Mindfulness and Mood: Empowerment Skills for Women (EWC/GWN)

Ruled by Anxiety ???

MINDFULNESS AND MOOD: EMPOWERMENT SKILLS FOR WOMEN

Reduce anxiety and stress, improve mood, improve relationships and gain greater emotional balance.

Learn Mindfulness Meditation and other skills by registering for this Free Five Session Workshop Series!

Tuesdays, 6:30-8:00 p.m., beginning October 18, 2011
Open to UMass, Five College and community women.

Registration required.  Registration begins September 2011.

This workshop is fills quickly so please register as soon as possible if you are interested!
Call Everywoman’s Center Counseling Services at  577- 0077.

GWN Writing Group Starting Tuesday September 27, 2011

Writing a paper?

Working on your dissertation?

Need a change in study scenery?

Come to the GWN Writing Group!

GWN Writing Group
Tuesday Evenings
9/27/11-12/6/11
5pm-9pm
CC 905-909

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The Graduate Women's Network (GWN) is pleased to announce the start of
its 2011-2012 Writing Group on September 27, 2011. The group will be
held on Tuesday evenings throughout the semester from 5pm-9pm in
Campus Center 905-909.

All graduate women and their friends are welcome on a weekly or drop-in basis.

For more information, please contact:

Adina Giannelli, GWN Coordinator
gssgwn@grad.umass.edu
413.545.2897

Interesting Events

Some Upcoming Non-GWN Events:

1) Rainbow Riverfest: An All-Day Queer Music and Art Festival 11am-7pm     Saturday 9/24/11     Holyoke, MA

2) Nailing the Immigrant Body: The Manicure as Embodied Labor and Resistance (A Talk By Professor Miliann Kang) 12-1:30pm    Wednesday 9/28/11      Bartlett 316

Additional Details:

Rainbow Riverfest: An All-Day Queer Music and Art Festival
This Saturday, 11 a.m.- 7 p.m.
Holyoke Canoe Club (Route 5, Holyoke)

Co-sponsored by the Stonewall Center.  Free to those 20 and under.

The Rainbow RiverFest combines music, performances, art, games, a youth tent, educational workshops, demonstrations and the Zen Zone, a healing place for body, mind and spirit. Pop diva Crystal Waters is the headline performer. Other performers include legendary women’s music icon Alix Dobkin, Comedian Amy Tee, MAOR, Sister Funk, M3cedes Diaz, Sara Grace, Loco Ninja, Who da Funk It, and more.

The festival also includes a Youth Tent, a safe and welcoming space for young people ages 12- 22, with workshops addressing their needs and interests, as well as activities like the Graffiti Wall Art Project. Many of the RiverFest performers will tell their personal coming out stories and answer questions candidly in the Youth Tent.

For more information or to purchase tickets, go to:
www.RainbowRiverFest.org <http://www.RainbowRiverFest.org> or call 413-588-1018.

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JOIN the faculty and affiliated faculty of Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies for the first presentation of our
WORKS-IN-PROGRESS talk series

MILIANN KANG
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
12:00-1:30PM
Bartlett 316

Nailing the Immigrant Body: The Manicure as Embodied Labor and Resistance

In her book, The Managed Hand: Race, Gender and the Body in Beauty Service Work (University of California Press, 2010), Miliann Kang examined the dynamics of “body labor” in intimate bodily and emotional contact between women of different racial and immigrant statuses  in Asian-owned nail salons.  In this talk, Kang explores new theoretical dimensions of body labor, such as body rules (drawing on Arlie Hochschild’s concept of “feeling rules” in emotional labor), the manicuring of “docile bodies” (building on Foucault’s work on disciplinary technologies of the body) and dynamics of embodied assimilation and embodied resistance.  She situates this work within the current drive to pathologize, denigrate and deport immigrant bodies, and discusses how greater attention to embodied processes can inform organizing campaigns to resist this anti-immigrant backlash.

Bio:

Miliann Kang is associate professor in Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where she is also affiliated faculty in Sociology and Asian/Asian American Studies. Her book, The Managed Hand: Race, Gender and the Body in Beauty Service Work (2010, University of California Press) won the Sara Whaley book prize from the National Women’s Studies Association, the Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Book Award (American Sociological Association Section on Race, Gender, and Class), the Oliver Cromwell Cox Award(American Sociological Association Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities), and the Distinguished Book Award (American Sociological Association Section on Sex and Gender).  Kang is currently researching work-family issues and the racial politics of mothering for Asian American women.  Her research has been supported by the American Association of University Women, the Ford Foundation, the Institute for Asian American Studies at UMass Boston, the Labor Relations and Research Center at UMass Amherst and the Social Science Research Council.

An Introduction from the Graduate Women’s Network Coordinator

Hello, Everyone!

My name is Adina Giannelli, and I am the Graduate Women’s Network (GWN) Coordinator for the 2011-2012 academic year. As you may know, the previous Coordinator, Hongmei Sun, has moved on to the auspicious role of Graduate Student Senate President. I look forward to working closely with Hongmei in the year ahead, to building on her successes, and most of all, to serve women graduate students at UMass as GWN Coordinator.

In the coming year, we plan to continue longstanding GWN programming, such as the weekly Yoga and Writing Groups, and to continue co-sponsorship of events such as Where’s the Love 101? and the commemoration of International Women’s Day.

We will continue to nurture the partnerships that sustain the GWN, in the belief that healthy collaboration benefits everyone involved, and work with campus organizations including the Everywoman’s Center (EWC), GEO, the UMass Office of Family Resources, the Stonewall Center, and the Women of Color Leadership Network (WOCLN).

In addition, we hope to offer additional programming and opportunities for graduate women, including the following:

  • Monthly Arts & Entertainment Series, featuring live performances, documentary films, and open mic opportunities.
  • Graduate Women Brown Bag Lecture Series, in which graduate women present their research projects to a supportive, cross-disciplinary audience.
  • Focus and Interest Groups, to serve various constituents of graduate women, including international students, LGBTQ students, women of color, and graduate student parents and families.
  • GWN Hot Chocolate Running and Walking Team, to benefit the 8th Annual Hot Chocolate Run and Walk for Safe Passage, December 4, 2011.

(And other events, as dictated by student interest, participation and demand.)

All GWN events are free and open to all women graduate students and their friends. Over the coming days and weeks, I’ll be posting updates related to upcoming groups, workshops, trainings and events.

In the meanwhile, if you have any questions, feedback, or suggestions, you can: (1) leave a comment here; (2) e-mail me at gssgwn@grad.umass.edu or gssgwn@gmail.com; (3) find me live in the GSS Office/919 Campus Center; or (4) call me at 413-545-2897.

Warm wishes for a productive and enjoyable start to the 2011-2012 school year, and I look forward to meeting you in the coming weeks and months!

Best,

Adina