Discuss queer stories through what is missing. View the program recording here https://youtu.be/Qe3UfZfYerg. This presentation traces the relationships between care, grief, and midrash - a Jewish rhetorical genre and method that attends to gaps, lapses, and silences through stories. Dr. Cassandra Hall will position midrash as a queer grieving practice that honors those structurally forgotten within dominant historical narratives through a close read of Ocean Vuong?s <em>On Earth We?re Briefly Gorgeous</em>. Following Vuong, how do stories - including those positioned as fictional - reveal deeper meanings within traumatic and systematically forgotten memories? How do fiction and other creative genres attend to historical and other gaps in ways that reveal messier, whole-making meanings? Vitally, how might midrash and other creative methods allow us to grapple with the ongoing impacts of these gaps, lapses, and silences and enable more livable queer futures? Access the questionnaire here: https://www.deschuteslibrary.org/files/uploads/OV%20Questionnaire%20to%20Oneself.pdf. Cassandra Hall is a queer, feminist scholar and full-spectrum care worker whose research and activist interests include disability justice, Jewish rhetorics, reproductive justice, and feminized genres, including romance and memoir. Cassandra holds doctoral and MA degrees in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (Queer Studies minor) and a graduate certificate in Certificate in College and University Teaching from Oregon State University. Cassandra is currently located in Portland, OR, and works as an instructor at Portland State University. *cr* *yt*
AGE GROUP: | Adult |
EVENT TYPE: | Adult Program |
The two-story, 38,855-square-foot library opened in 1998 and features exposed beams and high ceilings, complemented with eastward-facing windows, looking over Bend’s civic square.