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David Wojnarowicz Straps It On: The Now and Then of Queer Visual Responses to HIV/AIDS – Closing Talk Presented by Marty Fink

In Uncategorized on March 31, 2009 at 10:49 pm

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Friday, April 10, 7PM

Concordia EV Building, 1.605 (1515 St. Catherine W.)

We invite you to join us for a closing talk presented by Marty Fink (PhD candidate, CUNY), reflecting on past and present queer artistic responses to HIV/AIDS:

Many are familiar with the AIDS activist art of the ’80s and ’90s, as images by groups like ACT UP, General Idea and Gran Fury have come to emblematize the early years of the AIDS crisis. While revisiting such images to commemorate queer histories and visual responses to the pandemic, we can juxtapose these works alongside an exciting new wave of HIV/AIDS art addressing contemporary issues surrounding HIV in North America, as well as what it means to be queer in an age of HIV/AIDS today.

This space is wheelchair-accessible.

Workshop on Sexual “Safety” for Queers Inside & Outside of Prisons

In Uncategorized on March 26, 2009 at 10:41 pm

‘YOU IMPROVISE TO SURVIVE’: SEXUAL “SAFETY FOR QUEERS INSIDE & OUTSIDE OF PRISONS

Tuesday, April 7th @ 6pm

2110 Centre for Gender Advocacy – 2110 Rue Mackay (Metro Guy-Concordia)

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This workshop will feature statements from gay, queer and trans prisoners across the US and Canada on what sexual “safety” means when condom access is restricted and when queer sex is criminal. The workshop will draw specifically on the development of a resource series called Fucking Without Fear that has been underway with the Prisoner Correspondence Project for the past six months, as well an anthology of writings by our penpals on the inside on how they negotiate risk, safety, and survival against a prison landscape. The workshop seeks to forge dialogue about how anti-prison struggles, and queer anti-prison struggles in particular, can work more closely with HIV/AIDS prevention work and the histories of queer AIDS and prison organizing that precede us. We hope to use this as a point of departure to start dialogue about how we can support one another, and each others’ struggles for control over our own sexual lives, as trans folks and gays and queers across prison walls.

The Prisoner Correspondence Project is a collectively-run gay, trans and queer prisoner support initiative based out of Montréal, Québec. We coordinate a penpal program for gay, lesbian, transsexual, transgender, gendervariant, two-spirit, intersex, bisexual and queer inmates in Canada and the United States, linking these inmates with people a part of these same communities outside of prison. Through the development of resources for our incarcerated penpals, coordination of a resource library about trans and queer survival inside prisons, collaborative writing projects, workshops, and programming, we aim to confront the ongoing targeting, policing, and criminalization of trans and queer communites, inside and outside of prisons. The project is a working group of the Quebec Public Interest Research Group at Concordia University. 

The workshop will take place in English with whisper translation towards French available. Free childcare also available with 48 hours notice (email queertrans.prisonersolidarity@gmail.com). The 2110 is a wheelchair accessible and scent-free space.

http://prisonercorrespondenceproject.wordpress.com

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In Uncategorized on March 20, 2009 at 10:22 am

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poster design by Emy Storey

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