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    1. Convergence 9

      a sexy crip manifesto
      by seeley quest

      1 sometimes I want to rip
      Sometimes I want to rip out my bands of body pain to hurl—

      I fight harsh wind and words all day, muscles set and edge on numb, and even if I’ve slept enough, I resist feeling how my back will again resist relaxing all today.

      Yeah, I know I have to try Feldenkrais or yoga or visualization techniques or a salt bath, but again broke, my attention so focused on survival and hustling each day, I simply stumble into and out of my sleeping pad.


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      Art by Chloe Gordon-Chow

      Musings of a Pansexual Muslim Stoner
      by Fadwa Bahman

      Ramadan just ended
      Breathe it all in
      The first breakfast in a month feels like a new chance at life
      like I’ve put on rainbow-colored glasses
      Sucked back into a version of reality where
      I am sipping iced coffee from a glass jar on my balcony,
      browsing a psychotherapy office in Westmount
      pitalism exists again
      I want to be a part of society again
      I n ingest and inhale again


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      Queer: “ of, relating to, or being a person whose sexual orientation is not heterosexual and/or whose gender identity is not cisgender ”

      Not Queer Enough?is dedited to anyone who feels like they do not fit under a single gender or sexual label.

      This series sheds light on a very real stigma within the Queer community, that of rigid exclusivity. Although the LGBTQ+*?have historilly been discriminated against, the
      community itself also perpetuates structures of oppression within their own members. Strict definitions based on heteronormative systems have created divisions that exclude more than they include.


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      The Empire of Racism: Dismantling and Resisting the Colonial Violence with/in Ademia through an Auto/Ethno/Graphil Narrative
      by Shyam Patel

      The corpses of ademic trauma live in the bodies of people of colour. They exhaust — almost burning, rupturing — our existence limb by limb. As I trace — painfully extracting and exhuming — my own experiences and stories with/in ademia, I am overcome by a sense of hardship and loss. Knowing that others like me, too, have similar travels with/in ademia does not provide me with any form of solace. It only reminds me how treacherous and vile the culture of dominance, even with/in so lled progressive and radil spaces, happens to be. Despite this, I still hold onto this notion of hope — perhaps even radil love — when I embark on dismantling and resisting colonial violence,? finding ways of bringing my own voice from the margin to the center.?


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      Voluntourism and the Conflation of Compassion with Colonialism
      by Gaby Novoa

      Voluntourism “at its best” n open opportunities for cross-cultural exchange of skills, knowledge and experience (Devereux 2008); however, the work of Western volunteers and organizations within “developing” countries, while veiled as compassion, also functions as a continuation of colonialism. Every year, more than 1.6 million youth from the “global North” spend over $2 billion to volunteer in countries of the “global South,” with these young volunteer tourists being predominantly white women (Bandyopadhyay and Patil 2017). The imbalance of power dynamics upheld by voluntourism is further perpetuated through its visual dissemination on social media platforms such as Instagram (Sin and He 2018).


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      Convergence is a project by QPIRG Concordia and QPIRG-McGill

      Creative Commons License
      Convergence is licensed under a Top Rated Online slot Kasino.