VIRTUAL Creaction 3: 'better to speak, remembering' (after Audre Lorde)
13 July 2021, 5:00 pm–6:30 pm
In these sessions, participants will respond in various ways to their session title and to the ‘keywords’ of borders / discipline(s) / social justice / trans-formations. They will also discuss their creative critical processes.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Availability
- Yes
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
Institute of Advanced Studies
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All are welcome. The event will run on Zoom. The link and passcode will be provided on your confirmation email when you register. Register to attend at:
In the Creaction series (funded by a Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship) we are bringing together performers, artists, writers, including academics, all of whom see their work as focussing on social justice. There are many inspirations for this work, including Azeezat Johnson, Remi Joseph-Salisbury and Beth Kamunge'sand we have been exploring these issues inhakan sandal-wilson’s seminar series titled ‘’, includingbetween hakan and Natasha Tanna on the politics of writing, and Abeyamí Ortega's work onmapping art, activism and critical thinking for social justice,in collaboration with artist and editor.
Our ethos includes a focus on:
- Politically-engaged/social justice work that decentres or questions conventional scholarly forms
- Centring creativity, pleasure, and joy in knowledge production, even when working with difficult and painful issues, in order to counter the spectacle of violence towards racialised bodies
- Addressing hierarchies of knowledge production and knowledge producers and bridging academia/activist/creative divide
- Questioning what‘rigour’ means and how the term is deployed
- Thinking about experimental, creative, and collaborative ways of doing research, even when not technically doing what might be considered practice-based research
Please do not hesitate to contact us if you need assistance on the day, and follow thisFAQlink for more information and to read our virtual eventscode of conduct. All of our events are free, but you can support the IAShere.
Convenors:
- (she/her * they/them)
- (/)
- Natasha Tanna(/)
Image credit:Photo byDz
About the Speakers
Lola Olufemi
Writer, organiser and researcher
Lola Olufemi is a black feminist writer, organiser and researcher from London. She holds an undergraduate degree in English Literature from the University of Cambridge and an MA in Gender Studies from SOAS, University of London. Her work focuses on the uses of the feminist imagination and its relationship with futurity.She is co-author ofA FLY Girl’s Guide to University(2019), author ofFeminism Interrupted: Disrupting Power(2020), a member of ‘bare minimum’, an interdisciplinary anti-work arts collective and the recipient of the techne AHRC Doctoral Training Partnership between The Stuart Hall Foundation, CREAM and Westminster School of Arts.
Gülkan “Noir”
Poet, Author, Translator, Editor, Artist
Gizem Oruç
Musician, producer, audio-visual artist and tech professional
Gizem Oruç (they/them/theirs) is a musician, producer, audio-visual artist and tech professional based in Berlin. Besides producing and performing electronic dance music under the alias, they are involved in trans-feminist collectives, including the Turkish pop / r’n’b / arabesque band Gazino Neukölln and the queer-DIY project space Raumerweiterungshalle. Gizem gives poc oriented sound and music production related workshops, speeches; coordinates/curates events; collaborates as composer and sound designer; and works as technician and technical project developer.
Elmira and Ramona Zadissa
Artists