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Bergen Pride 2020

Queer perspectives at SKOK

Pride 2020 is upon us, and in the Centre for Women's and Gender Research's (SKOK) research and teaching, you can find many exciting perspectives related to this year鈥檚 programme.

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Even if Bergen Pride looks different this year due to the pandemic, it will still be duly celebrated as a digital festival from 4 to 6 June. The theme is 鈥," and is described like this:

While lockdown meant distance and loneliness, our lovedown will offer you community, knowledge, entertainment and love directly from our pride studio to where you are!

are included in the basic understanding of how we think about gender in the Center for Women's and Gender Research's (SKOK) research and teaching, and an insight into the center鈥檚 work can thus give an extra dimension to the knowledge part of the this year.

Queer history research

On Wednesday 4 and Friday 6 June, Bergen Pride presents two lectures about Bergen鈥檚 queer history, and if you want to learn more about queerness in Norwegian history from the Viking age until today, you can read Hanne Marie Johansen鈥檚 book on this topic. Johansen is associate professor in humanistic gender research at SKOK, and before she wrote her book, there was no collected history of queerness in Norway.

Book about queer history in Norway created debate

Central questions in the book are how the breaking of norms for gender and sexuality have been viewed during different periods, and which causal explanations have dominated. The book received good reviews in (the journal for the Norwegian Association of Researchers) in and the . Johansen also started a debate in Norwegian newspaper Klassekampen in June 2019 with her opinion piece The police recognizes wrongdoing towards gay people. Now it鈥檚 the church鈥檚 turn! (title translated from Norwegian). Both theologians and representatives for the National Council of the Church of Norway participated in the debate.

Transsexualism in a historical perspective

Research assistant at SKOK, Sigrid Sandal, also has a novel contribution to historical research with her from 2017. Her thesis examines how Norwegian doctors, lawyers and the Norwegian Directorate of Health have thought about and treated genuine transvestism/transsexuality from 1952 to 1928, and it was awarded the master scholarship in 2016. Before the publication of this thesis, hardly any research had been done on historical transsexualism in Norway. In 2019, Sandal presented her thesis at one of . A specific perspective on trans themes is also on this year through the showing of the documentary short 鈥淐oming out 鈥 searching for freedom鈥 鈥 a film about the Lebanese trans woman Jija. 聽聽

Anti-genderism on the rise

According to Bergen Pride鈥檚 programme, a conversation will be held on 4 June about the situation for LGBTQI+ people in Poland, which is steadily worsening. In Central and Eastern Europe, anti-genderism is on the rise, which among other things manifests itself in attacks on queer people and their rights, as well as .

SKOK professor about anti-genderism

Professor at SKOK, Randi Gressg氓rd, touches upon anti-genderism in her essay in Norwegian (title translated from Norwegian). Gressg氓rd is also co-editor of a special issue of the journal Intersections: East European Journal of Society and Politics (IEEJSP) with the theme聽"Struggles over Europe: Post-colonial East/West dynamics of race, gender and sexuality." In this issue, forthcoming this September, she contributes with two articles, co-authored with Rafa艂 Smoczynski og Nadya Husakouskaya, that both address anti-genderism in (among other countries) Poland. In several of Gressg氓rd鈥檚 previous publications, one can find themes like asexuality, transsexualism and islam and homosexuality.

Queer perspectives in other SKOK researchers鈥 work

Gressg氓rd is also advisor for Dinara Yangeldina, who is writing her PhD thesis at SKOK about how intersectional feminist discourses move across national borders and how they get used, transformed and appropriated in Russian-speaking feminist online spaces. In her master thesis in gender studies from , Yangeldina wrote about digital moral activism and anti-LHBTQI+ activism in Russian-language media.

Co-advisor for Yangeldina at SKOK, Redi Koobak, has also explored queer perspectives in her research. Her PhD thesis from 2013, , looks at the role of visual arts in conceiving and reconfiguring postsocialist feminist imaginaries by focusing on the deeply personal and political artwork of a contemporary feminist and lesbian-identified Estonian artist, . Sadly, the artist passed away in 2017, and Koobak wrote an about her the same year. More recently, Koobak published a chapter on her thesis in the volume (2019).

Queer perspectives in SKOK's teaching

At SKOK, students are met with queer perspectives as one of the first subjects taught in the introductory course, and these are also continued throughout the other courses in the bachelor鈥檚 degree and the one-year course. In addition, the students at KVIK101 - Gender in Modernity - have this year been asked to write a paper where they discuss the strength and weaknesses of 2020 campaign about the anti-gender movement and subsequent attacks on academic freedom; the . Queer history is also included in the course KVIK 102 - Equality and diversity, and Johansen's aforementioned book is on the reading list.