Copy
Feminist Research Institute Digest                       View this email in your browser
HATCH: Experimental Funding for Graduate Students
Due Wednesday November 15, 2017
HATCH: Feminist Arts & Science Shop will support 3-6 “experiments” (broadly conceived) for graduate students during the Winter and/or Spring term, with awards ranging from $1,000-2,000.
HATCH seek projects that challenge traditional disciplinary methodologies, are interdisciplinary in nature, and further social justice goals through their knowledge seeking practice.
Visit the HATCH website for full application details.


Also on November 15, HATCH hosts a feminist pedagogy lab session on alternative grading and evaluation. Join HATCH for the lab from 11:00 am–12:00 pm in Hart Hall 3201.
On November 1, Alondra Nelson—professor of sociology at Columbia University—visited UC Davis to share her work on science, technology, and social inequality. HATCH hosted a lunch-time conversation on Nelson's research in Body and Soul: The Black Panther Party and the Fight Against Medical Discrimination. Nelson then spoke at the Department of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Feminist Seminar on “Racial Reconciliation, Institutional Morality, and the Social Life of DNA.
Read FRI's coverage of the events.
Can We See the Baby Bump Please?
a film about surrogacy in India

Screening and discussion with filmmaker Gargi Sen.

Wed., November 15, 2017
12:00–1:30 p.m.
RM 1001, King Hall (Law)


Presented by the If/When/How: Lawyering for Reproductive Justice student organization. Lunch will be served.
 "Spaces of Exception, Masculinity, and Testimonies of Punishment in the Imperial Valley, 1986-1994" 
a presentation by Jessica Ordaz, Andrew W. Mellon Saywer Seminar Postdoctoral Scholar at University of Washington, Seattle.  

Thursday November 17, 2017  |  4:10-6:00pm  |  3201 Hart Hall

Presented as part of the Cultural Studies Graduate Group Fall 2017 Colloquium Series.
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION The 2nd annual ICAS conference
January 19 - 21, 2018 San Francisco, California

Conference theme: Beyond Justification

The International Community of Artist Scholars is an innovative, experimental, and playful platform for artists and scholars who inhabit the space in-between scholarship and artistic practice. ICAS speaks to the presence of many artist-researchers whose work does not t squarely into the classifcations of “art” or “research.” As ICAS conference participants discovered at the first conference there are many different methods of doing art/research and most of us will face the (perceived or actual) need to justify our methodologies or practices in a professional context.What happens if you enter a space in which you do not have to justify your methodology? The 2nd ICAS conference invites you to present your work in an environment which allows you to move “beyond justification.”

Please send a conference proposal to icascommunity2017@gmail.com by November 23rd, 2017See the full proposal here.

The Feminist Research Institute (FRI) realizes the potential of feminism to transform academic research to meet today’s pressing social and scientific challenges. FRI supports cutting-edge feminist scholarship across the disciplines.
Twitter
Facebook
Join Mailing List
Email FRI
Copyright © 2017 Feminist Research Institute at UC Davis, All rights reserved.


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp