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WGSS Colloquium: 'Issa No for Me': Black Networked Resistance and the Complexities of Cancel Culture
Race and Human Trafficking: How Racial Inequality Impacts Human Trafficking
NYU Libraries: Porn Work: Sex, Labor, and Late Capitalism
EALC Lecture Series | Trans in Relation, Topos in Motion: Narrativity and the Power of Congruency
Howard Chiang, Associate Professor of History at University of Calfornia-Davis
Reading by Visiting Hurst Professor francine j. harris
This event will be held via Zoom.
Americanist Dinner Forum: Work, After the Future
Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum: (UN)MASKING HEALTH
Sexual Violence and Armed Conflict: Theories, Myths and Holistic Responses
Black Girlhood Studies Lab In Conversation With Dr. Nazera Sadiq Wright
In this conversation, Dr. Wright will discuss her manuscript, Black Girlhood in the Nineteenth Century and recent digital humanities project, “DIGITAL GI(RL)S: Mapping Black Girlhood in the Nineteenth Century.”
Sex Week 2022: Ethical Porn Discussion and Erotica Writing Workshop
Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Spring Colloquium: AIDS and Time: Queering and Decolonizing the Health Crisis
Professor Ivan Bujan is the Post-Doctoral Fellow in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.
Professor Marlon Bailey, Associate Professor Arizona State University will be the faculty respondent.
Black History Month: HeLa 100 – Race and Eugenics 2022
Join School of Medicine’s Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and the Division of Biology and Biomedical Science’s Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and Student and Alumni Affairs for a discussion regarding race and eugenics in relation to Henrietta Lacks.
This program seeks to be a critical space for participants to recognize how science has perpetuated harmful and racist narratives that deeply affect marginalized communities. Participants will read a short selection of pre-work to prepare for the discussion. This program is part of WUSTL’s commemoration of Henrietta Lacks’ 100th birthday.
St. Louis University 2022 (Virtual) Bridge Lecture: "Wicked, Licentious, and Free: African Women in the French Atlantic World"
SLU 2022 (Virtual) Bridge Lecture
Celebrating the 10th anniversary of lectures bridging Black History Month & Women's History Month
Guest speaker Dr. Jessica Marie Johnson
Women in Global Health - Midwest Chapter Speaker Series Leadership During the Pandemic with Matifadza Hlatshwayo Davis
St Louis Public Library Presents: Who is the St. Louis Queer+ Support Helpline (Not an Intro event)
Please join St. Louis Public Library for a presentation from SQSH. St. Louis Queer+ Support Helpline.
Raising Queens: The Important Role of Racial Socialization in the Lives of Black Girls
Presentation by Sheretta Brown, Associate Professor, Brown School
St Louis Public Library Presents: Trailblazers: Navigating the World of Academia as a Woman
Thinking about where your journey will take you in college and beyond? Thinking about teaching higher education and whether it's worth it?
Leadership Perspectives: 'She Suite'
A panel discussion on women and leadership in the business world
A Queer Perspective on Successful Aging
Vanessa Fabbre, Associate professor at the Brown School
St Louis Public Library Presents: Women Artists Panel Discussion
While much of art, including music, continues to be male dominated, women have made and continue to make an important impact.
Panel Discussion for ‘Behind the Sheet’
Co-Hosts: Ron Himes, Founder and Producing Director, The Black Rep; and Rebecca Messbarger, PhD, Director of Medical Humanities
Lecture by Visiting Hurst Professor Anne Cheng
This event will be held via Zoom. Register below.
Supporting Transgender Youth - Transgender Day of Visibility
Speakers include Lisa Brennan (she/her), co-leader of TransParent St Louis and author of The Auditorium in my Mind/Treasuring My Transgender Child; Jess Jones (they/them), owner of Jess Jones Education & Consulting; Sayer Johnson (he/him), Executive Director of Metro Trans Umbrella Group; Christopher Lewis (he/him), co-director of Pediatric Transgender Health and director of Differences of Sex Development Clinic at Washington University School of Medicine. This panel is moderated by Kelly Storck (she/her), a licensed clinical social worker and author of Gender Identity Workbook for Kids. Brown School Open Classroom.
The Mark S. Bonham Centre for Diversity Studies Presents: Joint Book Launch
Professor Heather Berg, Washington University in St. Louis and Professor Brenda Cossman, University of Toronto
Moderator: Professor Rebecca Wanzo, Washington University in St. Louis
"Monsters, Cyborgs, and Vases: Specters of the Yellow Woman"
Anne Cheng is professor of English and affiliated faculty in the Program in Gender and Sexuality Studies and the Committee on Film Studies at Princeton University. She is an interdisciplinary scholar who works at the intersection of aesthetics and politics, drawing from literary theory, critical race studies, film theory, feminist theory, and psychoanalysis. She works primarily with 20th-century American literature and visual culture with special focus on Asian American and African American literatures. She is the author of The Melancholy of Race: Assimilation, Psychoanalysis, and Hidden Grief (Oxford University Press, 2001), a study of the notion of racial grief at the intersection of culture, history, and law. Her second book, Second Skin: Josephine Baker and the Modern Surface (Oxford University Press, 2013), excavates the story of the unexpected intimacy between modern architectural theory and the invention of a modernist style and the conceptualization of Black skin at the turn of the 20th century.
Combating Caste on U.S. College Campuses
A Dalit History Month Speaker Panel
"Now is the right time. Come, come!": Unpacking Gender, Caste, and Humor in Bharatanatyam Performances of Eroticism
Anusha Kedhar, Assistant Professor in Dance, University of California, Riverside
Neuroscience & Society Colloquium: Sex and Gender Development in Research and Healthcare
Melissa Hines, PhD
Professor of Psychology
Director, Gender Development Research Centre
University of Cambridge
Who Owns Women’s Rights?: Reflections on The UN Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)
Bull in a China Shop
An Island Retreat: Sin, Secrecy, and the Offshoring of Sexually Abusive Priests
A public lecture by Kevin Lewis O’Neill, Director of the Centre for Diaspora and Transnational Studies and Professor in the Department for the Study of Religion, University of Toronto
LGBTQ + Mental Health Panel
MedQ and Stem present a panel on LGBTQ and Mental Health
Honors Thesis Presentations
HONORS THESIS PRESENTATIONS
Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Class of 2022 Celebration
Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Graduation Celebration
What Does Reproductive Health Look Like, post Dobbs?
Panel:
Dineo- Khabele, MD - Mitchell & Elaine Yanow Professor, Chair, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology;
Tessa Madden, MD, MPH, Associate Professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Division of Family Planning;
and Rebecca Wanzo, PhD (moderator), Chair, Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
What does reproductive health look like post-Dobbs?
Join this discussion around reproductive health, designed to help guide us in the wake of the Dobbs ruling.
The Politics of Reproduction presents Professor Adrienne Davis: "Sexual Political Economies of Slavery and Abortion Access"
Adrienne Davis, William M. Van Cleve Professor of Law; Founder & Co-director of the Law & Culture Initiative; Professor of Organizational Behavior and Leadership, Olin Business School
History Colloquium: HIV/AIDS and the Politics of Caregiving: Surfacing Coalitional Intimacies through the Domestic Archive
Stephen Vider, Assistant Professor of History and Director of the Public History Initiative, Cornell University
The Politics of Reproduction presents Professor Colin Burnett: "The Rights of Intensity: Or, What Does 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (Mungiu, 2007) 'Say' about Abortion?"
Colin Burnett, Associate Professor of Film and Media Studies at Washington University
Banned Comic Books
Panel discussion moderated by Rebecca Wanzo, professor and chair of the Department of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Washington University
WGSS Colloquium: "How (Not) to Become White"
Presentation by Shefali Chandra (Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and History)
Discussant: Stephanie Li
St. Louis University Women's and Gender Studies Brown Bag Series presents:" What Does Care Mean to You?"
Amanda Gray Rendón, Ph.D., Post-Doctoral Fellow, St. Louis University Women's and Gender Studies
The Politics of Reproduction presents an International Perspectives Panel
The panel: Anca Parvulescu, Liselotte Dieckmann Professor of Comparative Literature; Rachel Brown, Assistant Professor, Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies; Shanti Parikh, Professor and Chair of African and African American Studies and Mytheli Sreenivas, Professor of History and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies at the Ohio State University
The Politics of Reproduction Presents: Professor Mytheli Sreenivas, "Reproductive Politics and the Making of Modern India"
Professor of History and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies at the Ohio State University
Simone Veil: How an Auschwitz survivor and conservative politician won the battle for abortion rights in France.
Simone Veil: How an Auschwitz survivor and conservative politician won the battle for abortion rights in France.
Organized by the French Connexions Center of Excellence, in collaboration with the Department of Jewish, Islamic, and Middle Eastern Studies.
‘She Leads’ symposium to focus on empowering women leaders presents the Inaugural Karl King Hoagland, Jr. Speaker: Paula Boggs, Founder, Boggs Media, LLC, Tedx©Speaker, Writer, Lawyer, Army Veteran, and Musician
Haley Swenson: Doing Feminist Work: Wielding Narrative, Data, and Intersectionality Outside the Academy
The speaker, Haley Swenson majored in English & Women's & Gender Studies in undergrad, and received a Masters Degree and PhD in Women's, Gender & Sexuality Studies, while volunteering as a grassroots organizer for several campaigns and movements throughout her academic career. In 2017 she made the leap from higher education to a non-partisan think tank in Washington, DC, where she edited a daily vertical that ran at Slate.com on gender, work and social policy. Today she writes for a variety of mainstream news outlets, and has appeared as a commentator on NPR, CBC Radio, and CNN International. She also runs a research and action initiative on rebalancing the division of labor at home and its connection to gender, racial, and class equity, which has been featured in the New York Times and at CNN.com
"Race, Reproduction, and Death in Modern Palestine"
Frances S. Hasso is Professor in the Program in Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies at Duke University. She holds secondary appointments in the Department of Sociology and the Department of History. Her scholarship focuses on gender and sexuality in the Arab world. ORCID
The Politics of Reproduction Presents Professor Caitlin Myers, Middlebury College: "Who Gets Trapped in Post Roe America?"
Caitlin Myers, John G McCullough Professor Of Economics at Middlebury College
Jihad and the Negotiation of Gender and Religious Difference
Asma Afsaruddin is a Professor of Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures at Indiana University Bloomington.
How Do Black Lives Matter in Italy?
Join us for a virtual lecture and conversation in English with Italian-Brazilian activist and writer Kwanza Musi Dos Santos
Faculty Book Talk: Tazeen M. Ali
Alison Bechdel - Washington University International Humanities Prize
Lecture and reception for cartoonist-memoirist and MacArthur “Genius” Alison Bechdel, author of “Fun Home” and winner of the 2022 Washington University International Humanities Prize
The Politics of Reproduction Presents Professor Alison Kafer, "Disability and Reproductive Justice"
Alison Kafer, Associate Professor of Feminist Studies, University of Texas - Auburn
Disability justice activists have long been concerned with ableist approaches to pregnancy and abortion. Disabled people also face many barriers to reproductive health care and have a heightened risk of sexual assault and pregnancies they did not choose. How does a disability studies lens reshape some of the conversations about reproductive justice?
Masters and Johnson Lecture Series 2022: Let Young People Tell Their Story: From Robert Rayford to the Current Generation
The Masters and Johnson Annual Lecture honors late sex researchers and founders of modern sex therapy, William Masters and Virginia Johnson. Masters and Johnson conducted clinical sex research at Washington University from the 1950s through the 1970s. Their clinical observation of sexual behavior enabled them to dispel myths about vaginal orgasm, erectile dysfunction, masturbation, and older adult asexuality.