Blog : Upcoming Events

[April 14, 2016 |Heyyyy Chicago, DePaul University!]

[April 14, 2016 |Heyyyy Chicago, DePaul University!]

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Event tonight 6-730pm, Performance & Talk with food & refreshments sponsored by – DePaul University, Center for Social Inclusion, LGBT Studies, & the English Dept! Stop by scent-free & wheelchair accessible space, ASL interpretation offered. [Description: flyer of outlined brown round boi in purple, black, It is about following these cialis canada no prescription unbelievable natural tips to boost sex stamina. All these sample of viagra herbs are blended in right combination as the best herbal treatment to cure impotence. Quitting cigarettes and decreasing the consumption of alcohol can be having a cheapest levitra Continue Shopping negative impact. Cardio exercise is one of the simplest and most levitra 20mg generika effective way of bringing awareness back to the second brain and gut area is affecting mood. shows their silhouette. With name in pink “Kay Ulanday Barrett,” title in black “you are SO brave.”] https://www.facebook.com/events/202679923428110/
________
#qtpoc #gendernonconforming#transpeopleofcolor #qpoc #sdqtpoc
#youaresobrave16 #queerart #kayulandaybarrett #sickanddisabledqueers
#queerpoetry #QAPI #gaysian 
#queerchicago #spoonies

[October 24, 2015 | Vassar College]

[October 24, 2015 | Vassar College]

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[description: brown round boi on a great & black & white flyer]

Today! 530pm-7pm at Vassar College for Transmission & Unframed in Poughkeepsie, NY. Come scent free, come ready for stories & poems all down, brown, & wobbly on. Holler at me as new merch, posters, and poetry to listen to. The Pfizer Company has made canada in levitra https://unica-web.com/watch/2016/shame.html their lot by selling the medicine and now the patent is over. Men suffering from this condition aspire to improve the condition sildenafil canada pharmacy and seek the assistance of online materials and learning tools such as emails, discussion groups, forums, chats, whiteboards, webinars, audio and video conferencing etc. They don’t deal with the real issues that are unseen but viagra properien unica-web.com problematic such as ED. Moreover, the pace of reforming this incumbrance is underwhelming, at best. unica-web.com viagra samples Thanks to Matthew McCardwell. Photography by the on-point, @vixiv.v!

https://www.facebook.com/events/930479963709469/

[September 4, 2015 | 3 Artists & Cultural Workers You Need to Know About – medium.com]

[September 4, 2015 | 3 Artists & Cultural Workers You Need to Know About – medium.com]

3 Artists & Cultural Workers of Color You Need to Know About

Kay Ulanday Barrett on Reina Gossett, Patricia Berne, & Sonia Guiñansaca

This post is part of a Nat. Brut series in which feminist writers, artists, and activists discuss people, publications, or organizations who are working toward inclusivity. Today, poet and educator Kay Ulanday Barrett shares their choices. Click here to read more!  Special Thanks to Kayla E. of Nat. Brut for the amazing collaboration. 

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July 8, 2015 | Rally: Queer Art & Activism Now – Dixon Place

July 8, 2015 | Rally: Queer Art & Activism Now – Dixon Place

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[Description: a visual of a brown round boi with a red and gold halo has handwriting surrounding their image. above text reads “Dixon Place” and below a yellow box with black letters reads, “RALLY #QUEER ART AND ACTIVISM NOW.”]

This exhibit opens tonight at Dixon Place 4pm-6pm, 161A Chrystie St. New York, New York 10002. Come by & say hello?

 

 

 
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#qtpoc #qpoc#queerpoets #gendernonconforming#transmenofcolor
#transpeopleofcolor#sdqtpoc #kaybarrett

June 19, 2015 | Kay Facilitates at Allied Media Conference (AMC)

June 19, 2015 | Kay Facilitates at Allied Media Conference (AMC)

 

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How have you been fed by your experience of loss? How can we shift our understanding of loss from something being taken from us, to something opening within us? We will recognize and celebrate the ways we embody and radiate the energy of our lost ones through our art, activism, family-making and more. Participants will be guided through creative exercises and supported in connecting with the echoes vibrating around us. Folks will leave with new connections and gathered wisdom from the group. This session centers queer and trans spectrum folks; BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Colour); and sick and/or disabled folks.

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Presenters

Kay Ulanday Barrett

A Campus Pride Hot List artist, Trans Justice Funding Project Panelist, and Trans 100 Honoree, KAY ULANDAY BARRETT is a poet, performer, and educator, navigating life as a disabled pin@y-amerikan transgender queer in the U.S. with struggle, resistance, and laughter.

Mel G Campbell

mel g campbell is a queer, black, chronically ill, poet, performer, educator and occasional femme. a VONA alum and the Tangled Art+Disability Artist in Residence, mgc regularly explores themes of resilience, trauma, and intersectionality. mel is passionate about interdependence, sunshine, and their cats.

Saturday June 20, 2015 6:00pm – 8:00pm
State Hall: Room 128

April 25, 2015 | Kay published on Fusion.net!

April 25, 2015 | Kay published on Fusion.net!

Please check out my new piece on Fusion.net with Katrina Goodlett & Alexa Vasquez. It was a pleasure holding such dynamic and beautiful conversation that centers Trans Women of Color and Trans People of Color as mainstream coverage like
Bruce Jenner’s announcement and other exposure exists. I want for us to keep ourselves — poor, sick and disabled, migrant, Trans People of Color to have the space to enact voice and change for what impacts us deeply. Thanks to Jorge Rivas for supporting the work and ushering this piece to Fusion! Read directly here.

 

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The problem regarding Bruce Jenner’s situation is the media circus that it all culminates into. It’s all a freakshow for cisgender and non-transgender people.

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The painful reality is that our gender identity is under speculation, suspicion, doubt, and policing. But the current curiosity surrounding Jenner’s interview in the non-trans community creates a magical fantasy based on a very wealthy, able-bodied, American, and white experience that isn’t the case for many of us who struggle for survival and justice as transgender people of color.

The author of this story Kay Ulanday Barrett seen at a Trans Day of Action event wearing a sign that reads “Brown, trans, disabled, liberation now.” (Photo: Sabelo Narasimhan)

The author of this story, Kay Ulanday Barrett, seen at a Trans Day of Action event wearing a sign that reads “Brown, trans, disabled, liberation now.” (Photo: Sabelo Narasimhan)

The emphasis on Jenner’s announcement focuses on a limited portrayal of transgender lives; there isn’t one exceptional experience, but a plethora of pathways to be trans. I wanted to celebrate these different paths by interviewing two trans women of color who are artists and activists.

I had a conversation with Katrina Goodlett, one of the founders of the Trans Women of Color Collective, a group working to uplift the stories of trans people of color.

I also spoke to Alexa Vasquez from Santa Ana, Calif., who currently works with Transgeneros en accion Santa Ana, a trans Latina group working for the empowerment of the transgender Latina women of Orange County, many of whom are undocumented.

Kay Ulanday Barrett: How do you feel the about the current exposure of Bruce Jenner’s interview? Does this relate to your life and work as a trans person of color?

headlines_kayKatrina Goodlett: Trans women of color are historically objectified by mainstream media with this basic narrative around genitalia and surgery. I believe this “exposure” could be better served towards issues that affect marginalized community; poor, disabled, incarcerated, undocumented trans people of color. We know eight trans women were brutally murdered within the first 60 days of 2015 with no media outrage or outcry, no Diane Sawyer interviews.

Alexa Vasquez: Unfortunately, this media circus makes money off of us. The way Jenner is choosing to “come out” and make a circus announcement is so dishonest to our community. Many will tune in to watch and begin to believe they understand, accept, and value our community based on Jenner’s experience. It is unfair to a movement started by women of color. Women of color have used their voices to empower and uplift a revolution based on real issues, not a mockery.

What is up with the obsession with cis or trans celebrities instead of everyday trans people like yourself?

Katrina Goodlett (Photo courtesy of Goodlett)

KG: The media wants to maintain the status quo of capitalism and white supremacy. Bruce’s story is based on privilege. Despite Bruce’s internal truth seeking, [Jenner] will have access to health care, housing, jobs etc. Many trans people of color I know don’t even have access to safe and affordable health care or housing. Mainstream media wants to prop up this narrative of “transition” when for many trans folk that is not the goal!

AV: Celebrities take the audience’s agency over their lives. It’s decided what the audience wants to see, when it wants to see it, and to what extreme the issue is presented. The obsession never gets to the real issues that evolve around personal transformation and growth from the audience.

How can we shift the limited focus on stories such as Jenner’s, and instead focus on real issues that transgender people of color face today? 

KG: We shift the focus by documenting and telling our own stories. We can’t wait for mainstream media to catch up. After the basic interview Katie Couric did in January 2014 with Laverne Cox and Carmen Carrera I decided to stop complaining and create my own show.

Alexa Vasquez (Photo courtesy of Vasquez)

Alexa Vasquez (Photo courtesy of Vasquez)

I created The Kitty Bella Podcast out of a need to amplify the most marginalized voices and with a focus on issues outside the basic narrative. Too many of us are dying in the streets for us to beg and ask for nuanced discussions.

AV: We can start by investing in our own lives. Opening our eyes and ears to the stories and lives around us, not by creating celebrities. By looking at the culture that surrounds us, we make sure that the resources are flowing in our community. We must remember what affects one affects us all.

How do we talk about marriage if trans women can’t walk down the street safely?
– Katrina Goodlett

What positive changes are there to look forward to for trans people of color?

KG: Liberation for all queer people of color. Like my sister TWOCCnational director Lourdes Ashley Hunter says, “Equality has never been the goal.” I’m in solidarity with her words. Just look at all the millions of dollars that went pouring into marriage equality, an issue many queer trans people of color have little interest in. That is so basic. How do we talk about marriage if trans women can’t walk down the street safely? If I can’t survive, I will never get to a place where I can even meet or find a potential partner to marry!

AV: As a trans woman of color I don’t think we are seeking anything other than a fair chance to survive and live our lives. We want a future with the fair opportunity to live healthy, prosperous lives with homes, and families that love us to fill every room. We want jobs where we are respected for who we are. We want to walk on streets and not harassed by the police due to our appearance.

How can people support trans people of color?

Leaders of TWOCC in NYC. (Photo courtesy of Kate Goodlett)

Leaders of TWOCC in Washington D.C. (Photo courtesy of Katrina Goodlett)

KG: People can support by empowering the leadership and lived experiences of queer trans people of color (QTPOC.) Yes we are facing high levels of violence, yes we are constantly being erased out of mainstream media and organizations, but the reality is many QTPOC are leading their own narratives, we been doing it. Ruby Corado, founder of Casa De Ruby [in Washington D.C.] recently launched an LGBT transitional home [for trans youth.] Pour into the work of the Trans Women of Color Collective (TWOCC.) Invest in black media makers like Black Star Media. Finally, book QTPOC artists and speakers. Queer and trans people of color already know what we need, we already have the skills, we ask for sustained intentional investment and resources.

AV: One of the biggest ways we can support trans folk’s work is by building our relationships to trans folks. Offer your homes, make us feel safe in workspaces, and bring these issues up when we are not around. Sometimes the worst part of coming into a room as a trans woman is having to dissect myself in front of everyone as if I’m what’s being served for dinner. As a trans undocumented woman of color, navigating education has been one of the biggest struggles of my life. I grew up knowing that as an undocumented student I had to pride myself over my education accomplishments to fulfill the “American dream.” Today, as a transwoman of color my solution has changed. Having lost my best friend Zoraida last year, I am learning to appreciate the different voices that really have shaped my views on life. I can’t rely on a system of education that works against me and who I am in order to be fulfilled.

To support the lives and work of transgender community in the U.S., you can find comprehensive list of resources by the Trans Justice Funding Project.

Kay Ulanday Barrett is a poet, performer, and educator, navigating life as a disabled pin@y-amerikan transgender queer in the U.S. with struggle, resistance, and laughter. Follow Kay online at @Kulandaybarrett.

April 13, 2015 | Performance w/ Ryka Aoki

April 13, 2015 | Performance w/ Ryka Aoki


10427252_10153719551738356_6058261869796937852_n[Description: a Japanese transwoman with long black hair and glasses speaks at a microphone. the background is light blue, and text to the right reads “RYKA AOKI reads HE MELE A HILO (a hilo song)]

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Tonight: 7pm-830pm
Dixon Place
161A Chrystie St
New York, New York 10002

Award winning poet & novelist Ryka Aoki will be reading
from her latest novel! Joining her will be work from 
@ladydanefe,
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#translivesmatter #transgender #topsidepress#transpeopleofcolor
#poetry #reading #qapi#transasian #hawaiian #twoc
#rykaaoki #girlslikeus

April 10, 2015 | Upcoming: Dixon Place, NYC.

April 10, 2015 | Upcoming: Dixon Place, NYC.

MONDAY – April 13, 2015

7pm-830pm
Dixon Place – 161A Chrystie St
New York, New York 10002

Award winning poet & novelist Ryka Aoki will be reading from her latest novel! Joining her will be work from Dane EdidiTyler Vile, & Kay Ulanday Barrett. Brought to you by Topside Press.
‪#‎translivesmatter‬ ‪#‎transgender‬ ‪#‎topsidepress‬ ‪#‎transpeopleofcolor‬ ‪#‎poetry‬‪#‎reading‬ ‪#‎qapi‬ 
#‎
transasian‬
 ‪#‎hawaiian‬ ‪#‎twoc‬ ‪#‎rykaaoki‬ ‪#‎girlslikeus‬

[Description: a Japanese transwoman with long black hair and glasses speaks at a microphone. the background is light blue, and text to the right reads “RYKA AOKI reads HE MELE A HILO (a hilo song)]

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March 23, 2015 | U Penn

March 23, 2015 | U Penn

March 23, 2015
7-9pm


TONIGHT
7pm-9pm
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Check me out with new work, newer poems, and some sort of saucy critique of many things with my wobbly self! Thanks to Penn Non-Cis​, Gender Women’s Studies, Penn Disability Advocates, Queer People of Color, Queer & Asian, & Asian Pacific Student Coalition at University of Pennsylvania.  Wheelchair accessible and scent-free!

 

 

March 16, 2015 | UC Berkeley

March 16, 2015 | UC Berkeley

Guest Lecturer 6pm

“Disability Justice: Re-centering Power in Movement Building”
taught by Patricia Berne​ (of Sins Invalid​)

hosted by Disability Studies and Gender and Women’s Studies at UC Berkeley.

Since it is a closed course, feel free to message me if you want to attend.
The topic is on the disability justice concept of “wholeness”.
I’ll be sharing work like crip sick tankas, some SDQ love poems,
and reflections on medical systems as a trans POC disabled person.
There will be refreshments provided & a Q&A.

 

We have a surpise out of town guest tomorrow in our Disability Justice course — Monday, March 16th, Disability Studies and Gender and Women’s Studies are honored to bring you guest lecturer, Kay Ulanday Barrett.

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Please come scent free.  If you have questions about how to be fragrance/chemical free, please see the guide provided by the East Bay Meditation Center’s guide here:  http://eastbaymeditation.org/accessibility/scentfree.html
We will be meeting in the room that we usually do,
602 Barrows, from 4p – 7p.  Kay will likely read at appr. 6p.
 
If you are not a student in GWS 111.2, please email
an RSVP so that we can set the room — and food! — appropriately.
Patricia Berne: pattyberne@sinsinvalid.org