TOPIA 50 is a special issue titled Beyond Homonationalisms: Queer(er) Possibilities of Elsewhere and Imagining Otherwise, exploring new and renewed formations of “queer” and calling for the imagination of new #QueerPossibilities. Read more: https://t.co/9Ky7pFjodz @JRJCHAIR
Delve into the new issue of TOPIA 50 for a roundtable with contributors reflecting on the evolution of #QueerActivism and their thoughts on homonationalism over the past decade. Read more: https://t.co/3wfIuIzaJV @GaryWKinsman@Carleton_FIST@JRJCHAIR#CulturalStudies
TOPIA 50 explores the relationship between queerness and Indigeneity within Niitsítapi (Blackfoot) territory, centering the experiences of Niitsitapi women and 2SLGBTQI+ members engaged in queering approaches to #GenderJustice. Read more: https://t.co/UH4w3lpO1N @UCalgaryPoliSci
The latest issue of TOPIA: Canadian Journal of Cultural Studies explores the impacts of western #activist ideals on the subjectivities of queer and trans of colour organizers within Toronto, Ontario. Read “I don’t feel like an activist" in TOPIA 50: https://t.co/Ph2FDTwrah
New research in TOPIA 50 reflects on the liberatory possibilities of hope, speculative fiction and creative practice to mobilize communities to worldbuild a better future. Read the full article today: https://t.co/bDlZVkhk6Z @syrusmarcusware#CulturalStudies
Explore the new issue of TOPIA! Volume 50 is a special issue that delves into new and renewed formations of “queer,” and calls for the imagination of new queer possibilities beyond the binaries of inclusion and exclusion. Read the issue: https://t.co/9Ky7pFjodz @JRJCHAIR
In the latest issue of TOPIA, Victoria Sands of @TorontoMet explores how the “girl-oriented intimacy” of popular UK influencer channel FreddyMyLove “might have been challenged and/or (re)negotiated in response to the Black Lives Matter protests”: https://t.co/XFmGoDf1yQ
In recognition of National Indigenous History Month (#NIHM2024), a selection of @utpjournals articles are #FreeToRead until the end of June, including Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’s “Pinery Road and Concession 11” from TOPIA 46. Read the article online: https://t.co/sAXyN9thLp
“Platforms are no longer things outside of or adjacent to us, whether hand-held or screen-mediated; instead, they are now embedded, both literally and figuratively, in our lives and bodies.” Read more from @LindsayAnneB in TOPIA 48: https://t.co/vu7e7umIPj @utpjournals@utpress
Read Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’s “Pinery Road and Concession 11,” which reflects on Dionne Brand’s A Map to the Door of No Return, considering place, belonging, and diaspora. Available #FreeToRead until the end of June: https://t.co/sAXyN9thLp
In “The Spook Who Sat by the Door: Creating Black Studies in the Canadian Academy,” @afuacooper explores the issues with developing Black studies programs in Canadian universities. The article is #FreeToRead until June 23: https://t.co/UB3CPRmHce
“Is the Canadian academy committed to making Black studies central to its curricula, or will it continue to marginalize and tokenize this branch of knowledge?” Read more in @afuacooper’s article in TOPIA 44, #FreeToRead until June 23: https://t.co/UB3CPRmHce
In recognition of National Indigenous History Month (#NIHM2024), a selection of @utpjournals articles are #FreeToRead until the end of June, including Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’s “Pinery Road and Concession 11” from TOPIA 46. Read the article online: https://t.co/sAXyN9thLp
New on the @utpjournals blog, TOPIA contributor @afuacooper describes her current research creating a biography of Thomas Peters. Read “The Thomas Peters Project: The Life and Journey of a Black Atlantic Revolutionary”: https://t.co/UB3CPRmHce
Dr. Afua Cooper has been travelling around the world, tracing the journey of Thomas Peters, a Black revolutionary who escaped slavery in 1776, fought for the British army, and campaigned for the rights of Black people. Read more on the @utpjournals blog: https://t.co/UB3CPRmHce
Read Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’s “Pinery Road and Concession 11,” which reflects on Dionne Brand’s A Map to the Door of No Return, considering place, belonging, and diaspora. Available #FreeToRead until the end of June: https://t.co/sAXyN9thLp
“Is the Canadian academy committed to making Black studies central to its curricula, or will it continue to marginalize and tokenize this branch of knowledge?” Read more in @afuacooper’s article in TOPIA 44, #FreeToRead until June 23: https://t.co/UB3CPRmHce
In recognition of National Indigenous History Month (#NIHM2024), a selection of @utpjournals articles are #FreeToRead until the end of June, including Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’s “Pinery Road and Concession 11” from TOPIA 46. Read the article online: https://t.co/sAXyN9thLp
In “The Spook Who Sat by the Door: Creating Black Studies in the Canadian Academy,” @afuacooper explores the issues with developing Black studies programs in Canadian universities. The article is #FreeToRead until June 23: https://t.co/UB3CPRmHce
In the latest issue of TOPIA, Rebecca Noone (@rebnoone) and Arun Jacob (@arungapatchka) explore how location data and #geofences are used to target abortion seekers and accelerate tenant evictions in the US. Read more in TOPIA 48: https://t.co/Two4r2AzPC @utpjournals@utpress