5th Biennial Seneca Falls Dialogues (SFD), "Lean Out: Gender, Economics, and Enterprise," October 21 - 23, 2016, held in historic Seneca Falls, NY.

Announcing the 5th Biennial Seneca Falls Dialogues (SFD),  "Lean Out: Gender, Economics, and Enterprise," October 21 - 23,  2016, held in historic Seneca Falls, NY.     

The 2016 SFD will feature award-winning documentarian and creator of "Upstate Girls," Brenda Ann Kenneally,  keynote and WILL award recipient.  The Call for Dialogues is pasted below.  

Call for Dialogues
The Biennial Dialogues are a collaborative effort to reinvigorate Seneca Falls as a site of feminist activism and intellectual exchange.  We invite faculty, students, activists to participate in a weekend of dialogue on any of the following "Lean Out: Gender, Economics, and Enterprise," subthemes:
•  Divisions of Labor
•  Class, Gender, & Sexuality
•  Teaching Economic Justice
•  Representations of Work
•  Gender and Entrepreneurship
•  Global Economies
•  Art, Activism, and Social Justice
•  Women in Business

We are seeking group-led sessions that involve active audience participation and focused discussion of issues raised by the conference theme and subthemes. Session proposals should indicate how organizers will present information, pose questions, and facilitate conversation. 

Submit proposals to senecafallsdialogues.com@gmail.com

All proposals must include:
•   Title of the session.
•   A 2-3 sentence summary of its focus and relevance to one or more of the conference subthemes.
•   Name of each session organizer.
•   Name of one organizer who will serve as the contact person. Include for the contact person her or his  
   home or institutional address, email, and telephone number.
•  250-500 word description of the session’s focus and organization. This should include how the
  organizers will introduce the topic, questions they will pose,  and a clear explanation of how the
  organizers will involve the audience in dialogue.
•  List of technology needs.

Proposal Deadline: April 30, 2016

Conference participants will be invited to submit essay versions of their dialogues for publication consideration in the new online, peer-reviewed Seneca Falls Dialogues Journal.  For additional journal information, see http://digitalcommons.brockport.edu/sfd/  

Questions about the SFD and the SFD Journal can be directed to me off list atblesavoy@brockport.edu 
Visit  www.senecafallsdialogues.com  for conference updates including upcoming links to registration and hotel.  Join us and feel the power of place in Seneca Falls, NY.  

Peace and Good Cheer, 
Barbara LeSavoy, PhD
Director, Women and Gender Studies
Executive Editor, Dissenting Voices
Co-Editor, The Seneca Falls Dialogues Journal
118 Liberal Arts Building
The College at Brockport, State University of New York
Brockport, NY 14420
http://www.brockport.edu/wms/
Voice:  585-395-5799
Fax:     585-395-2448
blesavoy@brockport.edu

Yes, I am your mother: Discussing alternative forms of reproduction with children

New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute's Child and Adolescent Psychoanalysis division continues the "Dialogues on..." Series with leading child development experts:

 

Yes, I am your mother:

Discussing alternative forms of reproduction with children

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

8:00 pm - 9:30 pm

The Marianne & Nicholas Young Auditorium

 247 East 82nd Street, NYC

Free and open to the public

 RSVP HERE, visit nypsi.org or call 212-879-6900

ART (Alternative Reproductive Technologies) include IVF, sperm or egg donor, surrogate mothers, etc. How is the best way to address this accounting for parental preferences and the child's developmental stages?

Anna Balas, M.D. is a child, adolescent and adult board certified psychiatrist and psychoanalyst in private practice on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. She is on the faculty at New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute and Associate Professor on the Voluntary Faculty at The Payne Whitney Division of the New York Presbyterian Hospital and the Weill Cornell School of Medicine.

The "Dialogues on..." Series is intended for professionals and parents who are involved with the care of children in the school and home environments. Educators, school administrators, community leaders, grandparents are welcome. NO CME OR CE CREDITS WILL BE OFFERED.
The "Dialogues on..." Series is made possible by a generous donation from The Poses Family Foundation.

The 60th Freud Anniversary Lecture

The New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute cordially invites you to attend

The 60th Freud Anniversary Lecture

 

Tuesday, May 10, 2016 at 8 pm

The Marianne & Nicholas Young Auditorium

247 East 82nd Street, New York City

 

Rosemary Balsam, M.D, will speak on Freud, the Birthing Body, and Modern Life

Shelley Orgel, M.D. will introduce the speaker

Starting with a closer look at Freud's early astute sense of the psychic impact of the bodily power of females' biological sex and child-bearing potential, the lecture will show how this appreciation became obscured until about the 1970s. In spite of sporadic subsequent efforts, moreover, the impact of the female body has never been acknowledged in general in psychoanalytic thought (except as an infantile archaic fantasy, or sidelined in a special adult "woman's" category). Given the new vibrant culture of enacted gender multiplicities that we encounter in the clinic these days, where, then, can this lag leave us with psychoanalytic ideas about natally sexed female or male bodies as they articulate with gender?

Rosemary Balsam, M.D. is a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, London; Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine; Staff Psychiatrist at the Yale Student Mental Health and Counseling Service; and Training and Supervising Analyst at Western New England Institute for Psychoanalysis. She is the author of numerous writings, including Women's Bodies in Psychoanalysis published in 2012 by Routledge.

 

General Admission: $15

To register, click HERE, visit  

nypsi.org, or call 212.879.6900

  A Reception will follow the lecture. All are welcome.

Educational Objectives: Upon completion of this activity, participants will be able to:

a) describe Freud's early sense of the biological body

b) appreciate why and how this changed, and how the body became obscured

c) assess the long term effects of this obfuscation on our thinking, that can still affect today's analysts dealing with patients' gender dilemmas.

d) think more creatively with patients about the modern role of the biologically female body.

2 CME/CE credits offered.

 

Frontlines: Women of Color on the Forefront of Activism

Frontlines: Women of Color on the Forefront of Activism will highlight women of color as driving influences in activist movements, and illuminate a few of the most pressing issues facing women of color over a series of panel discussions. The panels will be about mental health, criminal and civil incarceration, and institutional violence. The conference will open with keynote remarks from Bronx County District Attorney, the Honorable Darcel Clark. Please register for the conference here. April 15th

The First Annual City Lights Kids Film Festival!


The Spirituality Mind Body Institute Invites you to...
The First Annual City Lights Kids Film Festival!
Date: Thursday, April 14th
Time: 5:00PM-6:00PM

Location: Milbank Chapel (125 Zankel Hall) at Teachers College, Columbia University
Please join us for the City Lights Kids Film Festival! We will be screening a series of short films all created by children for children. The mission of the festival is to support and cultivate the creativity of youth and to disseminate their films to the local community. All ages are welcome! Please RSVP below if you plan to attend.
RSVP: http://bit.ly/1LBDrwX
Inquiries: SMBIFilm@gmail.com

call for submission #DarkMatter: women witnessing

We are now accepting submissions for issue #4 of/Dark Matter: Women Witnessing.//Dark Matter /publishes writing and visual art created in response to an age of massive species extinction and ecological collapse, especially work that points toward cultural and/or linguistic restoration.Deadline: May 13, 2016

http://www.darkmatterwomenwitnessing.com

We welcome writing in all forms and genres as well as artwork in all mediums. Context and commentary are required for dreams, visions, and other communications. Notes bridging to the journal’s mission must accompany all poetry and fiction. We also welcome submissions for our /After•Words /column, in which writers offer responses to books, films, artwork, cultural events—not necessarily current ones—that they feel make an important contribution to our mission. Responses can be creative—the work may serve as a springboard for the writer’s own reflections— and they can be as brief or as long as they need to be, within our 5,000-word limit.

The theme for each issue of /Dark Matter/ tends to emerge organically from material we receive. For now, the issue is open.

Submissions in French and German welcome; we will provide translation.
For more details please see our submission guidelines.

http://www.darkmatterwomenwitnessing.com/submission_guidelines.html

Women and Creativity House Student Exhibition

Women and Creativity House Student Exhibition

April 20 - May 2, 2016
Mary H. Dana Women Artists Series Galleries,
Douglass Library
8 Chapel Drive, New Brunswick, NJ 08901

Special Event: Douglass Global Village Student Showcase and Women and Creativity House Student Exhibition Reception
April 25, 2016

Time and location TBA

Exhibition presenting the work of student artists living and working in the Women and Creativity House Living-Learning Community in the Global Village at DRC, under the guidance of instructor Stacy Scibelli.

Theorizing Motherhood In The Academy 2016

Each Year the Museum of Motherhood works with academic partners and collaborators to create the Annual Academic M.O.M. Conference. This year the conference is pleased to partner with JourMS (the Journal of Mother Studies) for publication of select peer-reviewed content in the field of Mother Studies.

The goal of the conference is to develop interdisciplinary approaches to Mother Studies and encourage information exchanges between thought-pioneers, activists, artists, academics, students on the subject of Motherhood, Fatherhood, and Family Life.

Theorizing Motherhood In The Academy 2016
May 5 – Motherhood Hall of Fame – Columbia Teachers’ College, NYC (Free) 7-9pm
May 6-7 – MOM Conference – Manhattan College

4513 Manhattan College Pkwy, Bronx, NY 10471

What factors, past and present, inform our new ways of understanding motherhood, fatherhood, and notions of family? The conference organizers encourage submissions that provide critical insights into mothering, fathering, and family issues; that draw direct links between theories and/or research findings; or that offer practical approaches to issues facing contemporary mothers and families. The overarching goal of this conference is to provide an environment to explore new ideas and approaches for tackling issues that concern mothers as well as important others who fill a care giving role in the family.

GENERAL INFORMATION

The conference fee which helps to cover our expenses is:  $150 before March 1. ($175 after) Payments are non-refundable- However the museum turns no one away for lack of funds and special student rates apply. (payment link)

The Conference is open to all those students wishing to attend, and we will provide discounted fees to the general public and for those wishing to attend singular panels.

For questions e-mail queries to MOMmuseum@gmail.com

part time employee or paid intern for BOBB films

BOBB Films is a production company run by Ricki Lake and Abby Epstein.

An overview of their projects can be seen at http://www.rickiandabbyfilms.com/.

Lake and Epstein partnered in 2004 to make the documentary “The Business of Being Born” and have also written a book and executive produced 6 other documentaries in the women’s health space.   BOBB Films is in production on two current films “Weed the People” and “Sweetening the Pill” along with several ancillary media projects. 

BOBB Films is seeking a part time employee or paid intern to serve as an assistant to Ms. Lake and Ms. Epstein.  The assistant will help manage day to day operations for the company and assist on all media projects for 15-20 hours/week.  We are looking for a minimum 1 year commitment.  Candidates will need to have some or all of the following qualifications and skills:

  • A background or interest in women’s health and/or women’s reproductive issues or women’s studies.
  • A background or interest in documentary film production, media or journalism.
  • Strong writing skills and experience with social media to manage all social media accounts and create monthly newsletter.
  • Administrative asst. experience to manage scheduling for Lake and Epstein, coordinate conference calls, create calendars, manage email communications and create financial reports for accountant.
  •  Excellent personal skills and initiative to work independently and contribute ideas

The Second Annual National City Lights Film Festival


The Spirituality Mind Body Institute invites you to the

 The Second Annual National City Lights Film Festival!

Date: Thursday, April 14th
Time: 6:30PM-9:00PM
Location: Milbank Chapel (125 Zankel Hall) at Teachers College, Columbia University

Please join us for the Second Annual National City Lights Film Festival! We will be screening a series of short films that explore lived spirituality in its many forms of expression. We invite you to an evening of film, culture and conversation. Please RSVP if you plan to attend. Appetizers and drinks will be served.

RSVP: http://bit.ly/1UfWn7s
Inquiries: SMBIFilm@gmail.com
Recommended Donation: $10 at the door
 

LGBTQ Study Group at William Alanson White Institute

LGBTQ Study Group

Katharina Rothe, Ph.D.
Bisexuality: Freud's major marginal concept, lived sexual orientation, and experience in the consulting room


Dr. Rothe will provide history on the multifaceted term bisexuality and will explore Freud’s unfinished work on the concept of a constitutional bisexuality. She will also describe how she applies the concept of bisexuality in the consulting room through a clinical vignette.

Katharina Rothe received her Ph.D. from the University of Bremen, Germany, in 2008. She is widely published in academic journals and books on psychoanalysis, qualitative methods in psychoanalytic social research, sex and gender, anti-Semitism, and racism. She is a NYS-licensed psychologist and a WAWI graduate in psychoanalysis.

Please note the correct time:
8:30-10:00 pm

Date:
Wed. April 6th, 2016

Location:
William Alanson White Institute
20 West 74 St.
New York, NY 10023

RSVPeugenioaduarte@gmail.com
 

2016 Keywords Roundtable Discussion on the keyword “choice”

The Center for the Study of Social Difference and the Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Council are co-hosting a spring 2016 Keywords Roundtable Discussion on the keyword “choice.” 

Thursday, March 31, 2016, 4:30-6:30 p.m.
Lehman Auditorium (202 Altschul Hall), Barnard College


Featured participants:

  • Rachel Adams: Director, CSSD and Professor of English and American Studies, Columbia University
  • Ester Fuchs: Director, Urban and Social Policy Concentration and Professor of International and Public Affairs and Political Science, SIPA, Columbia University
  • Maya Sabatello: Assistant Professor of Clinical Bioethics, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons
  • Carol Sanger: Barbara Aronstein Black Professor of Law, Columbia Law School
  • Josef Sorett: Associate Director, Institute for Religion, Culture, and Public Life and Assistant Professor of Religion and African-American Studies, Columbia University
     

Woman and City, a conversation with Wang Anyi

One of China's most critically-acclaimed writers, Shanghai-based Wang Anyi has published twelve novels including The Song of Everlasting Sorrow (Weatherhead Books on Asia/Columbia University Press), The Age of Enlightenment, Heavenly Fragrance, and Anonymous. She is the winner of many prestigious literary prizes, including the Lu Xun Prize, "The Writer of the Year" of the Chinese Literary Media, and The Dream of the Red Chamber Prize offered in Hong Kong. Her work was nominated in 2011 for the Man Booker International Prize. She is a professor at Fudan University.

Hosted by Lydia H. Liu and Eugenia Lean
Monday, 21 March at 6:00pm
104 Jerome Greene Hall
Columbia University
Registration required
Please click to register -> https://www.eventbrite.com/e/woman-and-city-a-conversation-with-wang-anyi-tickets-22421328798

Cosponsored by Weatherhead East Asian Institute; Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University; Center for Translation Studies at Barnard College; East Asian Languages and Cultures Department at Columbia University; C.V. Starr East Asian Library; Columbia Law School Center for Contemporary Critical Thought; Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality; Literary Translation at Columbia, Columbia School of the Arts; and Columbia University Press.
 

Twenty-first annual Queer Studies Award and the ninth annual Women’s and Gender Studies Award!

IRWGS is proud to announce the twenty-first annual Queer Studies Award and the ninth annual Women’s and Gender Studies Award!

$250 in prize money for each award!

All Columbia, Barnard, Engineering and Applied Science, and General Studies undergraduates are encouraged to submit their best work for consideration.  All disciplines and topics within the fields of “queer studies” or “women’s and gender studies” (broadly defined) are welcome.  Papers will be judged by an interdisciplinary committee of IRWGS faculty.  Students are invited to enter one or both of the competitions (but must submit a different essay for each competition).

Application deadline: Monday April 18th, 2016 by 5pm

Application packets now available on irwgs.columbia.edu/undergrad


Symposium: "On The Body" May 6-7, 2016


Presenter: Julia Kristeva, Juliet Mitchell, Sherry Turkle, Paul Verhaeghe, Patricia Gherovici, Jessica Benjamin, Christine Anzieu-Premmereur, Robert Paul, Panagiotis Aloupis, Marina Papageorgiou, Rosemary Balsam, Jonathan House, Dominique Scarfone, Robert Michels, Lila Kalinich and George Sagi

Abstract:

At the dawning of psychoanalysis in Freud's project and throughout his writings, the intertwining of body and psyche was elemental. However, since Freud, the body has been progressively undertheorized. The APMSymposium 'On the Body' addresses the imperative to bring the body back to center stage and to consider the challenges it poses to our current ways of understanding our patients. Does the contemporary ideology of the body, an ideology of an omnipotent mind that transcends the limits of the body, produce different kind of patients from those of the times of Freud? How do we think of hysteria today and of the psychosomatic symptoms that we are encountering more and more in our practice? How is the body today used by the psyche?

This 2-day multi-disciplinary International Symposium in NYC with guest speakers from around the world will address singularly important topics in contemporary psychoanalysis such as:
• Disembodiment in our Digital Age and its Impact on the Psyche
• The Speaking Body, the Sick Body, the Sexual Body
• Sex, Gender and Infantile Sexuality

For more information, follow our Facebook page APM Symposium on the Body in NYC.

Register at http://internationalpsychoanalysis.net/2007/05/06/apm-on-the-body-conference-register-here/

#IAmPsyched - Museum Day Live on March 12th

We are so excited to announce that IamPsyched! Museum Day Live! 2016Inspiring Histories, Inspiring Lives: Women of Color in Psychology, will launch on Saturday, March 12, 2016 at the APA Capitol View Conference Center. And for those of you not in DC, you can tune in to the livestream http://bit.ly/1Rfm4hI on March 12th.  

IamPsyched! is a joint project of the APA Women's Programs Office, the Cummings Center for the History of Psychology, and Psychology's Feminist Voices, in collaboration with the Council on Women and Girls at the White House and the Smithsonian Affiliations program. We are creating a pop-up museum to empower girls of color to explore the social and behavioral sciences and to use psychology to engage in positive social change.

APA Interim CEO Cynthia Belar will be welcoming visitors to APA’s Capitol View Conference Center. Jennifer Kelly, Secretary of the APA Board of Directors, will be introducing our special guests.  Reiko True will be sharing her story with the girls in the audience. Ramani Durvasula (@DoctorRamani) will be moderating the town hall meeting. Other speakers include Judith Arroyo, Jessica Henderson Daniel, Iva GreyWolf, Angela Cole Dixon, Helen Hsu, Tami Jollie-Trottier, Camilla Knott, and Kee Straits.

Help Us Publicize “IamPsyched!” 

I’m reactivating my Twitter account to get out the word. Follow me on Twitter at @DrMilesCohen for regular updates and you can join us on March 12th via livestream.

Please use these hashtags to help us get out the word: #IamPsyched #MuseumDay #ImagineHer 

For the first time, we are using a platform called Thunderclap to publicize #IamPsyched on Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr.

What is Thunderclap? It’s a new platform that allows people to pledge a Tweet or Facebook message that is concentrated and unleashed all at the same time, like an online flash mob. It’s completely safe and will automatically post exactly one message on your behalf. 

It takes 5 seconds to join.

1.       1: Visit http://thndr.me/zcgEzL

2.       Click “Support with Twitter”, “Support with Facebook” or “Support with Tumblr”  

3.       Once you’ve added your support, encourage your friends to join the Thunderclap by clicking one of Facebook, Twitter or Tumblr icons at the bottom right. 

We just need 100 supporters to get our message out. With your help, we can use psychology’s past and present to inspire today’s girls of color.

Joyfully giving psychology away,

Shari Miles-Cohen, with Cathy Faye, and Alexandra Rutherford

Reproductive Freedom Festival - Live-Stream on March 20th

The Festival

The Reproductive Freedom Festival, a theatrical recognition and celebration of the fundamental human right to bodily autonomy, is being developed by Words of Choice to support reproductive freedom, rights, health and justice and to generate new conversations on these subjects. We are pro-women’s rights, pro-human rights, pro-reproductive rights, pro-reproductive justice and pro-choice.

Short theatrical works, poetry and spoken word selections will be presented in a Live Theatrical Reading, at The TACT Studio in NYC and also streamed live to the world, via a multi-camera interactive livestream

The LiveStream

One of the best parts! The Live Event in New York will be shared simultaneously across the country via premiere high-quality Live Arts Streaming of VirtualArts TV. This is not your back-of-the-house wobbly camera, but a professional multi-camera set-up of the theatrical works.  You will feel like you are in the room with the performers in New York!

Included will be short interviews with experts and artists, along with selected visual arts. Online participants may join in by Twitter and instant messaging.  In other words, this is TV of dynamic new writings coming through to you by computer, with international online participation. 

Connect with reproductive freedom advocates across the country!

http://reproductivefreedomfestival.org/watch/