Nov. 3: Gender is a Colonial Construct

by Green & Gold News  |   

Conversation Café is a facilitated workshop and dialogue space where members of the UAA community can unpack how race, gender and sexuality show up in our current society. This month we will be thinking about how gender and the gender binary is constructed through a Western Colonial lens. Join us virtually Wednesday, Nov. 3, 5-7 p.m. Guest speaker Souksavanh T. Keovorabouth will share how non-binary and gender non-conforming people have always existed and how we can and should challenge our current understanding of gender.

This Conversation Cafe is connected to Queer History Month (October), Filipino History Month (October), and Indigenous and Alaskan Native Heritage Month (November). While we want to celebrate and uplift these important months, we also want to recognize, celebrate and uplift these incredible communities all the time.

Register here

Souksavanh T. Keovorabouth is a Queer/Two-Spirit multiracial scholar-activist with Laotian and Diné (Navajo) heritages. Their concentrated area of research is on Indigenous urban experience, Two-Spirit wellbeing, Relocation Act of 1950, Native and Queer urbanization, BIPOC Masculinities, and Missing and Murdered Indigenous women, girls, and Two-Spirit in urban areas.


For questions, please contact Sara Caldwell-Kan, director of Multicultural Student Services, at smcaldwellkan@alaska.edu or 907-786-4080.

Creative Commons License "Nov. 3: Gender is a Colonial Construct" is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
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