Writer, performance artist, sex worker and parent Frankie van Kan explores queering the parenting narrative as part of M/OTHER's free Soapbox Series.
Featuring
About
Queer parenting offers us new ways and new words to think about what a family looks like outside of the traditional expectations about gender, sexuality and ‘motherhood’.
Frankie van Kan, is a queer parent using love and compassion to explore pleasure, make art and raise a child. As a writer, performance artist and sex worker, van Kan’s practise explores the liberation of the body, queerness, sex and sexuality to rethink heteronormative narratives.
Between M/OTHER panels, meet us at The Moat as van Kan takes to the soapbox to explore queer parenting, discuss the highs and lows of co-parenting, and examine the benefits to children and parents who find ways to parent that consider the needs of all parties.
This is the second Soapbox event taking place over M/OTHER. You can also hear from podcaster and writer Madison Griffiths on Friday 3 March, and radio host and writer Jacinta Parsons on Sunday 5 March.
Conversations in M/OTHER may include references to topics such as mental health, reproductive rights, and childbirth. If you need assistance with any of these issues, you can learn more and seek advice via the Centre of Perinatal Excellence (COPE), Perintal Anxiety & Depression Australia (PANDA) and Beyond Blue.
Official Bookseller
The official bookseller for M/OTHER is Neighbourhood Books.
M/OTHER
M/OTHER is a weekend of fearless conversation about the ways ‘motherhood’ is experienced, portrayed and labelled by those who mother, have been mothered, wish they were mothers, do not identify as mothers, cannot or do not want to mother, and by society at-large.
Featuring
Frankie van Kan is an interdisciplinary queer artist, writer and sex worker living, loving and learning on unceded Wurundjeri land. Her practise includes live performance, costume, the written word and dance. Her debut solo show, A Body at Work, directed by Maude Davey, recently completed its pr... Read more
Watch, Listen, Read
Watch
Ma Thida: Myanmar’s Struggle for Democracy
Listen
Global Game Changers: The Evolution of the Olympic Games
Watch
Surveillance, Technology and AI: Meredith Whittaker in Conversation
Watch
No Place Like Home: Australia’s Housing Affordability Crisis
Listen
Surveillance Technology and AI: Meredith Whittaker in Conversation
Read