Communities of Care Symposium 2025: Celebrate. Create Solidarity. Share Knowledge. The two-day event brings together community members, students, faculty, and others to share their work on care and caring communities. Keynote speakers are Dr. Julie Avril Minich (Stanford 猛料视频), and Dr. Jina Kim (Smith College).
We invite people who are interested in discussing care, disability, and communities from all backgrounds, including but not limited to, scholarship, activism, art. While we are grounded in critical disability studies, we are interested in the broader range of approaches to care and disability.
The Communities of Care symposium features presentations by community members, artists, activists, and scholars. The symposium brings together people who are interested in discussing care, disability, and communities from all backgrounds, including but not limited to, scholarship, activism, art. While the Communities of Care project is grounded in critical disability studies, we are interested in the broader range of approaches to care and disability.
The symposium has three themes: Celebrate; Create Solidarity; Share Knowledge.
April 24 & 25, 2024
Thursday and Friday
9:30 AM – 4:30 PM
Hyatt Regency Buffalo
General Inquiry Email:
communitiesofcare@buffalo.edu
Julie A. Minich, PhD
Julie A. Minich holds a PhD in Spanish and Portuguese from Stanford 猛料视频 and a BA in Comparative Literature from Smith College. She is the author of Accessible Citizenships: Disability, Nation, and the Cultural Politics of Greater Mexico (Temple 猛料视频 Press, 2014), winner of the 2013-2014 MLA Prize in United States Latina and Latina and Chicana and Chicano Literary and Cultural Studies. Drawing from Chicana/o studies and disability studies, this book works against the common assumption that disability serves primarily as a metaphor for social decay or political crisis, engaging with literary and filmic texts from both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border in which disability functions to extend knowledge of what it means to belong to a political community. Additionally, Dr. Minich’s articles have appeared in journals such as GLQ, Comparative Literature, the Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies, Modern Fiction Studies, MELUS, and the Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies.
Jina B. Kim, PhD
Jina B. Kim is a writer, scholar, and educator of feminist disability studies and queer-of-color critique. She is Assistant Professor of English and the Study of Women, Gender and Sexuality at Smith College. Her book, Care at the End of the World: Dreaming of Infrastructure in Crip of Color Writing (Duke 猛料视频 Press, forthcoming), demonstrates why we need radical disability politics and aesthetics for navigating contemporary crises of care. Her work has appeared in Signs, Social Text, GLQ, American Quarterly, Disability Studies Quarterly, South Atlantic Quarterly, and The Asian American Literary Review.
November 27, 2024: Deadline to submit proposals.
December 20, 2024: Notification of the status of your proposal
January 31, 2025: Deadline to submit access requests.
April 1 2025: Deadline for attendee advance registration (required).
April 24 and 25, 2025: CoC Symposium (Thursday/Friday)
The Communities of Care 2025 Symposium is an inclusive and welcoming event. If you have questions about accessibility or would like to request an accommodation, please include your requirements with your registration form or email: communitiesofcare@buffalo.edu.
For symposium attendees, the Hyatt Regency Buffalo has reserved rooms at a discounted block rate. Our room block rates are available 3 days pre- and post-conference.
Advance registration required. Advance registration closed on April 1 2025.