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VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260525T112036Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Riga:20260724T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Riga:20260731T170000
SUMMARY:Time Work: Debt\, inheritance\, and intergenerational practice
UID:20260526T055523Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:Europe/Riga
LOCATION:Minhauzen Unda\, Ainažu iela 74\, Saulkrasti\, Latvia
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>TIME WORK.<br></strong><strong>Debt\, inheritance\, and intergenerational practice.</strong></p>\n<p>Let&rsquo\;s call it &ldquo\;time work&rdquo\;: Those practices that negotiate the relations between the living and the dead. Time work is not merely conducted by archivists and historians\, but by grave diggers and undertakers\, documentary filmmakers and memoirists\, knowledge bearers\, politicians\, war journalists\, practitioners of living traditions\, speakers of dead languages\, as well as by any and all who keep something &ndash\; a story\, a trinket\, an heirloom\, a song &ndash\; holding onto it to remember. Time work is not easily done without feeling\; It is driven by the weight of mattering\, it is attention called by the fact that now &ndash\; this\, &lsquo\;our&rsquo\; now &ndash\; is in-part composed by the shadows of what and who came before. Time work is haunting work\, it whispers of recurrences (&ldquo\;<em>this happened before&rdquo\;</em>)\, and implicitly describes the present as a thing pushed to the surface of existence by the collective force of innumerable spent lives\, over centuries\, over millennia.</p>\n<p>In the summer 2026 <em>Studies in Remoteness </em>symposium\, we explore the ways that time work might destabilize the remoteness of history &ndash\; its absence\, distance\, and neglect. How might we describe the work that transforms time into a weighted force that accumulates\, persists\, and can be carried forward\, often across generations? Through what actions is one accountable to the past? What does it mean to hold or carry an inheritance? In what ways are people indebted to those who came before\, and how might the living &ldquo\;pay the debts&rdquo\; that have accumulated over generations? What kinds of temporalities do different approaches to time work produce\, and what social relations are then enabled or foreclosed? Through these questions\, the symposium reflects on the entanglement of debt and history\, exploring debt as an enduring paradigm that variously informs intergenerational relations\, systems of oppression\, and historical justice.</p>\n<p><em>We particularly invite proposals that engage with voices and worldviews often marginalized or erased in dominant knowledge systems.</em></p>\n<p><strong><em>That place of bad debt\, the invaluable thing</em></strong><br>Economy is one of the technologies that captures time. Timework (or <em>Zeitarbeit</em>) is also a term for wage labour. Since the early 20th century\, Taylorism maximized the efficiency of labouring bodies\, in part\, by transforming work into monotonous\, repeatable tasks. In &ldquo\;Time\, Work-Discipline\, and Industrial Capitalism&rdquo\; (1967)\, E.P. Thompson analysed the industrial imposition of precise\, clock-based time measurements on human labour. In models of industrial labour\, debt accrues around &ldquo\;wasted time&rdquo\;.</p>\n<p>Within time-as-economy\, time work can also be rendered into the kind of labour that expedites and standardizes\, and thus administrates of the past as the debts and inheritances of the present. But what does it mean to account for history as countable value? In <em>The Undercommons</em> (2013)\, Stefano Harney and Fred Moten provide a model for thinking about remoteness as an anti-efficient site of refuge within the economic capture of time where the &ldquo\;debtor seeks refuge among other debtors\,&rdquo\; engaging in practices that work in time to accumulate indebtedness without resolution. They write that\, &ldquo\;[t]his refuge\, this place of bad debt\, is what we call the fugitive public&rdquo\;. Harney and Moten draw from a history of debt wielded a tool of oppression to argue that refuge from debt informs <em>black study</em> and other practices of <em>fugitive planning</em> that first emerged among self-liberated slaves\, or <em>maroon communities</em>. And yet\,</p>\n<p><em>[t]o creditors it is just a place where something is wrong\, though that something wrong &ndash\; the invaluable thing\, the thing that has no value &ndash\; is desired. Creditors seek to demolish that place\, that project\, in order to save the ones who live there from themselves and their lives.</em></p>\n<p>Extractive states\, corporations\, and developers claim that communities are indebted to them for progress delivered and infrastructures that too often devalue precisely what is invaluable to those communities. While the economising of the past as debt informs important reparations processes\, heritage work\, and protections\, remoteness can also point us in another direction &ndash\; following in the footsteps of the fugitive.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong><em>Historical Remoteness: Marooned and unmoored</em></strong><br>At the seaside fishing village of Saulkrasti\, Latvia\, the ruins of the 1960s modernist catering establishment Restaurant Vārava stands marooned amidst the trees in a seaside forest. World War II refugees from Pskov and Leningrad\, who settled around Saulkrasti after Germans had driven them out of their homes\, are shown in photographs digging trenches for the Nazis in that same forest in 1944. An EU-funded project on Baltic military heritage has identified a German WWII bunker in a farmer&rsquo\;s field\, built with timber cut by refugee hands. Excavations flooded the bunker with groundwater and were reversed.</p>\n<p>Saulkrasti&rsquo\;s ruins are perhaps not so monumental as Latvia&rsquo\;s famous Karosta Northern Forts\, falling into the sea\, but they speak just as eloquently to histories of loss\, survival\, forced migration\, fascism\, war\, and economic struggle within Europe&rsquo\;s Baltic &ldquo\;peripheries&rdquo\;. Like many communities along the North Sea and Baltic Rim\, Saulkrasti has been historically shaped by movements over water and its beach has since time immemorial provided a thoroughfare for fish\, trade\, language\, culture\, violence\, exchange\, and upheaval.<br><br>How can our time work engage with Saulkrasti as a place where time work is already going on? Hosted within the Nordic Summer University\, a mobile institution which holds symposia for interdisciplinary research at different sites throughout the Nordic and Baltic regions\, <em>Studies in Remoteness</em> invites proposals from all fields to our summer 2026 symposium\, and explicitly encourages practice-based and community-inclusive research that takes up the challenge of engaging directly with the site and the seaside\, and thus to thoughts that slip into the water with the maroon to contemplate and critique historical narratives of moorage\, abandonment\, and the uncertainty of being unmoored. What poetic and material threads connect Saulkrasti and Latvian histories to wider emotional and material legacies of remoteness as they flow across time and partake in the patterns of dependency\, exploitation\, and exclusion structured by legal and economic systems? We are particularly interested in work that draws the site into relations with the long and layered histories of the Baltic rim through ruptures and disruptions and in pasts that remain present &ndash\; not as something stable or settled &ndash\; but as partial\, affective\, and unresolved.<br><br><strong>DETAILED INFORMATION ON SUMMER SESSION PRACTICALITIES</strong><br><br><strong>Place: Minhauzen Unda\, Ainažu iela 74\, Saulkrasti\, Latvia</strong><br><strong>Dates: 24 July &ndash\; 31 July 2026</strong><br><br><em>The 2026 Summer Session gathers all study circles of the Nordic Summer University. </em><br><em>Participants arrive in the afternoon/evening on 24 July.</em><br><br><strong>Summer session prices include housing and food (full room and board) for the week.</strong><br><br><strong>Cost</strong> f<strong>or participants <em>without </em>institutional support </strong>(full room and board\, July 24-31 2026<strong>):<br>100 &euro\;:</strong>&nbsp\; &nbsp\; NSU Scholarship price for full room and board for the week in shared 4-bed rooms<br><strong>700 &euro\;:</strong>&nbsp\; &nbsp\; Full room and board\, bed in double room (shared with one other participant)<br><strong>950 &euro\;:</strong>&nbsp\; &nbsp\; Full room and board\, single room (not shared)<br><strong>500 &euro\;:</strong>&nbsp\; &nbsp\; Camping with access to shared bathrooms with showers + breakfast\, lunch\, dinner\, and<br>&nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; snacks for the week.<strong><br></strong><br><em>Studies in Remoteness is working hard to fund the participation of those with financial need.<strong> </strong>Participants who need funding support should send in their proposal as early as possible and express this in their applications. Nordic Summer University also offers limited scholarships (by application).<strong> </strong>Additionally\, there are a number of travel/conference grants we can recommend to participants to apply to independently.</em><br><br><strong><strong>Cost</strong> f<strong>or </strong></strong>p<strong>articipants <em>with</em> institutional support </strong>(full room and board\, July 24-31 2026)<strong>:<br>900&euro\;:</strong> &nbsp\; &nbsp\; Institutional price for PhDs/any room type<br><strong>1250&euro\;: &nbsp\; </strong>Institutional price for employed scholars/any room type<br><br><strong>Participants with families </strong>(full room and board\, July 24-31 2026)<strong>:</strong><br><strong>1000 &euro\;: &nbsp\; </strong>&nbsp\;Full room and board in a double room for 1 adult and 1 child<br><strong>1200 &euro\;: &nbsp\; </strong>&nbsp\;Full room and board in a family room for 1 adult and 2 children<br><strong>1500 &euro\;: &nbsp\; </strong>&nbsp\;Full room and board in a family room for 2 adults and 1 child<br><strong>1800 &euro\;:&nbsp\; &nbsp\; </strong>Full room and board in a family room for 2 adults and 2 children<br><br><em>Attending children aged 4+ are welcome to join the Children&rsquo\;s circle\, with two circle coordinators who plan activities for the kids running the course of the week.</em></p>\n<p>***</p>\n<p><br><strong><em>Read more about Study Circle 1</em>:</strong></p>\n<p><strong><em>Studies in Remoteness </em></strong><em>is coordinated as a study circle within the </em><strong><em>Nordic Summer University </em></strong><em>by dance historian Dr. Lindsey Drury and artist Helena Hildur W\, in cooperation with &ndash\; <em>among others</em></em> &ndash\;<em> team members Theol. Dr. Shiluinla Jamir\, <em>Essi Nuutinen</em></em> <em>and <em>Tinka Harvard</em></em>.<br><br>Studies in Remoteness does foundational theoretical\, artistic\, and historical work toward initiating a new field of interdisciplinary research in critical remoteness studies. To unpack the geopolitical\, environmental\, and cultural dimensions of &lsquo\;remoteness&rsquo\; &ndash\; particularly\, in the circumpolar North &ndash\; we will center Indigenous scholarship and critiques of extractive colonialism\, as well as artistic and embodied approaches\, in a series of six symposia across the Baltic rim between 2026-2028.<br><br>The project turns its attention to the notion of &ldquo\;a place far away&rdquo\;&ndash\; be it the regional peripheries or cartographic borderlands between nation states\; the residential areas of Indigenous/minoritized communities\; historical testimonies and lacunae\; sub-cultural meeting spots or your neighbour&rsquo\;s kitchen. Theorizing modernity by turning to its so-called outskirts\, the project inquires sensoria of absence\, distance\, and neglect that have blossomed along the frontiers of colonial empires and sedimented among the margins of modern infrastructures of &ldquo\;global connectivity&rdquo\;. With lingering attention\, <em>Studies in Remoteness</em> intends to unsettle conditions of obscuring or exoticising &ndash\; resolutely acknowledging histories\, topographies and epistemologies with an eye to how these might come into &ldquo\;intense proximity&rdquo\;\, as coined by Okwui Enwezor.&nbsp\;<br><br>As a three-year collaborative research project\, <em>Studies in Remoteness</em> brings together a network of scholars\, artists\, and activists to engage in community-based research practices. By establishing a co-creative space for community building and artistic practices &ndash\; open for the sharing of facts\, questions\, concerns and practices &ndash\; we believe that our work will prove enduringly relevant.<br><br><strong>Studies in Remoteness Userblog at Freie Universit&auml\;t Berlin:<br></strong><a href="https://userblogs.fu-berlin.de/remoteness/">https://userblogs.fu-berlin.de/remoteness/</a></p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Lindsey Drury:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260525T112036Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Riga:20260724T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Riga:20260801T170000
SUMMARY:The F-word: autofiction as resistance to patriarchy
UID:20260526T055524Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:Europe/Riga
LOCATION:Saulkrasti\, Latvia
DESCRIPTION:<p>Feminism gives us a vision\, a framework\, and tools to upend systems. One of those systems is how we think of language and the self. Is it possible to say what is true\, when stories are always already framed by the world in which they take place? What role does autofiction play in our own lives\, in the process of resistance\, in the call for that which remains invisible? The poetic attention inherent in autofiction\, in escreviv&ecirc\;ncia\, that is inherent in the work\, is created for and by and to address the necessity of the impossible. Autofiction as an act of God\, of the transcendent that manifests itself in the real\, in lived experience\, and as such is aimed at resisting the patriarchy.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>In this symposium we aim to bring together people with whom this theme resonates\, and we ask people to share from their own life\, practise\, profession\, in order to create an ongoing conversation as a way to build resilience. We explicitly invite people to embrace the difference they bring in to contribute towards this shared endeavour.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>Autofiction as Resistance as a method</p>\n<p>During this week we aim to work together on exploring the themes that are central to this circle also in the way we participate. We explicitly invite people to share their insights\, artistic practises and theoretic understanding in a way that invites collaborative thinking. For this reason academic presentations are not accepted\, although a presentation can be a part of a larger workshop. Please indicate in your application how much time you would need for your intervention\, and a brief description on how you aim to use the time allotted to your session. First-time experiments are as welcome as tested concepts.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>Participants without workshops/sharing of their own personal project/ideas are also most welcome to collaborate during the week in the interactive program.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>About Nordic Summer University (NSU):</p>\n<p>NSU is a space for collaboration between disciplines/peoples/ideas. During the Summer Session several study circles\, each hosting their own program\, will come together &ndash\; participants are welcome to join different circles/programmes during the week. NSU is a horizontal organisation\, being present means you are a member and part of the organisation.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>Costs</p>\n<p>NSU offers a limited amount of grants and scholarships. If you are interested in receiving one (which means a reduced participation fee of 100 euro for the whole week)\, please let us know while applying.&nbsp\;</p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<p>100 euros Scholarship (in shared 4-bed rooms with shared bathroom)</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>1250 euros Institutional price/any room type</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>900 euros Institutional price PhD/any room type</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>950 euros Single room</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>700 euros Bed in double room</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>1000 euros Double room 1 adult 1 child</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>1200 euros Family room 1 adult 2 children</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>1800 euros Family room 2 adults 2 children</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>1500 euros Family room 2 adults 1 child</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>500 euros Camping&nbsp\;</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>This includes accommodation and all meals for the full week. The price also includes NSU membership\, so it is not necessary to purchase it separately. Those who have already attended a winter symposium and paid the membership will receive a discount code to deduct the membership fee. No refunds will be given if participants pay membership twice by mistake\, so please mention in your application that you already attended an NSU event this year\, to receive a discount code.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>Deadlines</p>\n<p>Please send us a short text explaining your aim / topic / idea\, how much time you would need to host the experience\, and what materials you would require (paper/paint/bicycles)\, which we will try to accommodate.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>Please send us your application by April 5th. Especially if you would like to be considered to receive a grant/scholarship\, as decisions on grants/scholarships will be made at the end of April. Deadline to confirm and pay your spot as a grant/scholarship receiver is May 1st.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>Other applicants are accepted on a rolling basis. Final deadline to apply: May 10th. By May 15th you will need to register and pay for the accommodation.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>Applications and queries can be send to: nicole.nobyeni@nsuweb.org</p>\n<p>Please be aware that everyone involved at Nordic Summer University is collaborating on a voluntary basis.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>About the Circle:</p>\n<p>How to think/write/be/inter-act without being limited by an already outlined goal/outcome/impact? How to explore what is messy/confused/embodied while accepting that exploration is always also taking place within philosophy/genre/language/life &ndash\; within what is. That is\, our attempt to explore\, to transcend our sites of speech happens in this world and is framed by the situatedness of our lives. Could it be otherwise? This study circle aims to take advantage of the network\, space and openness provided by the Nordic Summer University to raise questions that cannot be answered/grounded/voiced\, for philosophers/writers/feminists and/or/as-well-as those who are other(s/ed/ing).&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>This study circle will explore the liminality of not belonging in a discipline/space/frame/ category/nation. Accepting language as the limit/tool/curse and an unavoidable starting point\, building upon the work of Irigaray/Arendt/Ettinger\, this state of exception of being-with/in/of language is not simple put aside\, but accepted as a reality which is &ldquo\;disturbing\, overwhelming\, and sometimes too close for comfort&rdquo\;.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>These tensions open up a liminal space &ndash\; how to think/write/be/inter-act within such a space\, while being an/Other\\not-I/(m)\\Other within feminist philosophy? How to write/create/live as a being that is more than the categories available to mark/describe/situate them? How to explore power as a temporary space\, a moment\, political and liminal? How to read and ground ourselves in feminist philosophy while also living/m-othering/PhD-ing? How to even ask/write/question these questions\, without falling prey to the linearity inherent in what/who/why it means to question?&nbsp\;</p>\n\n<p>More information: https://www.nsuweb.org/study-circles/circle-4-an-other-not-i-m-other-in-feminist-philosophy/&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Nicole Des Bouvrie:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260525T112036Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Riga:20260724T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Riga:20260801T170000
SUMMARY:The F-word – Autofiction as Resistance to Patriarchy
UID:20260526T055525Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:Europe/Riga
LOCATION:Saulkrasti\, Latvia
DESCRIPTION:<p>Feminism gives us a vision\, a framework\, and tools to upend systems. One of those systems is how we think of language and the self. Is it possible to say what is true\, when stories are always already framed by the world in which they take place? What role does autofiction play in our own lives\, in the process of resistance\, in the call for that which remains invisible? The poetic attention inherent in autofiction\, in escreviv&ecirc\;ncia\, that is inherent in the work\, is created for and by and to address the necessity of the impossible. Autofiction as an act of God\, of the transcendent that manifests itself in the real\, in lived experience\, and as such is aimed at resisting the patriarchy.</p>\n<p>In this symposium we aim to bring together people with whom this theme resonates\, and we ask people to share from their own life\, practise\, profession\, in order to create an ongoing conversation as a way to build resilience. We explicitly invite people to embrace the difference they bring in to contribute towards this shared endeavour.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Autofiction as Resistance as a method</strong></p>\n<p>During this week we aim to work together on exploring the themes that are central to this circle also in the way we participate. We explicitly invite people to share their insights\, artistic practises and theoretic understanding in a way that invites collaborative thinking. For this reason academic presentations are not accepted\, although a presentation can be a part of a larger workshop. Please indicate in your application how much time you would need for your intervention\, and a brief description on how you aim to use the time allotted to your session. First-time experiments are as welcome as tested concepts.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Participants without workshops/sharing of their own personal project/ideas are also most welcome to collaborate during the week in the interactive program.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>About Nordic Summer University (NSU):</strong></p>\n<p>NSU is a space for collaboration between disciplines/peoples/ideas. During the Summer Session several study circles\, each hosting their own program\, will come together &ndash\; participants are welcome to join different circles/programmes during the week. NSU is a horizontal organisation\, being present means you are a member and part of the organisation.</p>\n<p><strong>Costs</strong></p>\n<p>NSU offers a limited amount of grants and scholarships. If you are interested in receiving one (which means a reduced participation fee of only 100 euro for the whole week)\, please let us know while applying.&nbsp\;</p>\n<ul>\n<li>100 euros Scholarship (in shared 4-bed rooms with shared bathroom)</li>\n<li>1250 euros Institutional price/any room type</li>\n<li>900 euros Institutional price PhD/any room type</li>\n<li>950 euros Single room</li>\n<li>700 euros Bed in double room</li>\n<li>1000 euros Double room 1 adult 1 child</li>\n<li>1200 euros Family room 1 adult 2 children</li>\n<li>1800 euros Family room 2 adults 2 children</li>\n<li>1500 euros Family room 2 adults 1 child</li>\n<li>500 euros Camping&nbsp\;</li>\n</ul>\n<p>This includes<strong>&nbsp\;accommodation and all meals for the full week</strong>. The price also includes NSU membership\, so it is not necessary to purchase it separately. Those who have already attended a winter symposium and paid the membership will receive a discount code to deduct the membership fee &ndash\; please contact us before you register to receive the discount code. No refunds will be given if participants pay membership twice by mistake\, so please mention in your application that you already attended an NSU event this year\, to receive a discount code.</p>\n<p><strong>Deadlines</strong></p>\n<p>Please send us a short text explaining your aim / topic / idea\, how much time you would need to host the experience\, and what materials you would require (paper/paint/bicycles)\, which we will try to accommodate.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Please send us your application by April 5th.</strong>&nbsp\;Especially if you would like to be considered to receive a grant/scholarship\, as decisions on grants/scholarships will be made at the end of April. Deadline to confirm and pay your spot as a grant/scholarship receiver is May 1st.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Other applicants are accepted on a rolling basis. Final deadline to apply: May 10th. By May 15th you will need to register and pay for the accommodation.</p>\n<p>Applications and queries can be send to: nicole.nobyeni@nsuweb.org</p>\n<p>Please be aware that everyone involved at Nordic Summer University is collaborating on a voluntary basis.</p>\n<p><strong>About the Circle:</strong></p>\n<p>How to think/write/be/inter-act without being limited by an already outlined goal/outcome/impact? How to explore what is messy/confused/embodied while accepting that exploration is always also taking place within philosophy/genre/language/life &ndash\; within what is. That is\, our attempt to explore\, to transcend our sites of speech happens in this world and is framed by the situatedness of our lives. Could it be otherwise? This study circle aims to take advantage of the network\, space and openness provided by the Nordic Summer University to raise questions that cannot be answered/grounded/voiced\, for philosophers/writers/feminists and/or/as-well-as those who are other(s/ed/ing).&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>This study circle will explore the liminality of not belonging in a discipline/space/frame/ category/nation. Accepting language as the limit/tool/curse and an unavoidable starting point\, building upon the work of Irigaray/Arendt/Ettinger\, this state of exception of being-with/in/of language is not simple put aside\, but accepted as a reality which is &ldquo\;disturbing\, overwhelming\, and sometimes too close for comfort&rdquo\;.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>These tensions open up a liminal space &ndash\; how to think/write/be/inter-act within such a space\, while being an/Other\\not-I/(m)\\Other within feminist philosophy? How to write/create/live as a being that is more than the categories available to mark/describe/situate them? How to explore power as a temporary space\, a moment\, political and liminal? How to read and ground ourselves in feminist philosophy while also living/m-othering/PhD-ing? How to even ask/write/question these questions\, without falling prey to the linearity inherent in what/who/why it means to question?&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>More information:&nbsp\;</strong>https://www.nsuweb.org/study-circles/circle-4-an-other-not-i-m-other-in-feminist-philosophy/&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Nicole Des Bouvrie:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
