As many of you know, I’ve been infatuated with gay HIV-positive sex worker activist Danny Cockerline since stumbling upon some archival materials in the Canadian Women’s Movement Archive related to the Canadian Organization for the Rights of Prostitutes and HIV/AIDS activism eight years ago. Since then I’ve slowly accumulated material about him, from personal writings and photos in archival institutions to audio recordings of public speeches and video documentation. Danny’s work, sharp analysis, humour, and unrepentant sexiness in the face of so much anti-gay/anti-sex worker hatred, violence, death, and respectability politics that marked the ’80s and ’90s is a literal spectacle to behold and learn from! As part of the inaugural cohort of OutHistory Fellows I have created a digital exhibition that includes an original text, dozens of photos from various archives and personal collections, organizations’ documents from some of Canada’s earliest sex worker rights’ organizations, three videos, and an audio recording of Danny’s last public appearance on a panel of sex workers discussing pressing issues in Toronto’s sex worker scene in late 1995. You can view the full digital exhibition here: Danny Cockerline: Toronto’s Patron Saint of Whores & Hustlers (1960-1995)
Alongside three of my Research Assistants I will be presenting some of the preliminary findings from the Sex Worker Self-Authoring in the Canadian Women’s Movement Archive project at the annual Sexuality Studies Association conference in Toronto this spring. Emily, Diksha, Jasmin, and I will be presenting at ##pm on May ## at George Brown College where the Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences will be hosting their annual Congress of which the SSA is a part.
In a few short weeks I will conclude my Human Rights & Sexualities course at Carleton. I did not receive any course contracts for the summer, so as per usual I will be applying for Employment Insurance. The federal EI program is, in a substantive way, subsidizing the underfunded university system in Ontario where cheap contract faculty like myself are about equal to the number of full time faculty. Unlike them, we are cheap labour that is kept on during the Fall and Winter semesters only to be let go in the summer to fend for ourselves. Surprisingly, EI payments for the summer pay better than a summer course contract at Carleton.
This semester I am also finishing up my service as the Vice President Internal at CUPE 4600, the union of contract faculty and teaching/research assistants at Carleton. I will be running for President this spring in the hopes that I’ll be leading the union through it’s next round of bargaining that is set to commence late this summer.