Archive for Events

Women’s Sexuality Workshop: FREE INTRO NIGHT!

Are you ready to own your sexuality, to reclaim it, heal it and celebrate it? Come explore the current state of your sexuality and possibilities for growth with other women in a safe environment.

Wednesday, March 09, 2011 from 7:00-9:00 PM
Moonheart Healing Arts Center: 59 West 19th Street Suite 3A2A, New York, NY 10011

Amy Jo Goddard is beginning a new session of the Women’s Sexuality Empowerment Apprenticeship on March 22, 2011 in New York City. This program is a serious commitment to your sexual self. It’s a program that fills a gap for women who are seeking a unique environment where they can study themselves intimately. There is no way it won’t transform the women who choose it. In this free introductory night, Amy Jo will help women to assess where they are in their own sexuality and lead them in a guided meditation and interactive discussion. As an attendee, you will be able to ask questions of her and former participants of the women’s sexuality program to see whether the program feels right for you. There is no obligation to take the program, and you will definitely walk away with some clarity about your own sexuality.

Click here for more information and to sign up!

Master Class Writers' Retreat for Women!

Woodhull Institute for Ethical Leadership
February 25-27, 2011
Get inspiration. Get guidance. Get published!
Mention you saw this on Paradigm Shift NYC and save $100!

Join us for a weekend long training program located in our beautiful facility in upstate New York! In this long weekend of writing instruction and one-on-one critique, participants gain fundamental knowledge of developing, marketing and pitching works of fiction and nonfiction.

This is a fantastic opportunity for women of all ages who are interested in writing and publishing! Surprisingly, many otherwise talented fiction/non-fiction writers have never been taught the basic skill of organizing their material – their narrative or their argument – along the lines of a coherent and clear outline. This workshop will provide participants with skills such as jumpstarting your creativity, connecting with an agent, and identifying a winning idea.

We are privileged to have this retreat led by awarding-winning and best-selling authors Barbara Victor and Christina Baker Kline.

Barbara Victor is a journalist who has covered the Middle East for most of her career. She worked for CBS television for fifteen years, has worked at U.S. News and World Report, Elle, Femme and Madame Figaro. She was the first person to interview Moammar Ghadaffi after the American bombing of Libya in 1986, and has interviewed many major political figures in the U.S. and the Middle East. Barbara is the author of five novels and seven non-fiction books.

Christina Baker Kline is the author of four novels, including, most recently, Bird in Hand and The Way Life Should Be. She has taught creative writing and literature at Yale, NYU, Drew, and UVA, and is currently Writer-in-Residence at Fordham University. She is an editor on staff at the social networking site SheWrites and her blog is “A Writing Life: Notes on Craft & the Creative Process.”

*The Woodhull Institute is committed to making it possible for all women to participate in our powerful leadership trainings and writers’ workshops. We offer flexible payment plans, limited scholarships, and need-based financial aid.

Please feel free to contact our Program Coordinator, Rebecca at RMarcus@woodhull.org with any questions regarding this retreat, applying, or about Woodhull as an organization.

"The How and the Why" – A Play About Gender, Power, and Evolutionary Biology

You won’t want to miss The How and the Why, an amazing play featuring Mercedes Ruehl and Bess Rous, presented by the McCarter Theatre in Princeton, New Jersey!

Although the plot focuses on the relationship between two evolutionary biologists, one new to the field, the other “very established,” the play is about much more than what meets the eye.  According to Emily Mann, the show’s director, “The How and the Why is a play about sex and gender, power and age, nature and nurture, loss and love… that compels us to examine some of the unexplored questions of what it is to be a woman… It is also a great relationship play—about two women of different generations desperately trying to find a common ground.

Sarah’s dialogue is sharp and her characters complex; but most of all, her ideas are challenging—both intellectually and emotionally.”

After tomorrow night’s matinee performance, Erica Nagel will be curating “The How and the Why in Conversation: Blazing Trails and Taking Names.” According to Nagel, it will be an “interdisciplinary conversation featuring some pretty amazing folks,” including Jill Dolan, Emily Mann, Franziska Michor, Daniel Rubenstain, Shirley Tilghman, and Gina Kolata.  These individuals are experts in their fields, ranging from molecular biology to gender studies.

For more information about performance schedules and reserving tickets, visit this website!

An Interview with Jessie Fahay: Feminist Activist and Theater Director

Jessie Fahay, the founder of Ripple Effect Artists, recently spoke to us about her production of The Taming of the Shrew.  By adding a feminist twist to the traditional plot, Fahay hopes to encourage audience members to ask questions, get involved, and raise awareness about important issues affecting women.  In this interview, Fahay speaks about the relationship between theater and activism, gender roles, and her upcoming performances.

What inspired you to launch your performing arts company, Ripple Effect Artists?

I knew that I wanted to start a theatre company that would not only allow me to work with the theatre professionals I chose to work with, but also a theatre company that would make a difference in the community and the world.

What is the significance of your organization’s name?

When a stone is thrown into a body of water, it creates a “ripple effect.”  Our company is that stone that dares to ask our audiences bold questions and make a difference, which will inspire others in their circle to take action.  We are out to create a “ripple effect,” of a more connected, loving, communicative, and compassionate world.

What can the audience expect when coming to see your modern-day, feminist production of The Taming of the Shrew?

A lot of laughter, fun, and phenomenal 80’s costumes!  Really, audiences can expect to feel every range of emotion from extreme joy to extreme terror to extreme sadness.

On your website, you say that the roles of women have changed since Shakespeare’s time, but have also remained the same in some ways.  What differences and similarities do you see between these time periods?

This is a pivotal question.  Differences of course include that women are working, women are the bosses of men, and in many places of the world it is no longer acceptable to inflict physical harm on a woman simply because she is a woman.  Also, there are many organizations (such as Paradigm Shift) that stand for the rights and empowerment of women.  Yet, there are still similarities.  One underlying truth is that as powerful as women can be, women often live in fear—even in the United States as well as many other parts of the world.  There are places of power women still have not obtained (i,e, the President of the United States, most CEO positions, etc, etc.).   In addition, in many places of the world, women are still denied education.

Why did you decide to set your version of The Taming of the Shrew in the 1980’s, rather than the present-day?

This was actually the choice of the brilliant director, Jeff Love.  This came from the thinking that the 80’s was the time in which women were first given powerful roles in the workplace.  Yet, it was still acceptable to make comments about a woman’s attire and to make sexual advances on a woman in the office.  This was a decade of a lot of murkiness when it came to women’s roles in the workplace and at home, which is why it works for this production.

Following some of the performances, there will be a panel discussion with women’s rights activists.  Who will be speaking on this panel and what can the audience hope to gain from this discussion?

There are four different panel discussions—one with employees of Paradigm Shift, one with a leader of a new female-empowerment group, one with a life-coach, and one with a female playwright.  The audience will gain information about these organizations and individuals and what exactly they do as well as gain insights into what differences can be made day-by-day.

When people come watch your performances, they are encouraged to recognize different types of inequality and ask questions.  I think this is great because it puts the audience in an active position to make a difference, in themselves and in society.  How do your performances act as a platform for activism?

Thank you for the recognition.  The answer is in the question.  We challenge our audiences by putting on performances that ask questions (not performances that make statements).  We then further challenge them by asking what differences can be made.

What do you hope the future will bring for Ripple Effect Artists?

For the next five years, Ripple effect will produce one or two shows per year following this format with different issues such as gay-rights, abuse, unrequited love, warfare, etc.  The goal of Ripple Effect is to become an Equity Company in five years with an ensemble of actors, directors, writers, and a staff, with the founder acting as the artistic director.

Spring 2011 Prediction: The Paradigm Will Shift by at Least 5%. Spring Events Announced Soon!

We’ll announce our Spring events shortly, so in the meantime please check out our co-sponsored events listed on the event calendar, our blog, and our about page for testimonials and list of past events.

Join us on Facebook, Meetup, and Twitter!

Paradigm Shift NYC events challenge and inspire participants to contribute to the feminist movement by providing a unique and welcoming platform for expression and coalition building.  The result is almost 4 years of feminist community building that is creating both intra- and interpersonal paradigm shifts, contributing to a transformative societal ripple effect.

By donating- you are creating change

Suggested Donations:

$10-25 – will allow one person who is not able to pay to attend an event for free
$50-100- will help subsidize the cost of building a partnership coalition for one event
$100-250- will help subsidize the cost of one venue for one event
$500-750- will help subsidize the costs of event video production

Your donation of $5, 10, $25 or $50+ is greatly appreciated- donate today

Community Speak-Out for Reproductive Freedom

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011 – Celebrating 38 years since Roe v. Wade!

11am – Gather

We need people to help establish the space for the Speak-Out.  We have a permit and need people to help occupy as much space as possible so that the anti-choice forces can’t.

12noon – Speak-Out

Come raise your voice for reproductive justice, to commemorate Roe v. Wade and the bravery of abortion providers in the face of increased terrorism against abortion clinics, and support a local clinic under attack.  See the attached flyer for a full list of demands and more details about the Speak-Out.

Dr. Emily Women’s Health Center
560 Southern Boulevard, South Bronx

#6 Train to E. 149th St.
BX19 Bus to Southern Blvd & 149th

How you can participate:

Organizations-

1) Endorse! Email nycradicalwomen@nyct.net with your organization’s name

2) Forward! Send this to your e-lists

3) Speak out! On 1/22 – all speakers are invited to bring their demands and share their stories connected to reproductive freedom.

Individuals –

1) Forward! Send this to your friends, make announcements at meetings, and help get the word out.  Flyers are also available for leafletting!

2) Join! “Like” the New York Coalition for Abortion Clinic Defense here.

3) Attend! Come early on 1/22 to help us establish our protest area

4) Early birds, if you can’t attend (or even if you can!) we need help calling the media at 6am the morning of the event.

5) Speak out! Come to speak your mind about the reproductive freedom you want to maintain or the abortion provider who made the difference in your life.  Even if you wish to remain anonymous, you can give us a written statement to read on stage so that we can share your support for reproductive rights.

Interested in helping? Email nycradicalwomen@nyct.net or call 212-222-0633

Sponsored by: New York Coalition for Abortion Clinic Defense and Radical Women

Endorsed by: Brooklyn/Queens NOW, Freedom Socialist Party, Socialist Core, World Can’t Wait, National Women’s Liberation, Nieves Ayress Moreno-Trabajadoras por la Paz de NY, Brooklyn Law School National Lawyers Guild chapter.

Jumpstarting Adult Learning with Carrie Lobman

Jumpstarting Adult Learning: How play and improvisation can help you become a better learner (or teacher) with Carrie Lobman

Saturday, January 22, 4:15-5:45pm

920 Broadway, 14th Floor (at 20th Street)

$25.00 in advance, $30 at the door

Click here to register

Lifelong learning is critical to professional and personal success. But for many adults this can be a challenge. As we get older, lots of things get in the way of learning new things — embarrassment, fear of making change, resistance to asking for help, and most of all, a lack of playfulness in our learning environments.  But new discoveries reveal that  playfulness, spontaneity, creativity, performance, and pointless conversation are critical for learning across the lifespan. In this workshop, Carrie Lobman — who has made learning a more joyous experience for thousands of adults — will help participants put play, fun and creativity front and center in even the most serious learning challenges.

Carrie Lobman is director of pedagogy at the East Side Institute, the founder of the Institute’s Developing Teachers Fellowship Program and associate professor at the Rutgers University Graduate School of Education. She is co-author of Unscripted Learning: Using Improvisation Across the K-8 Curriculum and a frequent presenter at professional conferences on learning, development and play, including meetings of the American Educational Research Association, the Association for the Study of Play and the International Society for Cultural and Activity Research.

To register go to: www.acteva.com/booking.cfm?bevaid=214675

or contact Melissa Meyer at 212.941.8906, ext 304, mmeyer@eastsideinstitute.org.

News Flash for NYC Women: Your Health is Important – But Live A Little!

Doctors Susan Love and Alice Domar Distinguish Between the Serious, the Silly and the Superfluous in Women’s Health

January 31st at 8:15 pm: The 92nd Street Y

TICKETS/INFO | www.92Y.org | 212.415.5500 | 1395 Lexington Ave.

PRESS CONTACT | Andrew Sherman | asherman@92y.org | 212.415.5693

New York, NY— Jan. 7, 2011— What are the three ‘must-do’s for breast cancer prevention? Can an old, irritating friend actually be bad for your health – and if so, what do you do about it?  How crucial to your health and happiness is eight hours of un-interrupted sleep?

Doctors Susan Love and Alice Domar, co-authors of Live a Little! Breaking the Rules Won’t Break Your Health, have a message for you: Don’t sweat the small stuff. On Monday, January 31 at 8:15 pm at 92nd Street Y, Drs. Love and Domar help women manage top-of-mind, everyday health concerns, and give them some tips on how to do it without getting even more stressed out. First on the list?  Balancing career, family and exercise when you only have 16 hours a day (if you’re getting those eight hours of sleep, that is).  Also on the agenda: the inescapable companion to modern life – stress – and whether it can actually serve you well (or not).  And, with a peek in the pantry, they talk about importance of berries (and other anti-oxidants) on your shopping list, even in an era belt-tightening.

Dr. Love, author of the famous Dr. Susan Love’s Breast Book (De Capo Press, now in its fifth edition), also looks at breast cancer and what’s changed since the book first came out in 1990, including: breast cancer awareness campaigns (and whether they have been successful); the possibility of a preventative vaccine on the horizon; and how to know the difference between an “interesting” media report on breast cancer and an important one.

Elizabeth Browning, CEO of BeWell.com, a social network focused on health issues and information (founded by Dr. Love and Dr. Nancy Snyderman), moderates the discussion.

Following the talk, Drs. Love and Domar will sign books (which will be on sale at the event).

More About the Speakers

Dr. Susan Love is a professor of surgery at UCLA and President and Medical Director of the Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation. She’s a founder of the National Breast Cancer Coalition; and she was appointed to the National Cancer Advisory Board by President Clinton.  The fifth edition of her book, Dr. Susan Love’s Breast Book, came out in Sept. 2010.

Dr. Domar, a pioneer in the application of mind/body medicine to men’s and women’s health issues, is the executive director of the Domar Center for Mind/Body Health. She’s also a Harvard Medical School professor and a psychologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

About 92nd Street Y

92nd Street Y’s unique fusion of community and culture makes it the only place of its kind in the world. 92Y is a not-for-profit community center, performance stage and lecture hall; a literary salon and home for artists; a school, outreach organization and summer camp; a gym, a residence and more. 92nd Street Y, a proudly Jewish institution since its inception in 1874, has become a community of communities, welcoming people of all ages, races, faiths and backgrounds. Now serving more than 300,000 people each year in its New York facilities, 92Y also reaches millions of “virtual” guests around the world through its website, satellite broadcasts and other electronic media.  Committed to making its programs available to everyone, 92nd Street Y awards nearly $1 million in scholarships annually and reaches about 7500 public school children through subsidized arts and science education programs.  For more information, please visit www.92Y.org

This Sunday: Poetic People Power @ The Art at Bay Gallery!

This Sunday at 3:00 pm, head to the Art at Bay Gallery on Staten Island for an amazing poetry show hosted by “Poetic People Power,” an activist group that uses poetry as a way to raise awareness about important social issues, such as universal health care and consumerism.  Their performances are inspiring, thought-provoking, and life-changing.  Sunday’s show will feature excerpts from their 2009 Show, “Tapped Out: Words About the Water Crisis.Here is a brief description of the show:

Tapped Out: Words About The Water Crisis
On April 25, 2009, we presented Tapped Out: Words About The Water Crisis at Bowery Poetry Club. This show premiered new works about the privatization of water, the dangers facing freshwater, and the growing scarcity of this precious resource. Poets featured were Tara Bracco, Erica R. DeLaRosa, Andy Emeritz, Frantz Jerome, Angela Kariotis, Dot Portella, and Jonathan Walton. Tapped Out marked our seventh annual show.

RAPE NEW YORK: A Series of Public Dialogues

Jana Leo, author of Rape New York (Feminist Press, February 2011), will be joined by Jennifer Baumgardner, Mitch McEwen, and Michelle Anderson in a series of groundbreaking conversations about urban environments, violent crime, and the criminal justice system.

RAPE NEW YORK:

a series of public dialogues

Wednesday, February 16: Bluestockings, Lower East Side, 7:00 pm

Jana Leo & Jennifer Baumgardner, co-sponsored by Right Rides

Monday, February 21: Greenlight Bookstore, Fort Greene, Brooklyn, 7:30 pm

Jana Leo & Mitch McEwen, co-sponsored by Hollaback!

Tuesday, February 22: CUNY Graduate Center, Midtown NYC, 6:30 pm

Jana Leo & Michelle Anderson, co-sponsored by the Center for the Humanities at CUNY

*All events are free and open to the public.  Rape New York is available at www.feministpress.org.  To arrange an interview, order review copies, or for more information, contact Elizabeth Koke, FP publicity, at ekoke@gc.cuny.edu or 212-817-7928.*

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Praise for Rape New York:

“Absorbing, tender, insightful, terrifying, this book will change the way you think. In an extraordinary eloquent refusal of the line between the personal and the public, it takes us from the slow-motion details of a traumatic violation to a multidimensional reflection on the institutions and spaces of contemporary life. Memoir becomes urban manifesto.” — Beatriz Colomina, professor of Architecture and founding director of the Program in Media and Modernity at Princeton University

“Rape New York is evocative, wrenching—a raw, uncensored, singular exploration of the public and personal.” — Caitlin Roper, BOMB

“In this harrowing and exhilarating narrative, Jana Leo blasts open all the comforting fictions that we take for truths. Raped in New York, she turns the tables on New York and instructs her own case, drawing in landlords, police, lawyers, therapists, the entire environment which conspires to normalize complex and singular experiences.  A real eye-opener.” — Sylvere Lotringer, publisher of Semiotext(e) and Professor Emeritus, Columbia University

“Your front door lock is broken and your landlord doesn’t give a damn.  Jana Leo’s exploration of the public and private spaces in Rape New York effectively merges the vulnerability of the city with that of the body itself. A powerful and engrossing work.” — Arthur Nersesian, author of The Fuck-Up

“….In re-presenting the constellation of events that lead to and from that attack, Leo represents life in all its random brutality and orchestrated dignity – in other words, the best that can be said about this book is that it is true, which is the only real measure of real art, and honest existence.” — Vanessa Place, author of The Guilt Project and Statement of Facts

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