GenderFuge

KelleyAnne Malinen
GenderFuge

GenderFuge explores contemporary gender-linked theories, concepts, and issues in conversation with guests from a range of scholarly, professional, activist, or artistic perspectives. This podcast is recorded live in Sociology and Anthropology classrooms at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Students in the courses Gender & Society and Social Theory & Issues contribute questions for guests based on their assigned readings. The host, KelleyAnne Malinen, is a faculty member in the SOAN department at MSVU.

Episodes

  1. 08/04/2021

    Responsibization in the Canadian jails and prisons

    Ashley Avery is a queer feminist, advocate, mother, and poet. She is currently the executive director of Coverdale Courtwork Society, a non-profit community-based organization that provides support to women and gender diverse people who are involved in the criminal justice system. She holds an Honours Diploma in Social Service Work from Seneca College as well as a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Women’s Studies from Mount Saint Vincent University. Ashley is also in Graduate school, studying for a Masters in Women & Gender Studies under the supervision of El Jones and Dr. Rachel Zellers. In 2020, her work to support the exodus of over 41% of the jail population in response to covid-19 won the Michael McDonald Access to Justice Award. We also have Robert Clarke with us today. During his career with Corrections Canada, Robert Clark rose through the ranks from student volunteer to deputy warden. He worked with some of Canada’s most notorious prisoners, including Tyrone Conn and Paul Bernardo, and he dealt with escapes, lockdowns, murders, suicides, and a riot. But he also arranged ice hockey games in a maximum-security institution, sat in a darkened gym watching movies with three hundred inmates, took parolees sightseeing, and consoled victims of violent crime. In his monograph Down Inside, Clark takes readers into prisons large and small, from the minimum-security Pittsburgh Institution to the Kingston Regional Treatment Center for the mentally ill and the notorious (and now closed) maximum-security Kingston Penitentiary. He challenges head-on the popular belief that a “tough on crime” approach makes communities and prisons safer, arguing instead for humane treatment and rehabilitation and for an end to the abuse of solitary confinement. Robert Clark began his career with Corrections Canada in 1980, working in the gymnasium at the medium-security Joyceville Institution. Over the next thirty years, he worked at seven different federal prisons and in almost every conceivable role. Robert lives in Kingston Ontario. Before drafting questions for this podcast, students read the “I’m very careful about that: narrative and agency of men in prison,” a 2006 article by the late John P. McKendy.”

    1h 5m
  2. 22/04/2020

    Supporting women, girls, trans, non-binary and Two-Spirit persons affected by the criminal justice system: From the establishment of Coverdale to Covid-19Ashley Avery

    Ashley Avery is executive director of Coverdale Courtwork Society, a non profit organization that supports women, girls, trans, non-binary and Two-Spirit persons affected by the criminal justice system. Before joinging Coverdale, she worked in the Mental Health field in Toronto, ON and then in Halifax, NS in facilities supporting women experiencing homelessness and women transitioning from prison to the community. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Women's Studies from Mount Saint Vincent University. Ashley has completed numerous trainings and certifications in the areas of Mental Health, Trauma Informed Practice and Counselling. She is involved in SSHRC funded research that is studying the causes and consequences of breaching court orders for women in the criminal justice system in Nova Scotia. She has also worked supporting the transformation of the Law Reform Commission of Nova Scotia to the new Access to Justice & Law Reform Institute of Nova Scotia. In addition to these roles, is a feminist writer, poet and advocate living in KJIPUKTUK (Halifax). She is a former member of the Hali Slam team and a competitor at the 2017 Canadian Festival of Spoken Word. In preparation for this interview, students read John McKendy’s 2006 article "I’m very careful about that: narrative and agency of men in prison." This interview is the first recorded online rather than in the classroom due to social distancing measures taken in light of the Covid-19 Pandemic. The quality of the recording is likely to be compromised somewhat by this situation. Reference McKendy, J. (2006). I’m very careful about that: narrative and agency of men in prison, Discourse & Society, 17(4): 473-502.

    48 min
  3. 20/02/2020

    The Pink Dumbbell Problem - Terri Roberts

    Today, using a student-generated interview guide, I will be having a conversation with Terri Roberts. Terri is currently a part-time graduate student at MSVU working on her MA in Women & Gender Studies.  Her thesis, The Pink Dumbbell Problem, is about gender and agnotology in the fitness education industry.  She is a full time fitness instructor and is also a course conductor for the Nova Scotia Fitness Association.  Her side-gig is writing children's books about Celtic mythology which introduce the Gaelic language. Students prepared for creating this interview guide by reading “Throwing like a Girl: A Phenomenology of Feminine Body Comportment Motility and Spatiality,” Published by Iris Marion Young in 1980. To quote Young, her paper “seeks to begin to fill a gap that […] exists in existential phenomenology and feminist theory. It traces in a provisional way some of the basic modalities of feminine body comportment, manner of moving, and relation in space. It brings intelligibility and significance to certain observable and rather ordinary ways in which women in our society typically comport themselves and move differently from the ways that men do.” Young is interested in the embodiment of norms experienced by women who are, quote, “situated in contemporary advanced industrial, urban, and commercial society.” She argues that even the experiences of women in our society who live against feminine norms of body comportment have their lives situated and given meaning by these norms. Students created interview questions that in many cases were informed by the Young reading but that would nonetheless make sense to listeners unfamiliar with Young’s work.

    1h 3m
  4. The Bogus BDSM Defense - Chanelle Gallant & Andrea Zanin - 2 October, 2019

    03/12/2019

    The Bogus BDSM Defense - Chanelle Gallant & Andrea Zanin - 2 October, 2019

    Welcome to the first Genderfuge podcast, recorded in Gender & Society, a Sociology & Anthropology Class at Mount Saint Vincent University.  In this podcast, using a student-generated interview guide, KelleyAnne interviews Chanelle Gallant and Andrea Zanin. The conversation focuses on BDSM and the "Bogus BDSM Defense" - a phenomenon whereby defendants in sexual assault cases frame their violence as consensual kink. Gallant and Zanin argue that this strategy works best when used by defendants who hold social privilege and who are accused of sexually assaulting women who are socially marginalized, such is racialized, indigenous, and/or sex working women.  Chanelle Gallant Chanelle Gallant is a long-time organizer, trainer, and writer with a focus on sex and justice. Her writing has appeared in MTV News, TruthOut, the Rumpus, Bitch magazine, and various anthologies. For over a decade, she has organized to build the power of people in the sex trade and to end policing and prisons. In 2016, she helped found the first chapter of Showing Up for Racial Justice outside of the United States. She is working on her first book, a theory of sexual labour. Andrea Zanin Andrea Zanin is a queer writer, scholar, teacher, community organizer and expert witness who focuses on the ethics of BDSM/leather and non-monogamy. She has been published in Globe and Mail, Bitch, and Ms. Magazines, and many anthologies, both popular and scholarly. Andrea was named Toronto Leather Pride Woman of the Year 2014 and won the Pantheon of Leather Canadian Award for 2016. She is currently working on a book and plans to return to finish her PhD in gender, feminist, and women’s studies at York University.

    59 min

About

GenderFuge explores contemporary gender-linked theories, concepts, and issues in conversation with guests from a range of scholarly, professional, activist, or artistic perspectives. This podcast is recorded live in Sociology and Anthropology classrooms at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Students in the courses Gender & Society and Social Theory & Issues contribute questions for guests based on their assigned readings. The host, KelleyAnne Malinen, is a faculty member in the SOAN department at MSVU.

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