Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Muchas Updates!

I have not updated in many days now, taking rather a necessary respite during midterms week and Fall Break.  Sin embargo, tengo muchas cosas de que puedo hablar....

El primero... presentaciones que mire.
Made in L.A.
Wondering about the Spanish?  There's a reason for it.  I attended a showing of "Made in L.A.," a documentary focusing on a group of illegal immigrant workers in the Los Angeles garment industry.  The women protest the long hours they are forced to work, wages withheld from them without reason, and mistreatment from supervisors, and achieve some victories.  The movie is also subtitled in Spanish and English (where applicable).  I recommend the film highly; I felt moved to action and sought out a local organization fighting for Immigrant Workers' rights.  In speaking with my contact, I discovered some dirt on American Apparel.  A student group I belong to has bought T-Shirts from AA in the past (as have I), but we are switching to Royal Apparel.   Here is some pertinent info for my new contact, Joan Suarez:

Joan Suarez
Co-Chair,
Workers' Rights Board & Immigrant Rights Action Task Force
Phone: 314.862.0911
C: 314.422.7389
email: suarez.joan@att.net
website:  www.stl-jwj.org


The directors of Made in L.A., Almudena Carracedo & Robert Bahar, were present and gave a brief Q&A and signed DVDs after the showing.  The Q&A was largely logistical, but I enjoyed meeting the two, especially lively Alamudena.  I recommend the film to anyone interested in social justice, women's issues, latina/o issues, or quality documentaries.

Lastly, Flannery Burke, whom many of us know and love, is teaching a history course on Latina issues next semester; worth a look if you're piqued by this entry. 

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Female Dance and the Sexualization of Blackness:  European Perception, 1550-1860
Dr. Katrina Thompson
History & African-American Studies Departments, Saint Louis University

The study group on cross-cultural history put together this presentation.  I arrived SUPER early and met Katrina, whom many of you know, and learned a little about her background in history.  She studied at SUNY Stonybrooke and highly recommended the Anthro Department's grad school, which is fab for me, por supuesto!

The talk was held in the Teasdale conference room on the upper floor of SLUMA, one of the most beautiful spaces I have yet seen at SLU and (sadly) usually off-limits.  It would be the most brilliant secret daytime study spot.  I had a small carton of chocolate soymilk to whittle away at during the talk.  As the rest of the group/audience (largely history professors) arrived, I realized, to my chagrin, I was the only undergraduate present.  But pity those who missed out!  Katrina's talk was incredibly interesting.

She looks at travelogues and diaries from European (mostly English) travelers to West Africa, and specifically at the ways they viewed African dancing by females.  The travelers seemed to be utterly remiss at the lack of clothing and furthermore, believed the women were coming onto them sexually.  I was put in mind of Malinowski's many daliances with (and crushes on) Trobriand women, in the 20th century.  There was in fact quite a readership for these logs, back in the day, and many of them are excruciatingly hyperbolic.  Still, the ways in which their perceptions of West African women "tainted," so-to-speak, the later visions of black Africans, is palpable.  The Q&A session for Katrina's talk was FABULOUS, and I also highly recommend asking Katrina about the project if you get a chance.  Quite neat!


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Updates
Women's Studies Blog/Group
School constraints (midterms, scheduling calamities) have put a hiatus on this brilliant collective idea for whom you should thank Shelley Womack, Penny, (me) and also the Women's Studies Advisory board who had many good points.  It's still in the works, Shelly an I can hopefully meet this coming weekend.

Heart and Crescent
Met wit Mark Chmiel, who was incredibly openminded and helpful, and also seemed to understand the need for this kind of group and also the problems with which we might meet.  He gave me a few contacts, in both Campus Ministry and Theology Dept.  I'm not going to share their names just yet, but I'm hoping to set up appts. soon.

Memoirs
I'm still waiting for these, but I realize 5-15 pages is quite a lot to work on. 

SLU Monologues

Just started writing one!

Mas Mas Tarde!!!!!
E

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Updates on WSTD Blog; Ideas; H&C Updates;More to come...

WSTD Blog updates...

1) Met with the advisory board on Monday at 3:30. A WSTD blog is approved. Possibly with a need for comment moderation if hate mail pops up.
2) Shelly Womack and I are going to try to start a WSTD Departmental club and this group will likely have responsibility for the blog. Shelly and I are meeting this afternoon at 3:45 at Laclede Coffee House. My thought is for us to:
a) plan to hold a general interest meeting
b) contemplate a mission statement, activities, roles
c) contemplate charter and consitution
d) agenda? brainstorm ideas?
3) Takeover is tonight. Pictures are a must! These pics should be blogged!

4) Met with my blog-savvy professor on Monday at 10AM. Assuming we use blogspot, she is helping me figure out how to:
a) make folders in the blog
b) allow multiple people to post.
5) The facebook idea was debunked. If there is some desire to revive it at some point, maybe we can synchronize it with the actual department blog.
6) What should we title the blog??

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Memoirs

1) Am going to set a tenative deadline to have all memoirs by Nov. 5
2) Thought maybe I could collaborate with SLU monologues? If approved by subjects; could be a way to share the compilation on a broader, more interactive scale.

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Heart and Crescent

1) Meeting with Mark Chmiel today at 4:30 at Laclede Coffee House to discuss the best approach to working with Theology department (et all...).
2) I'm describing the group as centered in "post-conventional spirituality." Why:
a) I feel like Wicca is too much an inclusive term, and I don't consider myself orthodox Wiccan or even strictly Wiccan, and I think most "neopagans" feel the same way. The point is to find one's own path!
b) I hope this change in terms will help us avoiding meeting with immediate disapproval or negative stigma, especially from campus ministry.

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I attended a few events.

1) Sexualizing Black Dance in Colonial Africa, Katrina Johnson (associate professor -- history). I'm going to find the actual title of this presentation. >.< I was essentially the only non-faculty person in attendance, so I'm thinking this one might make an interesting blog. I hope I acquit myself well!
2) Made in L.A. showing
3) Brown Bag with Jeannita on Nappistemology/Black Hair Philosophy (also going to get this actual title).

I may blog about these events as well.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Met with Contributor for Memoir Compilation

This morning, I met with Candice Simon (Contributor 2), who isn't requesting anonymity, so I'll refer to her by name from now on.

This morning, we met at Ventana around 9AM, and I listened to her story She suffered from bulimia, and after recovering, studied and wrote a great deal about eating disorders. The topic is probable for her memoir.

Candice, however, had another story, which she had never shared beyond the diary: drug abuse in the family. Are there others out there facing the same situation? Are they afraid to come out? She is considering using this story instead, precisely because it's a situation she kept private, and one many people may be enduring in silence.

E