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Echo: BIPOC Book-club

Echo: BIPOC Book-club
Date: Monday, April 25, 2022 EDT
Time: 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

Online discussion, Free 

Hosted by AGB’s Curatorial Assistant, Jasmine Mander, Echo is a book-club centering the voices of Black, Indigenous and People of Colour authors and thinkers.  Prioritizing BIPOC community members aged 16 – 25, this group offers participants the opportunity to explore a new way forward.

The booklist features critical texts by BIPOC authors and is carefully constructed to inspire open and honest conversation. The group meets monthly to dissect and understand ideas related to political activism including race, identity, disability, tokenization, abuse, prison abolition and oppression through reading. Echo promotes reading as a communal act to inspire conversation in a safe space for ideas to reverberate and grow.

Books are mailed a month in advance of each session or available at the AGB for pick-up. Readers of all levels are welcome and encouraged to share theory thoughts, interpretations, and experiences. Participants are encouraged to finish, or read as much as possible, of the recommended reading prior to each meeting for discussion. Participants can join any, or all, sessions. Echo is a free program with limited spaces so please register a month in advance to receive your copy.

To register, visit our website: https://agb.life/learn/courses/echo-bipoc-book-club-april-25

What we’re reading in April: They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up, written by Eternity Martis

A powerful, moving memoir about what it’s like to be a student of colour on a predominantly white campus. Using her award-winning reporting skills, Martis connects her own experience to the systemic issues plaguing students today. It’s a memoir of pain, but also resilience.

About the Facilitator:
Jasmine Mander is a Hamilton-based emerging curator. She is a graduate from the University of Waterloo where she studied Fine Arts and Business. She has worked for various art organizations such as the University of Waterloo Art Gallery, the McMaster Museum of Art, the Hamilton Artists Inc. and currently as the Curatorial Assistant at the Art Gallery of Burlington (AGB). Jasmine’s most recent exhibition, Incoming! worked to directly address the needs of refugee, newcomer, and immigrant artists.

This program is supported by Halton Region Community Investment Fund.

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MUSKRAT Magazine is an on-line Indigenous arts, culture, and living magazine that honours the connection between humans and our traditional ecological knowledge by exhibiting original works and critical commentary.

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