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2024 Meredith Miller Memorial Lecture

Why Is Sex a “Thing”? Making Relations against a Colonial World Settler-colonial states like Canada and the US have forged their societies and governance systems with theories of what is natural, and have centered specific property regimes while doing so. Concepts of nature and property have been at the heart of violence toward first peoples of the Americas, peoples of African descent, women, children, the differently abled, and queer people. What is deemed to be natural and who gets to define and manage “nature” have kept straight, white, property-owning men on top. Nature and property are also key to settler-colonial society’s ideas and regulation of sex. In this talk, Dr. Kim TallBear explains how the very notion of “sexuality” (like “nature”) makes networks of relations into controllable objects. She draws on Critical Indigenous and sexuality studies frameworks to offer alternatives to making intimate relations into “things” to be managed and controlled. This

Canada
Kim-tallbear
Why-is-sex
Making-relations
Critical-indigenous

Canada's International Cundill History Prize Names Its 2023 Jury

A shortlist for the 2023 Cundill History Prize is expected from the jury in late September, finalists in October, a winner in November.

Dallas
Texas
United-states
Chile
New-york
Canada
United-kingdom
Montreal
Quebec
Vancouver
British-columbia
London

UNM adds Intro to Asian American Studies class to Spring 2023 catalog

Students are invited to register for the University of New Mexico’s Introduction to Asian American Studies class being offered for the first time, this spring. Asian American Studies examines topics related to history, literature and identity pertaining.

Manhattan
New-york
United-states
China
Japan
New-mexico
Albuquerque
Americans
Japanese
Chinese
American
Shebati-sengupta

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