Advertiser's description (via Eventbrite)
The Food Futures Dream Lab is a creative process that harnesses the transformative power of dreaming with community. We'll listen to a story to spark our imagination and immerse in a guided visioning session to help us get specific on the futures we want to create, and grow our collective capacity to bring these dreams into reality.
This Food Futures Dream Lab features the audio story, After Surgery, Food as Gender Affirming Care, on how sometimes moments of self-sovereignty arrive through openness to receiving care. What becomes possible when food is love, food is care, and food is nourishment as a right for all people, all bodies?
After Surgery, Food as Gender Affirming Care is a story from Food Culture Collective's Radical Nourishment podcast! Learn more about our podcast and audio fellows here!
Reciprocity
Your financial support helps me to make this possible! Donation encouraged, but no one turned away for lack of funds! Sliding scale: $10-30.
Accessibility
Zoom closed captioning will be available for this event.
Conversation content will be delivered in English.
Things You’ll Need To Join:
- FC Cltv Virtual Community Agreements (available to view after registration)
- A reliable internet connection or cell service
- A laptop or mobile device
- Zoom join information (available upon registration. You can join from your browser or the software/mobile app)
A bout Food Culture Collective
Food Culture Collective is a community growing our cultural capacity for food and climate justice through cultural foodways, story, and media arts. We are food workers, culture-bearers, creatives, and co-conspirators who dare to dream of a future where our economies and cultures are shaped by care for the land, waters, and people to which we belong.
Our community is united by a belief that food is culture and foundational to nourishing the systems, values, narratives, and everyday behaviors that shape our world. We use story, art, and experiences to disrupt a culture of extraction and exploitation and collectively reclaim and reimagine our relationships to food.
To learn more, visit foodculture.org