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DTSTART:20201112T180000Z
DTEND:20201112T193000Z
SUMMARY:Disruptions 05: Elwood Jimmy on Imagining Wiser Futures Through the Senses
DESCRIPTION:Making space for different ways of understanding accessibility.



CUAG invites you to join in a&nbsp;participatory workshop led&nbsp;by&nbsp;Toronto-based artist and activist&nbsp;Elwood Jimmy.&nbsp;Admission is free and everyone is welcome!



This is the&nbsp;fifth event in CUAG’s “Disruptions: Dialogues on Disability Art” series, curated by Michael Orsini to generate dialogue about contemporary art as a force for challenging ableism.&nbsp;



We’ll convene on&nbsp;Zoom. You can register&nbsp;here.



The workshop will consist of a 30-minute talk by Jimmy, a break that includes&nbsp;an independent exercise and a 45-minute wrap-up and discussion.&nbsp;



In this workshop, Jimmy expands his notion of “acces(sens)ibility.”&nbsp;



He&nbsp;proposes&nbsp;a way to move from being unconsciously immersed in the naturalized&nbsp;violences&nbsp;of separability&nbsp;—&nbsp;accessibility as privileging&nbsp;modern-colonial ways&nbsp;of being and knowing that elevate individuality&nbsp;—&nbsp;toward consciously making space for different,&nbsp;unintelligible sensibilities.&nbsp;&nbsp;



Jimmy&nbsp;will gesture toward ways of interrupting&nbsp;and&nbsp;decluttering harmful and unsustainable desires,&nbsp;which&nbsp;prevent us from imagining wiser futures&nbsp;and&nbsp;relationships with each other and the Earth.&nbsp; We will consider strategies around care&nbsp;that&nbsp;are&nbsp;rooted in Indigenous and disability community teachings.&nbsp;&nbsp;



As Jimmy writes, “When relationality is based on the primary sense of entanglement with all other beings, other senses and sensibilities are activated.”&nbsp;&nbsp;



Disruptions 05&nbsp;is generously supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, Ontario Arts Council, Reesa Greenberg Digital Initiatives Fund, Office of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, School for Studies in Art and Culture, The Pauline Jewett Institute of Women’s and Gender Studies, Institute for Comparative Studies in Literature, Art and Culture, READ Initiative, Carleton Disability Awareness Centre, Graduate Students Association and Carleton University Students Association.&nbsp;



Access&nbsp;
This event is held on Zoom. Live captioning and ASL interpretation will be available.



Disability accommodations&nbsp;
Should you have any disability-related requirements, please contact Victoria&nbsp;by 2 November&nbsp;at&nbsp;victoria.mcglinchey@carleton.ca.&nbsp;





Participants

Elwood Jimmy&nbsp;(Thunderchild&nbsp;First Nation,&nbsp;Nêhiyaw; born in Saskatoon; lives in Toronto) is a learner, collaborator, writer, artist, cultural translator&nbsp;and&nbsp;facilitator, and gardener. For almost 20 years, he has played a leadership role in several art projects, collectives and organizations,&nbsp;nationally and abroad.&nbsp;He has employed photography, film, video, storytelling, language, text, textiles, natural materials, performance,&nbsp;and personal and&nbsp;community narratives as the foundation for&nbsp;collaborative projects.&nbsp;
Michael Orsini&nbsp;is Professor in the Institute of Feminist and Gender Studies and the School of Political Studies at the University of Ottawa. He is co-editor (with Christine Kelly) of&nbsp;Mobilizing Metaphor: Art, Culture and Disability Activism in Canada&nbsp;(UBC Press, 2016). He is currently part of a SSHRC-funded Partnership Grant, “Bodies in Translation: Activist Art, Technology and Access to Life,” which explores how activist art can be mobilized to promote social justice and an appreciation for diverse minds and bodies.
LOCATION:Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Dr, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6
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