BaFL Collective Writing Session #2

Workshop
March 26, 2024 at 12:30–3:30pm
Hybrid: Online and In-Person

Feminist Media Studio, CJ Building, Room 2.130
Concordia University 7141 Sherbrooke W Montreal (Qc)

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Last year, we invited FMS members to bring a story about a key book, resource, or creative object that informed their feminist research / research-creation work, as well as their feminist praxis, to collaboratively Build a Feminist Library. Through collaborative efforts, we identified essential concepts stemming from these contributions.

We are thrilled to invite you to join us for the second of three sessions as we continue our exploration of core values within the FMS community. In our previous meeting, we laid the groundwork for our collective writing exercise, and now it’s time to delve deeper into the themes and concepts that we’ve identified. These core values will take shape through the writing collectively authored by FMS members and will serve as touchstones for how we engage in feminist work.
    

More Info

   

We will be engaging in collaborative writing, beginning with Lauren Berlant and Kathleen Stewart’s Hundreds writing exercise. Here are a few excerpts from the writings shared by some of our members during our first meeting:


Acts of Joy  (by Melina Campos)
Having a plentiful breakfast before the sun goes up. Going through two years of printed articles on the lookout for something. Packing my swimming gear for later. Wearing thick wool socks. Walking under a mild snowstorm. Listening to the kids playing in the schoolyard after weeks of silence. Commuting for an hour. Encountering a dear friend halfway through. Eating warm lentil soup out of my thermos. Showing up at a meeting where I don’t know anyone. Nervous sighting. Discussing feminist ways of being and doing. Secretly smiling. Trying to explain in one hundred words how this feels.

Storytelling/ Embodiment
It is hard to hold grief in your body in an empty house. Five of us looked at each other, we told stories – some we knew, some we did not. Laughing together, holding her contradictions up to the light, time started passing again. Language struggles to fill the jagged hole, but we remember her infuriatingly stubborn chin, her big heart embracing others’ pain, the poetry she left each one of us, and the way we managed to defend joy for each other changed. Trying to account for the illegibility of loss, stumbling into new ways to show care.

We encourage you to choose a term (or a few!) to write on ahead of this meeting.

We welcome new and returning participants for this event. Previous attendance is not necessary!

Attendees are also welcome to bring books to propose for the library. View the library Zotero here.

Light vegan/vegetarian snacks and refreshments will be provided.


Part of: Building a Feminist Library

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Accessibility Information:
This hybrid event will be held in person and via Zoom. RSVP above to receive link.

The Feminist Media Studio is located on the second floor of the Communications and Journalism (CJ) building on the Loyola Campus which can be accessed via an outdoor staircase or ramped entrance. The second floor can then be reached by indoor stairs or elevator. The lab door opens outward into a hallway with a key card entry (restricted to active FMS members).

Inside the lab there is a lounge area with low seating, a narrow kitchenette that may be difficult to navigate with a wheelchair or walker, a large conference room with sliding barn doors, moveable tables and chair seating, the technician’s office which requires key-access, and a production studio which requires key access and features a small sound booth, with a raised floor.

 

Concordia University
Communications & Journalism (CJ) Building
CJ 2.130, 7141 Sherbrooke St. W.
Montreal, Quebec H4B 1R6
Canada

Space Accessibility




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info@feministmediastudio.ca
514 848 2424 ext.5975

The Feminist Media Studio is located on the unceded lands of the Kanien’kehá:ka Nation. We seek to stand in solidarity with Indigenous demands for land restitution and reparations.


  
Our work—committed to intersectional and anti-colonial feminist praxis—actively engages and names the predicament of doing feminism on stolen land. We acknowledge that territorial acknowledgement is insufficient to stand in solidarity with Indigenous communities.
Our anti-colonial and decolonial efforts articulated in our Lab Values center resisting extraction in all its facets, de-centering feminist canons, valuing methodologies that oppose white supremacy, and building good relations with human and more-than-humans.
Website by Natasha Whyte-Gray, 2024.    
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