POPULARITY
A vérszívók örökké izgalomban tartanak minket, mivelhogy egy a két céljuk van: öröklét és izgalom. Viszont az már ritkábban kerül szóba, hogy milyen egy negyven napja tőzeges talajban fekvő funky-vámpír, és hogy a legmagyarabb rém nem Lugosi Béla, hanem a csecsszopkodó nora. Kápi olvasmányélményéről (!!!) mesél, Leslie Feinberg önéletrajzi ihletésű könyvén keresztül a butch-ok '60-as évek beli küzdelmeit ismerhetjük meg. Kemény. Meredith Monk-koncert is ütős volt, Jackpot varjú barátja meg úgy tűnik, hogy alvilági kapcsolatokkal rendelkezik. Kerámia dildó készítő workshopnak is hírét adjuk, aminél még durvább a polóniummal dúsított műzli-ajándék.Világzeneieg Mianmar és Namíbia van soron.
Send us a Text Message.*TRIGGER WARNING* - This book contains subject material of sexual violence, rape, homophobia, transphobia, gender dysphoria, and police violence. Please take care of yourselves and make a decision that is healthy for you before listening to this episode.In this episode, we discuss the life-changing Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg. Jess's story of not fitting into the gender binary during the 1960s and early 1970s in the United States left us profoundly impacted by the truth that was so clearly present. We talk about community, organizing, identity, and hope in this episode, and want to leave you with a call to action: go do something to help your community. In honor of Leslie, we would like to provide you with these links to donate if you have the resources:The Center For Black EquityThe Trevor ProjectLAMBDA LegalIf you would like to contact us, please text us through the link in the show notes. Download and follow, it really helps us out! Our Instagram and TikTok accounts are @lesbianbookclubpod
Send us a Text Message.This week's episode was quite a doozy
Send us a Text Message.Lauren and Haylie debate the use of male lesbianism in this episode, Alice rejects lesbianism, and, of course, we gush over Holland Taylor. Please download and leave us a five star review, or text us with the link above and we will read them at the end of each episode. It really helps us out! We love hearing from you so please feel free to send us a DM on Instagram or TikTok - or we have an email if that's more your style!Next book: Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg.Instagram: @LesbianBookClubPodTikTok: @LesbianBookClubPodEmail: LesbianBookClubPod@gmail.com
Ce dont on parle dans cet épisode de Laisse-moi kiffer :Mini-kiff : l'ouvrage pour enfants "Est-ce que tu as faim ?" de Grace Lee et Mélody Ung (éditions On compte pas pour du beurre)Le kiff de Fanny : 3 conseils de podcasts, Absolument fabuleuses / Les Pages du milieu / Binouze USA (00:34:17)Le kiff de Ariane : le roman "Stone Butch Blues" de Leslie Feinberg édité par le collectif Hystériques & AssociéEs (00:43:54)Le kiff d'Anthony : le festival Pop et Psy (qui sera bientôt rediffusé en podcast) à retrouver aussi sur leur compte Instagram (00:56:13)Le kiff de Marie-Stéphanie : le compte Instagram Le photomentaliste de Thanh Long Bach (01:05:16)Laisse-moi kiffer :Autour d'une table, chaque jeudi, l'équipe échange recos culturelles, anecdotes et coups de gueule. Envoyez-nous sur Instagram vos anecbofs de star (une anecdote bof avec une star cool et vice versa), vies de boloss (une VDM mais en 2023, quoi) et autres messages boubou (si/quand vous avez un petit coup dans le nez).Retrouve-nous sur Instagram :Laisse-moi kiffer / Marie-Stéphanie / Anthony / Ariane / FannyAbonnez-vous :Apple Podcasts • Deezer • SpotifyLaisse-moi kiffer est un podcast de Madmoizelle présenté par Marie-Stéphanie.Avec Anthony Vincent, Ariane Hemery, Fanny Cohen Moreau.Réalisation et production : Fanny Cohen Moreau.Rédaction en chef : Marie-Stéphanie Servos. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
I det femtonde avsnittet i säsong tre träffar vi Ylva Emel Karlsson, översättare och aktivist, i ett samtal om översättandet av kultboken Stone Butch Blues av Leslie Feinberg. Välkommen till Bögbibblan Podcast – Din skeva bokhylla!________________Gäst: Ylva Emel KarlssonProgramledare och producenter: Milla Leskinen och Makz Bjuggfält.Klippning och grafisk formgivning: Makz Bjuggfält.Musik: Anna Hed.Fotograf porträttbild: Josefin Granqvist.Samtalet med Ylva spelades in i mars 2024._______________________Bögbibblan Podcast är en podd om queer litteratur. Du hittar Bögbibblan på bogbibblan.se och under namnet Bögbibblan på Spotify, Instagram och Facebook. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
How often do you get to chat with the author of your major literary obsession and learn something about queer storytelling at the same time? I cannot believe I actually got to sit down with @lamyaisangry to talk about their brilliant novel Hijab Butch Blues, their essay writing and the queer future, which, according to Lamya, will be weird AF. Listen now, to hear about queer readings of the Quran, gender expression at the gym, new coming out narratives, and Lamya's queer writing ancestors. Not to be missed! References:Lamya H. “A Fragile Dance: Queer Brown Futures (Or Lack Thereof).” Autostraddle, 23 April 2015.https://www.autostraddle.com/a-fragile-dance-queer-brown-futures-or-lack-thereof-284789/Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch BluesAudre Lorde's Sister OutsiderZami"A Litany for Survival" Dionne Brand's What We All Long ForDorothy Allison's Bastard Out of CarolinaCavedwellerStone Wall AwardAmerican Library Associationhttps://www.lamyah.com/ Questions you should be able to respond to after listening:Lamya writes in a very interesting form of memoir. What makes the structure of their novel unique?What does Lamya think about coming out narratives and how they are changing in contemporary literature?Who does Lamya name as her queer ancestors? Please look up at least one of them to find out a little more about their life and work.What does Lamya say about the queer future? What do you think the queer future, or the future of queer narratives, will look like?
Ce dont on parle dans cet épisode de Laisse-moi kiffer :Mini-kiff : l'ouvrage pour enfants "Est-ce que tu as faim ?" de Grace Lee et Mélody Ung (éditions On compte pas pour du beurre)Le kiff de Fanny : 3 conseils de podcasts, Absolument fabuleuses / Les Pages du milieu / Binouze USA (00:34:17)Le kiff de Ariane : le roman "Stone Butch Blues" de Leslie Feinberg édité par le collectif Hystériques & AssociéEs (00:43:54)Le kiff d'Anthony : le festival Pop et Psy (qui sera bientôt rediffusé en podcast) à retrouver aussi sur leur compte Instagram (00:56:13)Le kiff de Marie-Stéphanie : le compte Instagram Le photomentaliste de Thanh Long Bach (01:05:16)Laisse-moi kiffer :Autour d'une table, chaque jeudi, l'équipe échange recos culturelles, anecdotes et coups de gueule. Envoyez-nous sur Instagram vos anecbofs de star (une anecdote bof avec une star cool et vice versa), vies de boloss (une VDM mais en 2023, quoi) et autres messages boubou (si/quand vous avez un petit coup dans le nez).Retrouve-nous sur Instagram :Laisse-moi kiffer / Marie-Stéphanie / Anthony / Ariane / FannyAbonnez-vous :Apple Podcasts • Deezer • SpotifyLaisse-moi kiffer est un podcast de Madmoizelle présenté par Marie-Stéphanie.Avec Anthony Vincent, Ariane Hemery, Fanny Cohen Moreau.Réalisation et production : Fanny Cohen Moreau.Rédaction en chef : Marie-Stéphanie Servos. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
On the Schmooze Podcast: Leadership | Strategic Networking | Relationship Building
Today's guest has dedicated his life to fostering understanding and acceptance for a misunderstood community. With a deep-rooted belief in the importance of education and advocacy, he has been at the forefront of providing resources, training, and support for transgender children, youth, and their families. In 2021, he took to the TEDx stage at the University of Washington, delivering a powerful talk titled "The Heart of the Matter," shedding light on the nuances of gender diversity and the importance of acceptance. In 2023, his ground-breaking book "Trans Children in Today's Schools," was published by Oxford University Press. This book serves as an essential guide for educators, parents, and anyone seeking to understand the experiences of trans children. He provides professional development, policy creation, athletics guidance, and education for parents and students. His unwavering commitment led to the founding of two organizations: Gender Diversity and TransFamilies.org. These organizations offer a beacon of hope, with workshops, conferences, and outreach programs impacting families with gender-diverse children. Recognized as a trailblazer in the field and featured on The Oprah Winfrey Show, Larry King Live, and NPR's Fresh Air, he has been instrumental in shaping a world where gender diversity is celebrated and every individual feels seen and valued. His work has provided a haven for many and paved the way for a more inclusive and compassionate society. A visionary, an advocate, and a true changemaker, please join me in welcoming Aidan Key. Join us as we engage in a profound conversation with Aidan Key, a visionary advocate for transgender children, exploring his transformative journey and evolving perspective on leadership. In this episode, we discuss:
We sat down with trans pioneer and activist Nancy Nangeroni and her long term partner and trans ally Gordene MacKenzie. After reading a quote from Nancy Nangeroni in Leslie Feinberg's 'Transgender Warriors" We were determined to find Nancy and learn more about her life as an activist over the decades. We had the pleasure of meeting Nancy alongside her long term partner Gordene McKenzie; trans ally, gender theorist and all round inspiring human being. These two have spent decades of their life fighting for the rights of transgender people, raising awareness all over the world together with their radio show GenderTalk and they remain a positive force of inspiration and wisdom for all young queer people today. We have so much love for them and we were so grateful to be able to sit down and talk to them about all things love, hope, history and future.
freie-radios.net (Radio Freies Sender Kombinat, Hamburg (FSK))
Ein intimes Hörstück – a persistent femme/butch desire von k kater (CN/Inhaltsnotiz: in diesem Hörstück geht es explizit um sexuelle Inhalte, um queere Sexpraktiken insbesondere mit Dildos) In fragmentarischen Fiktionen wird der Raum eines Dazwischen erkundet. Eine Bezogenheit behutsam mit Worten umkreist, um sie offen zu halten. Femme/Butch-Identifizierungen und -Dynamiken werden hier als Erzählungen verstanden, als gelebte Fairy Tales, versponnen in ein kollektives queeres Gedächtnis und Archiv. (s. Fuchs 2020) Zitate, literarische Erlebnisse, persönliche Erinnerungen verweben sich zu einer Text-/Hör-Collage. Dabei wird vielfältig an Konzepte von und Erfahrungen mit Stoneness (Fuchs/ Cvetkovich), Circlusion (Adamczak), utopischer Körperlichkeit (Foucault/ Preciado) und dem „Recht auf Opazität“ (Glissant) angeknüpft. „Klassische“ Femme/Butch-Erzählungen aus dem 20. (& frühen 21.) Jahrhundert, insbesondere von Leslie Feinberg und Minnie Bruce Pratt, strecken ihre Fühler in die Gegenwart aus, mischen sich mit jetzigem Begehren, lassen sich nicht mehr voneinander trennen. Ein unablässiges Gezwitscher, Flüstern, sich Schreiben. In Stilisierungen etwas wie „Echtheit“ und Zu_Gehörigkeit finden. Ein Werden mit/durch Prothesen und Tools. Körper wider und wieder erzählen. Sprache und Narrative transformieren bis sich anders mit ihnen f**ken lässt. Sich durch Identifizierungen erfahren, berühren. Gehalten, Grobheit entfesseln. Schweres Beben. Zart und wach und dünnhäutig werden für den Raum in und zwischen uns. Das Nicht-Identische, Widerstrebende, Zörgerliche, Unsagbare, Opake tiefer und tiefer wahrnehmen. Lieben. This audio piece was produced for the Interdisciplinary conference »30 Years of Stone Butch Blues – Memories and Visions« (5th/6th May 2023): https://zgd-hamburg.de/en/projects/30-years-of-stone-butch-blues/ danke, so sehr an Clara Rosa Schwarz, Dr. Michaela Koch u Dr. Jara Schmidt. —mehr als für entsteht dies durch mischa ♥
‘Cause we are living in a material world, Kadji Amin is here to talk about trans materialism! Kadji's work is all about exploring what being trans means beyond gender identity. What are material reasons to transition or transgress gender expectations? How did our trancestors live as their chosen gender? And why does the history of trans women look quite different from that of trans men? In this episode, we talk about all of this and about how and why categories such as trans, cis, hetero and homo came to shape our queer lives.CW: homophobia, transphobia, medicalisation of queerness, racism References:https://www.kadjiamin.com/Kadji Amin's Disturbing Attachments (Duke UP, 2017)“Queer Form.” Coedited with Amber Jamilla Musser and Roy Pérez. Special issue, ASAP/Journal 2.2.Amin, Kadji. (2023) “Taxonomically Queer?: Sexology and New Queer, Trans, and Asexual Identities,” GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 29.1: 91-107.Amin, Kadji. (2022)“We Are All Non-Binary: A Brief History of Accidents,” Representations 158.1: 106-119.Emily SkidmoreJen ManionMurray HillEmpiricismMichel Foucault's History of Sexuality Vol. 1Magnus Hirschfeld“Trans Childhood” with Jules Gill-Peterson https://www.spreaker.com/episode/46314264Susan Stryker's Transgender History https://www.spreaker.com/episode/49782773Robert StollerLeslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blueshttps://lesliefeinberg.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Stone-Butch-Blues-by-Leslie-Feinberg.pdfQuestions you should be able to respond to after listening: Kadji talks about a ‘flattening effect' of the term trans. What does this mean? Which dissymetries does Kadji mention?How does Kadji describe the diverging historical lineages of transmasculine and transfeminine people?What can be material reasons to transition? Please give at least two examples.Kadji speaks about trans idealising cis. What does this mean?Which term did Robert Stoller coin and to what end?Why does Kadji find it useful to think about trans without gender identity? What do you think about this?
Guest artist FLORENCE PEAKE joins ELIZABETH FULLERTON to discuss her multi-faceted, performance-led art practice via 'Stone Butch Blues' 1993 by Leslie Feinberg. It tells the story of life as a butch lesbian in 1970s, working class America and is particularly unique due to the writer gaining full rights to the text, making it fully accessible online and for free. Florence and Elizabeth talk about hysterical clay, collapsing paintings, mark-making without sight, rigid heteronormative conventions, the patriarchy's rule which brings a perpetual fear of violence, butch lesbians in the 70s, drag queens, sex workers and femmes, extractions of earthly matter and energy, the dance floor as a space for belonging and expression, splattering the audience with clay, tenderness and care, finding comfort in the face of shame, and encountering ourselves imaginatively in relationship to objective reality. Please support this podcast via patreon.com/ARTFICTIONSPODCAST FLORENCE PEAKE florencepeake.com insta florence_peake Richard Saltoun Gallery 2023 16 April - 2 July 'Factual Actual Ensemble' at Southwark Park Galleries then touring to Fruitmarket Gallery and Towner Gallery 2023 11 Feb - 7 May 'Earth Spells: Witches of the Anthropocene' at RAM Museum, Exter with Caroline Achaintre, Emma Hart, Kris Lemsalu, Mercedes Mühleisen, Grace Ndiritu, Florence Peake, Kiki Smith, Lucy Stein 2023 18 Feb - 6 May 'Body Poetics' at Giant, Bournemouth with Penny Slinger, Helen Chadwick, Florence Peake, Louise Bourgeois, Judy Chicago, Charlotte Edey, Enam Gbewonyo, Rosie Gibbens, Guerrilla Girls, Evan Ifekoya, Ad Minoliti, Senga Nengudi, Niki De Saint Phalle, Carolee Schneemann, Tai Shani, Kiki Smith, Rae-Yen Song, Holly Stevenson curated by Marcelle Joseph and Bella Pelly-Fry 2021 Factual Actual at National Gallery 2021-22 Crude Care for British Art Show at Aberdeen Art Gallery then touring UK 2019 Apparition Apparition at Venice Biennale 2018 RITE: on this pliant body we slip our WOW! at De La Warr Pavillion 2015 Voicings for Block Universe at Modern Art Oxford, Somerset House ARTISTS + PERFORMERS Cameron Armitage Carolee Schneeman 'Meat Joy' Donald Judd Emma Hart Eve Stainton Fabian Peake Igor Sravinsky 'The Rite of Spring' Gabi Agis Grayson Duitu Jo Moran Jordan McKenzie Kate Bush Lee Bowie Lindsey Kemp Mercedes Grower Michael Clarke 'I am a Curious Orange' Rosemary Butcher Siobhan Davis Studios Tai Shani The Fall Yvonne Rainer BOOKS Juliet Jacques 'Variations' 2021 Carmen Maria Machado 'In the Dreamhouse' 2019 Octavia Butler
By request of several listeners and of my own heart, I made a longer-form introduction to Episode 4 that I ended up (duh, should have done this in the first place) pulling out as its own clip. I've edited, reedited, fleshed it out, and here it is. This minisode was prompted by some "fun" stuff on the Stone Butch Disco Instagram this week. [TL;DR: on the IG, some folks took our site's female lesbian namesake, Leslie Feinberg, whose website prominently displays her femaleness and she/her pronouns, and told us she was *actually* male -- then weaponized that fabrication to explain to us how the central aims of our project, 1) fighting for butch lesbians like us to reclaim our female bodies from the patriarchy and 2) fighting for femme lesbians to be allowed to say they exclusively desire female butch women, are both immoral and unenlightened to the obvious fact that sex is made up.] I recorded this as a "toolkit" for anyone listening anywhere who has experienced similar hostilities, online or IRL, for talking about the specific ways they experience being a butch lesbian or a femme lesbian. (If you know, you know.) If this hasn't happened to you, great! I'm glad the queer community respects somebody. But if it has, here's something I hope helps. I'm learning more and more how many people share with me, but are as terrified as I have been of talking about, the routine experience of being told their language for their own political analysis of their own identity is not just difficult, or even unpalatable, but also makes them a shitty dumb idiot meanie. Again: if that's not you, then ignore this one! It'll probably sound too quasi-academic and too much "blah blah." But if that is you, I hope this gives you a back-pocket resource to remind you (and me) there's not any damn thing wrong with us, and that Leslie Feinberg was a proud female lesbian who promoted transing gender conventions precisely because she fucked with gender like we do. Like a female-out-of-line does. Support Stone Butch Disco and the StoneButchDisco.com lesbian writing and archives project at https://www.patreon.com/stonebutchdisco.
Dans cette émission, nous nous intéressons à l'histoire de la non-histoire des lesbiennes. Contestation la plus radicale des modèles sexuels, les lesbiennes peuvent démonter le jeu sexuel et social qui se joue sur la scène patriarcale. C'est pourquoi elles ont été souvent occultées. Dans ce troisième et dernier volet nous revenons sur les luttes et les revendications de la communauté lesbienne depuis les années 50 jusqu'à nos jours. extraits : Etre fem dans les années 50 de Joan Nestle, Thérèse et Isabelle de Violette Leduc, Le corps lesbien de Monique Wittig, Stone blues butch de Leslie Feinberg,Le pulp description de Yuri, La petite dernière de Fatima Daas, La Gourgandine de Françoise Rey musiques : All I want is to be your girl de Holly Miranda, I wanna be me song de Domo Wilson, Barbara Butch, Suzie Noma de Muthoni Drummer Queen
Avery reads more passages from Leslie Feinberg's 1996 work Transgender Warriors — this time ones that respond to the same tired arguments people have been making against the trans community for decades now. How do you respond when someone insists that women's spaces shouldn't include trans women, that drag queens make a mockery of femininity, that trans women have male privilege? Feinberg offered concise, helpful answers years ago that can help us continue the good fight today. Click here for an episode transcript, which contains source links. Talking Points: (0:00 - 4:30) Call for stories + introducing the topic (4:31 - 10:14) Resisting biological essentialism when defining womanhood – "biology is not destiny"; no universal experience (10:15 - 13:14) Masculinity isn't inherently toxic + drag queens don't make a mockery of womanhood (13:15 - 20:23) Do trans women have male privilege? — Laverne Cox's view + Feinberg's additions (20:24 - 25:14) Making women's spaces safe for all women — there are no high-risk groups, only high-risk behaviors (25:15 - end) How anti-trans rhetoric harms everyone and the need for solidarity _____ Blessed Are the Binary Breakers is part of the Rock Candy Podcast Network. Find more shows at www.rockcandyrecordings.com. This show's theme song is "Aetherium" by Leah Horn. This episode also makes use of "Gold Beamer," "Can't Find," and "Lately" by Mother Hood.
In this episode, we talk with Suyane Oliveira (she/they) about the LGBT book Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg. Suyane told us, "Books don't really make me cry and this book made me cry so many times. It just pulled something out of me. I've never cried so much while reading a book." We discuss how Stone Butch Blues opened up a whole new world for Suyane and how it inspired the work she does at the New Haven Pride Center.Episode transcripts are available at thisqueerbook.com/podcast/stonebutchbluesBuy the books on this podcast at our Bookshop: bookshop.org/shop/thisqueerbookSupport the show
Avery reads excerpts from Leslie Feinberg's Transgender Warriors. Though the book was first published in 1996, the history it relates could not be more pertinent. In the shared passages, Feinberg emphasizes how we must not only demand and win but also defend our human rights. The fight isn't over until systems that deny us our rights are also overthrown, and every single person is free. Click here for an episode transcript. You can read Transgender Warriors for free online. Talking points: (0:00 - 4:48) Introducing Leslie Feinberg and Transgender Warriors (4:49 - 15:42) Resisting divide-and-conquer tactics, fighting to win and keep trans rights and all rights 15:43 - end) Wrapping up — send Avery your thoughts, fears, responses to current events
In dieser Folge haben wir Anja*Max Schneider zu Gast. Anja*Max hat sich in deren Masterarbeit intensiv mit Literatur der letzten 100 Jahre beschäftigt, in der es um lesbisch sein und nicht-konforme Geschlechtsidentitäten und -ausdruck geht, wie z. B. in "Zami" von Audre Lorde oder "Stone Butch Blues" von Leslie Feinberg. Wir sprechen mit Anja*Max darüber, welche Zusammenhänge und auch Ausschlüsse es bezüglich Geschlechtsidentität und Sexualität in queer-lesbischen Communities gab bzw. gibt und wie das in Literatur der letzten 100 Jahre verhandelt wird. Darüber kommen wir auf Labels und Outing und natürlich auf die Broschüre zu Nichtbinärität, die Anja*Max gemeinsam mit einer Illustratorin entwickelt hat. Sie soll dabei helfen, Worte zu finden, wenn man selbst oder jemand den man gern hat nicht-binär ist.
Pride started as a riot, a stand off; It was the beginning of revolution that is still ongoing. I'm still pinching myself that I got to sit down with this next guest. And even more blown away and delighted that this is our first episode of pride month. As far as I'm concerned she is the queen of all Femme's, and her late Butch hersband Leslie Feinberg was one of my greatest heros. These people changed my life forever as a young butch in my 20's, through their art and through their tireless commitment to be "OUT" as leaders in the gender revolution. I felt so honored to be in her presence and to have her share about her new book of poetry, Leslie, and their love and life together. I hope you love this person as much as I do. Please welcome Minnie Bruce Pratt. To learn more about what Minnie Bruce Pratt is up to, check out her website here: https://minniebrucepratt.net Show your support for these conversations and have the opportunity to join them here: https://patreon.com/thegenderrevealparty Each week a new episode will be released with another human being that has something to say about gender. My goal is to convey that gender is a construct that was all made up and it's way more fluid than any of us can fathom. Gender and genitals are NOT the same thing. These weekly stories are about gender reveal. I hope that you will soak up the stories of our guests and share them with an intention to educate others and love the differences. It's been my calling for years to love the transphobia out of our human systems. Thanks for sharing in my purpose.
Did you know most people start to transition before they decide to transition? Louka Maju Goetzke (Frankfurt Uni) shares research on transition practices, as well as all kinds of fascinating findings on transitioning, forming the desire to transition, and other activities surrounding gender. Louka interrogates the making and crossing of boundaries which produce gender transitions and the distinction which is drawn between gender transitions and other practices of gender. We also briefly touch on cis people's gender affirming practices, only to arrive at the thought indeed, everyone might be trans. Come and smash the cis/trans binary with @LoukaGo on Twitter and @queerlitpodcast on Instagram! Text mentioned Leslie Feinberg's Stonebutch Blues Questions you should be able to respond to after listening: 1. What is a transition? 2. Louka mentions the relation between desiring to become something and knowing that you are something. How does this relation play out? 3. What gender affirming practices have you encountered in literature? Are they always performed by trans* people? 4. A transition can take many shapes and forms. I invite you to reflect on your own gender journey and be kind to people who are finding their way through theirs.
"An Exclusively Gay and Lesbian Bookstore for Chicago"Time travel with us to a very special place in episode four of Unboxing Queer History!Between 1988 and 1997, Carrie Barnett and Brett Shingledecker founded and ran People Like Us: Chicago's only exclusively LGBTQ bookstore, located just north of Belmont at 3321 N. Clark Street. The bookstore was unique at a time when many queer spaces were segregated into women's or men's spaces. Carrie and Brett did not separate lesbian and gay male literature, but instead shelved everything together by genre. Erotica was separated out, but otherwise the collection was integrated. This created an overlap; an interaction between two cultures that were often polarized even within the queer spectrum. Of course, People Like Us became much, much more than just a bookstore - it was a cultural center: an everyday anchor for Chicago's queer community, a tourist hotspot for queer visitors to Chicago, and a foundation for the development of queer literature by publishers. PLU even hosted an incredible number of queer legends and icons–polaroid photos from events show speakers from Alison Bechdel and Lea DeLaria to Rupert Kinnard, John Preston, Leslie Feinberg, Greg Louganis, Rita Mae Brown, and beyond.Listen in to learn more about this incredible space and to hear from Carrie, Brett, and patrons of People Like Us on why having an exclusively LGBTQ bookstore was so important for the Chicago LGBTQ community, as well as where to find that touchstone today. Unboxing Queer History is created by Ari Mejia, Jen Dentel, and Erin Bell. Produced by Ari Mejia with Hannah Viti. Artwork by Mere Montgomery & theme music by Danny Robles! And special thanks to Jules Gordon for co-producing the episode on People Like Us books and Alyssa Edes for producing the episode on Lorrainne Sade Baskerville! Special thanks to RAILS (Reaching Across Illinois Library System) for the "My Library Is... " grant that funded this project
Back after many weeks absence. We catch-up, discuss Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues, winter holiday celebration, and Enby Claus. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/twopansinapod/message
Exposición PASEOS Y ALAMEDAS DE LA ILUSTRACION EN EL PAIS VASCO, de la bienal Mugak. Traducción al euskara del ensayo de Leslie Feinberg, BORROKALARI TRANS GENEROAK, a cargo de Fermintxo Zabaltza. Entrevista con Josean Olabe sobre "Rumbo a la esencia" un cómic sobre el muelle donostiarra. ...
Episode 24 of Responding To... a podcast where I aim to expand thinking about all things gender and sexuality, especially for an audience of older, cisgender, heterosexual, white men. In this episode I harken back to episode 19 and dip us again into the rich, educational waters of art. I read 4 poems by 4 different authors around the themes of gender, sexuality, love, and connection. Episode transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1H4Z_0KJZ2AEbRk3690Noi0c8oQN2nP9yU81tTcCQriQ/edit?usp=sharing This Episode's Recommendations: The Transreal: Political Aesthetics of Crossing Realities by Micha Cárdenas - https://bookshop.org/books/the-transreal-political-aesthetics-of-crossing-realities/9780983915249 Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg - https://www.lesliefeinberg.net/ Emergent Strategy by Adrienne Maree Brown - https://www.akpress.org/emergentstrategy.html Before I Step Outside [You Love Me] by Travis Alabanza - https://travisalabanza.bigcartel.com/product/before-i-step-outside-you-love-me-chapbook Want to make a sustaining monthly donation to the podcast? Here's the patreon: www.patreon.com/respondingto Got a question I should respond to in a future episode? submit your question on the blog - https://responding2oldwhitedudesquestionsaboutgendersexuality.home.blog/ or email me - Respondingtooldwhitedudes@gmail.com Follow the podcast on Twitter - twitter.com/to_responding
The spiritual landscape of nineteenth-century rural Russia blended native traditions and beliefs with Christianity; this is the world in which Black Book, an independent video game produced by Russian studio Morteshka, is set. In this episode, Avery shares some of what Black Book taught them about this syncretism of belief (without spoiling the game, don't worry!). Then, they bring in Leslie Feinberg's 1996 text Transgender Warriors to discuss similar tensions between indigenous and Christian traditions in medieval Western Europe. What happened to other gods and spirits after the rise of Christianity? How did sorcerers like Black Book's young woman protagonist navigate this spiritual blend as they either helped or cursed the peasants who both revered and feared them for their knowledge? What's all this got to do with trans folk? Read along with the episode transcript here. _______ Talking Points: (0:00 - 3:50) Introducing Black Book: playing as Vasilisa, a young sorceress in a world where people believe both in Christian and pagan teachings (3:51 - 10:50) Gods become demons; old rituals take on Christian elements; icons & feast days blend Christian & pagan traditions (10:51 - 13:16) Sorcerers and knowers — both revered and feared; tension between them and Christian priests (13:17 - 21:01) Moving westward and back in time to Feudal Europe: similar tension between Christianity and native religions; transgender expression targeted (21:02 - end) Wrapping up _______ Blessed Are the Binary Breakers is part of the Rock Candy Podcast Network. Find more shows at www.rockcandyrecordings.com. This show's theme song is "Aetherium" by Leah Horn.
Russell and Robert meet artist Rosanne Robertson on the eve of their new exhibition 'Subterrane' at Maximilian William gallery in London. The Cornwall based artist works in sculpture, photography, drawing and performance to explore the boundaries of the human body and its environment. Capturing moments, schisms and shifts, their work often explores negative natural spaces to create expanded representations of the figure. Their first solo exhibition has just opened coinciding with Frieze London art fair.We discuss Robertson's ongoing body of work titled Stone (Butch) which explores the terrain of the Queer body in the landscape. The term ‘stone butch' is taken from the lesbian and trans activist Leslie Feinberg's 1993 novel Stone Butch Blues in which the oppression of lesbian, trans, butch and femme identities is laid bare. Through an interest in terrain, Robertson elucidates upon Feinberg's metaphoric ‘raincoat layer,' the layer which protects the body from hostile external forces.The sculptural articulations of Stone (Butch) are created by plaster casting directly in crevices in natural rock formations at Godrevy Point, St Ives Bay, Cornwall and The Bridestones, West Yorkshire. The ‘sculptural void' makes physical a negative space created by the power of the sea and air. The sculptures embody a space that is shifting and fluid, reclaiming a natural space for Queer and Butch identity from a history of being deemed ‘against nature'. Robertson sees the natural stone formations as queer forms and changing bodies that are not set in stone, but revealed to us over a long period of time, as fluid structures shaped by water and erosion. Queer bodies which are as fluid as the water that shapes them and as plural as the grains of sand that erode them.Rosanne Robertson (they/them) (b. Sunderland 1984) is a contemporary artist based in West Cornwall. They obtained their BA in Fine Art from the Manchester School of Art in 2010. In June 2021, Robertson unveiled their first public sculpture, commissioned for the 10th edition of Sculpture in the City and installed at London's iconic Gherkin skyscraper until Spring 2022. To coincide with this unveiling, Robertson will perform Stone (Butch): Undercurrents in Nocturnal Creatures, a contemporary art festival programmed by the Whitechapel Gallery and Sculpture in the City. Their second public sculpture – commissioned by Sunderland Council as a legacy to the 700 women who worked in Sunderland's shipyards – will be unveiled later this year. Their work and writing are featured in Breaking the Mould: Sculpture by Women Since 1945, (London: Hayward Gallery Publishing, 2020) which was published on the occasion of the eponymous Arts Council Collection exhibition. Robertson will present their first solo exhibition at Maximillian William, London in October 2021, during the same month, they will exhibit in the group exhibition Seen at the Newlyn Art Gallery & The Exchange, Cornwall. While Associate Artist during the 2019 Yorkshire Sculpture International, Robertson presented a solo display, Stone (Butch), at The Hepworth Wakefield, Wakefield, 2019 and exhibited in the group exhibition Associated Matter at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Yorkshire, 2019. Works by Robertson... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Born in NYC, Reneé Imperato, is a proud anti racist, pro union trans woman who has lived her life fighting for the rights of others. In this interview she shares her memories of growing up in New York including her childhood spent in Times Square, her friendship with Leslie Feinberg, and her memories of the legendary 220 club in New York City's West Village. Throughout the interview Reneé weaves in the struggle for trans rights with the Black Lives Matter movement and union organizing. (Summary by Ted Kerr.)
SERIE: Revolutionary Girl Utena ADVERTENCIA: Lenguaje adulto, spoilers, menciones de abuso s*xual, p*dofilia e inc*sto. Traigamos la revolución!! Miu e Ine se van del otro lado del espectro butch-femme de los dibujitos 90s con Revolutionary Girl Utena! Incluye discusiones sobre la producción y censura de lo "clandestino", las relaciones sociales de la expresión de género, Leslie Feinberg! Contrapoints! E Ine hace La Cosa de Lxs Profesorxs de Historia º Disponible en Spotify, Google Podcast, Anchor e iVoox! Siganos en twitter e instagram en @ tortanimadas o nuestros instagrams personales: axolotlcitos e ine.don y twitters personales axolotlcitos y MAS_M0N0Sº Links adicionales: The Aesthetic - Contrapoints: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1afqR5QkDM Revolutionary Girl Utena - Girls Like Girls AMV: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eR3QMHAFW8s La música del inicio y el final fueron hechas por Nawel Torres/Polibius - Twitter: https://twitter.com/nawelt0rres - Instagram: https://instagram.com/naweltorres - Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/polibius
This episode features Nancy Bereano, founder of Ithaca's groundbreaking, award-winning lesbian and feminist press, Firebrand Books (1985-2000). Speaking with Rural Poetics host, Alec Pollak, Bereano reflects on the heyday of feminist small-press publishing and her role bringing up notable authors such as Alison Bechdel, Leslie Feinberg, and Audre Lorde.
Well, it's been aaaages (due to LC having to do a hell of a lot of late nights for her day job - don't ask) but we're back with Episode 5 of our series on LGBTQ+ authors, this time on Leslie Feinberg's acclaimed "Stone Butch Blues". In discussing our most affecting examination of the LGBTQ+ experience, the girls get into: Stone Butch Blues being, straight up, a critical novel in our learning about the historical experience of gay women when living a gay lifestyle or presenting as gender nonbinary was straight up illegal Trigger warning: This episode discusses physical abuse and rape – a lot. Because it happened a lot to these characters we loved. That's why we need to talk about it and show it in the way it's shown in the book. But if that is a source of trauma for you please be aware before listening, or indeed reading Stone Butch Blues. It's important to note that this story is restricted to the experience of a white gay woman, presenting as gender non-binary in 1950s America, but this is also something the author is very clear about – with Jess learning from her friends of colour what their struggles at the intersection of racism and homophobia are. And we experience the effects of that on her loved ones along with her This book isn't for the faint-hearted. Or maybe it is. We need to look the vile things our predecessors did head on. We are the better for reading about people we would have known or been related to or loved, dehumanising these people simply because they did not understand the way they live their lives But I mean, of course there were tangents: Chloe has named her new haircut. She's that excited about it Chloe and Katie get into a fight over the symbolic nature of the Purple balloon in the Permission to Dance video – Katie's likely more accurate but Chloe's theory is a LOT more entertaining Interestingly Chloe did also come up with her latest possible t-shirt phrase “Men, lesbians want nothing to do with your gross little willies” Followed closely by Cliodhna's “Lesbian Minesweeper Wiz” And not so much a tangent but definitely something we want to be aware of – given the anti-capitalist stance of the author we do not have ads for this week's episode (even if they are made up and not for anything real). Instead LC is sharing information on LGBTQ+ resources It's all here on our latest episode of Chick Lit 4 LIfe! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lc-lewis/message
Clovis Maillet, historien médiéviste et performeur, est l'invité du 99e épisode de La Poudre. Avec Lauren Bastide, ils ont parlé d'Eugène/Eugénie, de Leslie Feinberg et de Jeanne d'Arc.L'édito de Lauren :Il n'y a pas deux sexes. Non, je vous promets. Que ça soit biologiquement, chromosomiquement ou hormonalement, il est impossible de diviser les humains en deux catégories, il existe tout un spectre qui a été très bien décrit dans les travaux de la chercheuse Anne Fausto-Sterling. Il existe partout, tout le temps et depuis toujours, des personnes intersexes, dont les caractéristiques physiques ou biologiques ne correspondent aux définitions classiques de la masculinité et de la féminité. Ces personnes subissent aujourd'hui, en France, des violences médicales absolument inimaginables tant on s'acharne à vouloir à tout prix les faire rentrer dans les cases de la binarité de genre. Je vous renvoie au merveilleux documentaire de mon ami Océan, En Infiltré·e·s, dans lequel il a longuement échangé avec Mö, une personne intersexe en lutte contre le système médical qui a bousillé sa santé et son identité. Je vous renvoie aussi au site du Collectif Intersexes et Allié·e·s qui fait un travail colossal d'accompagnement et de transmission sur ces questions si invisibles dans le débat public. Figurez-vous qu'au Moyen Âge, ces personnes qu'on appelait hermaphrodites sont parfaitement reconnues et nommées, et personne ne songe à les forcer à rentrer dans l'une des deux catégories de sexe. Au Moyen Âge, il y a trois sexes. C'est l'une des découvertes réjouissantes et déterminantes que j'ai faite en lisant le livre Les Genres fluides de mon invité Clovis Maillet, historien médiéviste que j'ai eu la chance de recevoir sur la scène du Carreau du Temple. Résumé de l'épisode :Clovis Maillet est historien médiéviste et l'auteur du révolutionnaire Les Genres fluides, de Jeanne d'Arc aux saintes trans, un essai qui explore les formes de transidentités au Moyen Âge. Refusé aux Beaux Arts, il a trouvé sa voix en études d'histoire (07:04), un domaine qui l'a vite passionné et en particulier l'histoire médiévale qu'il connaissait mal avant d'y plonger tête la première. Autant intéressé par l'histoire en elle-même que par la façon dont on l'écrit, il défend l'importance de l'analyse des personnes concerné·e·s qui vont décrypter différemment les sources, sensibles à des éléments invisibles pour d'autres (14:20). C'est son projet aujourd'hui, aux côtés d'autres chercheur·euse·s, d'approfondir les recherches historiques sur les transidentités, à l'instar de la démarche de Michelle Perrot – entre autres –, pour l'histoire des femmes. Les personnes trans ont en effet souvent été effacées de l'histoire ou invisibilisées, même si Clovis Maillet met en garde contre les politiques de la visibilité et leur effet sur les figures mises en lumière (21:25). Pour ses propres recherches sur les saint·e·s trans au Moyen Âge, il a particulièrement travaillé à remettre en série et nommer les parcours des ces personnes (25:39). L'enjeu était grand de trouver des termes qui ne trahiraient pas les significations de l'époque mais pourraient également prendre tout leur sens aujourd'hui (35:24). Il s'est aussi penché sur la figure paradoxale de Jeanne d'Arc (38:57), à la fois sainte catholique et héroïne anticléricale. Ce cas complexe en termes de genre ne cesse d'ailleurs de l'étonner, tant il aurait été plus facile, pour tous les bords tentant de s'approprier ce personnage de choisir des égéries plus lisses (42:00). Immergé dans les échelles de valeurs médiévales qui, bien que patriarcales, prête par exemple plus attention à l'abstinence ou non qu'à l'appartenance à un genre (1:00:65), Clovis Maillet entend bien poursuivre ses explorations et continuer de braquer le projecteur sur l'histoire des transidentités.Bonne écoute, et continuez de faire parler La Poudre ! La Poudre est une émission produite par Nouvelles ÉcoutesRéalisation et générique : Aurore Meyer-MahieuProgrammation et coordination : Gaïa MartyMixage : Marion EmeritPrivacy Policy and California Privacy Notice.
Anthony Sis (they/them) interviews the fifth and final guest for the "Beyond Binaries" special series, Foula Dimopoulos (ze/hir/hirs | he/him/his/), in honor of LGBTQ+ Pride Month. For more information on resources to celebrate LGBTQ+ Pride Month, please visit: https://diversity.cornell.edu/our-community/dei-celebration-resources For more information on PFLAG, please visit: https://pflag.org/ To access a free PDF copy of "Stone Butch Blues" by Leslie Feinberg, please visit: https://www.lesliefeinberg.net/ To learn more about the series "Pride" by FX Networks, please visit: https://www.fxnetworks.com/shows/pride
If y'all haven't had a chance to check out "Stone Butch Blues" by Leslie Feinberg you really should! You can read it for free here: https://www.lesliefeinberg.net
If y'all haven't had a chance to check out "Stone Butch Blues" by Leslie Feinberg you really should! You can read it for free here: https://www.lesliefeinberg.net
Minnie Bruce Pratt is a queer and feminist icon, renowned for her activism and art. With another spike in anti-LGBT legislation around the South, Minnie Bruce discusses what it’s like to be targeted by these laws. When she came out in the 1970s, the state of North Carolina took custody of her children away from her. And when her spouse, Leslie Feinberg, grew ill, Minnie Bruce experienced directly how our healthcare system treats trans Americans.On the Reckon Interview, she discusses her history of turning personal pain into art and activism, how growing up in the crucible of the South shaped her career of activism and the importance of sharing the stories of queer Southerners.To support scholarships for LGBTQ students attending the University of Alabama and to hear more from Minnie Bruce, go here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ua-lgbtq-alumni-fireside-chat-with-minnie-bruce-pratt-joshua-burford-tickets-148276237217Sign up for The Conversation newsletter here: https://bit.ly/3dzfbfh See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Lachlan was born with a vagina. His is the story of how a boy learned to be a girl, then learned to be invisible, then a lesbian, before learning that he could just be who he was all along, except that it’s still … complicated. In this super-sized episode… Lachlan is a 41-year-old transgender man. He describes himself as white, straight-ish, monogamish and single. He describes his body as a round, cuddly bear. Bookmark moments: 6:33 - Lachlan shares the complications around early sexual desire for him, because he knew he was attracted to other little girls. 11:11 - Lachlan’s parents don’t pressure him to gender conform as a kid, though trans isn’t a known thing back then. Until, a birthday party. He learns about “passing” and blouses, and struggles through his teens. 18:21 - He talks about his rich fantasy life as a teen, in which he is a tall handsome football-playing penis-bearing male vaguely modeled on Macguyver. 23:08 - Lachlan’s first sexual experience of any kind is at age 21 with his first girlfriend, who teaches him to masturbate. He squirts! 35:37 - The concept of transgender comes into his awareness. 40:49 - Lachlan comes out, despite fearing he will lose his entire family. 46:44 - After the news is broken to his father (by his mother) it is never spoken of between them again. 47:18 - Lachlan shares outward steps of transition; therapy, hormones, telling people you work with, growing facial hair. 53:36 - Becoming a man complicates his lesbian relationship. 55:05 - Lachlan details how sexuality transitions along with transitioning: the impacts of testosterone, top and bottom surgical options, the discomfort of still having to get a pap smear, etc. 1:08:14 - Lachlan talks about the mechanics around having sex in present day. 1:11:28 - Top surgery has enhanced appearance but decreased sensation. 1:14:45 - Heartbreak and pandemic create time alone. 1:16:12 - Lachlan passes fully as a male, and decides if and when disclosure comes, in normal life as well as dating. 1:20:28 - He opens the door on bathroom talk. The Lowdown The entire Lowdown Q&A is on Patreon this week because this episode was already SO long!!! Don’t forget – ALL audio extras are FREE at Patreon! ALL audio extras are now FREE for everyone!!!!! They can be accessed at www.patreon.com/goodgirlstalkaboutsex. If you’d like to support the work I do, you can make a monthly contribution at that site. Mentioned in the episode: Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg – download a free PDF of the book at https://www.lesliefeinberg.net Book a PJ Party!!! All the info and registrations are at www.leahcarey.com/pjparty FACEBOOK GROUP: www.facebook.com/groups/goodgirlstalk HAVE A QUESTION OR COMMENT?: Leave a voicemail for Leah at 720-GOOD-SEX (720-466-3739) PATREON: Become a community supporter at www.patreon.com/goodgirlstalkaboutsex RATE THIS POD: Leave a rating and review at www.ratethispodcast.com/goodgirls BE A GUEST: Want to be on the show? Visit www.leahcarey.com/guest COACHING: Want to talk with Leah directly? Visit www.leahcarey.com/coaching Host – Leah Carey (website, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, email) Audio Editor – Gretchen Kilby Music – Nazar Rybak
Avery draws from multiple sources to discuss Halloween as a holiday that has elevated gender diversity since its origins deep in the ancient Celt observance of Samhein. As a holiday that has undergone various transitions, traveling across time and space and religious experiences while maintaining its binary-breaking core, Halloween is the perfect time for those of us who don't fit into gender norms to live into our holy truths. Indeed, its rise in popularity in the United States may well have relied on LGBT communities! Talking Points: - (2:50 - 5:19) Leslie Feinberg - "...The old butches told me there was one night of the year that the cops never arrested us – Halloween." - (5:20 - 8:10) Judy Grahn - "The qualities of impersonation and the dangerous business of crossing over from one world to another help explain why Halloween is the most significant Gay holiday." - (8:11 - 16:10) Samhein's survival in spite of Church suppression; history of matrilineal peasants vs. patriarchal landlords and priests - (16:11 - 19:35) Feinberg - "Transgender [expression] has been outlawed by the ruling classes of both our systems -- feudal nobility and modern industrialists alike." - (19:36 - 23:40) Halloween comes to the USA; "cross dressing" policed until ~1914 when the police give up and no longer arrest "cross dressers" on Halloween night - (23:41 - 25:54) David Frum - "the Halloween craze started in gay culture," 1970s San Francisco - (25:55 - end) Grahn - "On Halloween 1980, my lover and long-time partner Wendy Caden and I...go to San Francisco and look at the Fairies and Queens..." Find resource citations and an episode transcript at blessedarethebinarybreakers.com/podcast
Buck Angel is a transexual activist, entrepreneur, motivational speaker, YouTuber and many more other things. Born female, Buck was diagnosed with gender dysphoria in his twenties after a tumultuous adolescence. Now in his late fifties, he speaks candidly about his transition to become a man and how that cured his dysphoria. In this episode we talk about being a guinea pig, almost becoming a supermodel and the importance of taking ownership of your own life. Follow Buck on Twitter @BuckAngel or subscribe to his YouTube channel Check out Rachel Mason's documentary: Circus of Books The book: Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues If you enjoy the podcast, don't forget to subscribe, share and review. Follow us on Twitter @toughlovepc or on Instagram @missleonardis
Rachel talks Justin Townes Earle, Williamsburg blues, and an inspirational quote from Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues. (Also, she misspoke -- this is episode 135, not 136!) Click here for the Rainbow Rodeo Kickstarter! Justin Townes Earle -- “Workin’ For the MTA” (Harlem River Blues) Bronwyn Keith-Hynes -- “North Garden” (Fiddler’s Pastime) Erin Frisby -- “Theia and Gaia” (ECDYSIS) Jeremy Parsons -- “Good Ole Days” (Single) Emily Barker -- “The Woman Who Planted Trees” (A Dark Murmuration of Words) Lawn -- “Nighttime Creatures” (Johnny) Fuimos Viajeros -- “Viaje 3” (Dulce Condena) Tennessee Jet -- “Off to War” (The Country) Rachel Angel -- “Strapped” (Highway Songs) Ashley Riley -- “Close To Me” (Single) Bethany Thomas -- “Walls + Ceilings” (BT/SHE/HER) Billy Edwin -- “No More Clouds” (New American West) Caitlin Quisenberry -- “Imogene” (Single) Send me music via SubmitHub! Send me money via Ko-fi or Patreon. Find Rachel and her comic via https://linktr.ee/rachel.cholst
This episode follows our conversation with Staff Sgt. Kevin Flike, a Green Beret, and Alan Price, an Army Veteran and the current JFK Library and Museum Director, released on 8-24-20.Staff Sergeant Kevin Flike is a true role model for so many in any culture, and for both service members and civilians. He continues to educate us through public speaking, his work with the Green Beret Foundation, and through academic leadership that began at the Sloan school at MIT and the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Make sure to check out Kevin’s 2019 documentary Wounded by War for an incredible view of his story of injury and resilience. The US Army Special Forces is the special operations force established in 1952. Throughout the 1950s the Green Beret was worn as an unofficial part of the SF uniform, until 1961 when President JFK authorized the GB as the official head gear. JFK called the green beret "a symbol of excellence, a badge of courage, a mark of distinction in the fight for freedom."Many thanks to the JFK Presidential Library and Museum for hosting the Home Base team for this conversation, Leslie Feinberg our government relations director, and Army Veteran Pat Smith, Home Base’s Special Operation’s liaison. Thank you Staff Sergeant Flike for your service both before and after 2011, and thank you to Kimberlee Flike and your family for their service over these trying years. To learn more and connect with us:www.homebase.org/homebasenationTwitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedInHome Base Nation Team:Steve Monaco, US Marine Corps Brendan McCaffrey, Maureen Roderick, Charlotte Luckey, Karianne Kraus, Chuck Clough, DeeDee Kearney, Natalie BonelliProducer and Host:Ron Hirschberg Thank you to:Photography - Joe Wallace for photographyOn location recording - Chuck Clough of Above The Basement Introduction scene and "Taliban Fight" score - David G. Moore Home Base Media Lab Chairman:Peter Smyth The views expressed by guests to the Home Base Nation podcast are their own and their appearance on the program does not imply an endorsement of them or any entity they represent. Views and opinions expressed by guests are those of the guests and do not necessarily reflect the view of the Massachusetts General Hospital, Home Base, the Red Sox Foundation or any of its officials.
Avery brings the story of Rebekah and her mother's household told in Genesis 24 into conversation with social anthropologists' understandings of the communal, cooperative societies that preceded the birth of patriarchal, patrilineal societies across the globe. Ze draws from Leslie Feinberg's text Transgender Warriors to explore how the rise of patriarchy and class impacted ancient persons whom we might identify as trans or otherwise gender diverse -- including the biblical character Rebekah, whom the original Hebrew text identifies as a na'ar, a "young man." Other texts from which this episode draws are Mx. Chris Paige's OtherWise Christian and Joy Ladin's The Soul of the Stranger: Reading God and Torah from a Transgender Perspective, as well as An Introduction to the Hebrew Bible by Gravett, Bohmbach, Greifenhagen, and Polaski. For an episode transcript, visit blessedarethebinarybreakers.com/podcast-archive.
Web: queerit.co Twitter: @rwoodmass, @queeritco Instagram: queeritco Facebook: queeritco Check out: Business for the People & Toi Smith and McKensie Mack. Read: "Radical Dharma" by Angel Kyodo Williams, Lama Rod Owens, & Jasmine Syedullah and "Stone Butch Blues" by Leslie Feinberg. Follow and refer people to Queerit.co, and watch for the upcoming Patreon here: @rwoodmass, @queeritco Support our guests and the creation of future episodes through sponsorship (bezier.show/support) or by buying Bézier swag. This episode of Bézier is sponsored by SuperHi. Transcript link. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bezier/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bezier/support
Money and Nikeeta are weekly for Pride month 2020! On this bonus episode, we talk about the largest action Nikeeta has ever helped organize. We also sort through white lesbian foolishness on Twitter and talk queer women and masculinity. Nikeeta is a dainty daddy and Money is a low femme with aggressive tendencies. Where to find us: IG & Twitter - @queerwocpod FB - https://www.facebook.com/QueerWOCpod/ Tumblr - www.QueerWOC.com Listen to us on Soundcloud, Stitcher, Castbox, PocketCasts Contribute to QueerWOC via CashApp: $QueerWOCPod Become a Patron: https://www.patreon.com/queerwocpod Love us out loud by doing The R’s: Rate, Review, Request, Repost, Retweet, and Reply! Use the hashtag #QueerWOC to talk all things the podcast Send us an email or submit your Curved Chronicles: QueerWOCpod@gmail.com QueerWOC of the Week: 00:07:55 Freelance Photographer, Grassroots organizer, and Trans Latinx community builder Jesse Pratt Lopez @jprattlopez.photo cashapp: $jplopez22 venmo: @PaegeTurner (last 4 #s: 6590) End violence against [Trans] sex workers by investing in their safety. https://www.gofundme.com/f/homeless-black-trans-women-fund Community Contributors: 00:17:23 New reviews from Iya.domin (5star) Finally catching up! CaliforniaDaydreamer (5star) Dark girl in a milk world Recommendations: “Betty” on HBO, Looking For Lorraine by Imani Perry, The Stars and the Blackness Between Them by Junauda Petrus Topic: 00:30:48 Nikeeta lit up the crowd of protestors in Syracuse last Saturday. Nikeeta and the rest of BLM Syracuse partnered with RAHA and Cuse Youth BLM to organize the largest demonstration against police violence this city has ever seen! Son only that, they educated thousands of people about getting cops out of schools and #DefundPolice 00:49:26 We also talk lesbian gender labels and why white twitter lesbians should consider shutting their twitter fingers up before trying to tell queer women of color what terms they can use to describe their gender presentation. https://www.them.us/story/inqueery-butch This is inspired by a twitter conversation around Roxane Gay referring to herself as a Bisexual Butch, and the white lesbians who were in their feelings about it. You can read the article, but its dated and ashy. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/04/13/t-magazine/butch-stud-lesbian.html Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold https://bookshop.org/books/boots-of-leather-slippers-of-gold-the-history-of-a-lesbian-community-20th-anniversary/9781138785854 Stone Butch Blues [Ase to Leslie Feinberg] https://lesliefeinberg.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Stone-Butch-Blues-by-Leslie-Feinberg.pdf Curved Chronicle: None this episode so be sure to Send us your curved chronicles to QueerWOCpod@gmail.com
On vous propose de découvrir la culture Drag King avec Lickie McGuire. Vous pouvez d'ailleurs retrouver son travail ici : @LickieMcGuire sur Twitter.Voici les lectures dans l'ordre :Leslie Feinberg, Stone Butch Blues, Chapitre 1 « Lettre à Teresa », Hystériques & AssociéEs, Paris, 2019. hysteriquesetassociees.org/2019/10/27/chapitre-1/ Teresa de Lauretis, « Quand les lesbiennes n'étaient pas des femmes » Marie-Hélène Bourcier et Suzette Robichon (Éds) : Parce que les lesbiennes ne sont pas des femmes… Actes du colloque autour de l'œuvre de Monique Wittig Leslie Feinberg, Stone Butch Blues, Chapitre 1 « Lettre à Teresa », Hystériques & AssociéEs, Paris, 2019. hysteriquesetassociees.org/2019/10/27/chapitre-1/Teresa de Lauretis, « Quand les lesbiennes n'étaient pas des femmes » Marie-Hélène Bourcier et Suzette Robichon (Éds) : Parce que les lesbiennes ne sont pas des femmes… Actes du colloque autour de l'œuvre de Monique Wittig Actes du colloque des 16-17 juin 2001, Broché, 2002.Judith Jack Halberstam, Female Masculinity, Edition Broché, 1998.Sam Bourcier, Queer Zone 1, « Classés X : qui écrit l'histoire des butchs/fems ? », Queer Zones La trilogie, Editions Amsterdam, 2018. centrebombe.org/Queer.Zones.1.pol…t.des.savoirs.pdfLickieMcGuire, zine Kings, 2019, (sur demande à l'autrice).Plusieurs pauses musicales ponctueront l'émission. On vous met les titres ici, dans l'ordre de programmation :La Fileuse de Félix Mendelssohn, Daniel BarenboïmGrrrl Like, Dope Saint JudeTrip in fiction- Nadia Struiwigh - LenticularExtraterrestrial - Nadia Struiwigh - LenticularExtrait de l'émission « On est tous dans le brouillard », « Questions de genre, chap4 : l'activisme Queer », 23/11/2005, France CuturePrends ta place - Laitue VivaceExtrait du Documentaire « Paroles de King », Chriss lag, 2016Gueule de Gouines - Grace et Volupté Van Van – Gouines à chienWanda Landowska joue Mozart - kv 606Lala Ce Wet- DrippinMiss Kittin - Requiem for a HitHildur Gudnadottir – We Know – TrappedTGAF - Boiler Room EristoffLove du Masque et La GouineN'hésitez pas à nous suivre sur les réseaux et à nous écrire ( lemasqueetlagouine@radiocampus.org)
This special episode centers around the current protests against police murders of Black persons in the United States. In the fight against antiblackness, I see an urgent need to break down the binary constructed between US and THEM that allows our common enemy to divide and conquer our communities one by one. As trans activist Leslie Feinberg notes, each of us must become "fighters against each other's oppression...and in doing so...forge an invincible movement against all forms of injustice and inequality." Frederick Douglass once said, "When I ran away from slavery, it was for myself; when I advocated emancipation, it was for my people; but when I stood up for the rights of women, self was out of the question, and I found a little nobility in the act." May each of us strive towards that "little nobility" of joining other's battles for liberation as if they were our own. During this Pride month, I call on my fellow white LGBT/queer people in particular to fight against antiblackness, honoring that the first Pride was a riot led by trans women of color. Timestamps: (0:00 - 3:00) The US is on fire - is your heart? (3:01 - 4:04) white LGBT persons who are against the protests - do they not know our history? The first Pride was a riot against police brutality (4:05 - 8:09) the binary of US versus THEM and the truth that our freedom is intertwined - Fannie Lou Hamer, MLK Jr., Leslie Feinberg, intersectionality (8:10 - 11:19) passage from Leslie Feinberg - "What would motivate someone who didn't face the same hatred and abuse to join me as an ally?" - Finding Frederick Douglass (11:20 - 13:44) Fighting for and taking risks for oppressed groups to which we don't personally belong; overcoming the fear of backlash (13:45 - end) The Litany of Humility - "From the fear of being despised, from the fear of suffering rebukes...deliver me."
Paul B. Preciado est le nouvel invité du podcast Le Goût de M proposé par « M Le magazine du Monde ». Le philosophe et essayiste a répondu à distance depuis son appartement du XXe arrondissement parisien aux questions de la journaliste et productrice Géraldine Sarratia, à l'occasion de la sortie prochaine de son livre Je suis un monstre qui vous parle. Paul B. Preciado y évoque son enfance à Burgos, dans l'Espagne franquiste, entre un père garagiste et une mère couturière. Il revient sur son éducation catholique et son initiation à la philosophie, sa filiation avec les écrits de Jean Genet et Michel Foucault, sa libération à Madrid puis à New York à l'occasion de la découverte de la culture queer et d'identités dissidentes, sa transition de femme à homme trans, son admiration pour Annie Sprinkle, Leslie Feinberg et Barbara Hammer qui l'ont aidé à devenir l'homme qu'il est aujourd'hui, la révélation qu'a représenté pour lui le cinéma d'Antonioni et de Pasolini, deux réalisateurs qui ont bouleversé son rapport à l'espace et au corps. Il déconstruit la notion de genre et de bon goût pour appeler à l'invention d'autres esthétiques de vie moins normées.Toutes les deux semaines, une personnalité issue du monde de la culture, de la mode, du design ou de la cuisine racontera son histoire personnelle du goût. Mais aussi ses dégoûts. Comment elle s'est façonné un art de vivre, en continuité ou au contraire en rupture avec son milieu d'origine. Comment celui-ci a évolué au cours de sa vie, de ses rencontres, de ses expériences. Un podcast produit par Géraldine Sarratia (Genre idéal)Réalisation : Sulivan ClabautMusique : Gotan Project Retrouvez tous les podcasts du Monde sur https://www.lemonde.fr/podcasts See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Instead of an interview, this episode dives into faith history to present three stories that may resonate with trans and nonbinary people today. I draw from others' research to share accounts of: the divine manifestation Shiva from Hindu scriptures (as well as some of his devotees across time); Judaism's Joseph of Genesis; and the Catholic Saint Joan of Arc. Each of these figures (or their followers) breaks out of the gender roles assigned to them, sometimes facing condemnation for doing so - and yet they share their gifts in ways that bring healing and transformation to themselves and to others. Content warning: descriptions of anti-trans ideologies and violence. Talking Points: - (0:00 - 3:33) Housekeeping, introducing the episode themes - (3:34 - 11:06) Shiva - the ultimate binary breaker - (11:07 - 13:46) Hijras - a "third gender" community of India that will not be erased - (13:47 - 22:44) Joseph of Genesis - from family violence to the gratitude of whole nations - (22:45 - 29:21) Saint Joan of Arc - called by God to wear men's attire, adored by peasants - 29:22 - end) Wrapping up Resources Used: - The Man Who Was a Woman: And Other Queer Tales from Hindu Lore by Devdutt Pattanaik - sapiens.org/body/hijra-india-third-gender/ - article by Ina Goel - keshetonline.org/resources/baal-hachalomot-keepers-of-the-dreams-parashat-vayeshev/ - article by Karen Lee Erlichman - myjewishlearning.com/keshet/joseph-liberation-of-a-soul/ - article by Mijael Vera - keshetonline.org/resources/we-are-family-parashat-vayigash/ - article by Jase Schwartz - Transgender Warriors by Leslie Feinberg - qspirit.net/joan-of-arc-cross-dressing-lgbtq/ - article by Kittredge Cherry - blessedarethebinarybreakers.com/1400-1799
Casey, la rappeuse de légende, est l'invitée du 66e épisode de La Poudre. Avec Lauren Bastide, elles ont parlé de rap, de rock et de rage.L'édito de Lauren :C'était le 13 novembre 2019, au festival Les Créatives, à Genève, une quinzaine culturelle et intersectionnelle qui est l'un des plus géniaux événements féministes du monde. Ce soir-là, j'ai interviewé Casey en public. On était une petite centaine dans un café du centre. J'étais impressionnée, je l'avoue, ça faisait près de trois ans que j'essayais d'obtenir un entretien avec elle. Parce qu'elle n'est pas seulement l'un des plus grands noms du rap en France depuis près de vingt ans, mais aussi une autrice à la plume d'exception, porteuse d'idées politiques, indispensable à celles et ceux qui veulent faire avancer la société dans le bon sens, celui de la révolution. La veille je l'avais vue sur scène aux côtés de Virginie Despentes et de Béatrice Dalle dans Viril, un spectacle musical qui compile des textes radicaux féministes, signés par Paul B. Preciado, Valérie Solanas, Audre Lorde, Leslie Feinberg et d'autres. C'était dingue. Vraiment dingue.Résumé de l'épisode :Après six ans, Casey, voix iconique et adulée du rap français (04:36), revient avec un nouveau projet explosif, Ausgang et une réédition de ses deux premiers albums solo, Libérez la bête et Tragédie d'une trajectoire. Née en 1976 à Rouen, Casey se passionne pour le rap à l'adolescence. Elle y trouve des représentations de sa réalité (12:15) et une échappatoire intellectuelle au racisme qu'elle rencontre dans sa scolarité (18:57). Présente sur des mixtapes à partir de 1995, elle sort un premier album solo en 2006, puis un second, en 2010, qui rendent mythiques son flow unique et ses textes qui bousculent. Sa famille vient de Martinique, elle qui a grandi dans le 93, deux lieux qu'elle considère « chez elle » (26:02). Nourrie de l'œuvre d'Édouard Glissant et d'Aimé Césaire, elle glisse dans ses écrits la notion d'hybridité et la pensée décoloniale (27:30). Elle affirme la grandeur du rap (04:36), milite pour son droit à s'embourgeoiser (37:33) à l'image du rock, style dans lequel elle aime s'engouffrer pour des projets collectifs. Son dernier opus porte ses idées politiques, la défense des faibles et des cassés et traite des failles et de l'envie, parfois, de se soustraire au monde (41:47). Si son identité de genre n'a jamais été une zone d'exploration (24:57), elle connaît le poids du patriarcat (47:03) et les thématiques qu'elle aborde se rapprochent de celles des plus grandes penseuses féministes d'aujourd'hui, comme Virginie Despentes, qu'elle rencontre en 2015. En 2019, elle plonge dans la pensée queer en commençant à jouer dans Viril (10:05), un spectacle mis en scène par David Bobée, accompagné par le groupe Zëro, où elle partage l'affiche avec Despentes et Béatrice Dalle. Elles y déclament, sur fond de rock, des textes radicaux de Valérie Solanas, Paul B. Preciado, Zoe Leonard et Leslie Feinberg, comme pour mieux exprimer toute la « virilité » et de la colère des femmes.Bonne écoute, et continuez de faire parler La Poudre ! Le morceau que vous entendez dans l'introduction est « Aidez-moi » de Casey.Merci au festival Les Créatives pour avoir rendu cet enregistrement possible.La Poudre est une émission produite par Nouvelles ÉcoutesRéalisation de l'introduction et générique : Aurore Meyer-MahieuProgrammation et coordination : Gaïa MartyMontage et mixage : Marion Emerit
In this bonus episode Tracey chats with Jenn Bergen about Leslie Feinberg's Stone Butch Blues. Stay tuned for the season 2 which will be launching in March.
We came in at a solid ten with actress Sepideh Moafi because she is a part of one of the only things we ever discuss. You Might Know Her From The L Word: Generation Q, The Deuce, Falling Water, Black Box, and Notorious. We grilled Sepideh for an hour and a half about her new role on The L Word revival as well as the OG L Word. We also got real about playing Loretta on David Simon’s gritty The Deuce alongside James Franco and while we were with her, we just had to ask about The Full Jaffrey in relation to lesbian interracial relationships. Email and DM us examples of The Full Jaffrey, folks, and please enjoy this week’s lovely chat with Sepi. Follow us on social media: @damianbellino || @rodemanne Discussed this week: Talkin laughin lovin breathin L Word = Melrose Place + Single White Female The L Word: Generation Q Musical guests on original series: Sleater-Kinney, Ditty Bops, Toshi Regon, Shawn Colvin Marja Lewis-Ryan (Gen Q show-runner) On Iranian women in Gen Q The Deuce (David Simon) Ilene Chaiken, creator of The L Word Lucy Lawless and her lesbian cred Mia Kirshner as Jenny The Farm (original follow-up series to The L Word that never made it beyond the pilot) Janina Gavankar as Papi Oral History of Kate Moennig as Shane Rosanna Arquette as Cherie Jaffe Piper Perabo, lesbian icon? Lost & Delirious (2001) + Imagine Me & You (2005) Allegations against James Franco NYT article on Intimacy coordinators Sakina Jaffrey interview (“The Full Jaffrey”) "Is this because I'm a lesbian?" on Law & Order was actually Serena Southerlyn but there was also a Stephanie March problem Sepi’s top lesbians: Sheryl Swoopes (former lesbian identified), Tash Sultana, Sappho, Ashley Fure, Virginia Woolf, Susan Sontag, Gladys Bentley Damian’s top lesbians: Cynthia Nixon, Lea DeLaria, Rosie O’Donnell, Dusty Springfield, Anne! Anne’s top lesbians: Audre Lorde, Rosie O’Donnell, Jenny Shimizu, Lea DeLaria, Linda Perry, Lily Tomlin Honorable mentions: Cara DeLevingne, Leslie Feinberg, Sue Perkins, Tammy Lynn Michaels, kd lang, Tracy Chapman Celesbian chart made by Damian & Anne Dutch porn for women, by women: www.dusk-tv.com
Madiha Ansari specialises in cultural engagement, specifically for communities of South Asian women. She is the founder and director of arts-based social enterprise The Cultural Ecology Project which aims to make art accessible to those in the most deprived and vulnerable areas of society. You can contact her at madiha@lungtheatre.co.uk or follow her at @AnsariMadiha. Madiha's #feministfaves were the Muslim Women’s Council, Cate Blanchet and the Pakistani movie Cake. Pippa’s is Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues. Beth's is Samira Ahmed. More recommendations... And So The Choir Gathers The Bunker Nov 17 & 18 i will still be whole (when you rip me in half) & Before I Was A Bear is on until 23rd November. Use ticket discount BECHDEL10 to join us for our audience discussion on Thursday 21 November. Little Miss Burden The Bunker Dec 4 - 21 Midnight Movie Royal Court Nov 27 - Dec 21 Post Popular Soho Theatre Dec 3 - 14 Bitch on Heat Soho Theatre Dec 5 - 14 Venus Soho Theatre Jan 13 - 18 Three Sisters National Theatre Dec 3 - Feb 19 OH YES OH NO Battersea Arts Centre until Nov 23 EASY Blue Elephant until Nov 23 Aladdin and the Feast of Wonders The Vaults until Jan 15
Feel like you're always at work? In this wide-ranging discussion we cover the working-day, reproductive labour, the gig economy, unpaid internships and more. Listen to the Proles as they take on 'Chapter 10 - The Working Day' from 'Capital - Volume I' by Karl Marx. Diagram mentioned: Working-day 1: A–––B–C. Working-day 2: A–––B––C. Working-day 3: A–––B–––C. Works and writers mentioned: Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body and Primitive Accumulation - Silvia Federici; Alexandra Kollontai; Leslie Feinberg; Breaking the Chains - A Socialist Perspective on Women's Liberation; Capitalist Realism - Mark Fisher; The Condition of the Working Class in England - Friedrich Engels. Follow us on Twitter at @prolesbookclub and shoot us a DM if you need links to companion resources. If you'd like to join the book club, you can chip in a dollar to join our parent podcast's discord server. Proles of the Round Table: https://www.patreon.com/prolespod Thanks to @NunezKeenan for the intro theme; you can find more of their work here: http://tiny.cc/keenan Thanks to the Craig bot for helping us to record via Discord!
Introducing Nathan Spiteri – An advocate for child abuse. A very courageous man who had overcome many obstacles. Being abused as a child, and then as a teenager he focused mainly on men but was also attracted to and held relationships with several girls his own age. Nathan now wants to raise awareness and educate the masses on child abuse. TOPICS DISCUSSED IN THIS PODCAST EPISODE: (7:55) The drugs and violence (9:21) From drug therapy to shaking off bad memories (11:45) The message and the movie Toy Cars (15:57) Realizing it’s not your fault (23:00) Coming to terms with what happened to you (28:00) It’s important to have a support system around you HEAR MORE ABOUT NATHAN SPITERI As an eight-year-old, Nathan Spiteri was in his hometown of Queanbeyan, NSW when a middle-aged man followed him into the change rooms of the local swimming pool area. This incident became day one of a three-year relationship between Nathan and the 40-year-old man. This man told Nathan that his family hated him. Nathan visited this man regularly and exchanged ‘I love yous’. His family and friends had no clue. Eventually Nathan moved to New York to pursue his dream of acting. Nathan finally told his family who all reacted different to the news. In 2016 Nathan’s New-York-based psychologist suggested he write his experience of abuse down as a form of therapy. Over the next two years Nathan did what his therapist asked and the result was his first screenplay, Toy Cars. For Nathan, writing the screenplay was not only therapeutic and purgative, but provided a chance to put some closure around his harrowing story. FAVOURITE QUOTE TO SHARE WITH THE WORLD Don’t be perfect, just be real. ONE BOOK YOU SHOULD READ Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg CONNECT WITH NATHAN Website The Sydney Morning Herald Article Twitter Instagram CONNECT WITH SASHKA Facebook Instagram Pinterest Twitter LinkedIn Want to be a guest on the podcast? Apply to be featured on the No Name Brand Podcast here. SUBSCRIBE ON
INTRO - 15:56 | Hannah shares an interview article with Jonathan Van Ness on gender identity from Out.com17:06 - 53:55 | Deanna tells the epic and incredible story of our bad ass person of the week and author of the book, Stone Butch Blues (link below), Leslie Feinberg.LINKS:Stone Butch Blues went out of print some years ago, but is available as a free PDF through her website: https://www.lesliefeinberg.net/Jonathan Van Ness article: https://www.out.com/lifestyle/2019/6/10/queer-eyes-jonathan-van-ness-im-nonbinary
Rachel and Melody welcome special guest, Sarah, to discuss LGBTQ reads this month! Check out what we talked about: "Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe" by Benjamin Alire Sáenz with readalike "The Inexplicable Logic of My Life" by the same author. "The Paying Guests" by Sarah Waters with readalike "Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932" by Francine Prose. "The House of Impossible Beauties" by Joseph Cassara based on the 1990 documentary film, "Paris is Burning." Also, "Sketchtacy" by Matilda Bernstein Sycamore. Sarah's Recommended Reads: "Stone Butch Blues" and "Drag King Dreams" by Leslie Feinberg "Fun Home" by Alison Bechdel "Mean" by Myriam Gurba "For Today I Am a Boy" by Kim Fu "Dryland" by Sara Jaffe "Boy Meets Boy" and "Two Boys Kissing" by David Levithan Interested in more LGBTQ reads? Check out our LGBTQ booklist: https://oakcreeklibrary.org/adult-booklists/#tableid=78 Looking to earn prizes for reading? Sign up for our Summer Reading Challenge here: https://oakcreeklibrary.org/src/ Check out books, movies, and and other materials through the Milwaukee County Federated Library System: countycat.mcfls.org/ www.hoopladigital.com/ wplc.overdrive.com/ oakcreeklibrary.org/
James speaks with Los Angeles based filmmaker Finn Grey Paul, about trans people in the US military, Donald Trump presidency and the trans community, the representation and inclusion of trans people in the US film industry, the works of pioneering trans activist and writer Leslie Feinberg, and a critique of Caitlin Jenner’s TV series.We also discussed Finn’s film shorts about queer hook-ups, screening 22 March at the Melbourne Queer Film Festival (MQFF) and the upcoming MQFF plenary ‘Can Sex and Love Save the World?’, Sunday 24 March at ACMI, 2 - 3 pm. Details.James speaks with Felicity Marlowe of Rainbow Families Victoria, about her inclusion in the Victorian Honour Roll of Women, Rainbow Families issues during Australia’s upcoming federal election campaign, discrimination at religious schools during the election campaign, and the recent launch by Victoria government’s resources for people with intersex variations and the debate about banning conversion therapy in Victoria.James speaks with Jill Faulkner, Project Coordinator All of Us and Practice Lead, QRespect at Queer Space/Drummond Street Services, about working with women who have used force or interpersonal violence in heterosexual relationships and LGBTIQ+ folk using interpersonal violence in their relationships, and the logistics of these therapeutic programs offered through Queerspace.Content/trigger warning: Please be aware this interview contains mentions of interpersonal and intimate partner violence, that may be distressing to some listeners. If the segment has raised questions or caused distress to you, contact Lifeline or iHeal – Family Violence Recovery Support.
Feinberg traces the lineage of the formation of transgender identity and answers the age-old question: what does Marx have to do with any of this? You Saved My Life is brought to you by: mask.fm (http://mask.fm), a podcast network from Mask Magazine. To support this show and others, visit our Patreon (http://patreon.com/maskfm). You can follow Phoenix on Twitter, @kcdanger (https://twitter.com/kcdanger) Please take a moment to rate and review You Saved My Life on iTunes, which helps others discover our show. You Saved My Life was produced by Joe Kujawa and Tyler Reinhard for mask.fm, and recorded in Brooklyn, NY. Music provided by Lucky Cat Band (http://luckycatband.bandcamp.com). For announcements, follow the network Twitter, @maskdotfm (https://twitter.com/maskdotfm). For feedback and information, contact: fm@mask-mag.com
On this week's episode of The Speakeasy, Damon and Sother are joined in studio by bartender and baker Leslie Feinberg of Prohibition Bakery and bartender Brian Grummert of Subject Bar. Prohibition Bakery makes delicious alcoholic cupcakes based on classic cocktails, which are available at their store in the Lower East Side and at Subject Bar, a neighbor and partner of the bakery, which also offers cocktails in their traditional liquid form. The Speakeasy is powered by Simplecast
Irvine Welsh discusses Performers, a new one-act play he has co-written with Dean Cavanagh about the '60s cult film Performance. Directed by Donald Cammell and cinematographer Nicolas Roeg, it starred James Fox and Mick Jagger. Welsh's play dramatises the casting process in which East End criminals were sought for the villain roles.When James Daunt became Managing Director of the bookshop chain Waterstones in 2011, the company was receiving £27m per year selling its window space and high-profile in-store locations to publishers who wanted greater visibility for their books. He immediately stopped the practice, but what were the repercussions? James Daunt and Will Atkinson, Managing Director of Atlantic Books, discuss bookshop economics and the role of the 'recommendation'.Morrissey's early years get the rock-star biopic treatment in the film England Is Mine. Anita Sethi reviews.For Front Row's Queer Icons series, singer-songwriter and LGBTI rights activist CN Lester chooses Leslie Feinberg's semi-autobiographical novel Stone Butch Blues, a coming-of-age story about Jess Goldberg, who challenges sexual and gender definitions in a pre-Stonewall America.Presenter: John Wilson Producer: Edwina Pitman.
This is the first episode of Transgressive: The Podcast! Listen in as Shane and I talk about gender rulebooks, fancy panties, gender as a journey, and how great Leslie Feinberg looked in a three-piece suit. Shane is a licensed master social worker, Storyteller, Educator, and Facilitator in Austin, Texas. You can find out more about hir by visiting www.shanewhalley.net.
In this podcast, Yeshe Rabbit honors several recently-deceased ancestors, each of whom left a powerful mark on her world : Loreon Vigne, Ai-Churek, Randy David, Lady Olivia Roberston, Les Feinberg*, Morning Glory Zell, and Shekinah Mountainwater. This podcast contains music, chants, and speeches by : Same blood, Same Heart by Tia Members of the family and friends of Loreon Vigne, including her niece Leslie Life, Death & Rebirth by Yeshe Patrick, partner of the deceased Randy David Hekate by Rowan *Please note, Yeshe Rabbit included a passage by an author who formerly wrote under the name Leslie Feinberg, but who later in life preferred to be called Les Feinberg. Please forgive the poor quality of some of the audio recordings. Yeshe Rabbit captures audio all over the place and doesn't always have a great microphone.
How do you become a Biz woman who ROCKS? Listen to our Interview with Leslie Feinberg of Prohibition Bakery! Leslie Feinberg and her co-founder Brook Siem brought their love of alcohol and baking together in their business Prohibition Bakery in 2011. They sell hundreds of thousands of delicious cupcakes every year through their catering and their retail location in New York City. In this interview, Leslie talks about her experience as an entrepreneur, the ways she's evolved, how they acquired Google as a client and one of the best marketing strategies I've heard from a food company yet! http://BizWomenRock.com/164
Nayomi Munaweera, author of Island of a Thousand Mirrors, speaks to Tara Dorabji and Nono Girl from Apex Express about her book and the incidents that inspired it. Then we hear a speech given by Leslie Feinberg on the complex relationship between the Trans and Women's Liberation Movements. The post Women's Magazine – October 15, 2012 appeared first on KPFA.