Diaspora, Indigeneity, Queer Critique - A talk by Dr. Gayatri Gopinath
April 8, 12:00pm - 1:15pmMānoa Campus, Burns 2118
Dr. Gayatri Gopinath is an Associate Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis and Director of Asian/Pacific/American Studies at New York University. Her research area includes Queer Studies, Post-colonial Studies, and Feminist Theory. Her talk is an attempt to think through the relation between diaspora and indigeneity in relation to queer studies. She argues that queer diasporic aesthetic practices allow us to place in the same frame, different histories of dispossession and displacement, colonialism and racialization without rendering them equivalent.
Ticket Information
Dr. Gopinath will also meet with graduate students to discuss research methods from 1:30-2:30PM on Wed., April 8th in Burns Hall - 2118. Please see attached flyer.
Event Sponsor
Sociology and co-sponsored by the International Cultural Studies Program & the Rama Watumull Collaborative Lecture Series of the Center for South Asian Studies, Mānoa Campus
More Information
Joy Lacanienta, 956-7693, socdept@hawaii.edu, http://www.sociology.hawaii.edu/index.html
Wednesday, April 8 |
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12:00pm |
Talk by Gayatri Gopinath
Mānoa Campus, East-West Center, Burns Hall, Room 2118
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12:00pm |
Diaspora, Indigeneity, Queer Critique - A talk by Dr. Gayatri Gopinath
Mānoa Campus, Burns 2118
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6:00pm |
How Hawaii Changed America: Lecture with author Tom Coffman
Mānoa Campus, School of Architecture Auditorium
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