Town Hall Seattle and Bushwick Book Club present
Original Music Inspired by Art Spiegelman’s “Maus”
Artists Respond to the Timeless Graphic Memoir
Rental Partner: University of Washington Office of Public Lectures presents
Feminist Visions for Genuine Security and a Culture of Life
Note: A livestream will be available for this event.
Presented by the University of Washington Office of Public Lectures. For questions about this event, please contact lectures@uw.edu.
As the late philosopher Antonio Gramsci argued: “The old world is dying and the new world struggles to be born. Now is the time of monsters.”
Today’s multiple monsters, each with various heads, the state and civil society leaders of the globalized culture of killing, threaten the very survival of the planet. Multi-generations of feminist and other radical and visionary movements, activists, artists, musicians, journalists, and academics are facing the “monsters” in a variety of ways worldwide. How do we come to understand the “monsters” and their “heads” in this moment of global humanitarian and moral crises? What don’t or can’t we understand about the “monsters”? How will our understanding shape our vision of a world in which all living beings will thrive? What will be our paths and journeys to reach that destiny? Our feminist dialogue space will embrace these questions and more and share our personal and communal experiences to delineate a set of guiding principles that should constitute the foundation of the feminist Transnational Feminist Non-aligned Movement for Genuine Security and a Culture of Life.
Margo Okazawa-Rey, Professor Emerita San Francisco State University, is an activist and educator working on issues of militarism, armed conflict, and violence against women examined intersectionally. She has long-standing activist commitments in South Korea and Palestine, working closely with Du Re Bang/My Sisters Place and Women’s Centre for Legal Aid and Counseling, respectively. She also is a founding member of the International Women’s Network against Militarism and Women for Genuine Security and is President of the Board of Directors of the Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID). Her recent publications include Building a Culture of Life: A Conversation on Abolition, Feminism, and Asian American Politics. P. Kandaswamy, M. Okazawa-Rey, & S. Shigematsu. (2023). Frontiers: A Journal of Women’s Studies; Two Decades of Feminist Organising for Genuine Security: Understandings from the International Women’s Network Against Militarism with Akibayashi, Fabros, Kirk, et al. Feminist Conversations on Peace. S. Smith & K. Yoshida (Eds.) (2022). Bristol, UK: Bristol University Press; Nation-izing Coalition and Solidarity Politics for US Anti-militarist Feminists, Social Justice (2020); Gendered Lives: Intersectional Perspectives, Oxford University Press (2020); “No Freedom without Connections: Envisioning Sustainable Feminist Solidarities” (2018) in Feminist Freedom Warriors: Genealogies, Justice, Politics, and Hope, Chandra Talpade Mohanty and Linda Carty (eds.). She was a founding member of the Combahee River Collective.
Sponsoring Departments: The Graduate School, Department of American Ethnic Studies, Center for Anti-Racism and Community Health, School of Public Health, UW Tacoma, Department of Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies, Washington Institute for the Study of Inequality and Race, Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology
Town Hall Seattle and Bushwick Book Club present
Artists Respond to the Timeless Graphic Memoir
Town Hall Seattle and Northwest Center for Creative Aging present
Here’s to the Future! An Intergenerational Conversation about Aging
Playworld: A Novel