Questioning Transphobia

Upcoming event: Girl Talk, A Trans & Cis Woman Dialogue

with 21 comments

IMPORTANT EDIT:  Due to overwhelming demand, Girl Talk has been moved one floor down in the same building, from the Ceremonial Room to the Rainbow Room, where there are fifty more seats.  To my knowledge the Rainbow Room will have the same accessibility as the Ceremonial Room.  See you tomorrow night!  –ll.

I’ll be performing on the 24th in San Francisco, and I would love to see you there!  This has been a lovely and powerful event for two years in a row, and I’m proud to share it with the community.  Details and event promo below.  –little light

 

Girl Talk: A Trans & Cis Woman Dialogue
Thursday, March 24th, 2011
7:00pm – 10:00pm
San Francisco LGBT Community Center – Rainbow Room
1800 Market Street between Octavia & Laguna
Tickets: $12-$20 (no one turned away!)
(Link to BrownPaperTickets site:
http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/163744 I strongly recommend that you get tix in advance — we sold out very fast last year.)

Queer cisgender women and queer transgender women are allies, friends, support systems, lovers, and partners to each other. Trans and cis women are allies to each other every day — from activism that includes everything from Take Back the Night to Camp Trans; to supporting each other in having “othered” bodies in a world that is obsessed with idealized body types; to loving, having sex, and building family with each other in a world that wants us to disappear.

Girl Talk is a spoken word show fostering and promoting dialogue about these relationships. Trans and cis women will read about their relationships of all kinds – sexual and romantic, chosen and blood family, friendships, support networks, activist alliances. Join us for a night of stories about sex, bodies, feminism, activism, challenging exclusion in masculine-centric dyke spaces, dating and breaking up, finding each other, and finding love and family.

FEATURING:
Mira Bellwether
Gina de Vries
Tara Hardy
Tobi Hill-Meyer
Marlene Hoeber
Sadie Lune
Elena Rose, aka little light
Ray Rubin

***Curated & hosted by Gina de Vries, Elena Rose, & Julia Serano.***


PERFORMER BIOS:

MIRANDA BELLWETHER is a 28 year old trans dyke and student.  She is a femme, a queer, a dork, a loudmouth, and lots of other things.  Her interests include the 1920s, literature, masculinity, homos, conversation, rodents, and of course sex and sexuality.  She is the creator and editor of “Fucking Trans Women,” a zine about the sex lives of trans women and our lovers.

 

GINA DE VRIES is a genderqueer femme, a queer Paisan pervert, and a writer, performer, and activist with a long history doing political organizing in and with queer, trans, and sex worker communities. She is the founder and co-curator (with Julia & Rose) of “Girl Talk: a trans & cis woman dialogue,” and is very proud to be producing the show for the third year running.

Gina edited the queer youth anthology [Becoming] in 2004. Her writing has been anthologized dozens of places, from the academic to the pornographic. Her publications include Coming & Crying: true stories about sex from the other side of the bed, Take Me There: Trans & Genderqueer Erotica, Bound to Struggle: Where Kink and Radical Politics Meet, The Revolution Starts at Home: Confronting Intimate Partner Violence Within Activist Communities, $pread: Illuminating the Sex Industry, Femmethology, Girl Crush, and Curve, make/shift, and On Our Backs magazines. Gina was the head curator of the San Francisco in Exile queer performance series from 2006-2010. Shows she’s produced include “Ecstasies & Elegies” (for International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers), “Rebel Girl: a riot grrrl nostalgia show,” and “Cherry: queering virginity.”

Gina has performed, taught, and lectured everywhere from chapels to leatherbar backrooms. Recent university appearances include Harvard University, Yale University, and Reed College. She regularly teaches writing for WriteHereWriteNow queer & trans writers workshop in Boston, Massachusetts; regularly presents on issues ranging from sex work to intersex activism for the Civil Liberties and Public Policy Program of the Reproductive Rights Activist Service Corps; and works a day job fundraising for St. James Infirmary, the nation’s only clinic run by and for current & former sex workers. She is the founder and facilitator of Sex Workers’ Writing Workshop, a writing class for current and former sex workers at San Francisco’s Center for Sex & Culture (where she also serves on the Advisory Board).

A graduate of Hampshire College, Gina is currently pursuing her Master of Fine Arts in Fiction Writing at San Francisco State University, where she is working on a memoir and a book of short stories. Find out more at ginadevries.com, and keep track of her on the daily at queershoulder.tumblr.com.

 

TARA HARDY is the working class queer femme poet who founded Bent, a writing institute for LGBTIQ people in Seattle, WA.  She is a founding member of Salt Lines the all woman performance poetry group that toured the U.S. in March of 2009 and 2010 in honor of Women’s History Month.  Tara has been finalist on National Poetry Slam stages 7 times and is currently the highest ranking woman in the Individual World Poetry Slam. She’s been the Seattle Grand Slam Champion three times, and was elected Seattle Poet Populist in 2002.

Tara has been the keynote speaker for Seattle University’s Lavendar Graduation, Humboldt University’s 2009 Kink on Campus presented by the Women’s Center, and Seattle’s 2008 Dyke March.  A daughter of the United Auto Workers, and activist in the Battered Women’s Movement, she is committed to art as a tool for social change. Her upcoming book, Bring Down the Chandeliers, is due from Write Bloody Press in the spring of 2011. To contact Tara, or arrange for a performance, email wordyfemme@hotmail.com. Her webpage is www.tarahardy.net. You may find her on MySpace at www.myspace.com/tarahardygetsbent

 

TOBI HILL-MEYER (www.HandbasketProductions.com) is just about your average multiracial, pansexual, transracially inseminated queerspawn, genderqueer, transdyke, colonized mestiza, pornographer, activist, writer.  She has given talks on several campuses and her writing has appeared in And Baby Makes More: Known Donor’s, Queer Parents and our Unexpected Families, Who’s You Daddy?: And Other Writings on Queer Parenting, and Best Lesbian Erotica 2010.  She directed and produced the first porn film by and for trans women, Doing it Ourselves: The Trans Women Porn Project, and just finished work on her latest film, The Genderfellator, a campy sci-fi pornographic parody of a little known transphobic film from 2007.  Her zines and films can be found at HandbasketProductions.com.

 

MARLENE HOEBER is a long time queer, kink, trans, sex-positive, feminist, social justice activist and a devout pervert. She is currently Director of Collections at the archive of the Center for Sex and Culture. Marlene was a founding member of the world’s first college campus based BDSM organization in 1991. She has worked in diverse trades such as dildo manufacturing, jewelry, motorcycle repair, tool design and laboratory management. Her hobbies include target shooting and cognac “tasting”. Her writing can be found at http://fukshot.com and Body Impolitic http://www.laurietobyedison.com/discuss .

 

SADIE LUNE (www.sadielune.com) is a multimedia artist, absurdist, sex worker, and pleasure activist. She has won awards for her films and performances, exhibited explicit whore-positive work in museums, and shown her cervix internationally. Her writing on art and sex is published in books and magazines in the United States and Europe. Sadie is currently working on “Biological Clock” a queer fertility ritual performance as part of her ongoing project Teaching Myself to Love. She is looking for patrons, sperm donors, and a wife of any gender. Sadie lives in San Francisco with her three snakes.

 

ELENA ROSE, a Filipina-Ashkenazic mixed-class trans dyke mestiza, is a writer, preacher, scholar, and survivor from rural Oregon.  Dedicated to the projects of radical love, community building, and queer ministry, she writes online as “little light” at http://takingsteps.blogspot.com and elsewhere, serves on the advisory board of the Allied Media Conference in Detroit, and was a charter member of the Speak! Radical Women of Color Media Collective.

A sweet-talking monster at the mic, Rose has performed to sold-out crowds up and down the Pacific coast, from multiple headline shows in Portland to collaborations with the Bay’s Mangos With Chili and Seattle’s TumbleMe Productions, and has twice been a San Francisco Pride Featured Performer with the National Queer Arts Festival production, Girl Talk:  A Cis and Trans Woman Dialogue.  Her writing has found its way everywhere from law school classrooms and academic conferences to bathroom mirrors and protest marches, and has met print in magazines including Aorta and Make/Shift.

After the dust settles on Rose’s coast-to-coast tour this spring, she will be busy finishing her first book, “Mountain of Myrrh,” to be published by Dinah Press. Rose currently resides with her wife in northern California, where she stays busy being in good stories.  She carries a pen, her ancestors, and the mismatched ID of a citizen of the borderlands with her at all times.

 

RAY RUBIN is an FTMTF anti-capitalist that spends most of her day asking people for money. She is an activist for Lower-Haight, gluten-free, post-PCOS, rickets survivors who listen to public radio. She’s especially fond of independent publishing & has written for a number of ‘zines that can be found at the free section in Dog Eared Books.

 

JULIA SERANO is an Oakland, California-based writer, performer and trans activist. She is the author of Whipping Girl: A Transsexual Woman on Sexism and the Scapegoating of Femininity (Seal Press, 2007), a collection of personal essays that reveal how misogyny frames popular assumptions about femininity and shapes many of the myths and misconceptions people have about transsexual women.

Julia’s other writings have appeared in anthologies (including Gender Outlaws: The Next Generation, Word Warriors: 30 Leaders in the Women’s Spoken Word Movement and Yes Means Yes: Visions of Female Sexual Power and A World Without Rape), in feminist, queer, pop culture and literary magazines and websites (such as Bitch, AlterNet.org, Out, Feministing.com, Clamor, make/shift, and others), and have been used as teaching materials in gender studies, queer studies, psychology and human sexuality courses in colleges across North America. For more information about all of her creative endeavors, check out www.juliaserano.com.

Share

Written by little light

March 2nd, 2011 at 7:12 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

21 Responses to 'Upcoming event: Girl Talk, A Trans & Cis Woman Dialogue'

Subscribe to comments with RSS or TrackBack to 'Upcoming event: Girl Talk, A Trans & Cis Woman Dialogue'.

  1. Ohhh, how exciting, I’ve never been able to attend, but I can this year! Super psyched and interested to see what everyone has come up with.

    whatsername

    2 Mar 11 at 8:53 pm

  2. Sigh, this makes me sad to be in Australia, are there any plans to film/record any of the sessions?

  3. I know Julia has a sound recording of the first Girl Talk posted on line, and the second was recorded but is still in process–so I expect we will be recording again this year. We have also considered touring the show, though it will be some time before we can manage a budget that would get us to Australia.

    little light

    2 Mar 11 at 9:10 pm

  4. Wish I could be there, I know you’ll be awesome!

    Queen Emily

    2 Mar 11 at 9:33 pm

  5. I missed it last year because of a last minute problem. I fully intend on making it this year, this is the kind of thing I need right now :)

    Qwinara

    3 Mar 11 at 12:54 am

  6. Ok, maybe I’m a suspicious mean hag, but why isn’t anyone of the speakers marked as “cis”? There’s more than one speaker who’s been marked as “trans”.

    Please someone tell me it’s not ‘cos “cis is the default so it need not be mentioned”.

    Other than that, it’s prolly awesome and everything – but on the other side of the pond.

    Carto

    3 Mar 11 at 2:59 am

  7. (This may post twice, dunno what happened to the last attempt) I’m so glad that this show is returning for third year. Unfortunately, I’m on the US east coast and won’t be able to attend, but if/when the show tours the east coast, I’ll be there.

    GallingGalla

    3 Mar 11 at 7:32 am

  8. No, Carto, that’s totally our oversight–because we didn’t have a standard style or directions for author bios and had everyone submit their own. Many of us just have a standard bio we use for event after event with small modifications–there’s always a time crunch submitting this stuff.
    Nobody was required to identify themselves any particular way, but since most of the trans performers in the show do performance around our trans experience, we choose to mention it. I know I mention it in my standard bio even when I speak on other topics as a point of pride and visibility. I know our cis performers were chosen because they are really solid allies–this was almost certainly just an oversight of bios adapted from elsewhere.

    I’ll look into what we can do to make it clearer that we don’t consider “cis” an unmarked case.

    little light

    3 Mar 11 at 10:07 am

  9. Le sigh. I will be visiting San Fran just a week before this happens. I really enjoyed listening to the first year’s performance. I would love to see y’all come on tour to Portland.

    alexmac

    3 Mar 11 at 3:06 pm

  10. i havent seen it mentioned anywhere whether and to what extent this event is accessible to folks with disabilities. Can someone please clarify?

    romham

    3 Mar 11 at 5:26 pm

  11. alexmac, we will see what we can do in the future. In the meantime, for interested Portlanders, Julia and I will be appearing on a panel with Diana Courvant for the Gender Studies Symposium at Lewis and Clark College on March 11th.
    I will also be appearing at numerous events this spring at Virginia Tech, UC Santa Barbara, Stanford, Reed College, and elsewhere. Would people be interested in me posting a touring schedule?

    little light

    3 Mar 11 at 9:00 pm

  12. romham, thank you for asking an important question.
    The venue is definitely physically accessible, in terms of elevators and ramps and accessible restrooms. We don’t at this time have an ASL interpreter and haven’t had the budget to hire someone professional, but would love volunteers and I would love to start working on making that a more definite thing for next year. I also know that while it may be too late to put in scent-free requests to the audience, the space is well ventilated and there are quiet areas for people experiencing sensory overload. I know it’s not perfect, but we’re open to hearing input and will do our best to be considerate of everyone’s needs. Are there any other concerns I can clarify?

    little light

    3 Mar 11 at 9:07 pm

  13. Yes, ll, please post your schedule.

    Maybe also mention what you’re doing at each stop. eg: are you doing the same thing at Stanford and Girl Talk? Someone I know might come to both.

    Marlene

    4 Mar 11 at 8:50 am

  14. yes please post your schedule – if you’re to be at Reed, I’ll make an excuse to go.

    b. sanford

    4 Mar 11 at 8:54 pm

  15. I’m so sorry I can’t be there! I’m forwarding it to people in the Bay Area, okay?

    Break a leg.

    piny

    7 Mar 11 at 6:33 am

  16. I am so excited for this! Are tickets available yet?

    seaweed

    9 Mar 11 at 11:59 am

  17. Tickets are now available! I’ve also added this link to the original post:
    http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/163744

    little light

    9 Mar 11 at 12:39 pm

  18. @little light, thanks heaps, could you post/send me a link to the first girl talk recording, if you know where it is?

  19. littlelight, sorry im only getting back now, been dealing with some stuff.

    anyways, im leaving a link to my accessibility audit for yer reference. It may be too late for folks to perform a full one of these, but it might be good to get an idea of the kinds of things i look for when auditing a space for access.

    Sign language interpretation, light levels, marked and maintained accessible route through the venue, stairs/steps and railing information, elevators/lifts, scent-free/scent-reduced status, disabled, fat and gender-neutral access to washrooms, food/water availability, cost, signage, parking info, proximity to buses and other transit, what kinds of seating are available, and so on.

    i hope its a fabulous event!

    https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0AkEveutSlMoVdEtMcTk3NXBZS3pVQjZwOF9qOGJfcFE&hl=en&authkey=CO3uitcO

    romham

    17 Mar 11 at 6:26 pm

  20. Important change: Due to overwhelming demand and selling out of tickets FAST, Girl Talk has been moved one floor down in the same building, from the Ceremonial Room to the Rainbow Room, where there are fifty more seats. To my knowledge the Rainbow Room will have the same accessibility as the Ceremonial Room. See you tomorrow night!

    little light

    23 Mar 11 at 1:38 pm

  21. For those who weren’t able to make it to “Girl Talk” on 3/24/11, I have a review/overview of it at my blog with a number of videos showing clips of some of the funny, powerful and sexy performances. I’m happy to say I’ve since read there is some thought about creating a road version of it.

    http://alturl.com/j2svs

    ginasf

    26 Mar 11 at 9:41 pm

Leave a Reply