Care: Sylvie Rosenkalt (disability justice, healing justice)

BARTALK: Care BARTALK is a lecture-performance-storytelling series taking place in different bars in The Hague and sometimes online. Each event/podcast is themed which we ask 4 guests to share their research and stories on. This miniseries is on care and on this episode, we talk to Sylvie Rosenkalt about her work in disability justice, healing justice, and sustainable work practice. Sylvie is a queer disabled educator and activist. Her experiences with crip mentorship have fueled her desire to create formal and informal mentorship opportunities for disabled folks. Sylvie is focused on ways to welcome more people into disability culture through mutual aid projects. Currently Sylvie is works at the UIC Disability Cultural Center and is pursuing a Masters in Education with a focus on critical special education. Episode transcription: https://bartalkdh.files.wordpress.com/2020/12/bartalk-podcast-1.pdf Links: Principles / definition of disability justice: https://www.sinsinvalid.org/blog/disability-justice-a-working-draft-by-patty-berne Access Is Love: https://www.disabilityintersectionalitysummit.com/access-is-love Forced intimacy: https://leavingevidence.wordpress.com/2017/08/06/forced-intimacy-an-ableist-norm/ Acces Labor video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZfHavOGL4Zc Hosted by Yun Lee and Rae Parnell Produced by Hans Poel Music by Sro - Bring Back and Chad Crouch - Algorithms Transcribed by Sarafina van Ast This BARTALK episode is made possible with the generous support of Stroom Den Haag and iii

Om Podcasten

BARTALK is a lecture-performance-storytelling series that usually happens physically in a bar in The Hague. Each edition has a theme and brings guests from different backgrounds (art, psychology, media technology, music, drag, martial arts, kink, math) to share their perspectives under the same subject. Past themes have included death and the afterlife, a history of burning, the living archive, and more. Ultimately, BARTALK is a model of knowledge-sharing as community-building