19 February, 2008

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Twittering on 2008-02-19

  • Just got back from the bike shop! I love that place!! In fact, I always learn there!!! I just learned that SOY is bad for women! WTF?! #
  • I’m watching the Jane Austen Book Club movie! #
  • 4 degrees in Chicago! #
  • I see beauty and I am amazed! My heart yearns for the place of beauty! #
  • Just re-arranged my space! Trying to exist w/in the system! #
  • My weekend was great! I only wish I didn’t have to return! #
  • Gosh! #
  • Lunching it! #
  • What is the cost of love amidst the turmoil? #
  • Day is over! #
  • I cannot laugh about waiting for my bus to come in zero degre weather #
  • That’s supposed to read degree! #

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So, I may not be a whole hearted supporter of any candidate, but I do like Susan Werner! Check out her endorsement!  I think her music is sexy…

Are you convinced…?

 

I wanted to post 2 links that I found to be important for today, considering that today some major news emerged!

t r u t h o u t | 02.19

Fidel Castro Announces Retirement
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/021908J.shtml
BBC News reports, “Cuba’s ailing leader Fidel Castro has announced he will not return to the presidency, in a letter published by official Communist Party paper, Granma.”

Mexican Border Wall Bypasses the Rich and Connected
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/021908O.shtml
Melissa del Bosque reports for The Texas Observer: “As the US Department of Homeland Security marches down the Texas border serving condemnation lawsuits to frightened landowners, Brownsville resident Eloisa Tamez, 72, has one simple question. She would like to know why her land is being targeted for destruction by a border wall, while a nearby golf course and resort remain untouched.”

 

CALL FOR REGISTRATION

Race, Sex, Power:
New Movements in Black and Latina/o Sexualities
April 11-12, 2008
Chicago, Illinois

http://condor.depaul.edu/~rsp2008/info.html

Registration is now open!!!

 

Faculty from nine universities and colleges will hold the largest ever conference on black and Latina/o sexuality on April 11-12 at the University of Illinois at Chicago. “Race, Sex, Power: New Movements in
Black and Latina/o Sexualities,” the culmination of more than two years of planning, will bring together academics, activists, and artists to address topics ranging from intimacy and desire to HIV/AIDS and teen
pregnancy to humor and Hip Hop. Organizer Cathy Cohen, Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago, calls the conference “a bold effort to rethink what sexuality means for the two largest racial minorities in the US.” Dr. Jocelyn Elders, the former United States Surgeon General appointed by President Clinton, will open the conference on Friday morning, April 11.

 

Sponsored by the participating universities with major funding from the Ford and Arcus Foundations, “Race, Sex, Power” aims to set a new agenda for studying, organizing, writing, and developing policy about sexuality. Juan Battle, professor of Sociology at the CUNY Graduate Center, argues that the conference is not only ambitious, but timely, as sexuality is central to current political debates. “Same-sex marriage, abstinence education, and abortion rights are all at the forefront.” Marysol Asencio, associate professor of Family Studies/Puerto Rican and Latino/a Studies from the University of Connecticut at Storrs, adds that the demographic shifts in the US mean that “sexuality has to be confronted from the perspective of race, not merely to challenge the pathologies historically assigned to Latina/o and Black Americans, but to explore the dynamism and heterogeneity within these populations as well.”

 

The conference program takes sexuality and race in all their complexity. Panels and speakers selected from hundreds of submissions will cover, among other things: media, migration and immigration, religion and spirituality, sexual tourism, reproductive rights, transgender, community organizing, gay and lesbian civil rights, poverty, social class, age, and the sex industry. Within the wide variety of approaches in both method and topic, a key idea emerges. Sexuality can only be imagined in the context of communities that are embedded in a national and international context of changing sexual mores and deeply entrenched habits of thought and representation.

 

One of the hallmarks of this conference, Cohen stresses, is its emphasis on collaboration and inclusiveness. The complex coordination of nine institutions permitted organizers to draw on a pool of expertise that no one college or university could hope to contain. The unusual blend of research, activism, and art encourages all participants to think outside their personal assumptions and the conventions of their fields. Finally, the organizers hope to draw an audience of specialists and non-specialists alike. Asencio reminds us that knowledge about sexuality is hardly confined to those who make a profession of its study. Everyone, Asencio argues, is engaged in a critique of current sexual conventions. The conference is simply the space where such knowledge can be shared, rethought, and transformed.

 

LOCATION: UIC FORUM, 725 W. Roosevelt Rd., Chicago, IL

 

SPONSORING UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES:

 

Chicago State University
Columbia College Chicago
DePaul University
The Graduate Center, CUNY
Northwestern University
Roosevelt University
University of Chicago
University of Connecticut at Storrs
University of Illinois, Chicago

Conference Website: http://condor.depaul.edu/~rsp2008/info.html

 

For more information, contact: racesexpower08@gmail.com

 

Elena Gutierrez
Assistant Professor of Gender and Women’s Studies
and Latin American/Latino Studies
University of Illinois, Chicago
1802 UH (m/c 360
601 S. Morgan
Chicago, IL 60607

 

phone: 312 996-9039
fax: 312 355-4478

The Big Question: A Film About Forgiveness premieres at the D.C. International Film Festival. Please plan on joining me for this one time showing on Sunday March 9th at 1:30 p.m. at the Jack Morton Auditorium on the campus of GW University.

You can get information and buy tickets here:

http://dciff.bside.com/?_view=_filmdetails&filmId=49217170

In addition I’d like to ask your help to get the word out about the film.  If you know anyone in leadership at any peace and justice groups such as Amnesty International, National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, Pax Christi please help me get in touch with them.  I’m also interested in getting leaders of psychological, mediation or education associations to the screening.

The film features:

  • dramatic stories of forgiveness
  • commentaries by world-renowned scientists
  • spiritual leaders such as:
    • Archbishop Desmond Tutu
    • Sr. Helen Prejean
    • Deepak Chopra M.D
    • The Venerable Thich Nhat Hahn
    • Rev. Joseph Lowery
    • Hopi Elders and others.

Frank Desiderio, CSP
Paulist Productions
310 454 0688

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