Thursday, October 20, 2016

We meet today in regular room Th 3:30pm - 6:00pm CSS 1114. Here's what to bring!

===
For our fabulous workshop we meet today in our regular room:

Th 3:30pm - 6:00pm CSS 1114.

BRING WITH YOU: 

--your circuit scribe kits!
--fun writing implements: colored pencils, markers, etc. I will provide sharpies, glue sticks, and scissors so don’t worry about those.  
--collage materials, old magazines, images, photocopies: anything you feel comfortable cutting up!

BEFORE CLASS: 

Writing/Sketching/Thinking Prompt: Before you come to class on Thursday, please journal, draw/sketch, make a bulleted list (or some combo of these) about your utopian (or dystopian) version of the maker movement. What are your (our) dreams for what “making” can mean? What kinds of “making” do we want to make space for in our world—what do we want “making” to look like? What do we want “making” to be used for—what kinds of work can/should it do in the world? What and whose labor is needed to make this happen? These can be existing or imaginary utopias/dystopias/heterotopias. It can be short, typed, handwritten, whatever you want but it just needs to fit on 1 page. There is no wrong way to do this!

Please bring this with you to class: 
--one extra copy of your writing/sketching/thinking (you can photocopy it at the library!). So you’ll have one copy to keep and one copy to use in the workshop.

===

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Thursday Zine Workshop with Melissa Rogers! yay! Please prepare and bring items described

===
Zines (short for ‘magazines’ or ‘fanzines’) are independently produced and distributed publications; they are textual, visual, and material forms of cultural production. In today’s mini-zine workshop we think with and through zines as material manifestos/manifestations of feminist, queer, anti-racist maker movements. How have anti-racist and queer feminists used zines to generate theory from everyday life and to articulate utopian/dystopian versions of the world? How might we use zines to imagine and create our own visions of maker movements?

Recommended reading: Alison Piepmeier, “Why Zines Matter: Materiality and the Creation of Embodied Community,” American Periodicals 18.2 (2008).

Explore these links!

People of Color Zine Project: http://poczineproject.tumblr.com/
Barnard Zine Library: https://zines.barnard.edu/
Queer Zine Archive Project: http://archive.qzap.org/
Mimi Thi Nguyen Zine Collection at the Fales Library: http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/fales/nguyen/admininfo.html

Writing/Sketching/Thinking Prompt: Before you come to class on Thursday, please journal, draw/sketch, make a bulleted list (or some combo of these) about your utopian (or dystopian) version of the maker movement. What are your (our) dreams for what “making” can mean? What kinds of “making” do we want to make space for in our world—what do we want “making” to look like? What do we want “making” to be used for—what kinds of work can/should it do in the world? What and whose labor is needed to make this happen? These can be existing or imaginary utopias/dystopias/heterotopias. It can be short, typed, handwritten, whatever you want but it just needs to fit on 1 page. There is no wrong way to do this!

Please bring with you to class:
--one extra copy of your writing/sketching/thinking (you can photocopy it at the library!). So you’ll have one copy to keep and one copy to use in the workshop.
--your circuit scribe kits!
--fun writing implements: colored pencils, markers, etc. I will provide sharpies, glue sticks, and scissors so don’t worry about those.  
--collage materials, old magazines, images, photocopies: anything you feel comfortable cutting up!

My “maker” utopias at these cool links (which might help you think about your projects!):
Liberating Ourselves Locally makerspace: https://oaklandmakerspace.wordpress.com/
Zinester and art activist Nia King, author of Queer and Trans Artists of Color: http://www.artactivistnia.com/book.html
FANTASTIC site on e-textiles and soft circuits by some of their inventors: http://www.kobakant.at/DIY/
Jie Qi’s circuit stickers and circuit notebook: http://technolojie.com/circuit-sticker-sketchbook/
My own online multimedia essay, “Making Queer Love: A Kit of Odds and Ends”: http://hyperrhiz.io/hyperrhiz13/missives-of-love/queer-love.html


About me: Melissa Rogers is a PhD student in Women’s Studies at the University of Maryland who is currently finishing her dissertation on queer feminist fiber craft and gender, race, and technology in maker movements. She is also a teaching artist in the MAKESHOP at the Children’s Museum of Pittsburgh, where she facilitates workshops on electronic textiles. She has been making and collecting zines since 2010. 

===

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Thursday fun with food! Our last food layered class (altho food is never gone!)

===
Again it took until this morning to finalize what we are doing today. Thanks to Anne we will be experiencing TOMATO SAUCE in storytelling details and reflection! She will bring spaghetti and I will bring spirialized zucchini as canvases upon which to appreciate her creation!

NO CLASS NEXT WEEK! Use the time to work on projects, do any catching up necessary, and to MEET WITH CLASS PARTNERS! THINK PROJECTS! be sure you have EVERYONE'S CONTACT INFO! Remember to poke around reading the required and recommended course texts in any order you like and no matter whether we discuss in class: they are your resources for projects!

We will then return to our earlier classroom and start the DRAWING LAYER! 

BRING DRAWING MATERIALS FOR YOURSELF
BRING YOUR VISUAL DIARY YOU HAVE BEEN KEEPING AFTER EACH CLASS

Which layer(s) will your project take up?

draw => making practices and the neurobiology of learning
stories => social change and community making
games => techno-trickery and the critical role of fun
screens and role play => infrastructure and new materialities

===
TODAY: TOMATO SAUCE STORIES! Here's a good one: http://www.nytimes.com/2000/01/05/dining/from-the-vines-of-vesuvius-the-gift-of-summer-in-winter.html  



===
>>SECOND LAYER: FOOD ⇒ CLIMATE CHANGE & ALTERNATIVE ECONOMIES 

Thursday 6 October 2016 – SAUCE! Before and after: fermented miso (soup: vegan) & Swedish fermented filmjölk (dessert: dairy)

• WEB & WORLD ASSIGNMENT: time to take up the Climate Change and alternative Economies angles on Food: do a quick look online and bring in SOMETHING that helps you make such connections! 

=Hasan. 2016. Rude Food. Sweden's 1st rescued food catering service. http://rudefood.se/cookbook.html  



=Take Back the Economy Website: http://takebackeconomy.net/?page_id=14  
=Gibson-Graham. 2013. Take Back the Economy: An Ethical Guide for Transforming Our Communities. Minnesota. https://www.amazon.com/Take-Back-Economy-Transforming-Communities/dp/0816676070/  

=Monadic & Schultz. 2015. Food Foolish: The Hidden Connection Between Food Waste, Hunger and Climate Change. Carrier. https://www.amazon.com/Food-Foolish-Connection-Between-Climate-ebook/dp/B011QAD9RS/  



• READ AS OPTIONAL FOLLOW-UP: (I will bring to class to share around): 
=Ceceri. 2016. MAKE: Edible Inventions: Cooking Hacks and Yummy Recipes You Can Build, Mix, Bake, and Grow. Make Media. https://www.amazon.com/Edible-Inventions-Cooking-Hacks-Recipes/dp/1680452096/  
= Shurtleff & Aoyagi. 2001. The Book of Miso. Ten Speed. https://www.amazon.com/Book-Miso-Savory-Soy-Seasoning/dp/1580083366/  
= Brown. 1997. Tomato Blessings and Radish Teachings. https://www.amazon.com/Tomato-Blessings-Radish-Teachings-Edward/dp/1573220388/  

• MAKING: Tomato sauce & Miso & Filmjölk. 

• CLASS PROJECTS BEGIN: meet with your class partner next week NO CLASS! 

===

Thursday, September 29, 2016

for the Yoga of Making Thursday!

===
it took until this morning to finalize what we are doing today. THINK PROJECTS! be sure you have EVERYONE'S CONTACT INFO! Be sure you have signed up to meet individually with Katie! BRING PROJECT PLANNING SHEET TO MEETING! You should be poking around reading the required and recommended course texts in any order you like and no matter whether we discuss in class: they are your resources for projects!
===
 


===
THE YOGA OF MAKING & THE MEANINGS OF SPACE-CRAFT! 



https://www.facebook.com/AstronautKarenNyberg/photos/?tab=album&album_id=675451362479599  

===
>>SECOND LAYER: FOOD ⇒ CLIMATE CHANGE & ALTERNATIVE ECONOMIES 

Thursday 29 Sept – Tofu wonders, artichoke meanings, recipes and stories: Paoletti visitation! 

WE MEET AT THE MARYLAND ROOM FOR THE NEXT 2-3 CLASSES: 0100 Marie Mount, next to Woods Hall. Today until 6, after that until 5 with individual meetings with Katie after. Be sure you have signed up! 

ALWAYS NOTICE ANYTHING NEW ON THE CLASS WEBSITE AND READ BOTH POSTS AND LINKS.

• VISITATION! Jo Paoletti, author of Pink & Blue, and Unisex, will visit our class today to tell us histories of Marie Mount and other UMD Makings. See https://smile.amazon.com/Jo-B.-Paoletti/e/B005MLVS4Y/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1475155449&sr=8-1



• WEB & WORLD ASSIGNMENT: Again: Bring food. Bring feelings about food. Bring knowledges about making food. Be open to sharing all these: food, feelings, knowledges.
• READ or REREAD: Katie's presentation in Sweden, here: http://spiralfood.blogspot.com Please have read this BEFORE class on the 22nd. (Do you know how to read a website?) Be ready to discuss and talk as well as make and eat.
• MAKING: Blue is bringing a tofu dish to share and its recipe. Katie is bringing equipment to make tofu and to share how it is done. She is also bringing an artichoke dish in her celebration of artichokes.

• CLASS PROJECTS BEGIN: Be sure you have signed up to meet with Katie to discuss!

===
Only one of many sources for making tofu at home: here are kits and info to buy. But there are ways of doing this without much outlay. Investigate and have fun!

http://www.culturesforhealth.com/learn/recipe/soy/homemade-tofu/

Making tofu from soy milk with vinegar and a colander:

===


===

Making both soy milk and the tofu with a press and other traditional coagulants (you can get all this from Cultures for Health or other online sources):

===


===
Katie's favorite tofu making book The Book of Tofuhttps://www.amazon.com/Book-Tofu-Protein-Source-Future/dp/1479287350/



===


===

Basic recipe:
=Bake artichokes in cream at 350 degrees for about 45 mins or until the cream has thickened.
=Sprinkle Parmesan or other aged grated cheese on top.
=Return to oven until browned.

===
images made by Katie using iPad app Paper by Fifty Three. 

===

Thursday, September 15, 2016

We meet at 0100 Marie Mount, the Maryland Room, for the next three weeks, for our FOOD layer of the course!

===
For the coming three weeks we move onto our FOOD layer of the class. We will be meeting at The Maryland Room (downstairs) at Marie Mount Hall, which is the building next door to Woods Hall and Women's Studies on the Mall.



The building is a bit of a Maze, so it is best if you enter NOT ON SIDE WITH ARROW ABOVE, but rather on the opposite side close to the Chapel. Go in the doors and to the left and down at the bottom of the stairs is The Maryland Room. Two entrances, one from stairs, one from basement floor if you find yourself there.



We will discuss what we shall do Making-wise in the next 3 weeks. It will involve making food, eating it, preparing it, sharing it. Bring food. Bring feelings about food. Bring knowledges about making food. What issues does food raise for you? personally, in terms of social justice, in ways that affect your life, in forms that worry you, in things you like and don't like and why, and when you know and when you don't! What stories about food do you have? does your family have? how does this matter in Women's Studies: guessing is good!

To get an idea about how to think about some of these questions, see Katie's presentation in Sweden, here: Please have read this BEFORE class on the 22nd. (Do you know how to read a website?) be ready to discuss and talk as well as make and eat.

http://spiralfood.blogspot.com


===
Thursday 22 Sept – Food: feelings, eatings, stories, how to do it.

WE MEET AT THE MARYLAND ROOM FOR THE NEXT 3 CLASSES: 0100 Marie Mount, next to Woods Hall.

ALWAYS NOTICE ANYTHING NEW ON THE CLASS WEBSITE AND READ BOTH POSTS AND LINKS.

• WEB & WORLD ASSIGNMENT: Bring food. Bring feelings about food. Bring knowledges about making food. What issues does food raise for you? personally, in terms of social justice, in ways that affect your life, in forms that worry you, in things you like and don't like and why, and when you know and when you don't! What stories about food do you have? does your family have? how does this matter in Women's Studies: guessing is good!
• READ: Katie's presentation in Sweden, here: http://spiralfood.blogspot.com Please have read this BEFORE class on the 22nd. (Do you know how to read a website?) Be ready to discuss and talk as well as make and eat.
• MAKING: Spiralizing & fermentations. We will assemble a spiralized vegetarian dish: Zucchini "noodles" with home made Pesto from the Farmer's Market, and pea shoots. We will taste two kinds of sauerkraut and one kind of kimchi, all fermented traditional foods now promoted in new eating regimes.
• CLASS PROJECTS BEGIN: We will start making plans for projects for the class, taking inventory of your interests and ideas about women's studies.
• ESTABLISHING PRACTICES: We will consider what sort of learning space and community we are creating, and how we enter that space.
• KATIE WILL BE AVAILABLE AFTER CLASS FOR ANY CONCERNS, QUESTIONS, DISCUSSION, IDEAS YOU MAY WANT TO SHARE. 

===
Who was Marie Mount? What is the history of Marie Mount Hall at UMD?

"The hall was originally an addition to Silvester Hall and was called the Home Economics Bldg. In 1947, the addition was renovated. It was first named Margaret Brent Hall in 1959. It was renamed Marie Mount Hall in 1969. In 1980, it underwent another renovation and an addition." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Maryland,_College_Park_Campus_Buildings

Who was Margaret Brent? 

"With Anne Hutchinson, Brent ranks among the most prominent female figures in early Colonial American history. Hailed as a feminist by some in modern times in advancing rights of women under the laws, her insistent advocacy of her legal prerogatives as an unmarried gentlewoman of property, while notable in its exceptional energy, was consistent on paper with English law. However, in the rough, male dominated world of the colonies, her stance for her rights and her independence was unusual in actual practice and it would have been fairly uncommon back in England in that period." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Brent

"This week the spotlight shines on Marie Mount Hall, named for M. Marie Mount, who came to campus in 1919 as the head of the Department of Home and Institution Management and served as the dean of the College of Home Economics from 1927 until her death in 1957.  The building was constructed in 1940 and originally named Margaret Brent Hall after the colonial Marylander who was the first American woman to request  the right to vote. But in 1967, the Board of Regents voted to change the name to Marie Mount Hall. At one time, Miss Mount supposedly lived in the building in a special dean’s apartment there.  She was much loved by her students, and University President Wilson Elkins declared in a 1957 memorial to the dean that “The character of Marie Mount will live forever.”" https://umdarchives.wordpress.com/2012/10/10/ghostly-encounters-whos-playing-the-piano-in-marie-mount-hall/

[image from: http://www.newsline.umd.edu/photos/ghoststory/mariemountportrait102706.jpg ]

===
FOOD LAYER => Climate change & Alternative Economies 

Making food, eating it, preparing it, sharing it. Bring food. Bring feelings about food. Bring knowledges about making food. 

What issues does food raise for you?

• personally

• in terms of social justice

• in ways that affect your life

• in forms that worry you

• in things you like and don't like and why

• when you know and when you don't!

• What stories about food do you have? does your family have?

• how does this matter in Women's Studies: guessing is good!

===
What do you know about the UMD campus food pantry? http://campuspantry.umd.edu


Eliminate food hardship at the UMD College Park campus: 


  • Creating a safe space to distribute good quality and nutritious emergency food to current UMD-College Park students, faculty and staff.
  • Creating and promoting a space on campus dedicated to food donation collection.
  • Collecting good quality and nutritious food items (donations) that may otherwise go to waste to enhance sustainability initiatives on campus.
  • Raising awareness around hunger issues, especially as experienced by low-income college students.
  • Encouraging student engagement to foster a sense of community, volunteerism and service to peers on campus.


===



===

Today is Circuit Scribe, the next three weeks are FOOD! another meeting place

===
For the coming three weeks we move onto our FOOD layer of the class. We will be meeting at The Maryland Room 0100 (downstairs) at Marie Mount Hall, which is the building next door to Woods Hall and Women's Studies on the Mall.

We will discuss this today Th 15 Sept, and set out what we shall do Making-wise in the next 3 weeks. It will involve making food, eating it, preparing it, sharing it.

To get an idea about our directions here, see Katie's presentation in Sweden, here:

http://spiralfood.blogspot.com


===

Monday, September 12, 2016

Be sure to attend a panel at REIMAGINING EVERYTHING EVENT THIS FRIDAY!

===
We are asking everyone in our WMST classes to consider attending at least one of the panels of this fabulous event created by Dr. LaMonda H. Stallings in our department. To see the full schedule and plan which panel you will attend click HERE and to register click HERE (it's free!)

When: Friday, September 16, 2016 9:15 AM - 4:30 PM
Where: Tawes Hall, Room 1100
Cost: FREE
See: http://ter.ps/boggs
Description: Full schedule and online registration at http://ter.ps/boggs 


===