Reimagining Structures Of Rest
Schedule
Wed Sep 18 2024 at 06:00 pm to 08:30 pm
UTC+01:00Location
The Manchester Museum | Manchester, EN
About this Event
Join Evie Muir, author of Radical Rest: Notes on Burn Out, Healing and Hopeful Futures, for an evening of exploration, dreaming and play. Using the 4 case studies in Radical Rest (Home, Education, Health and the Charity Industrial Complex), Evie will guide us in creative activities and discussions that explore opportunities for future building and re-imaging our world through a lens of radical rest. Evie will be joined in discussion and facilitation in this workshop by anti-racist consultant Martha Awojobi, whose interview features in Radical Rest.
What to expect at the workshop:
- Q&A/ discussion with Evie and Martha
- Art based activities and prompt to aid group future dreaming/ building
- An evening of community connection
Both Evie and Marths’s work create spaces and structures centered for people of colour to heal from racial and other intersecting traumas and thrive within nourishing environments - be that work, social or beyond. In honour of these spaces and their work, this workshop will be for people of colour only.
Evie will also be in city the day before at her Manchester book launch open to all at House Of Books And Friends. Evie will be discussing her book with L’Oréal Blackett with an audience Q&A. Event information here
More about the facilitators:
Evie Muir (she/they)
is a nature writer and the founder and Director of Peaks of Colour, a Peak District-based nature-for-healing grassroots community group by and for people of colour. Evie’s debut book, Radical Rest explores activist burnout through a Black Feminist, abolitionist and nature-allied lens.
https://eviemuir.com/
https://www.peaksofcolour.org/
Martha Awojobi (any pronouns)
is Founder, Director and fearless leader of JMB Consulting. Martha works in coalition with organisations who share her goal of liberation from oppression through her work at JMB and through Uncharitable (formerly #BAMEONLINE) series which supports fundraisers and founders of colour to navigate the philanthropic sector and generate sustainable income.
https://www.jmb-consulting.co.uk/
Environmental Justice at Manchester Museum
As part of our commitment to building understanding between cultures and a more sustainable world, the museum is developing a programme of work around Environmental Justice led by the Social Justice and Environmental Action managers.
‘Environmental Justice’ means that everyone – regardless of race, gender, sexual identity, economic status, or ability - has the right to the same environmental protections and benefits, as well as meaningful involvement in the policies and action that shape their communities. However this has rarely been a reality for many marginalised communities, who are also at the greatest risk of being impacted by the environmental emergency we’re facing. At the same time, these voices and lived experiences have often been underrepresented in and excluded from climate and environmental action groups/movements.
This series of work aims to increase awareness and understanding of environmental injustice and its root causes through events and collaborations that give space and priority to marginalised voices. Many of these events and opportunities will be open to all, whilst some will prioritise or only be available to people from marginalised communities to take part in. This is so they can engage with the topic in a 'safer' space where for example, racism or ableism present within wider movements that make them inaccessible is less likely to be present.
Further information on Environmental Justice
- Greenpeace : Environmentalism Crosses Everything - link here
- Ella’s law: Clean Air For All - link here
- Greenpeace: Racism Report Sumamry - link here
- RACE report - link here
Where is it happening?
The Manchester Museum, Oxford Road, Manchester, United KingdomEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
GBP 0.00