BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Date iCal//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.20.2//
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Toronto
BEGIN:STANDARD
DTSTART:20181104T020000
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
RDATE:20191103T020000
TZNAME:EST
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
DTSTART:20190310T020000
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
END:DAYLIGHT
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:calendar.559.events_uoft_date.0@www.cdtps.utoronto.ca
CREATED:20190401T170057Z
DESCRIPTION:\nWhen and Where: \nTuesday, April 09, 2019 12:30 pm to 2:30 
 pm \n Centre for Indigenous Studies \n 563 Spadina Ave, 2nd Floor \n\nSpe
 akers \nJill Carter \n\nDescription: \nWe invite you to attend “After Conv
 ersation,” which is the culminating event to the Afterlives JHI working g
 roup. The event will take place on April 9 at the Centre for Indigenous St
 udies (563 Spadina Avenue, 2nd Floor; wheelchair accessible) from 12:30-
 2:30. A lunch, catered by Ku-Kum Kitchen, will begin at 12:30, and then
  a conversation with Lee Maracle and three respondents (Jill Carter, Kare
 n McBride, Rijuta Mehta) will start at 1 pm, addressing together the fol
 lowing prompt:Lee Maracle, in My Conversations with Canadians, invites r
 eaders to her table for a conversation about Indigenous-settler relations.
  The book, moreover, assumes the form of an ongoing conversation. In con
 versation with Lee Maracle, we seek to further converse about the formal\
 , political, and methodological possibilities of conversation. The langua
 ge of conversation and dialogue, however, is central to liberal concepti
 ons of what constitutes the political—a move that often presumes all voice
 s will be granted equal intelligibility at the table. “Conversations,” Sa
 ra Ahmed reminds us, “are also flows. They are saturated. We hear this sa
 turation as atmosphere.” How might we listen to one another anew, then, 
 while attuning ourselves to the atmospheric and socially differentiated va
 lences of conversation? Recently, the Humanities Pedagogy Confronting Col
 onization workshop subverted the “chair of Knowing and Authority” to enact
  a conversational poetics in “a physical and conceptual circle” that broug
 ht participants in “equidistant proximity to each other.” Echoing the rece
 nt efforts of this workshop, we ask: in what ways can conversations—when 
 uncoupled from liberal notions of free speech—enable us to listen otherwis
 e from within the ongoing afterlives of loss that are amassing in the pres
 ent? Consequently, how can such conversations change the current formatio
 n of Indigenous-settler relations?RSVP by email to afterconversation@gmail
 .comVisit the event website at humanities.utoronto.ca/events/after-convers
 ation \n563 Spadina Ave, 2nd Floor \n\nCategories \n Lectures \n\nAudienc
 es \n CDTPS CommunityGeneral Public
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20190409T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20190409T143000
LAST-MODIFIED:20201009T190537Z
LOCATION:563 Spadina Ave, 2nd Floor
SUMMARY:After Conversation
URL;TYPE=URI:https://www.cdtps.utoronto.ca/events/after-conversation
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
