A Research-co-Creation of Care: Feminist Speculation, Collaboration, and Curation in the Decameron 2.0 Virtual Gallery | University of Toronto Quarterly
This paper presents the evolving work of the Decameron Collective, a group of women Canadian scholars and artists who, during the early COVID-19 pandemic (2020–2022), built a body of creative works as an interactive, virtual gallery of visual, audio, and textual media inspired by Giovanni Boccaccio’s Decameron (1353). More than a gloss on Boccaccio’s text, Decameron 2.0 is a feminist project of collaborative and curational worldbuilding. We describe our practice of co-creating and curating, making a case for interdisciplinary praxis-led approaches of research-creation that embody both a mode of inquiry and a practice of feminist ethics and care. We describe the world of Decameron 2.0 – its courtyards, caves, and rooms of spells, and the affordances of the webGL spatial navigation that contributes to the intermediality within and between the works. The intertextual spatialization of works in Decameron 2.0 and the non-linear exploratory affordances of the virtual environment extend into our academic thinking/theorizing through centripetal and centrifugal frames. In homage to the polyphony of mediaeval manuscript culture, and as an intervention against the flattening of so much academic discourse, we use illustrations, hyperlinks, margins, page layout, and metacommentary. This paratextuality illustrates what we call thinking-together and honours the differences among our individual voices and perspectives. This paper contributes to current critical and cultural understandings of making, care, communication, and feminist practice and models how multi-institutional collaboration can be reshaped in the era of and after COVID-19.
I’m sharing this publication, whuch is now open access thanks to AU and TMU. I’m really proud of this radical work that reflects so beautifully the polyphonic, multi vocal thinking and working of the creative and scholarly Decameron Collective. I hope you enjoy! utppublishing.com/doi/10.3138/...
17.03.2025 17:31 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Watch Free TV & Movies Online | Stream Full Length Videos | Tubi
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Canadians, sigh, if you're boycotting US goods, look to your subscriptions. Netfix, Prime, Disney, AppleTV, newspapers, so many....
As an alt to paid streaming, tubitv.com is GREAT
02.02.2025 03:23 — 👍 9 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
Sources:
John Vaillant: Fire Weather: The Making of a Beast
Jerron Hawley, Graham Hurley, Steve Sackett: Into the Fire: The Fight to Save Fort McMurray
Sending love to LA.
/fin
09.01.2025 14:14 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
it's already low, as it is in Alberta most of the time too), and creating lightning that will start more fires, as well as tornado like activity, and winds of its own.
10. Fire rips quickly up hill.
This is the information I carry in my head.
09.01.2025 14:11 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
where there is not yet already a fire. Spontaneous combustion is real.
7. Sparks, ashes can travel long distances. In Fort Mac the fire breached a 1 km wide river, easy peasy.
8. Everything is combustible.
9. Intense wildfires create their own weather, lowering air humidity (and in California
09.01.2025 14:09 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
(There is a harrowing account of this as described by the first responders in John Vaillant's Fire Weather. I wept through that entire chapter)
6. The heat inside of a house surrounded by flames will boil water, and the freakish high heat alone can cause combustion—
09.01.2025 14:07 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
(thereby collapsing the house too and removing easy fuel source), meant that they were able to lower the height of the fire, and create fire breaks and prevent some vehicle explosions.
09.01.2025 14:02 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
5. Vehicles with gas tanks are bombs. In Fort Mac, first responders discovered on the fly that using heavy equipment to move vehicles out the fire’s path (literally bulldozing cars out of the fire's path), or push them into the basements of houses—
09.01.2025 13:59 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
—and the spray becomes too fine even if it hasn't vapourized. Nor can water bombers fly over and douse them effectively (they can’t get in close enough, fly low enough to be effective-- steam, fine spray).
09.01.2025 13:57 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
3. Wildfire in urban centres can not be fought by conventional methods. The water in hydrants and hoses literally turns to steam.
4. Flames are taller. Hundreds of feet in some cases. This means that fire fighters can’t get hoses on top of the flames to douse them, it turns to steam, for one —
09.01.2025 13:54 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
2. Houses that contain a lot of synthetic material will burn faster (think carpets, synthetic drapes, sofas, things made from wood composite with lots of glues, vinyl siding, laminate flooring.) Traditional (antique) furnishings, hardwoods burn more slowly.
09.01.2025 13:52 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
1. Wildfires burn hotter. A 2500 square foot house can be entirely consumed to ash in 5 min. To ash. Fire fighters can not contain this. This is not a typical house fire.
09.01.2025 13:49 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
that we actually don’t really understand fire-- in fact I urge you to do this. These are things that stood out to me, as I pondered, how this can happen in big cities with good fire-fighting resources and experience.
09.01.2025 13:46 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
—the things that make what we are watching happen in LA, a well- resourced, experienced, metropolitan centre.
Wildfires burn differently. I’m not a fire specialist, so I won’t attempt to explain in great detail. You’re welcome to read up on it and learn about how these fires taught us
09.01.2025 13:43 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Here are some things I’ve learned from reading first hand accounts from firefighters, wildfire fighters, and other first responders following the Slave Lake (2011) and Fort MacMurray(2016) and Jasper (2024) fires--
09.01.2025 13:40 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
My heart is breaking for LA. We know this all too well, in Alberta, in BC.
In case we're all sitting here wondering, or believing that this can't happen here (it just happens in rural areas, in the wild), it can.
Here are some things I’ve learned- a thread.
09.01.2025 13:37 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Peace
26.12.2024 14:32 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
26.12.2024 14:32 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Online Art Exhibition ICIDS 2024 – ICIDS 2024
Electronic and digital
Storytelling people! I’m
Excited to announce that the #icids2024 exhibition launches tody, and I’m
honoured to have piece which you can find here along with all the other amazing artists and their creations! icids2024.ardin.online/online-art-e...
02.12.2024 13:36 — 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Yup. Me too.
27.11.2024 23:34 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Hi! Thanks for doing this!! Please add me. <3
16.11.2024 23:30 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Professor, Indigenous, Environmental and Global Studies, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta. Research on planetary governance, climate change, biodiversity & more-than human species, applying Indigenous knowledge & ethics.
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Academic turned high school teacher. Digital culture, digital pedagogy, poetry, rhetoric and composition. English Team Coordinator and AI & ethics lead at the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy.