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Remembering Ada María Isasi-Diaz

Posted by Robyn on May 13, 2012 in Ethics, Feminism, Religion, Theology |

Today is a sad day for so many.  I was just notified that Ada passed away this morning.  While I knew she was struggling, a common theme in her Mujerista theology, to battle the cancer and infections that were destroying her body.  She ended her life en la lucha–in the struggle–yet not so in deep struggle, since she passed away in her deep sleep, and I am grateful for her pioneering a way for me, a Queermestiz@ to participate in the fullness of life.  While my life is not free from struggle, I have been able to look to Ada and her work (including her kinship among Womanist scholars) as a way to imagine queer\Ethics.  Thank you Ada for giving us a way to think and explore and imagine Hispanic/Latina Liberation Theology & Ethics.

I am not alone as a mujerista, a queermestiz@.  I am surrounded by the Hispanic Theological Community who proudly recognizes your contribution to Liberation Theology.  Your memory and theological imagination and commitment to la lucha remains with me and others this day, and will as we continue to take steps for liberation.

While I enflesh loads of doubt, I cannot help but call you a theological gift helping to pluralize women’s experience in theology and ethics.  You will be missed, eternally.

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The Politics of the State

Posted by Robyn on May 11, 2012 in Politics |

This past Tuesday I spent my evening at the Colorado State Capital.  I was eager to see the process, especially since SB 002 would have a chance to have an up or down vote.  For those of you who don’t know, SB 002 is the Civil Unions bill that would have been voted on Tuesday night.  It didn’t make it the floor; House Republicans called a 3 hour recess and essentially killed the bill.  Not only was I frustrated, but I was also sad and perhaps a bit enraged that these are the politics we are paying for: the politics of hate and exclusion.  I felt it my civil duty to respond before the Special Session gets underway.

By training, I am an ethicist.  I like to think about ethics and moral reasoning in every area of life.  And so, when I began to think about the ethics of the politics I saw enacted, I called it “bad ethics.”  It was bad ethics because the relationality of House Republicans was rooted in exclusion.  There wasn’t even an opportunity for the bill (and three dozen other bills) to be heard.  These politics and ethics seem to be motivated by hate and fear.  Why is that?

I’d like to tell you a story, because I think stories are useful when hot-button issues are lit up in flames (and civil unions, unfortunately) is one of those issues.

I remember when Bush was on the ballot for his 2nd term.  It was time to vote.  I had weighed the candidates and because I don’t tend to vote a straight ticket, I was ready  to make a decision.  The war was well under way and I began to think about the politics of John Kerry (and how he might respond to the war) and the politics of Bush (and the history of his inciting war).  My commitment is war adverse, and at times I call myself a pacifist.  I knew that the “war on terrorism” was T-H-E major issue for Americans in 2004.  For me, I wondered:  Do I vote for a candidate who started the war, or for a candidate who might intensify the war?  I was divided on this very issue.  I was so divided that I ended up not voting.  I recused myself from the American political process and ended up spending the last 4 year’s of Bush’s presidency frustrated.  My point here is not that “my” candidate won or didn’t win.  My point here is to highlight the process.  If you recall, this election was a mess, too.  The war was such an issue for everyone:  both those on the Right and the Left.  Americans just wanted a process to be fair; a process that would hear both sides about the war.  Choosing a president wouldn’t necessarily ensure that both sides would be heard, because politicians have their agendas, but we were all hopeful.  And, the way that these items are heard is in Congress and Senate.  The same is true for the State.

Civil unions is the same way in many ways.  Both sides want a fair hearing; they want their side to be heard.  The way this is accomplished is for civil unions to be debated in the legislature.  When the House recessed, that initiated a domino effect:  silence in all forms, except when supporters of civil unions cried out “shame on you!”  Regardless of your position on the matter of civil unions for Lesbian and Gay couples, you can imagine that both those in favor and opposed would like to have their side heard.  The way this happens is in the legislature, not in recesses where votes cannot be counted and support not measured.

The politics of this state, the State of Colorado, perpetuated long-standing politics of hate and exclusion when House Republicans called for recess.  Lesbian and Gay folks know these politics well.  This bill should be heard for the process to complete itself.  Lesbian and Gay citizens should be able to trust their elected officials to allow for a process, not the game of bad ethics.

I’m hoping for a process to take place for the Special Session, a process where Speaker of the House, Frank McNulty, allows for the real process of politics to unfold.  Whatever happens, it is my great hope for this state to invite the process of inclusion.

The politics of our state should not be the politics of hate and exclusion.  When it is, it is our duty to speak up and be counted.

Shame on you, Colorado, for refusing the process.

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5th CSBR Sexuality Institute

Posted by Robyn on May 11, 2012 in Ethics |

5th CSBR Sexuality Institute | Sept 18-23, 2012 | Alexandria, Egypt
Call for Applications | Submission Deadline: May 20, 2012

View it in your browser (http://us4.campaign-archive2.com/?u=0c55a9feec53d5aa297d3ecc3&id=f3c1b8cd69&e=).
<http://www.csbronline.org/institute/about-the-institute/>
As the only international network working on sexual and bodily rights in Muslim societies, CSBR has succeeded in creating an alternative discourse and progressive spaces in the Middle East, North Africa, South Asia and
Southeast Asia. The CSBR Sexuality Institute brings together leading sexual
and reproductive rights activists, academics and researchers. Held previously in Turkey (2009), Indonesia (2010), and Malaysia (2008/2011),
with participants from 23 countries throughout Asia, Africa and the Middle
East, the institutes include lectures, group work, round-tables, panels,
site visits and film screenings, as well as a methodology to engage
participants’ own experiences around sexuality.

<http://www.csbronline.org/institute/application-form/>
Designed as an intensive six-day participatory group training, the Institute will be limited to 20-22 participants. Do you have a minimum of 2 years experience working in the field of sexual and reproductive health and rights? Are you committed to undertake efforts to promote sexual and bodily health and rights at national and international level? Do you represent an organization/institution engaged in sexual and reproductive health and rights advocacy, research or fieldwork? Please submit this form http://www.csbronline.org/institute/application-form/

online and send a C.V. to coordinator@csbronline.org

subject:  Sexuality Institute C.V.

by May 20 2012.

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Writing, reading, learning

Posted by Robyn on May 5, 2012 in Dissertation |

I’ve been doing lots of reading lately, and not a lot of writing.  It seems that though I am done with coursework, there still is a bit more to read–or, to my chagrin, a lot to read!  I actually love learning and reading, but at some point I have to start writing.

I’m enjoying the nature of the dissertation, because it gives me an opportunity to have a sustained academic thought–a place where my ideas can marinate for a bit.  So, that’s what I’m doing on this Saturday night–reading and learning.  Tonight its Elizabeth Grosz’s Volatile Bodies.  I seem to appreciate her work…

Onward, as they say…

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Reading for Dissertation: Karen Barad’s Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning

Posted by Robyn on May 3, 2012 in Dissertation |

This is my current dissertation reading on materiality and ethics, epistemology and ontology.  I wanted to share it with y’all!

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On Being ABD & Choosing an Advisor

Posted by Robyn on April 21, 2012 in iLife |

I’ve resisted the impulse to blog about my recent achievement (becoming ABD).  I’m sort of blogging about it now, but am rather wanting to talk about one of my experiences today that  was a “first.”  I was introduced to as Robyn Henderson-Espinoza, Ph.D. Candidate for the first time today.  It was a great feeling, and I enjoyed being on the other side of “student.”  While I am in the beginning stages of writing the dissertation, it feels good to be at this moment and time:  ABD.  Becoming ABD begins and ends w/ the choosing of an advisor, and perhaps that is where I want to begin reflecting.

When I began searching for places to do my Ph.D., I either wanted to study with a Queer person, or a person of color.  For me, I wanted a Latin@ of some sort.  I found Dr. Miguel De La Torre to be that person, and while he is straight and a bit macho, he has been more than an advisor to and for me.  He has served as a sounding board, a mentor, and encourager.  One of the things that he pushes his students on is being involved in the community of ethicists, and finding one’s own voice.  And so, while Miguel serves as my dissertation chair and primary advisor, I have a group of scholars holding me close in heart and holding me accountable to do the good work I am capable of doing.  Some of those folks I’ve mentioned on this blog before, and others remain cited, but only in my heart.  Becoming ABD is a feat, for sure, but it is in the choosing of an advisor and one’s community that truly sustains one’s ability to do good work.

And, to do the good work that I want to do means that I continue to engage in scholarly discourse and explore the realm of teaching.  While the teaching pieces still have me a bit anxiety ridden, the move to continue to engage in scholarly discourse does not.  Like today, for example, when I was a guest in the Iliff Social Media Praxis Class.  It was nice to be apart of the conversation, and also contribute to the imagination of bodies and how we understand bodies.

Life continues to be good to me.  I sometimes wonder if there’s someone praying?!  Thanks, Miguel, for taking me on as your student and for encouraging me to explore the field of Ethics.  And, I continue to be grateful to Melanie Harris, Kate Ott, Nikki Young, Kelby Harrison, Mark George, Margaret Robinson, Nadia Bolz-Weber, and so many others (like that *one* girl) who help me get to where I need to go when it comes to my thinking.

Time to write the dissertation!

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The What-ness of Social Media

Posted by Robyn on April 20, 2012 in Ethics, Religion, Technology, Uncategorized |
Robyn Henderson-Espinoza
21 April 2012
Social Media Praxis, Iliff School of Theology

“The What-ness of Social Media in 140 Characters”

Obviously, my title is a bit mis-leading. I will not attempt to digest social media in 140 characters. If I did, it would be this: Social media, as a relational practice, is the beginning of our ability to truly relate, which is always mediated by virtual differences.

What do I mean by social media being a relational practice?

Let me answer this question by situating myself in the discourse. I am an Ethicist. I like to think about our moral imagination, moral agency and ethics; and so, when I assert the notion that social media is a relational practice, I also am suggesting that there are ethical implications here.

There has long been the question that Scholars have raised regarding the relationship between human bodies and virtual bodies. With social media, you have many bodies engaging with each other: from actual human bodies, machine bodies (like computers), and virtual bodies, like avatars and so forth. This creates a web of relating practices that indeed raises the question of the “what-ness” of social media, and especially so for today’s church.

For me, I created iRobyn. I was living in Chicago, and Twitter was all the hype. iRobyn is on Twitter as a politically queer voice, and iRobyn.com is a WordPress blog where I seek to work at the multiple intersections of religion, theology, race, queerness, sexuality, and ethics. In fact, when I have attended the American Academy of Religion, I have had conversations with people who call me iRobyn. What does this tell me about the power of creative possibilities and my own ability to create a voice, how ever virtual it is? I’ve discovered that social media is a relationship across many and multiple differences.

What might all this mean for today’s church?

What if the church embraced social media as a liturgical practice? If liturgy is the work of the people, and people of a local church began to engage with their own communities’ practices, then church might look a lot different–we might be able to live into the relational practices of our communities call to: care for the poor, feed the hungry, and so forth. Our churches might look less like a non-profit and more like a cathedral of hope, rooted in (insert here your religious practice): the call of Christ or the Divine, or what have you. What we can imagine is the ability for us all to develop a voice that lives as a social media voice.

The iRobyn voice is not necessarily the most academic voice; it is a public voice that is informed by culture, society, politics, and mediated by social media. When I blog, I write in the voice that makes most sense to me: an honestly engaged voice that is concerned about social practices that are often harming to multitude of communities. This ranges to a political voice that hopes for some political change. When I blog about theological issues or religious concerns, I write in a voice that has long-been acquainted with the practices of a local church, how ever agnostic I am these days…

What has been most helpful is that I quickly learned that for me I needed to have a multiplicity of voices. I run in circles that cut across many and multiple differences, so I needed to be able to speak to a variety of people, and sometimes my iRobyn voice merges. An example os this is when I blogged on Easter Sunday and posted an Oscar Romero quote and tied it to the murder of Trayvon Martin. It was titled: “Rise Again.” Now, I have no interest in being overly theological or affirming any sort of Resurrection of the Dead (sorry Orthodox Theologians). What was of interest to me here is to expose the intersections of theology, religion, sexuality, and race. It is in the multiple voices that iRobyn continues to exist and engage in a meaningful way.

The potential that today’s church has continues to open in multiple ways. From using social media to organize a group within a faith community or church to using Twitter to dialogue about a sermon’s content, a book study, or what have you. There seems to be no limit on what we can do with social media!

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Pluralizing Identity and Identifying zir Plurality

Posted by Robyn on April 14, 2012 in Politics, Race |

Click here to read “Pluralizing Identity and Identifying zir Plurality” on PostColonial  Networks.  Its posted here for your reading pleasure!

As Gloria Anzaldúa says in “To(o) Queer the Writer,” “Identity is not a bunch of little cubbyholes situated respectively with intellect, race, sex, class, vocation, gender. Identity flows between, over, aspects of a person. Identity is a river—a process.”

The struggle today is, “which box do I check?” I am born of a Mexican woman, and I was raised in the United States. I am neither Mexican nor American, and yet I am both. So, which box do I check? Perhaps Michel Foucault was right when he wrote:

“I don’t feel that it is necessary to know exactly what I am. The main interest in life and work is to become someone else that you were not in the beginning. If you knew when you began a book what you would say at the end, do you think that you would have the courage to write it?

What is true for writing and for love relationships is true also for life. The game is worthwhile insofar as we don’t know where it will end.” (Rux Martin, One Truth Power, Self: An Interview with Michel Foucault, October 25, 1982)

Perhaps it is true that this river—this process—is an unknowing and an unknowable adventure, an adventure in including and embracing the unknown. I’d like to think that in the act of trying to fit oneself into an identity and the discovery that one cubbyhole doesn’t fit all of your identities, that the river metaphor becomes a much more helpful and productive way to imagine the plurality of identity.

The notion of a plural identity is in contrast to the subtle (or perhaps not so subtle!) ways in which hetero-patriarchal colonial history sublimated indigenous ways of knowing and identity production. I wish to move into not only advocating but privileging the plurality of identities as a way to queerthe post/colonial space and place that today’s earth’s bodies inhabit.

I wish to start with a few questions which I hope expose the singularity of the colonial understanding and contours of identity.

Who am I today? If I am not conservative, then does that make me liberal? If I am not gay, does that make me straight? If I am not white, then am I black? The binary that these “boxes” reify is problematic insofar as one box necessitates the impulsive checking of another corollary box, and therefore singularizes one’s identity. Not only does it singularize the identity, but it also stabilizes the identity. What emerges is a fixed colonial identity whose referent is white and male.

What might a queer post/colonial theory of identity be? And how might a queer post/colonial identity become? First, I think that a queer post/colonial theory of identity is one that recognizes the multiple and ongoing intersections of the complicated pieces which materially construct our identities. Second, I think that a queer post/colonial theory of identity is an identity constructed from many access points: the intersections or borderlands, that help us all make sense of the materially rich web of human existence. I suggest that a queer post/colonial identity becomes by pluralizing zir’s identity and exposing the intersections that are necessarily embedded in zir’s identity. To that end, I hope in this brief post to de-stable the notion of identity as a singular/monolithic category of socially constructed ideas. To do this, I suggest that it is its material reality that helps give shape to one’s multiple or plural identity. I am many while I am one.

Colonized identities never had the chance to become a river of multiples, that process which Anzaldúa speaks about. Colonized identities are material, which have been and continue to be torn apart and mutilated by colonial destructiveness. As a result, colonized identities have been stabilized by their colonial referent: white and hetero-patriarachal. What is important now is to begin to make little moves against destructiveness and help unmask what a queer post/colonial theory of identity is, and how it becomes relative to its colonized history. This colonized history, in fact, continues to burgeon in light of the ongoing colonial efforts and imperial efforts of the First World. The fact that we all are socialized to “check” one box over another, to choose one colonized identity over the multiple, is problematic. We fight against this totalizing reality.

Checking the “one” box perpetuates the monolith of identities, eclipsing the multiple by reducing it into the singular. The act of checking one stable identity, while experiencing the multiple and unstable identities of, perhaps, being color-less in a world of binary colors, might compel us to explore the multitude of identities that are always in/between and becoming. What is of interest here is the recognition of the plurality of identities in the face of the stable, singular, and unified identity that the colonial regime concretized for us. The singular was given to us by the power structures. What percolates beneath our stratified experiences is the compulsion to relocate ourselves relative to the multiple and plural—to find the river that helps us become. This is the river, the process, that is percolating, but unknown to us. What is becoming are the pluralities of our identities; we cannot stop the river from becoming, and we cannot stop the process of identity from taking shape. As such, a queer post/colonial theory of identity is one which recognizes the multiple, in the face of the unified whole, the stable singular. It is also one which does not accept the colonizing tendency (or reality) of what results when one is forced to check one box for one’s very complicated and multiple identity.

And so, if a queer post/colonial theory of identity is the recognition of the plural in the face of the singular and the colonizing reality of the unity of the monolith, and if we agree that this is not a myth, but a totalizing reality for so many who continue to be sublimated by this reality—the hetero-patriarchal colonial effort(s)—then we might ask how does a queer post/colonial theory of identitybecome? Here, the term ‘become’ is a technical term, borrowed from Rosi Braidotti and Gilles Deleuze (among others). To continue the metaphor of the river, we should look to the Guadalupe river, which functions as the border of Texas and Mexico, or the State of Texas/nation of the US and Mexico, how ever you wish to visualize these borders of nations and states.

Throughout history, this border has become. It was once a meager river which gave promise to those on both sides of the border: relationships became fruitful and productive across the waters. Now, however, this river is the static feature of the state of Texas and the country of Mexico that often times eliminates real relating and becoming. Because of the ways in which the United States situated its power relative to otherness, this river no longer embodies or enfleshes its creative potential to become multiple or create space and place for the plural to flow between these two countries, nations, and states. What this river does is act as a barrier to the process of becoming. It, at one time, enfleshed potential, and the borderlanders of this space and place created ways to live into the river’s gifts of allowing others to become both/and, or plural people. Yet it continues to be the hegemonic power structures that perpetually displace these peoples, and the borderlanders are bereft of the ability to embrace the plural, the multiple, themselves.

We must recognize the power of becoming. This river has the power to be the very process that helps others become multiple and plural. It is the State, the hetero-patriarch, who prohibits the river to become. The State keeps the river as a static bureaucratic feature of foreign policy adhering to the call for the border to be a unity of the monolith, instead of allowing it to live into zir’s creative potential of the plural. Displacing hetero-patriarchal colonial powers reframes the heart of the river as a river offering the plurality of its waters. In this act of displacing, the river is able to become and offer both sides of the border opportunities to become.

Robyn Henderson-Espinoza is a PhD student at The University of Denver-Iliff School of Theology.

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Faithful Conversations: Envisioning Our Future as the LGBTQ Community and Allies | Denver

Posted by Robyn on April 13, 2012 in Queer, Race, Religion |

The struggle for inclusion, justice, and care for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender individuals in religious communities is a struggle that continues today. An upcoming event hopes to shed light on this issue. “Faithful Conversations: Building Support for LGBTQ People and Allies in Religious Communities” will be held from 1–8 pm. Registration begins at 1 pm and conversations will be held from 2–8 pm.

The conference is a gathering for LBGTQ people of faith, goodwill, and allies to build relationships, engage in challenging conversations, enhance and build skills for advocacy, and empower faith communities to support LGBTQ inclusion. Keynote speakers are: Jay Michaelson, author of the recently-released God vs. Gay? The Religious Case for Equality, and Dr. Kate Ott, Assistant Professor of Christian Social Ethics at Drew University Theological School.

There is a $25 registration fee for the event, which includes dinner. Please register by April 17. For more information, please call 720-524-1100.

The event is presented by the Interfaith Alliance of Colorado, One Colorado Education Fund, Keshet, and Nehirim.

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The end of God-talk?!

Posted by Robyn on April 9, 2012 in Race, Religion |

This is important stuff!  Watch and learn!

James Hal Cone & Anthony B. Pinn from Revolution Books on Vimeo.

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