2019 Election Protection Volunteers Needed!

election flyer

FRIDAY, October 25 & SATURDAY October 26 – 2019 Election Protection Volunteers Needed!

The ACLU of SC is partnering with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund to recruit and train volunteers to serve as election monitors for municipal elections in Charleston and North Charleston this Election Day, November 5. Anyone old enough to vote is eligible to participate — including college students! Trained election monitors will act as non-partisan observers at target precincts, reporting and addressing problems in real-time with the help of a network of volunteers and legal advocates. The time commitment is a two-hour training plus a volunteer shift on Election Day. 

  • 10/25 from 1-3pm at the Charleston County Public Library (68 Calhoun Street) 
  • 10/26 from 12-2pm at the Dorchester Road Regional Library (6352 Dorchester Road, North Charleston) 
  • Register HERE to volunteer! 

Women of Color Entrepreneurship Panel, 10/22

WOC Entrepreneurship Panel Flyer (details below)

Tuesday October 22 – Women of Color Entrepreneurship Panel – Tate Center room 207, 6:00pm  

Join the Center of Entrepreneurship for this event featuring five incredible panelists, Monique Hill, Joselyn Johnson, Sharon McGhee, Thomasena Thomas, and Marietta Worthy, and moderated by Ruth Johnson.  
 

WGS Student Spotlight: Raegan Whiteside

We sat down with WGS and English double-major Raegan Whiteside to talk about her experiences leading Literati (the CofC English club), how she came to study WGS, and what areas of WGS she’s most passionate about.

First off, why did you choose to major in WS?

I chose to major in WGS after my first WGS class – Feminism and Jiu-Jitsu (taught by Dr. Kristi Brian). I left that class each day feeling empowered and free. I was surrounded by unique, powerful, independent and different women and yet we all had the common goal of supporting and lifting each other up. We formed a community. That’s why I chose to major in WGS, because I loved that feeling of community and lifting up others, of empowerment and acceptance and WGS Department is the only place I have found that consistently. Raegan headshot

What areas/aspects of WGS you find most engaging or interesting? Or, what WGS-related issues are most passionate about?

I think many of us are in WGS because we are passionate about equal rights and empowering others, especially minority groups. But I think the diversity found in WGS – in the faculty and students, the courses and topics discussed or even the events – is what I find most interesting and what excites me.

Tell us about any extracurricular work you’re doing (ex. volunteering/local activism), or any involvement you have on campus with clubs/organizations.

After my WGS internship ended at skirt. magazine, they offered me two paid positions – Freelance Writer and Magazine Distributor. I’m also the Co-President of Literati (the CofC English club), and a Humanities and Social Sciences Ambassador. When I’m not in class or working on any of those activities, I work at Buxton Bookstore here downtown.

What does being a WGS student mean to you, and why do you think it’s important that we study WGS?

WGS, for me, means community and acceptance (like I mentioned before). I think, in our society today, it’s easy to get caught up in being something you’re not and losing sight of what matters. But, with WGS, I’m always able to be completely myself and WGS challenges me to do better, fight for what I’m passionate about and not shy away when things get difficult.

I think every CofC student should take a WGS class before they graduate because we are in the 21st century and it’s time to quit denying the obvious — that we need change and we need equality and we need everyone on board. WGS is for those who are ready for change, but also for those who want to learn more, for those who want to challenge themselves and get out of their comfort zone and actually make a difference in our community, society and culture.

AFFA’s LGBTQ Health Expo: Saturday, 10/12

AFFA Health Expo Flyer

AFFA’s LGBTQ Health Expo – Saturday, October 12 from 10:00-2:00 – Arthur Christopher Community Center (265 Fishburne St)

FREE Event! Come and go or stay all day – connect with providers and get more information about trans/nonbinary health preventative screenings, navigating insurance, mental health resources, and LGBTQ empowerment.

RSVP on Facebook!

GSECond Thursdays: 10/10 and 11/14

GSECond Thursdays Flyer

GSECond Thursdays Series: October 10th & November 14th

10/10 from 5:00-6:30pm – The Terms of Our Existence: A Workshop to Explore Solidarity Across Gender, Sexuality, and Identity – RSS Room 252

11/14 from 5:00-6:30pm – Preparing for Courageous Conversations at the Thanksgiving Table: A Restorative Justice-Style Dialogue – RSS Room 250

Learn more about GSEC and all of their awesome events at gender-sexuality-equity.cofc.edu

International Pronouns Day & Spirit Day Events, 10/16-17

INTERNATIONAL PRONOUNS DAY & SPIRIT DAY 2019 are this week!

International Pronouns Day

Second Annual Observance: October 16, 2019

International Pronouns Day seeks to make respecting, sharing, and educating about personal pronouns commonplace. Referring to people by the pronouns they determine for themselves is basic to human dignity, but many transgender and gender nonconforming people are regularly called by the wrong pronouns, which causes erasure and marginalization.

International Pronouns Day occurs on the third Wednesday of October each year, and in 2019 is scheduled for Wednesday, October 16, 2019. The College of Charleston has officially endorsed International Pronouns Day, joining hundreds of groups around the world, including groups based in Australia, Canada, Italy, the Netherlands, Rwanda, Singapore, the UK, the USA, and individual registrants in a variety of additional locations such as Denmark, Hong Kong, and Mexico. The full list of endorsers is online at:

https://pronounsday.org/endorsers

To recognize International Pronouns Day, WGS, MSPS, GSEC, Out Front, Prism and our local LGBTQ+ youth organization, We Are Family, will be conducting outreach on Cougar Mall, and hosting educational events on Wednesday and Thursday of this week (see info below!).

Show your support by posting online using the #PronounsDay hashtag, encouraging create supportive institutional policies and practices, and creating awareness on our campus and in the Charleston community. “Trans and gender nonconforming people, especially Black folks and those perceived to be feminine, are often harmed by many forms of interpersonal and systemic violence. An action as small as respecting names and pronouns can begin a conversation about justice and about creating the workplaces, educational environments, and communities where we all thrive,” said Shige Sakurai (they), the campaign’s founder and the creator of the educational MyPronouns.org website. “For me, it’s a spiritual undertaking, and it’s about wellbeing. We have to end assumptions and erasure and the harm they create.”

“Intersecting forms of oppression deeply impact transgender communities. These actions are part of the larger work of creating and sustaining inclusive and supportive communities for everyone,” said Luca Maurer (he), a campaign Executive Board member, about this observance.

 

International Pronouns Day flyer

October 16 – International Pronouns Day! Tabling & “Flash Fashion Shows” in Cougar Mall and Maybank

Join GSEC, We are Family, Prism, MSPS, and WGS as we table for International Pronouns Day! Stop by and learn more about the College’s commitment to the International Pronouns Day initiative and pick up free swag, including awesome pronoun buttons to wear!
 

Spirit Day 2019 Flyer

October 17 – Spirit Day 2019 – Phluid Project & Youth Panel – 5:00-7:00pm, Stern Ballroom  

Join GSEC, We are Family, Prism, MSPS, and WGS for an event for GLAAD’s Spirit Day celebration! Wear purple to show solidarity with anti-bullying towards LGBTQ+ youth and enjoy a panel guest hosted by Preston Souza and Alex O’Hanley from the Phluid Project and a special fashion show performance.  
 

Student Spotlight: Meshauna Dwight

We sat down with WGS and Sociology double-major Meshauna Dwight to talk about her experiences as this year’s Alison Piepmeier Scholarship recipient, her work volunteering with Educating Girls on the Go (EGO), and why she loves studying WGS.Meshauna Headshot

What does being this year’s Alison Piepmeier Scholarship recipient mean to you?

I was happy to learn about the endeavors and achievements of Alison Piepmeier while she was alive, and it is an honor to pick up her torch in solidarity for social justice.

What aspects of WGS or WGS-related areas of interest are you most passionate about?

I decided to declare Women’s and Gender Studies as one of my majors because, to me, WGS embodies effort towards social justice. Social justice in every area is what I am passionate about because I believe that all corners of the globe should be beautiful places for everyone no matter what their differences are, and societies should work towards being as close to a meritocracy as possible.

What upcoming projects or classes in WGS are you most looking forward to?

The class that I am most looking forward to is SOCY 362: The Sociology of Social Change. I read lots of books and watch lots of movies with dystopian themes in the hopes of getting a glimpse of a roadmap to influencing positive social change. Hopefully, this class will help to answer some of my questions.

Are you currently engaged in any activism in the greater Charleston community? If so, tell us about it!

I am mostly involved with this small, up-and-coming organization called Educating Girls on the Go, or EGO. It was started by Nathalia Mateus, a former residential assistant at a group home in North Charleston, called Jenkins Institute for Children. Having first-hand experience with the foster care system opened her eyes to how broken it is and she wanted to become an advocate. We have been speaking with policy-makers, community leaders, and other organizations based in and outside of South Carolina for three years now in an effort to reform South Carolina’s foster care system. We now plan to get involved with the Department of Children’s Advocacy, which has only just been established in the beginning of July. This new organization will provide oversight for South Carolina’s Department of Social Services to make sure that all youth in foster care are actually receiving the many services that they have a right to while in DSS custody. The staggering amount of foster care youth that age out of the system only to become homeless were often never even made aware of the resources that they are entitled to.

I-CAN Statement Against White Supremacy

Women’s & Gender Studies condemns any and all manifestations of hate, including white supremacy. We are posting the below statement from I-CAN in solidarity with all marginalized communities on campus and in the greater Charleston community. 

 

To our campus and community,

We’ve been here. We’ve done this. This is a habit. A repeated occurrence. A shared History Made Here. So we are exasperated. We are tired. We are fed up. And this cannot continue.

Never will an organization seeking to eradicate “foreigners,” punish “sinners,” with proud declarations of ties to Naziism, mark our campus and expect that we will sit idly by. And yet on this Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, we will not be intimidated. We will stand with those who are frightened, on our campus and those across the United States.

Let us be clear: Tolerating white supremacy on our campus has become ritual. Let us not forget that we have seen white supremacist actions on or around our campus four times just within the past two years. Our campus has been claimed by Confederate flagging, by two accounts of minstrelsy, by jokingly enacting and recording racial slurs, all in recent memory. We have heard countless stories of identity-based violence waged against marginalized students. We live in a crisisThe Cougar Crisis. We are no longer satisfied with attempts to merely manage these occurrences: we call for sustained action and attention to institutional and systemic racism–beyond reaction, towards seeing this as so vast we might call it a shared reality. Because none of us can simply escape this pain without resounding trauma, trauma that will continue to echo through the time we spend here.

And in the midst of this Crisis, it confounds us that such hatred is possible. We seek radical love–which is a full time job, and should be for everyone reading this. And let us take this opportunity to act collectively, as though our very lives depend on it. Because they do. Addressing The Cougar Crisis is a matter of supporting black, brown, and queer student leaders, faculty, and staff who are dreaming up this radical love. Our dreams will be attained, too: we will keep shouting and singing our love and pain until we are heard. And until actions are taken. Let’s move beyond reactive, towards proactive, because these are not in any way isolated incidents. Looking ahead, Halloween is coming, and we will not tolerate or excuse racist costumes. More immediately, attempts to recruit CofC students to a terrorist organization deserve sustained attention and a thorough response.

In the coming weeks, members of the Intersectional Cougar Action Network (I-CAN) will continue to lead by example in addressing our shared Crisis. We look forward to working closely with upper-level administrators. So that radical love can prevail. We honor all of the tough emotional work black, brown, and queer student leaders, faculty, and staff have done in supporting members of our community throughout this Crisis. And we appreciate President Hsu’s note. But this problem is perennial and oceanic; directly confronting racism must continue as our defining struggle in the coming years. A Crisis state can be sustained for only so long. Please forward this call to action deep and wide. And let’s get moving, now.

In solidarity, we are

The Intersectional Cougar Action Network (I-CAN)

Makayla Cook, she/her, Biology (Planned Parenthood leader)
Katie Chea, she/her, Computer Information Systems (president of Asian Student Association)
Tanner Crunelle, he/him, English & WGST (Out Front Initiative director)
Brandy Del Rio, she/her, English (Honor Board)
Vanity Deterville, she/her, Political Science (Sustainability and Social Justice advocacy)
Jonathan Evans, he/him, Political Science (Outreach Liaison for Mental Health in Melanin)
Danya Firestone, she/her (alumnus and I-CAN member)
Kristen Graham, she/her, Public Health & WGST (I-CAN curriculum chair and town hall organizer)
Leah Martin, she/her, School of Business (student organizer)
Claire Natiez, she/her, Dance & Arts Management (student organizer)
Erin Jones, she/her, Middle Grades Education (student organizer)
Tie Jones, she/her, Accounting (student organizer)
Peterra McCarroll, she/her, Political Science (president of Human Rights Alliance)
Claire Natiez, she/her, Dance & Arts Management (student organizer)
Malayna Nesbitt, she/her, Public Health (vice president of Black Student Union)
Elizabeth Quarles, she/her, English (Peer Facilitator)
Akayla Sellers, she/her, Public Health (president of Black Student Union)
Tessa Torgovitsky, they/she, WGST (president of Prism)
Rachael Weidman, she/her, Psychology and ENVT (Vegan Club leader)
Jeff Williams, they/them, Classics & Computer Science (student organizer)
Reagan Williams, she/her, Psychology & WGST (president of Mental Health in Melanin)

In the Zone: Being LGBTQ+ in Charleston: Past & Present

In the Zone: Being LGBTQ in Charleston: Past & Present

October 8  In the Zone: Being LGBTQ+ in Charleston: Past & Present  12:00-1:00pm, Stern Center Room 409 

Join SafeZone to learn more about Charleston’s rich LGBTQ history and get connected with on-campus resources! With a presentation from the Special Collections LGBTQ Oral History project.

Why WGS?: Info Session & Drop-in Advising on 10/10

Why WGS Flyer

October 10  Why WGS? Information Session & Drop-in Advising 

Info session from 3-4 in Stern 201, drop-in advising at the WGS office from 4-5  

Join the WGS program for free pizza and an info session on WGS courses, co-curricular opportunities, graduate programs, career paths, and ways WGS can enhance a wide variety of careers!

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