Last session of the conference: Publishing Bodies, Building Worlds with Andrew Mazzaschi, Elizabeth Groeneveld, Sharon Lauricella, Melina Alice Moore. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Groeneveld: Discussing how trans people carved out space in lesbian media - On Our Backs helped foster trans-inclusion. Lou Sullivan wrote "Information for the Female to Male Crossdresser" and placed ads in the magazine. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Groeneveld: OOB began including more trans articles, etc. highlighting voices of trans men. Loren Cameron This Guy is Hot by Susan Stryker: In 1991 Cameron posed for photos for OOB and then took up photography himself. Important for trans self-representation. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Groeneveld: Question the politics of looking at trans bodies. Trans bodies are made into symbols or spectacles. They may choose to be spectacular themselves but they should represent their own bodies. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Groeneveld: Connections between Sullivan and Cameron in a lesbian sex magazine illustrates power of trans self-representation, desire to be seen as fully human is visible. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Sharon Lauricella is @AcademicBatgirl. Will discuss gender performance in real and online life. Academics should use Twitter. It builds community, encourages dialogue, where digital and offline worlds coincide. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Lauricella: Friendships grow on Twitter and in real life. There are still a lot of gender imbalances in academia; using Twitter offers support and builds camaraderie. Twitter encourages dialogue more than other social media platforms. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
@AcademicBatgirl Lauricella: There are covert influences affecting your Twitter life - shame, judgement, etc. @AcademicBatgirl quit due to this type of shaming. When gender performance doesn't fit, women are silenced in this and many other ways. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Lauricella: Decided to say screw that and the white male cishet patriarchy that shamed her and went back to Twitter. Perform gender with integrity and authenticity. Mentoring and support is important part of performing gender authentically. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Lauricella: Gender performance is influenced by things we cannot see. Online, the backstory is even harder to find. Women take on a disproportionate percentage of academic community woes. Lauricella does this happily. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Lauricella: Academia is pervasive. It is a gas that will expand to fill the space you give it. So take care of yourselves and each other. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Moore: Will discuss practices of aesthetic resistance in Transvestia Magazine. With the mag, founder Virginia Prince sought to combat isolation in trans community, provide info and education. Welcomed reader submissions. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Moore: Also started TV Clipsheet - included cut and paste clippings of interest to trans community. Transvestia highlighted self-representation, artistry, reader inclusion. Challenged dominant models, images, narratives of transness. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Moore: Collage (cut and paste) as key to fashion and writing for Kate Bornstein. Recreating, remixing imagery for self-expression and community building. Online, Tumblr offers similar spaces for trans community. It's a continuation of collage, remixing. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Moore: These mags offered trans subjects space, showed engagement with or (deconstruction of) with dominant narrative and allowed glimpses into real trans lives and resistances. Reached readers whose identities were in flux, as Prince's was. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Moore: Starting w Transvestia #5, Prince started a Girl of the Month feature, showing photos on cover and inside. Autobiographical narratives were included and necessary. Offered trans people opportunity to be elevated to cover girl glamour. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Moore: Photos help to archive and preserve identity. Transvestia's commitment to publishing photos and narratives offered visibility, resistance. Preserves first person account, visual representation. They counter/confirm existing theories. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Moore: Comics used in Transvestia as well. Cut from mainstream pubs, they featured cis, white, glamorous women and re-captioned to re-situate them with/in trans experiences. Reframed as self-representation and challenged ideas of gender and womanhood. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
Moore: Transvestia allowed more nuanced examination of trans lives and experiences in the 1960s and over time. Preserved and protected narratives. Offered testimony and archival storytelling. #nwsa2019#nwsa19
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Sherri Mitchell (Penobscot) is the final speaker at the #Indigenous History Conference. She is the author of the award-winning book Sacred Instructions; Indigenous Wisdom for Living Spirit-Based Change. sacredinstructions.life
Mitchell: What guidance have I been given that will lead me into the future? It's a circular route that we travel. We have to be living for all of our relations. This is how prayers are ended, relations are acknowledged.
Mitchell: so maybe that's where we should begin: how do we be good relatives? Think about grandmothers, mothers, aunties, they are the ones who have taught us how to be a good relative. This matrilineal line was directly attacked by colonialism and patriarchy.
Robin Wall Kimmerer is first up. If you haven't read her classic BRAIDING SWEETGRASS, you should get the beautiful special edition of it now (would make a great holiday gift!) from Milkweed Editions @Milkweed_Books: milkweed.org/book/braiding-…
Kimmerer: Will discuss the prophecies of the Seventh Fire which counter the myth of the First Thanksgiving and the overall lack of Native American historical literacy.
And the second session today at the #Indigenous History Conference is "From Traditional Knowledge to Colonial Oversight to Indigenous Integration: Educator’s Roundtable Indian Education in New England" with Alice Nash, Tobias Vanderhoop (Aquinnah Wampanoag),
Jennifer Weston (Hunkpapa Lakota, Standing Rock), and
Alyssa Mt. Pleasant (Tuscarora).
Vanderhoop: "The colonial system of education happened to us." Wampanoag in the colonized schools were seen as more controllable, agreeable, etc. But their intention to get rid of Native Americans via the colonize education system failed.
This morning I'm attending the second to last panels of the conference! "Writing Ourselves into Existence: Authors’ Roundtable: New England Native Authors and Literature" with Siobhan Senier @ssenier, Melissa Tantaquidgeon Zobel (Mohegan) @tantaquidgeon, Carol Dana (Penobscot),
John Christian Hopkins (Penobscot), Cheryl Savageau (Abenaki), and Linda Coombs (Aquinnah Wampanoag). This has been a fantastic conference, I hate that this is the last weekend! Thanks to all for your hard work! @Plymouth_400@BridgeStateU@joyce_rain18
Dawnland Voices edited by @ssenier is the first collection of its kind from Indigenous authors from what is now referred to as New England. Tribes are very good at shepherding their own literary works.