurgitation of Orientalist tropes, and appealing to a selective white morality, Empire works hard to render Lebanese lives, especially those from the South, "ungrievable." This research explores "feminist witnessing" as a method of resistance through visual documentation, focusing on Lebanese photographer Fatima Joumaa's portrayal of the lives and losses in South Lebanon amidst ongoing Israeli aggression. The term "feminist witnessing" is underexplored in the literature, and this study seeks to address this gap by examining Joumaa's documentation of funerals and commemorations of martyrs, particularly highlighting women's participation in these public ceremonies. Joumaa's work makes visible the grievability of Southern lives that traditional media often marginalizes, erases, or even demonizes. Drawing on Judith Butler's theories of ungrievability, Marianne Hirsch's feminist cultural memory, and Sarah Ihmoud's concept of "decolonial love," I argue that Joumaa's images serve as a form of feminist witnessing. Through her photographs and videos shared on social media, Joumaa documents collective grief and solidarity, challenging Empire's convoluted framing of war and violence. This study examines how visual storytelling from South Lebanon constructs an archive of resilience and resistance akin to Ihmoud's decolonial letters. By synthesizing these frameworks, I seek to think through what feminist witnessing could look like, examining how it confronts the disposability of lives deemed ungrievable and asserts their intrinsic value and purpose in the greater struggle for liberation from imperialistic occupation and injustice.
Speakers
AF

Asher Firestone

PhD, University of Colorado Boulder
DF

Daphne Fietz

PhD, Yale University
NK

Nourhane Kazak

Master's, Georgetown University
Saturday March 22, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
Room 141 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

4:15pm EDT

maomao: becoming ancestral mud (a performance ritual)
Saturday March 22, 2025 4:15pm - 5:30pm EDT
maomao: becoming ancestral mud is a solo performance that weaves in family oral histories, creation myths, folk songs, and Buddhist/Taoist rituals to rekindle ancestral spirits, queer lineage, and ecological entanglements. The piece offers a biomythographical retelling of my ancestral and diasporic migration, from rural Shaanxi to the US, mapped onto my coming-of-age story of place-making. More than twelve generations of my ancestors had resided in northern Shaanxi while I am the first generation in my family who was born and raised outside of the region. “Mao mao,” literally meaning feathers, is a nickname of mine given by my grandmother for endearment. I name the piece “maomao” to both honor grandma’s rural wisdom and articulate a grammar for femme/queerness within ancestral lineage.

I’m indebted to critical ethnic studies and queer/trans studies’ approach to fabulation as a speculative knowledge practice. Saidiya Hartman (2008) responds to the limit of colonial archives of transatlantic slavery from “critical fabulation,” a writing practice that asks what could have been, what might have happened, akin to what Lisa Lowe’s (2014) “past conditional temporality.” Queer of color writers engage with fabulation as a literary device to merge myths, biographies, fictions, and fantasies together as alternative narratives of the self, from Audre Lorde’s (1982) “biomythography” in Zami: A New Spelling of My Name to Kai Cheng Thom’s (2016) “confabulous memoir” in Fierce Femmes and Notorious Liars. I depart from these generative theorizations of fabulation as a literary and historical method by articulating “ancestral fabulation” an embodied ritual practice. By mythologizing one's diasporic ancestry interwoven with femme, queer intimacies, it situates one’s lineage entangled with legacies of relational colonial modernities while simultaneously imagining otherwise. Doing this performance is a process of becoming and unbecoming, to remember and dream alternative ways of knowing and being different from the extractive systems of the present.
Saturday March 22, 2025 4:15pm - 5:30pm EDT
Room 155 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

4:15pm EDT

Revised, Revisited, & Reshaping Communal Knowledge
Saturday March 22, 2025 4:15pm - 5:30pm EDT
Adrian Godboldt, "Filling the Dead Air: How Local Radio Amplifies Community Voices in Times of Crisis"
Amidst the initial wave of the COVID-19 crisis, Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear provided daily press briefings on the rapidly unfolding situation—but only in English. This left non-English speaking communities across the state without vital information. In response, a local community radio station in the city of Lexington, called RADIOLEX, translated Beshear’s press conferences into multiple languages, addressing the needs of a city with over 185 languages spoken. However, to avoid this information gap in future crises, the station decided to develop its own communication infrastructure. Collaborating with RADIOLEX, I developed an onboarding training guide to integrate diverse community journalists into the radio station, filling in for the dead air left by the state. Guided by feminist theory, this training guide served as a miniature ethnographic toolkit, aimed at resisting exclusionary practices and fostering spaces of inclusion through radio waves—amplifying voices often overlooked by the state. This presentation will explore how a feminist ethnographic framework can empower community members to reflect on their own positionalities, build relations, and produce knowledge that resonates throughout their community.

Taylor Harmon, "Made by Madre: the Mexican-American Kitchen as a site of kinship and knowledge reproduction"
Open any Latin-American cookbook and the introduction will emphasize the strong ties that food has to culture. Speak to any Mexican-American family and you will hear about the significance of the conversations held around abuela’s kitchen table. These stories hold the key to conversations that have plagued scholars for decades: about kinship, about nation and identity, cultural knowledge, and the role women play in all of it- we just need to listen to who is telling them. Questions of domestic spaces and gendered labor have been an area of focus within the field of feminist studies, including scholars such as Shoniqua Roach (2022) who presents the Black Living Room as a space of Black becoming, and Rhacel Salazar Parrenas (2000) who focuses on migrant Filipina domestic workers as reproductive laborers. Nira Yuval-Davis (1996) argues women as “biological reproducers of the nation” and writes about the ways in which national and ethnic processes affect and are affected by women. Indigenous cultures have also long revered women as reproducers and keepers of cultural knowledge (Cutcha Risling-Baldy, 2018; Carol Schaefer, 2006), but epistemological biases have largely prevented these wisdoms from being considered valid sources of knowledge production that are worthy of citation in academic work. Additionally, gendered domestic labor in the kitchen, specifically among Mexican immigrant women and their postgenerations, has not been credited as the capacious space for cultural knowledge reproduction and kinship ties that it is. As such, my paper aims to challenge citation politics by holding scholarly work, indigenous knowledge, and knowledge produced through art- specifically live theater (Christin Eve-Cato, 2024)- to present a feminist reading of The Mexican-American Kitchen as a site of cultural knowledge reproduction, kinship, and identity, that is facilitated by immigrant women and their successors.

Elisabeth Lucien, "Who is there to save the hero? A Generational Perspective of the Socialization of Strength among African American Women"
The concept of strength has been foundational to the identity of many Black American women, shaping how they are perceived and how they perceive themselves. Over time, this strength has become more than just a characteristic; it has evolved into a prescriptive social discourse upheld by societal expectations and cultural narratives. This has led to the perpetuation of the "strong Black woman" trope. This stereotype paints Black women as unyielding, resilient figures, often likened to superheroes capable of enduring immense mental, emotional, and physical challenges. While the physical and emotional consequences of this trope have been well-documented by scholars, there remains a significant gap in the literature: how Black American women across generations perceive and engage with this trope. This study seeks to address this gap by examining the attitudes and perceptions of Black American women toward the socialization of strength across four distinct generational cohorts—Baby Boomers, Generation X, Millennials, and Generation Z. Through interviews with women from each generation, the research aims to uncover both the commonalities and divergences in how the "strong Black woman" trope is understood and internalized over time. Employing a qualitative phenomenological approach, this feasibility study serves as a pilot and lays the groundwork for more expansive future research. Data was collected via four cross-sectional focus groups, each comprising 5-7 participants, recruited primarily from Sacramento, California. The study's findings are expected to deepen theoretical understandings of the gendered racial socialization processes that shape Black women's lives. By amplifying Black women's voices and lived experiences, this research will offer a more nuanced and generational perspective on the enduring and evolving legacy of the "strong Black woman" trope and its impact on identity formation across time.
Speakers
avatar for Elisabeth Lucien

Elisabeth Lucien

PhD, Howard University
TH

Taylor Harmon

Masters, Brandeis University
avatar for Adrian Godboldt

Adrian Godboldt

PhD, University of Massachusetts Amherst
I'm currently a PhD student in Anthropology, with a focus on culture, at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. My research interest looks at the intersection of digital technology, human relations, and geopolitics. I'm looking to explore the infrastructure that gives life to our... Read More →
Saturday March 22, 2025 4:15pm - 5:30pm EDT
Room 144 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167

4:15pm EDT

Transformative Connections: Solidarity, Mutual Aid, Community Care & Collective Justice
Saturday March 22, 2025 4:15pm - 5:30pm EDT
Casey Grippo, "The Solidary Requirement of Solidarity"
Contemporary life is plagued by the atomization of political subjects. To overcome this, thinkers often speak of the importance of community-level care. In this essay, I explicate two forms of community-level care: solidarity and allyship. Contrary to thinkers who see allyship as a form or type of solidarity, I argue that solidarity and allyship focus on different objects and should thus be classified as divergent phenomena. While solidarity and allyship both serve the similar function of bonding people together, they do so by wholly different means. In solidarity, people are united by their focus on shared concern or ideological commitment(s), and the solidary group is often denoted by first-person plural pronouns (e.g., “we are in solidarity”). When people are in solidarity with one another, the object of one’s care is not the other but the shared concern or ideological vision they hold together. On the other hand, allyship unites people by focusing on the one in need, and allyship is often denoted by the use of third-person pronouns (e.g., “I am an ally to them”). When one engages in allyship, they exhibit care for the other rather than the concerns or commitments of the other. In this way, allyship fails to produce a much-needed community-level care, substituting interpersonal care in its place. Therefore, solidarity is a more powerful tool for liberation because it enables people to overcome the hyper-individualistic commitments forced upon us in a way that allyship is unable to. Only by sharing the concerns of the other and engaging in shared commitments with each other are we able to provide one another with the community-level care so desperately needed. Moreover, by understanding this distinction between solidarity and allyship, we can better understand how elite capture effects the way we even conceive of liberation itself.

Morgan Gimblet, "Community Care, Radical Reimaginings, and Decolonial Feminist Resistance: Testimonios from a Texas Reproductive Justice Mutual Aid Collective"
This project expands on my previous research exploring the case study of my volunteer ran, queer, sex worker, and POC-lead Texas-based reproductive justice mutual aid group. I draw connections about how the organization utilizes decolonial praxes of community building, radical reimaginings, and collective care in creating survival programs for liberation and continuing the Chicana feminist tradition of mutualistas (mutual aid societies) as queer forms of resistance. Through testimonios, autohistoria, and anti-colonial methodologies, this project provides insight into contemporary decolonial queer feminist coalition-building efforts centering community care and pedagogies of social transformation that emerge out of crisis. In centering the lived experiences of the Texas organizers, the study underscores the significance of collective storytelling as a form of solidarity and a powerful tool for liberation and decolonial resistance. Specifically, I historicize the praxis of the non-hierarchal grassroots collective, emphasizing our advocacy for bodily autonomy, promoting community care through mutual aid fundraising, sharing accessible resources, and resisting the non-profit industrial complex. By foregrounding the perspectives of the collective, this research provides insight into radical possibilities for transformative decolonial feminist movements for liberation.

The purpose of this project is to explore how queer Texas organizers utilize decolonial feminist theories and praxis in our grassroots organizing through building solidarities, creating transformative connections, and providing community-created solutions despite the restrictions that limit our bodily autonomy (Spade, 2020; Luna & Luker, 2013). Grounded in reproductive justice, mutual aid, transnational, decolonial queer, and Chicana feminist theories, I provide an intersectional critique of the nonprofit industrial complex by centering mutual aid organizing as a liberatory practice in our communities (Ross & Solinger, 2017; Spade, 2020; Galván, 2014; Tambe & Thayer, 2021; Mohanty, 2003; Gomes Pereira, 2019; Morgan-Montoya, 2020). Further, incorporating testimonios from my fellow organizers and using autohistoria, these decolonial praxes are essential in solidarity movements towards collective liberation and contribute to decolonial feminist epistemologies and transformative pedagogies in the fields of Gender, Chicanx, and Ethnic Studies (Delgado Bernal et al., 2012; Hamzeh & Flores Carmona, 2019).

Joy Chrysyl Llido, "Resisting Displacement in a Climate Crisis: The Dumagat-Remondato’s Fight to Live Free"
This project analyzes the grassroots organizing efforts of the Dumagat-Remontado People’s fight against displacement through a climate justice framework. In the Philippines, the primary source of fresh water for the National Capital Region has fallen below critical levels exacerbated by severe drought conditions attributed to human-caused climate change. The Kaliwa Dam Project aims to double the region's freshwater production and alleviate the on-going crisis. The Anti-Kaliwa Dam Campaign is an Indigenous Right’s struggle in opposition to the construction of the Kaliwa Dam on the Dumagat-Remontado’s ancestral lands in the Philippines.
The paper highlights the disproportionate impact of climate change on Indigenous Peoples and their enduring quest for climate justice. This research posits that using a climate justice framework as an analytical tool and a political strategy will enable the Anti-Kaliwa Dam Campaign to navigate its socio-cultural battle against the Philippine government and waterworks providers more effectively. This framework elevates the campaign’s fight from an Indigenous and Land Rights issue in the Philippines and connects it to a global social movement. Within this framework, the community's opposition to the dam construction project becomes not only a defense of their land, but also a broader struggle against global systemic oppression.
The findings aim to contribute to the discourse on climate social justice movements, highlighting the interconnectedness of indigenous rights, environmental justice, and the larger climate justice movement. The study involves a qualitative analysis of the campaign's social media presence, particularly posts from the Stop Kaliwa Dam Facebook page, to examine how a climate justice framework fits in the campaign’s organizing strategy. The findings will underscore the expression of PeoplePower from a grassroots movement that has a real stake in a complex global problem.
Speakers
avatar for Casey Grippo

Casey Grippo

PhD, Boston University
Casey Grippo primarily works in the realm of social ontology, focusing on the relationship between social forces, social groupings, and individual identity formation. Their dissertation, a prescriptive project arguing for a politics of solidarity, concentrates on solidarity as one... Read More →
JC

Joy C. L. Solon

PhD, University of Massachusetts Boston
avatar for Morgan Gimblet (she/they)

Morgan Gimblet (she/they)

PhD, University of Colorado Boulder
Morgan Gimblet (she/they) is a doctoral student, teaching assistant, and Colorado Diversity Initiative Fellow in the Department of Communication pursuing an Ethnic Studies Graduate Certificate at the University of Colorado Boulder. Their research areas include reproductive justice... Read More →
Saturday March 22, 2025 4:15pm - 5:30pm EDT
Room 141 Stata Center, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA 02167
 
Sunday, March 23
 

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

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

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

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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