Miranda Joseph Endowed Lecture with Marquis Bey

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Black background with bright yellow overlaying rectangle outlines on the corners. White and bright yellow text reads: “The Institute for LGBT Studies invites you to join us for our 2023 Miranda Joseph Endowed Lecture with Marquis Bey: In-person or virtual! February 16th, 2023. 4:30-6pm (AZ Time). In person: get more information and register at tinyurl.com/Bey2023 Virtual: register at tinyurl.com/MJEL2023

When

4:30 to 6 p.m., Feb. 16, 2023

Please RSVP if you plan to attend the 2023 Miranda Joseph Endowed Lecture.

In person: tinyurl.com/Bey2023

Virtual: register at tinyurl.com/MJEL2023

 

Marquis Bey - Miranda Joseph Endowed Lecture

Date: Thursday, February 16th

Time: 4:30pm - 6:00pm

 

About the presenter: Marquis Bey's (they/them, or any pronoun)* work focuses on blackness and fugitivity, transness, and black feminist theory. Bey is particularly concerned with modes of subjectivity that index otherwise ways of being, utilizing blackness and transness—as fugitive, extra-ontological postures—as names for such otherwise subjectivities. These two analytics (rather than endowments of the epidermis or specific bodily morphologies) are the axes around which Bey thinks about subjectivity formation and deformation, abolition, and political work.

Currently, Bey is at work of multiple projects. Forthcoming with Duke University Press is Bey’s monograph Black Trans Feminism, which attempts to theorize the convergence of blackness, transness, and black feminism via the Black Radical Tradition, critical theory, and contemporary literature. Additionally, forthcoming with University of Minnesota Press’s Forerunners series is Bey’s short text The Problem of the Negro as a Problem for Gender, which deeply meditates on Nahum Chandler’s work, putting into conversation his thinking on paraontologpy and desedimentation with the transness and gender nonnormativity of transgender studies. Lastly, Bey is in the early stages of a collection of autotheory essays meditating on the relationship between blackness and the category of cisgender, tentatively entitled Cistem Failure.

 

This event is sponsored by the Institute for LGBTQ+ Studies and co-sponsored by the UA QTPOC+2S student group, African American Student Affairs, the Department of Gender and Women's Studies and the LGBTQ+2S Resource Center.

 

If you have questions about access or to request any disability-related accommodations that will facilitate your full participation in this event, please contact Sarah Maaske at smaaske@email.arizona.edu or 520-626-7005

Contacts