Where: Online, via Zoom
Booking: Limited spaces, click here to book.
Led by Sabrina Fuller, Taey Iohe, Helena Reckitt, and Dot Jia Zhihan of the Feminist Duration Reading Group.
To care can feel good; it can also feel awful. It can do good; it can oppress. Its essential character to humans and countless living beings makes it all the most susceptible to convey control. But what is care? Is it an affection? A moral obligation? Work? A burden? A joy? Something we can learn or practice? Something we just do?
– Maria Puig De La Bellacasa, ‘The Disruptive Work of Care,’ in Matters of Care: Speculative Ethics in More Than Human Worlds, 2017
The most anti-capitalist protest is to care for another and to care for yourself. To take on the historically feminized and therefore invisible practice of nursing, nurturing, caring. To take seriously each other’s vulnerability and fragility and precarity, and to support it, honor it, empower it. To protect each other, to enact and practice community. A radical kinship, an interdependent sociality, a politics of care.
– Johanna Hedva, ‘Sick Woman Theory,’ 2016
Healing is transformation, it’s becoming, it’s blooming, it’s being home and whole within one-self in order to be home and whole within our worlds.
– Tabita Rezaire, ‘Decolonial Healing*: In Defense of Spiritual Technologies,’ 2019
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This meeting focuses on three texts which explore the intersections of care and collectivity, symbiosis and healing. Following introductions from the organisers and amongst participants, we will divide into small break-out groups where we will read out loud, one person and one paragraph at a time, from selected extracts.
We will then reconnect to share our insights into the readings and their relevance for current work around collective and self-care centred on values of reciprocity and recognition, creativity, equity, and interdependence.
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Readings
> Johanna Hedva, ‘Sick Woman Theory,’ Mask, 2016
> Maria Puig de la Bellacasa, ‘Thinking with Care,’ in Matters of Care: Speculative Ethics in More Than Human Worlds, 2017
> Tabita Rezaire, ‘Decolonial Healing*: In Defense of Spiritual Technologies,’ in The SAGE Handbook of Media and Migration, 2019
Selections from readings will be sent to everyone who registers, ahead of time. There is no need to read in advance as we will do so together during the session.
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About the Feminist Duration Reading Group
Since 2015 the Feminist Duration Reading Group has explored under-known feminisms outside the dominant Anglo-American canon. Its monthly meetings, open to all, have taken place in art galleries, seminar rooms, community centres, parks, and living rooms in London, Birmingham, Bexhill-on-Sea, Toronto, and Penzance, as well as online. The FDRG is led by a Working Group of five and a Support Group of seven. The group welcomes feminists of all genders and generations. www.feministduration.com
Access: This session will be held on Zoom. Closed captions will be available.
Kaleidoscope Network: This event has been organised by The NewBridge Project for the Kaleidoscope Network, a collaboration between Eastside Projects (Birmingham), Primary (Nottingham), Spike Island (Bristol), and The NewBridge Project (Newcastle). Primary residents and members are automatically part of the Kaleidoscope Network and can attend selected events programmed by each partner for free.
Eastside Projects makes art public. Based in Birmingham, they are an artist-run multiverse, commissioning, producing and presenting experimental art practices and demonstrating ways in which art may be useful as part of society. Extra Ordinary People is Eastside Projects’ Associate membership scheme. EOP works with artists, curators and art-writers to support the development of work, ideas, connections and careers through a programme of events, opportunities and projects.
Spike Island is a dynamic arts centre that supports, produces and presents contemporary art and culture. A short walk from Bristol city centre. Spike Island Associates is a dynamic network of artists, curators, designers, writers and thinkers at all stages of their career. Members span multiple disciplines and share a common interest in collaboration, experimentation and a desire to learn new skills and have new experiences.
The NewBridge Project is an artist-led space that supports artists, curators and communities through the provision of space for creative practice, curatorial opportunities and an ambitious artist-led programme of exhibitions, commissions, artist development and events.