Wednesday, November 01, 2006

gendering gerunds

Write a list of gerunds (action words in process...ending in ing) that have to do with how you feel about the genders you have, want, bump up against, get mistaken for....etc. (See comments for one example...) and then post your own.
This exercise was developed by Zachari and Alexis as part of the Engendering Peace curriculum at New Horizons Alternative School.

It is better to write!

3 comments:

lex said...

sometimes girl

holding
waiting
stretching
making
breaking
taking
falling
holding
holding
opening
moving
shaking

lex said...

al/most woman

exhaling
wailing
sailing sailing
curtailing
trailing
tracing
facing
pacing

fashioning
hiding
siding
signing
whining
timing

re/fin/d/ing
shining

furious flower said...

In The People's Hands Call for submissions foward widely!!!


Call For Submissions..:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />



In The People's Hands

(a grassroots literary zine)



Theme: Africana Women and Violence



Submission Deadline: March 5, 2007



Introduction



Africana (women of African heritage) share an interesting and distinct relationship with violence. Throughout h(er)story, and contemporary times Africana women have interfaced with police brutality, sexual assault, verbal attack, cultural brutality, academic dehumanization, reproductive injustice, political, and social disenfranchisement. Thank goddess, this is not the story of Africana women in total. We also experience and create love, joy, spirit, resilience, and fortitude that make our individual and collective journeys worth traveling. The complex relationship Africana women share with violence is reflected in our relationships with other women, men, ourselves; and is wonderfully and heartfully highlighted in the songs we sing, the stories we share, the love we make, the poems we recite, the food we cook, etc. etc.



In The People's Hands, a SpiritHouse publication, was created to hear the voices of diverse communities. Submit work that explores your personal relationship with violence as an Africana woman or work in which explores this theme. Submit a literary creation that fits one or a combination of categories. Please note: We will not use your submission for any other purposes than creating In The People's Hands literary zine. We will not reproduce in total or in part your submission for any other purpose than the paper-based, and online publication of this project. After publication author retains all implicit and explicit publication rights.



Criteria



Poetry

Two poems (maximum of two pages)



Short Fiction

1 story (maximum of four pages)



Essay

1 Essay (maximum of three pages)



Visual Art

2 pieces (please note one maybe chosen as the cover of collection)



Along with your creative work send:



-Two sentence biography

-picture (optional)

-contact information (phone, email address)



All submissions must be sent to:

InThePeoplesHands@gmail.com

In the subject line please type: Africana Women and Violence Issue



About the Sponsoring Organization



SpiritHouse- www.spirithouse-nc.org

SpiritHouse is a nonprofit grassroots community-based organization. We are part of a movement of progressive movements and organizations that endeavor to connect people to each other for the purpose of liberation, enlightenment, and fulfillment. We are independent. We are not supervised by any corporate, religious, or state bureaucracy. Our freedom allows us the flexibility to work and develop the partnerships of our choice. This gives us clarity and direction.

About the Editor-In-Chief www.myspace.com/mamashieroglyphics

Ebony Noelle Golden, MFA, is a poet, performer, and educator currently teaching African American Literature, Composition and Creative Writing at North Carolina Central University and Louisburg College as a Visiting Instructor. She has self-published a chap book of poems titled the sweet smell of juju funk and is currently editing mama's hieroglyphics to be released next year. In the near future, Ebony plans to undergo doctoral studies in Performance and stage her multimedia choreopoem, What Aunt Sarah Says to Siffronia When Sweet Thing is Moon-Watching and Peaches is Dancing to the Wind. Ebony can be contacted via email at furiousflower@gmail.com.