Speaker Series - Race, Gender, and Monsters: What Vampires and Werewolves Reveal About Ourselves and Our Culture | Kids Out and About Portland

Speaker Series - Race, Gender, and Monsters: What Vampires and Werewolves Reveal About Ourselves and Our Culture


*The event has already taken place on this date: Thu, 06/06/2024
Why do some monsters seem to resonate through time? What do they say about our social and cultural anxieties around difference—in particular race, class, gender, sexuality, nationality, and ability? This talk explores the shifting meanings vampires and werewolves have taken in popular culture, with a particular focus on the 1980s through the 2000s. Discover how the monsters we love tell us a great deal about ourselves and our changing cultural ideas about difference.

Please help us keep this calendar up to date! If this activity is sold out, canceled, or otherwise needs alteration, email mindy@kidsoutandabout.com so we can update it immediately. If you have a question about the activity itself, please contact the organization administrator listed below.

Why do some monsters seem to resonate through time? What do they say about our social and cultural anxieties around difference—in particular race, class, gender, sexuality, nationality, and ability?

 

This talk explores the shifting meanings vampires and werewolves have taken in popular culture, with a particular focus on the 1980s through the 2000s. In addition, these figures will be compared to the early Universal horror film monsters Dracula and The Wolf Man. Discover how the monsters we love tell us a great deal about ourselves and our changing cultural ideas about difference.

 

Bernadette Marie Calafell (she/her) is professor and chair of Critical Race and Ethnic Studies at Gonzaga University specializing in Latinx/o/a Studies, women of color feminisms, and LGBTQ Studies. In addition to writing, teaching, and traveling across the country talking about monsters for the last ten years, Calafell is the author of Latina/o Communication Studies: Theorizing Performance and Monstrosity, Performance, and Race in Contemporary Culture. She earned her PhD in communication from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

 

The CCHM Speaker Series season is sponsored by the Clark County Historic Preservation Commission. This month’s presentation is co-hosted with Fourth Plain Forward and brought to you by Humanities Washington and the League of Women Voters of Clark County. Admission is free and open to all.

 

For more information, contact the museum at 360-993-5679 or outreach@cchmuseum.org.


*Times, dates, and prices of any activity posted to our calendars are subject to change. Please be sure to click through directly to the organization’s website to verify.

Location:

Fourth Plain Forward
3101 E. Fourth Plain Blvd.
Vancouver, WA, 98661
United States

Phone:

(360) 993-5679
Contact name: 
April Buzby
Email address: 
The event has already taken place on this date: 
06/06/2024
Time: 
7-8:30pm
Price: 
FREE

Ages

All Ages