Coming up from UConn Alumni’s #ThisIsAmerica Series…
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Mouths of Rain traces the history of intellectual thought by Black Lesbian writers across genres, identities, age, and political leanings. Publishers Weekly called the anthology “prodigious” and “wide-ranging,” and Elle magazine called it a “a balm that shows readers that Black feminism benefits us all.”
Learn about the book and purchase here.
The article “How a Cuban Writer Defied Censors and Became a Latin American Literature Icon” explores the ways in which his roles as a poet, novelist, and everything in-between has impacted Cuban literature as we know it today. Known for his influential 1966 novel “Paradiso”, he was censored by the Cuban revolutionary state that polices artistic and intellectual expression that was deemed detrimental to the state. Read it here.
Gurnah is a 73-year-old writer who represents both a post-colonial African sensibility and an Islamic interiority. He has written 10 novels and is also a retired professor of literature at the University of Kent. Read more about his work here.
Looking for a class to fill in your schedule?
Consider WGSS/ENGL 3609 with Dr. Bhakti Shringarpure!
The class is on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 12:30-1:45 PM!
See flier below for more information
This post and its contents were Sent on behalf of WGSS Affiliate Zehra Arat. The downloadable documents according to each section are located at the bottom of this post.
We, the undersigned women’s groups and feminist organizations, collectively representing nearly a thousand women’s organizations, held a meeting on October 15, 2020, to discuss the attacks on the Istanbul Convention and our other common problems. We issue this joint declaration to draw attention to the ongoing discrimination and violence, as well as increasing hardship and human rights violations, faced by women worldwide, and to reaffirm that our rights are non-negotiable.
We observe with deep concern that
We demand that
We declare that
LONG LIVE WOMEN’S SOLIDARITY!
Signatories to the 2020 Declaration on Women’s Rights
Advocates for Human Rights, United States
Bulgarian Gender Research Foundation, Bulgaria
Great Coalition for Equality and Choice, Poland
Hungarian Women’s Lobby, Hungary
Organization for Promotion of Women’s Rights (DOMINE), Croatia
Ukrainian Women Lawyers Association (JURFEM), Ukraine
Women Against Violence Europe (WAVE)
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF)
Women’s Network Croatia, Croatia
Women’s Platform for Equality (EŞİK), Turkey
Women’s Rights Center, Poland
Women’s Support and Information Center (NPO), Estonia
European Women’s Lobby (Supporting organization)
December 7, 2020
An international group of twelve women’s networks and platforms, collectively representing nearly a thousand women’s organizations, has issued a declaration to draw attention to the discrimination, violence, hardship, and human rights violations faced by women worldwide.
The 2020 Declaration on Women’s Rights was conceived at a transnational meeting hosted by the Women’s Platform for Equality, Turkey, on October 15, 2020. At that meeting, participants discussed right-wing groups’ and governments’ attacks on the Istanbul Convention (the Council of Europe convention to prevent and combat violence against women and domestic violence). Bringing together 170 women from 15 countries from Europe and North America, the October meeting confirmed that the arguments used against the Istanbul Convention in each country stem from similar misogynist, homophobic, and transphobic patriarchal ideologies.
The 2020 Declaration on Women’s Rights draws attention to the interrelated causes of violations of women’s human rights. It also highlights the aggravation of these violations by neoliberal policies, rising authoritarianism, climate change, militarism, and the current COVID-19 pandemic.
In addition to demanding that national political institutions and international organizations take action to realize women’s human rights and ensure gender equality, the Declaration reaffirms women’s commitment and determination to work in transnational solidarity, despite the shrinking democratic space, to confront patriarchal violence, misinformation, masculinist discourses, and attacks on their hard-won rights, and to build a world of equality, justice, and peace.
The text of the Declaration is available in English Turkish and Kurdish. For more information please contact info@esikplatform.net
Signatories to the 2020 Declaration on Women’s Rights
Advocates for Human Rights, United States
Bulgarian Gender Research Foundation, Bulgaria
Great Coalition for Equality and Choice, Poland
Hungarian Women’s Lobby, Hungary
Organization for Promotion of Women’s Rights (DOMINE), Croatia
Ukrainian Women Lawyers Association (JURFEM), Ukraine
Women Against Violence Europe (WAVE)
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF)
Women’s Network Croatia, Croatia
Women’s Platform for Equality (EŞİK), Turkey
Women’s Rights Center, Poland
Women’s Support and Information Center (NPO), Estonia
European Women’s Lobby (Supporting organization)
#WomensSolidarityAcrossBorders
#2020WomensRightsDeclaration
2020 Womens rights Declaration Press Release
Hello Huskies!
Timothy Bussey, a former WGSS Graduate Student, got an article of theirs picked up by the Associated Press!
Titled “‘Rainbow wave’ of LGBTQ candidates run and win in 2020 election”, Bussey explores the 2020 election, and a few of the roughly 1,000 LGBTQ+ candidates that ran for state senate and house seats. The link to the article is below, and we hope that you all take a look!
https://theconversation.com/rainbow-wave-of-lgbtq-candidates-run-and-win-in-2020-election-149066
Please join us for American Studies’ first event to kick off the new year – Monuments to the Past / Structures of the Present — on Thursday, September 24 @ 12:00-1:30pm. Panel features Kelly Dennis, Kenneth Foote, Lewis Gordon, Micki McElya, and Cathy Schlund-Vials.
By their nature, monuments collapse the conceptual divide between past and present. They are visual artworks, often of distant vintage, that construct particular sites of memory. In so doing, the figures they marbleize manage to display, in the most quotidian realms, how the social structures of earlier eras continue to permeate everyday life in the here and now.
As a field, American Studies has long focused on the politics of historical memory. To this end, UConn American Studies brings together scholars from a range of disciplinary perspectives whose work engages this issue, the relevance of which is clearer now than ever. They will weigh in on the stakes of the ongoing battles over Confederate and colonial monuments, and address what new sites of memory – monumental or not – we should endeavor to create.
Please contact Chris Vials for more information.
Hello Huskies!
We would like to congratulate our WGSS Affiliate, Dr. Sharde Davis, on winning the OSCLG Feminist Teacher/Mentor Award for this year! Also, WGSS Distinguished Professor Dr. Nancy Naples’ three-volume “Companion to Women’s and Gender Studies” is NOW AVAILABLE! These two members of the WGSS Family have done many great things, and we are so proud of them both!