Thursday, April 09, 2020
[inclusion lens - event management tool]
York University has a great "inclusion lens" event management tool which is very helpful for ensuring that events are as inclusive and accessible to all as possible. And even better, this tool is available to the public!
Each of the four main categories - Planning, Advertising, Implementing and Evaluating - offers a list of questions. Click on any question and it expands to show specific considerations. Click on any consideration and a tip pops up with an explanation or more information.
Here's an example from the Planning section, showing the considerations for the question: "Is your event location accessible?"
Go have a look and try it out for your next event:
https://inclusionlens.yorku.ca/
Wednesday, April 08, 2020
[god as a black woman]
"Harmonia Rosales is a 33-year-old artist based Chicago who’s doing something really powerful. She’s recreating some classical paintings, but portraying God as a black woman instead."
Here's one example of her work:
Read more:
This Artist Reimagines Classic Paintings With God As A Black Woman And They're Beautiful
Harmonia Rosales' website: https://www.harmoniarosales.com
Harmonia Rosales' Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/honeiee/
Monday, March 23, 2020
Friday, March 13, 2020
[good minds books]
Looking for good books? Here's a lot of them - all First Nations, Metis and Inuit - on one website.
Monday, March 09, 2020
[christ our black mother speaks]
An 84-page, full color collection of art, essays, questions and practices to deepen our connection to the Dark Divine Feminine.
Our conditioning has taught us to automatically perceive femininity as untrustworthy and blackness as dirty. So, black femininity is perceived as wholly unholy.
There’s something very evil about the way black women in particular are perceived as distant from the Divine. It brings to mind the Jezebel stereotype, the idea that black women are lascivious by nature, which has long plagued black women... [and] continues to thrive today...
In this volume of essays, I turn toward images of Christ on the cross. As I continue my exploration of the wholly holy female face of God, I ask a deeper question.
http://www.christenacleveland.com/shop/christourblackmotherspeaks
Saturday, February 29, 2020
the tale of the pyreneesian piranha
My great-great-grandfather lived in a small town in Europe and, it turned out based on his journals, liked to record happenings around town along with folk tales that the townspeople told. Here is his entry from January 4, 1876:
------
The Curse of the Pyreneesian Piranha
Once upon a time, there was a young man who lived by the sea. He was afraid of the sea, very very afraid of the sea and all that lived with it.
"Give me an egg or a steak or a quail or a beet salad, but keep that sea-stuff away from me and my plate!" he said regularly.
And when he grew up, the very first thing he did with money saved from his first job delivering emails, was to move to the mountains. The Pyrenees, to be precise. To Bordes-du-Lys, France, to be more precise, a little hamlet high up in the Pyrenees and about equidistant from the Bay of Biscay and the Mediterranean Sea and thus, about as far away from the sea as possible without moving to Siberia.
After a few months, he learned the habits and routines of life in Bordes-du-Lys, and took them on for himself.
So he started every day by going to the bakery down the street, to get a fresh brewed coffee and croissant.
Except for one day. A box of chocolate came in the post, anonymously, just as he was about to leave, and he decided, as a special treat, to eat the chocolate for his breakfast
Ta-a-asty, that chocolate. Good dark Swiss chocolate, with little bits of hazelnut embedded in it. Yummmeeeee.
Once the chocolate was all gone into his belly, he put the box on the kindling pile. That's when he heard a loud rumbling outside.
"What is going on???" he asked himself!
He ran outside, looking around. The sky was clear though grey instead of the usual blue. Then, turning around and looking up at the mountain, he saw it. The biggest piranha he had never seen. Bigger than anything of any sort of fish or toothy thing he had ever seen in a book. Bigger than tall skyscrapers and the mountains themselves.
And that was when he knew. By skipping his usual morning jaunt and giving in to the temptation of the chocolate instead, he had broken the rhythm of the universe. And now the universe was coming for him.
The piranha opened its mouth wider,
bigger than the sky,
lunged forward,
and SNAP!
The End.
-------
Note to regular readers of this blog: I apologize that this post does not fit into the usual theme and genre of this blog. However, I have nowhere else to post my great-great-grandfather's stories.
Thursday, February 06, 2020
Thursday, January 23, 2020
[peanut goes for the gold]
The children's book "Peanut goes for the Gold", published January 2020, is about a non-binary guinea pig.
Peanut Goes for the Gold is a charming, funny, and heartfelt picture book that follows the adventures of Peanut, a gender nonbinary guinea pig who does everything with their own personal flare....
This upbeat and hilarious picture book, inspired by Jonathan's own childhood guinea pig, encourages children to not just be themselves—but to boldly and unapologetically love being themselves.
From Harper Collins
Should be an interesting read if it meets the publisher's description.
I asked Kristi who works in education and literacy, about this. While we are not aware of particular research about this, here are parts of our conversation.
Certainly there is a positive impact when people see themselves or their own situation reflected in characters in a book, movie, TV show, etc.
A wide variety of characters and situations can be helpful to normalize a range of differences.
Seeing something first in a non-human character (like a guinea pig) who plays a human-like role might make it easier for someone who finds ideas like nonbinary new or unnerving might make it easier for them to later relate to a person who is nonbinary.
The use of non-human characters might also expand our understanding of binary. What I mean is, while some animals are clearly understood to have male and female (think cow and bull, or male and female birds with very different plumage), some others are not as obvious (think squirrels) and some ... well, I have no idea if worms even have gender. Or what about those guinea pigs? I imagine they are male or female, just like the gerbils I had as a child, but I don't think about male or female when I see one.
The connection for the reader could be the character species, the artwork, the humour, or any number of aspects of the book or show.
Kristi also said,
"I do feel it is so important for kids and adults to get a wide range of literature and if being exposed to characters in all situations helps you recalibrate and check who you are all the better. I also think it’s really important to have a huge variety because it can help 'normalize' ideas and situations too."
Would love to hear your thoughts...
Monday, January 13, 2020
gendered events and two spirit people
In this particular case, Warren Winnipeg was the cultural lead. In advance of the event, he sent out this note:
All ceremony participants are to wear a wrap‐around, blanket or full length skirt to thePretty simple, huh? The men mostly had a blanket tied around their waist, which went down to their feet. Most women had skirts but those who don't like skirts used blankets or wraps. Non-binary and Two Spirit people could also pick whatever they prefer. Including everyone doesn't always have to take a lot of work...
ankles. This can be a throw‐blanket that one can tie around their waist.
Jennifer Brockman, a Woodland Cree Metis with Scottish, British, and Italian ancestry, has written about their experience as a Two-Spirit participating in ceremonies. The article concludes with some tips on how to create ceremonial space for Two-Spirit people.
Coming into the Circle – Welcoming Two-Spirit People in Ceremony
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
[quiltbag & glass bookshop]
Fiction, non-fiction, cookbooks (somewhere in between fiction and non-fiction!), cards, pronoun pins, and more. Knowledgeable friendly staff who are well-connected to the literary and arts community here in Edmonton.
https://www.glassbookshop.com/
quiltbag
"The QUILTBAG is an LGBTQ+ retail shop carrying queer & trans wares... The shop carries an always changing assortment of custom and curated used & new clothing; accessories like pins, pronoun buttons, patches, stickers; art by local artists; small gifts; and trans gear including chest binders and compression underwear."
Located at 7603 104 Street NW (Calgary Trail).
https://thequiltbag.com/
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
[towards an inclusive church]
Prayer & Blessing for the ‘Towards an Inclusive Church Committee
So there is indeed progress being made at Christ Church, which after a long time waiting is exciting...
Thursday, November 14, 2019
[Honor Song - Jeremy Dutcher]
I've been listening to the music of Jeremy Dutcher lately -- and have heard from several friends who have seen Jeremy in concert in the past few months...
direct link if video does not appear above
About Jeremy Dutcher
Performer, composer, activist, musicologist — these roles are all infused into his art and way of life. His music, too, transcends boundaries: unapologetically playful in its incorporation of classical influences, full of reverence for the traditional songs of his home,and teeming with the urgency of modern-day struggles of resistance.
A member of Tobique First Nation in New Brunswick, Jeremy first did music studies in Halifax before taking a chance to work in the archives at the Canadian Museum of History, painstakingly transcribing Wolastoq songs from 1907 wax cylinders. “Many of the songs I’d never heard before, because our musical tradition on the East Coast was suppressed by the Canadian Government’s Indian Act.” Jeremy heard ancestral voices singing forgotten songs and stories that had been taken from the Wolastoqiyik generations ago.
As he listened to each recording, he felt his own musical impulses stirring from deep within. Long days at the archives turned into long nights at the piano, feeling out melodies and phrases, deep in dialogue with the voices of his ancestors. These “collaborative”compositions, collected together on his debut LP Wolastoqiyik Lintuwakonawa, are like nothing you’ve ever heard. Delicate, sublime vocal melodies ring out atop piano lines that cascade through a vibrant range of emotions. The anguish and joy of the past erupt fervently into the present through Jeremy’s bold approach to composition and raw, affective performances enhanced by his outstanding tenor techniques.
“I’m doing this work because there’s only about a hundred Wolastoqey speakers left,” he says. “It’s crucial for us to make sure that we’re using our language and passing it on to the next generation. If you lose the language, you’re not just losing words; you’re losing an entire way of seeing and experiencing the world from a distinctly indigenous perspective.”
(from https://jeremydutcher.com/biography/)
Further reading:
http://muskratmagazine.com/jeremy-dutcher-on-climate-change-two-spirits-and-the-ethos-behind-wolastoq-music-and-the-indigenous-cultural-renaissance/
https://www.cbc.ca/arts/the-extraordinary-rise-of-jeremy-dutcher-2018-gave-canada-the-two-spirit-polaris-prince-we-need-1.4931935
https://calgaryphil.com/interview-with-jeremy-dutcher/
Friday, November 08, 2019
[all people and all genders...]
Tuesday, November 05, 2019
an affirming and embracing parish
Our parish announced this summer that they are an inclusive parish and that they will perform same-sex marriages. Subsequently, I was asked to be on a committee to help make this a reality.
The following mind map contains some of the ideas I've been thinking about in preparation for our first meeting:
Click image above for a bigger version.
Click here for a PDF version of this mind map
Note: the PDF version may be more recent.
Friday, October 11, 2019
conference emcee
Hey guys! As good as some of the other resources I highlight have been, I know you've all been waiting for another original cartoon from me -- and here it is!
I remember when the transition from "man" to "human" and from "mankind" to "humankind" was taking place. It was hard for some people to grasp how using the same word for both "all members of a group" and "one specific type of member of a group" should not be done, how it made that one specific type of member the standard for the whole group.
Imagine if there were four kinds of dogs: German Shepherds, Dachshunds, Shih Tzu Bichons, and Dogs. How would that work?
Alternative words to use in welcoming remarks, greetings and more:
Colleagues
Folks
Kin
Friends
Everyone
Participants
Team
Occupational titles as applicable (I.e., Teachers, for a teachers' conference, Social Workers for a social work conference, etc.)
Fellow workers (note that "fellow" here is an adjective, not the noun for a guy. ...)
Members of our community
Neighbours
People
(Or, simply skip "Guys" and better alternatives, and just say "Welcome to our conference!")