Gender Awareness Week (GAW) has become an integral part of the university’s strategy of promoting diversity and inclusivity among students, staff and other stakeholders at NWU. The activities, sessions and presentations that take place fosters an awareness of, and engages with issues concerning gender and identity in diverse contexts. This year GAW will take place from 8 - 12 August 2022 and the proposed theme is Gender as expressed through the Arts. For several years, transdisciplinary approaches in teaching and learning, and research, have advanced holistic practices and aided in the dissemination of knowledge. Staff and students from all faculties and disciplines are encouraged to think of creative, innovative ways of engaging with gender in their own fields, drawing on inspiration from music, the visual arts, literature, architecture, philosophy and the greater arts community..
“Creative thinking inspires ideas. Ideas inspire change.” –Barbara Januszkiewicz
Gender Awareness Week
8 – 12 August 2022
ALL WEEK Online and In-person Activities
NWU Orchestra (Online)
The NWU Symphony Orchestra will perform a work by Florence Price on 20 August 2022 as an extension of the Gender Awareness Week program. They will also be doing a profile on Florence Price.
NWU PUK Choir (Online)
The NWU PUK-Choir will launch two new music videos to highlight female composers. The videos will be accompanied by profiles of the composers. The works are “Sing My Child” and “Stomp on The Fire” by Sarah Quartel and Andrea Ramsey.
(will insert youtube link here when videos become available)
Gallery Exhibitions (In-person)
Feminism Ya Mang
Place: NWU Libraries (Potchefstroom, Vaal and Mahikeng Campuses)
Gender Terminology (Digital activity)
The availability of vocabulary to describe or talk about gender, in languages other than English, poses an interesting opportunity for a multilingual country like South Africa. The possibility of generating gender terminology, especially with input from community members, is very important. Two Digital Humanities researchers from the South African Centre for Digital Languages Resources (SADiLaR), Deon du Plessis and Benito Trollip, have been exploring this possibility the past few years. As part of Gender Awareness Week 2022 they are collaborating with the NWU Campus Pride Society to showcase some of the terminology that has been developed by different people or organisations for some of the South African languages, as well as the gaps in the terminology. Feel free to engage with them via email at deon.duplessis@nwu.ac.za and benito.trollip@nwu.ac.za.
Femmegineering and Modiragatse
The purpose of these two initiatives presented by the Faculty of Engineering is to change gender stereotypes through role models and other activities, and open STEM-careers to school learners who identifies as female. Modiragatse runs prior to GAW and ends on 9 August 2022. Read more:
Schedule for the week
MONDAY, 8 August
Health Sciences: Inter-campus Sports Day
Theme: We walk the rainbow talk
Time: 10:00-13:00
- Painting of zebra crossings in front of G16 (Potchefstroom Campus).
- Great Hall Library (Mahikeng Campus)
- Library (Vanderbijlpark Campus)
- Exhibiting photo comic pics (visual art) in print in foyer area G20 (Potchefstroom Campus)
TUESDAY, 9 August
Health Sciences: Comic Art Exhibition
Time: 09:00-15:00
Theme: In Harmony for Health
- Exhibition of photo comic pics in print in the foyer area G20 (Potchefstroom Campus)
- Great Hall Library (Mahikeng Campus)
- Library (Vaal Campus)
West Side Story Screening
Venue: Conservatory Hall, Building K1, Potchefstroom Campus
Time: 16:00
Prof Conroy Cupido briefly highlights how director and producer, Steven Spielberg, uses gender to expresses various themes in the movie West Side Story released in 2021. This will be followed by a screening of the movie. Refreshments will be available for attendees. Although the screening is free, please RSVP using the following link to confirm attendance.
- Steven Spielberg's "West Side Story" | Official Trailer | 20th Century Studios
- Steven Spielberg on Recreating 'West Side Story' in 2021
WEDNESDAY, 10 August
Health Sciences: Comic Art Exhibition
Time: 09:00-15:00
Theme: In Harmony for Health
- Exhibition of photo comic pics in print in the foyer area G20 (Potchefstroom Campus)
- Great Hall Library (Mahikeng Campus)
- Library (Vanderbijlpark Campus)
Student Arts Societies: Footprints
Time: 13:00-14:00
Venue: Wasgoedpennetjie Lane, Potchefstroom
Stalls for students to interact with and bringing attention to Gender Awareness issues.
Theology: Interactive Workshop
Time: 11:00 – 12:30
Venue: Faculty of Theology (Potchefstroom), Room 204 in Building K23
We intend to read and discuss a relevant passage from Scripture (such as one of the texts dealing with gendered violence), and then let attendees create artwork in small groups based on their understanding and feelings about the text, afterwards sharing and explaining the motivation for their creations with the larger group and then having a concluding discussion, especially on the themes raised by the artworks created.
Lecture Recital: LGBTQ+ Vocal Literature – Songs for Life
Time: 13:00
Venue: Conservatory Hall (Potchefstroom)
- Invited performer: Prof Christian Bester (Northeastern State University, Oklahoma US)
- Pianist: Prof Tinus Botha
- Horn player: Jandré Lubbe
The purpose of this lecture recital is to provide an overview of selected LGBTQ+ classical vocal literature, with a special emphasis on Hubert du Plessis’ seminal song cycle, Vreemde Liefde, and provide resources for further exploration. With unique challenges facing the LGBTQ+ community, Prof Bester not only hopes to increase awareness of this body of literature, but also offer to students literature they can relate to, grow with, and be inspired by.
Article: LGBTQ Vocal Literature: Songs for Life
Bester, Christian.
Journal of Singing; Jacksonville Vol. 77, Iss. 5, (May/Jun 2021): 619-632.
https://www.proquest.com/docview/2524409876?accountid=12865 (access for NWU students and staff with your credentials through the University’s database)
Transformation and Diversity with Current Affairs
What is Gender?
Presented by: Potchefstroom SCC
Venue: Amphitheatre (Potchefstroom Campus)
Program:
- 17:00: Opening and Welcoming
- 17:15: First Speaker (heterosexual female)
- 17:30: Second Speaker (heterosexual male)
- 17:45: Performance by The Blacknotes/Serenades/Divaco
- 18:00 – 18:45 LGBTQI
- 1. Mr Xander Fleming
- 2. Grizannie van Wyk
- 3. Campus Pride
- 18:45: Performance by The Blacknotes/Serenades/Divaco
- 19:00: Race & Gender & Disability (sociology)
- 19:30: Thanks to Sponsors
- 19:35: Closing
THURSDAY, 11 August
Health Sciences: Comic Art Exhibition
Time: 09:00-15:00
Theme: In Harmony for Health
Exhibition of photo comic pics in print:
- Foyer area, Building G20 (Potchefstroom Campus)
- Great Hall Library (Mahikeng Campus)
- Library (Vanderbijlpark Campus)
Seminar: Claiming space for queer bodies in our churches – A journey
Venue: Building F20, Room G50, Potchefstroom Campus
Time: 11:00
Welcome: Mr Ricus Stroh
Speaker: Mr Laurie Gaum
While most religions traditionally are male-structured asking you to ‘check in’ your body & sexuality at the door to the place of worship, this goes against the core values of many faiths. Laurie tracks his own story, the roots of the Christian faith, and how you can be supported to come out powerfully everywhere you are, also transforming faith spaces to be safer, welcoming and inclusive of all.
Seminar: The contribution of South African Queer women to the development of “Gayle”
Venue: Vaal Campus (Building D1, G03 “clubhouse”)
Time: 12:00
Speaker: Megan Williams
This research aims to fill a long-existing gap in the Afrikaans queer-identifying women and non-binary individual's specific way of “queering” language as an expression of their identity and lived experiences. Within this focus, language is described as a tool used by these queer individuals to construct their gender and sexual identity and expression outside of the heteronormative expectations of society. The collection of the specific terms and phrases used will aid in answering the question of “how identity is signaled by the LGBTQIA+ speech community through language?”. This research provides needed exposure to a different way of using the language outside the ‘normative frameworks’ within the Afrikaans speech community. Furthermore, the idea of ‘performativity’ introduced by Judith Butler, will also be used to support the notion that just like gender, expected language use based on an individual’s biological sex is a construction of what society accepts as the “normative”. Therefore, this discussion will emphasise how queer women and non-binary individuals use language freely from social constructs to signal their identity. Within the sociolinguistic view of language, gender, and sexuality, linguistical data will be collected on what terms and phrases are used by this community and what is meant by these words within the context of the South African LGBTQIA+ community.
Seminar: Men, masculinity and patriarchal lies: a lecture in memory of Eudy Simelane
Venue: Vanderbijlpark Campus (Building D1, G03 “Clubhouse”)
Time: 13:00
Welcome: Mr Ricus Stroh
Invited Speaker: Prof Zethu Matebeni (University of Fort Hare), SARChI Chair in Sexualities, Genders and Queer Studies
This seminar conversation follows a provocative video lecture which pays homage to black lesbian soccer player, Eudy Simelane (11 March 1977 – 28 April 2008). In this hard-hitting conversation, Prof Zethu Matebeni interrogates the role of black men in society, offers a crucial critique of masculinity and the patriarchal lies that dominate how men see themselves and their relationships to others. Through a queer analysis, this lecture suggests that South Africa has been halted by a resistance to imagine a queer radical and liberatory politics.
Theology: Open Discussion
Time: 14:00-15:00
We want to focus on depictions of female figures in the Bible in art and the implications thereof; previous discussions have been on, for example, the juxtaposition of Eve and Mary in art and how they have been perceived in the Church throughout history and in the present. This will take the form of a more open discussion, although it will be led, and some themes raised (such as Eve and Mary in doctrinal reflection on sin).
Exhibition Opening: Feminism Ya Mang
Date: 11 August to 2 September 2022
Venue: Botanical gardens, Potchefstroom
Time: 16:00
Feminism ya Mang, Feminism Yethu, Feminism Yani is the visual exploration on how we define womanhood, sexuality, age and feminism; key themes that come with such an engagement; and the ways in which notions on gender and queerness can redefine our understandings. By engaging with this complexity, the exhibition aims to celebrate the diversity of knowledge that contributes to our regional experience of Feminisms. We acknowledge that this notion is not static and is constantly being challenged by a myriad of lived experiences.
The exhibition reflects the diversity of experiences and expressions in being woman in spaces such as those represented in this installation. Home of Empty’s and Saloon explores the way in which woman engage with and exist within these realities. The installation texts particularly focus on some of the words, emotions and memories associated with the spaces and interrogates what this means in a local context.
Feminism Ya Mang, Yethu, Yani features works by Jodi Bieber, Amy Ayanda, Teresa Firmino, Helena Uambembe, Kelly Johnson, Lulama ‘Wolf’ Mlambo, Saaiqa, Santu Ramaisa, Jabu Newman.
https://www.goethe.de/ins/za/en/kul/sup/lfm.html
Exhibition Opening: Attached to the Soil
Venue: NWU Gallery, Potchefstroom Campus
Time: 18:00
A creative collaboration with South Africans
by Prof Peter Glendinning (Michigan State University)
“Attached to the Soil is a collection of 50 photographic portraits conceived in partnership between Peter Glendinning and a number of South Africans of all
ages and social backgrounds. It tells the stories of these individuals, capturing their hopes, fears, aspirations and disappointments. It speaks of a people who are distinguished by their diversity, emanating as they do from a variety of racial, cultural, religious and linguistic backgrounds. All have been marked by the tragic history of racialized exploitation in this land. But all demonstrate in their activities, ambitions and voice how this tragedy did not scar their souls. All speak of a desire to belong to a cosmopolitan community, of an understanding that political community is established not by where its inhabitants come from,
but rather by their common intention to continue to belong to a community that resides in a specific geographical space”. Adam Habib
This event includes performances by the NWU African Music Ensemble, led by Dr Cara Stacey.
FRIDAY, 12 August
Health Sciences: Comic Art Exhibition
Time: 09:00-15:00
Theme: We all stand together
Exhibition of photo comic pics in print:
- Foyer area G20 (Potchefstroom Campus)
- Great Hall Library (Mahikeng Campus)
- Vanderbilpark venue to be announced
Closing of exhibition: Releasing balloons with messages
Time: 13:00-14:00
- Outside buildings G16 and G20 (Potchefstroom)
- Great Hall Library (Mahikeng Campus)
- Library (Vaal Campus)
Seminar: Claiming space for queer bodies in our churches – A journey
Venue: Building A1, Room 261 (Mahikeng)
Time: 13:00
Welcome: Mr. Robert Uys
Speaker: Mr Laurie Gaum
While most religions traditionally are male-structured asking you to ‘check in’ your body & sexuality at the door to the place of worship, this goes against the core values of many faiths. Laurie tracks his own story, the roots of the Christian faith, and how you can be supported to come out powerfully everywhere you are, also transforming faith spaces to be safer, welcoming, and inclusive of all.
Seminar: Acting with the posthuman body in the visual art of Christiaan Diedericks and the poetry of Andrew McMillan
Venue: Building F20, Room G50, Potchefstroom Campus
Time: 12:00
Speaker: Dr Louise Postma
A background and introduction open the discussion on multiple becomings by the queering of the multiple ways in which traditional thinking and behaviour are experienced. Listeners can join the analysis and become participants by sharing their personal awareness and experience of how the artist and the poet present and depict their personal perspectives. Their views are the manifestation of traditional and oppressive thinking and behaviour in multiple becomings of both artist and viewer. The theoretical introduction to the discussion is informed by posthumanist philosophy.
Seminar: “Balls”
Venue: Building F20, Room G50, Potchefstroom Campus
Time: 13:00
Speaker: Wemar Strydom
Research on rugby’s socio-cultural and civil impact has grown exponentially over the last decade, with work appearing on how rugby coimbricates with xenophobia (Kelekay, 2019) and patriotism (Cleland & Parry, 2022), as well as with folkloric masculinity (Parry, Cleland & Kavanagh, 2019), diasporic belonging (Hawkes, 2019), and reconciliation (Mthonti & Valela, 2016). But, as Jaspir Puar and Amit S. Rai (2002) point out, civil-affective assemblages (of which we can take rugby to be exemplary in the South African imaginary) are near-always mediated, and as such it would be productive to consider how rugby - and its coimbrications detailed above - is represented in South African popular media. In this session, Dr Wemar Strydom offers such an overview, with consideration of popular film (with a focus on Modder en Bloed, dir. Sean Else, 2016), gendered expression awareness campaigns (the Jozi Cats’ 2010 poster drive), literary fiction (Fanie Viljoen’s Uit, 2014), and TV series (Getroud met rugby, 2016 onward).
Work cited:
- Cleland, J. & Parry, K.D. 2022. Fair Go? Indigenous Rugby League Players and the Racial Exclusion of the Australian National Anthem, Communication & Sport, 10(1), 74-96
- Hawkes, G.L. 2019. Diasporic Belonging, Masculine Identity and Sports: How rugby league affects the perceptions and practices, RMIT University PhD Thesis
- Kelekay, J.L. 2019. “Too Dark to Support the Lions, But Light Enough for the Frontlines”: Negotiating Race, Place, and Nation in Afro-Finnish Hip Hop, Open Cultural Studies, 3, 386-401
- Mthonti, F. & Valela, N. 2016. “So over the rainbow, rugby and reconciliation”, The Conversation, 02 March
- Parry, K.D., Cleland, J. & Kavanagh, E. 2019. Racial folklore, black masculinities and the reproduction of dominant racial
- ideologies: The case of Israel Folau, International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 55(7), 850-867
- Puar, J.B. & Rai, A.S. 2002. Monster. Terrorist, Fag: The War on Terrorism and the Production of Docile Patriots, Social Text 72, 20(3), 117-148
Gender Awareness Week 2022 Student Competition
Students stand a chance of winning three prizes to the value of R3000 by entering the Gender Awareness Week 2022 competition. Students can submit videos describing how they experience their gender identity and what gender identity means to them. See the video for more details.
Submit your entries here
Contact details for enquiries
- Prof Conroy Cupido
- Gender Awareness Week co-ordinator