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Panelists
Panel presenters and topics
Kess Carpenter (Laurier)
Politics & Pleasure: Battles Over Pornography in 1980s America
Kess Carpenter is a PhD candidate in history at Wilfrid Laurier University. They completed their MA at the University of Windsor where they examined gender, sexuality, and post-World War II culture through the lens of Playboy Magazine. While at Laurier, Kess has undertaken specialized study in the history of gender and sexuality, cultural history, and the Cold War. Their current research explores the intersections between culture, politics, activism, and pornography in 1980s America.
Rui Li (Guelph)
“Good Wife, Wise Mother” and Manchukuo Women’s Education under the Kingly Way
Rui (Raymond) Li is a first-year Ph.D. student in history at the University of Guelph. He earned his first master's degree in history from the University of Macau in 2018 and his second master's in history from the University of Guelph in 2023. Raymond's research interests lie in the history of modern Northeast Asia, especially the ideological propaganda issues of Manchukuo, Japan and China. In particular, it focuses on the rise and dissemination of nationalism and feminism in modern Northeast Asia, and their effects in modern Asian societies.
Jake McIvor (Guelph)
Boys and Their Toys: Gender, Geoengineering, and the Men Who Would Destroy the World
Jake McIvor is a 2nd year MA student at the University of Guelph. He is the current Guelph TUGSA co-president, and is enrolled in Guelph's first cohort of the Sexualities, Genders and Bodies graduate program. Jake is researching the history of geoengineering and is exploring its heavily gendered dimensions. Geoengineering will soon become increasingly important to the global climate debate, but it represents an unmistakably male approach to science and the environment. Jake's research aims to uncover not only how geoengineering is informed by masculinity, but also maintains the current gender hierarchy in the face of climate change.
Vera Zoricic (Waterloo)
The Black Women’s United Front: “Forward with the Struggle”
Vera Zoricic is a second-year PhD student studying under the supervision of Dr. Ian Milligan. Her research topic focuses on the digitization of the black freedom struggles during the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. She is particularly interested in how the issues of race, class, and gender intersect to shape individual and group experiences in Canada and the United States.
Panel chair
Dr. Kristina Llewellyn
Dr. Llewellyn's bio states:
My interdisciplinary research tackles vital questions about education and justice. My current focus is on oral history as a path for the redress of historical harms through education (e.g., schools and museums). I am the author and co-editor of four books, including Democracy’s Angels: The Work of Women Teachers and the award-winning Oral History, Education, and Justice. I am a regular media commentator on education issues, promoting nuanced understandings of policies and practices related to teaching and learning for an equitable society.