13:29:29 From Zoom Admin 2 ICFA to Everyone : Please be aware of the IAFA Code of Conduct and Netiquette policy: 13:29:46 From Zoom Admin 2 ICFA to Everyone : https://iaftfita.wildapricot.org/Code-of-Conduct 13:29:55 From Zoom Admin 2 ICFA to Everyone : https://iaftfita.wildapricot.org/Netiquette 13:32:08 From Brian Attebery to All panelists : Congratulations on the book, Joy! 13:32:22 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to All panelists : 1. African Indigenous Knowledge and the Sciences: Journeys into the Past and Present. Gloria Emeagwali and Edward Shizhaote, eds. 2. Gregory Cajete (Tewa), Native Science: Natural Laws of Interdependence: https://www.indianpueblostore.com/products/native-science-natural-laws-of-interdependence. Cajete talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BqoZhp2Zn4 on Native Science—“All things are dependently interrelated in the harmony and balance of the multiverse.” “Native Science is a product of a different creative journey than Western Science…There is a tendency in Western science to negate that there has ever been anything other than Western science.” 3. Decolonizing Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) in an Age of Technocolonialism: Recentering African Indigenous Knowledge and Belief Systems. Edited by Artwell Nhemachena, Nokuthula Hlabangane &. Joseph Z.Z. Matowanyika. https://muse.jhu.edu/book/74875. 13:32:36 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to All panelists : 4. Robin Wall Kimmerer (Potawatami Nation), Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants: https://birchbarkbooks.com/all-online-titles/braiding-sweetgrass. Kimmerer talk: https://new.artsmia.org/event/virtual-talk-robin-wall-kimmerer 5. Laura Harjo (Mvskoke), Spiral to the Stars: Msvkoke Tools of Futurity: https://uapress.arizona.edu/book/spiral-to-the-stars 6. Wendy Makoons Geniusz (Anishinaabe), Our Knowledge is Not Primitive: Decolonizing Botanical Anishinaabe Teachings: https://press.syr.edu/supressbooks/860/our-knowledge-is-not-primitive/ 13:32:49 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to All panelists : 7. Laura-Anne Minkoff-Zern, The New American Farmer: Immigration, Race, and the Struggle for Sustainability. https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/new-american-farmer. 8. David F. Peat “Blackfoot Physics and European Minds.” Futures: The Journal of Policy, Planning and Futures Studies, vol. 29, no. 6, Elsevier Ltd, 1997, pp. 563–73. 9. Racial Ecologies. Leilani Nishime and Kim D. Hester Williams, Eds. https://uwapress.uw.edu/book/9780295743738/racial-ecologies/ 13:34:33 From Cristina Bacchilega to All panelists : Thanks, Joy! Where are the resources? in the chat or Q&A? i don’t see them. 13:35:03 From FitzPatrick, Jessica Lynn to All panelists : (@Joy, when you get a moment, can you please re-post those lovely resources? I think they didn’t get ‘sent’ to “Panelists and Attendees”, just panelists) 13:35:08 From FitzPatrick, Jessica Lynn to All panelists : (Indeed. Thanks!) 13:35:31 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : African Indigenous Knowledge and the Sciences: Journeys into the Past and Present. Gloria Emeagwali and Edward Shizhaote, eds. 2. Gregory Cajete (Tewa), Native Science: Natural Laws of Interdependence: https://www.indianpueblostore.com/products/native-science-natural-laws-of-interdependence. Cajete talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BqoZhp2Zn4 on Native Science—“All things are dependently interrelated in the harmony and balance of the multiverse.” “Native Science is a product of a different creative journey than Western Science…There is a tendency in Western science to negate that there has ever been anything other than Western science.” 3. Decolonizing Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) in an Age of Technocolonialism: Recentering African Indigenous Knowledge and Belief Systems. Edited by Artwell Nhemachena, Nokuthula Hlabangane &. Joseph Z.Z. Matowanyika. https://muse.jhu.edu/book/74875. 13:35:37 From FitzPatrick, Jessica Lynn to Everyone : Huzzah! 13:36:17 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : 4. Robin Wall Kimmerer (Potawatami Nation), Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants: https://birchbarkbooks.com/all-online-titles/braiding-sweetgrass. Kimmerer talk: https://new.artsmia.org/event/virtual-talk-robin-wall-kimmerer 5. Laura Harjo (Mvskoke), Spiral to the Stars: Msvkoke Tools of Futurity: https://uapress.arizona.edu/book/spiral-to-the-stars 6. Wendy Makoons Geniusz (Anishinaabe), Our Knowledge is Not Primitive: Decolonizing Botanical Anishinaabe Teachings: https://press.syr.edu/supressbooks/860/our-knowledge-is-not-primitive/ 13:36:35 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : 7. Laura-Anne Minkoff-Zern, The New American Farmer: Immigration, Race, and the Struggle for Sustainability. https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/new-american-farmer. 8. David F. Peat “Blackfoot Physics and European Minds.” Futures: The Journal of Policy, Planning and Futures Studies, vol. 29, no. 6, Elsevier Ltd, 1997, pp. 563–73. 9. Racial Ecologies. Leilani Nishime and Kim D. Hester Williams, Eds. https://uwapress.uw.edu/book/9780295743738/racial-ecologies/ 13:37:38 From Anya Heise-von der Lippe to All panelists : Thank you! 13:39:52 From STEPHEN TOBIN to All panelists : From a Latin American perspective (and with a more philosophical/non sci-fi approach) in its approach, Epistemologies of the South: Justice Against Epistemicide by Brazilian Boaventura de Sousa Santos is a pretty foundational text. https://www.routledge.com/Epistemologies-of-the-South-Justice-Against-Epistemicide/Santos/p/book/9781612055459#:~:text=This%20book%20explores%20the%20concept,possible%20without%20global%20cognitive%20justice. 13:40:47 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Master of Poisons too! 13:42:06 From Amy Armiento (she, her) to All panelists : Do you mind sharing titles and authors in the chat? My sound connection isn't the greatest. 13:42:41 From Taryne Jade Taylor to All panelists : Maybe one of our wonderful admins could drop names we mention in the chat for Amy and others? 13:42:57 From Alexis Brooks de Vita to Everyone : Great introduction to decolonialist analysis, Andrea! 13:43:34 From Isiah Lavender III to Everyone : I butchered her name! 13:43:41 From Aaron Kashtan to All panelists : That name is spelled Sabrina Vourvoulias 13:44:24 From Marek Oziewicz to All panelists : Isaah: who’s the author of Ink? 13:44:37 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Sabrina Vourvoulias's Ink 13:44:43 From Marek Oziewicz to All panelists : Thanks! 13:44:48 From Zoom Admin 3 ICFA to Everyone : This happens in Latin America and Spain, too; for example,Cybershamanism (ciberchamanismo) Jorge Baradit (Chile) , Gabriel Trujillo Munoz (Mexico); The Hour of the Sea (Carlos SisI, Spain) 13:44:57 From Isiah Lavender III to Everyone : Sabrina Vourvoulias as Aaron pointed out 13:48:02 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Great job, Taryne, pointing out that the term "Indigenous" is not implying that all Indigenous peoples have the same sciences or the same ways of doing science. The list is what I know best, but I know some of our attendees will know of other resources. 13:49:28 From Cecilia Tan to All panelists : Loving this indigenous science knowledge 13:51:03 From Suparno Banerjee to All panelists : The term "indigenous" though is problematic in the global context. There are often hierarchies within "indigenous" knowledge structures that not necessarily only resist/reject western/colonial science, but suppress other "indigenous" traditions. And at times try to take over the hegemonic position of the western science. 13:54:11 From Isiah Lavender III to Everyone : I agree with you Suparno to an extent. We may not have the language yet to see our way out of domination games as a species. 13:54:17 From Alfredo Suppia to All panelists : All this makes me think of the Yanomamis’ technology and way of life 13:54:20 From Alfredo Suppia to All panelists : https://www.amazon.com.br/Falling-Sky-English-Davi-Kopenawa-ebook/dp/B00GKFJDIE 13:55:02 From Alfredo Suppia to All panelists : And the Krenak people: https://www.amazon.com/Ideas-Postpone-World-Ailton-Krenak/dp/1487008511/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=Ailton+Krenak&qid=1616176482&sr=8-1 13:57:33 From Aaron Kashtan to All panelists : Have to leave for another meeting, thanks to the participants 13:58:21 From Taryne Jade Taylor to All panelists : Also Bodhi Chattopadhay's work on Kalpavigyan is very pertinent for what Grace is saying about language. 13:58:36 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Also Bodhi Chattopadhay's work on Kalpavigyan is very pertinent for what Grace is saying about language. 13:58:42 From Suparno Banerjee to All panelists : Yes, I guess structural domination is the main problem. I see both types--subversive and hegemonic--in my field of study, Indian sf. 13:58:48 From David Higgins to All panelists : Love this conversation -- great to see you all! Related to Grace's current comments, I think Laura Harjo's book Spiral to the Stars: Mvskoke Tools of Futurity (mentioned in the list above) is particularly excellent. I can't recommend it highly enough: https://journals.kent.ac.uk/index.php/transmotion/article/view/901/1780. 13:59:17 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : This is an important point: Indigenous sciences are typically regulated to climate management, but Indigenous sciences cover a wide variety of sciences including math and physics. 14:00:03 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Suparno Banerjee and all panelists : I agree Suparno. I think that is something that needs working out! 14:00:15 From Alfredo Suppia to All panelists : Many native Brazilian nations, if not all of them, do not have the word “illness” or “sickness” or “malady”. They use Portuguese “doença” instead 14:01:12 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : inin 14:01:39 From Marek Oziewicz to All panelists : There’s also a really interesting chapter by Colin Scott “Science for the West, Myth for the West?” in Sandra Harding’s. (Ed) The Postcolonial Science and Technology Studies Reader. Duke UP: Durham and London, 2011: 175-197. 14:03:01 From Cecilia Tan to All panelists : The anti-science fiction bias persists. Just makes my blood boil. 14:03:54 From Taryne Jade Taylor to All panelists : Yes! It is hard to believe we're still there! 14:06:48 From Sandra Lindow to All panelists : I grew up talking to a tree who my brother and I deemed a family member. The outside was what was normal. I struggle to find now the comfort that I got from that tree. 14:09:28 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : See Kimmerer's Braiding Sweetgrass for a good explanation of the connections between Indigenous and Eurowestern sciences. 14:10:05 From Zoom Admin 3 ICFA to Everyone : Taryne just put her finger on THE problem. We don't have words 14:10:25 From Cecilia Tan to Everyone : Which is why we need science fiction, where we make up new words on the regular 14:11:26 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Yes and Joy's forthcoming essay in our AF Handbook also discusses a story that does both Carlos Hernandez's Carlos Hernandez’s Assimilated Cuban’s Guide to Quantum • Santería 14:11:44 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Quantum Physics+Santería 14:11:50 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Thanks, Taryne :-) 14:11:54 From Isiah Lavender III to All panelists : I've got one eye on the time. I simply can't go past 2:50 and get to my kids for pickup 14:12:24 From Zoom Admin 3 ICFA to Everyone : The only way to speak of some problems is through SF, if you'll pardon the "Captain Obvious" statement 14:12:35 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Nalo Hopkinson's the New Moon's Arms 14:12:47 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : (try to type titles for Amy and others who asked! :-) 14:15:19 From Samantha Baugus (she/her) to Everyone : For a YA position on thinking about knowledges and sciences and its interweaving with Eurowestern forms of sciences (via magic) I just read Legendborn by Tracy Deonn which brings together Arthurian legends and the knowledges of enslaved women in the 21st century. 14:15:23 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : By the way, if you are enjoying this panel, please consider joining the new BIPOC Caucus of IAFA! 14:16:03 From Suparno Banerjee to Everyone : I second Taryne! 14:16:03 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : To join, you can email me: taryne.taylor@erau,edu or Isiah! Black, Indigenous, and People of Color AND allies are all welcome! 14:16:28 From Isiah Lavender III to Everyone : Isiah.lavender@uga.edu 14:16:33 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Oh yes! Legendborn is phenomenal! There is a lot of Indigenous Science going on in YA! 14:17:32 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : I have a forthcoming interview with Daniel Jose Older about IS in his Shadowshaper cypher series in which he talks about this. 14:17:43 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Justina Ireland's Dread Nation. 14:18:17 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Daniel Jose Older 14:18:55 From Sumeyra Buran to All panelists : It is the same in indigenous turkic “natural” science from the 9th-10th century are newly being welcomed by western rational science which now is called alternative science. Shamanic, turkic healing technology or water music healing and etc are still more believed by our people. Even for covid, Turkic indigenous people prefer to apply natural science following the ideas of Akşemşettin and Ibn-i Sina in termos of pandemic healing. When I had covid here my grandmom also had and she recovered in two days and I di not listen her and for her that’s why I Wafa hospitalised. She still says that nature heals but not the doctors. She says that nature cures all illnesses because you heal your soul. Even it is the case for Sufi spiritual soul healing (medidation in western). Even we have proverb that if sun does not come to your house then doctor comes. So, as I was brought up by my native indigenous tribal grandmother, I sometimes find myself between western science and indigenous believes. 14:19:18 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Darcie Little Badger, Elatsoe 14:19:30 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Also our own Graham Murphy is writing a great about essay about YA andIndigenous Science 14:19:37 From Suparno Banerjee to Everyone : An older but excellent book is Amitav Ghosh's The Calcutta Chromosome 14:19:42 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : And Darcie Little Badger is here giving a reading!!! 14:19:42 From Alena Cicholewski to All panelists : I really appreciate all those book recommendations! 14:19:50 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : *at ICFA I mean! 14:20:40 From Daniel Creed to All panelists : And reading your story actually remaps their cognitive synapse firings in a physical sense 14:20:53 From Isiah Lavender III to Everyone : Anil Menon's The Beast with Nine Billion Feet 14:21:04 From Beth Feagan to Everyone : I love this truth: we are story beings and our stories change each other. <3 14:21:28 From Zoom Admin 3 ICFA to Everyone : Interesting, Sumeyra--thanks! 14:21:38 From Kristy Anne Cox (Eagar) to Everyone : Brandy Nalani McDougall's Finding Meaning: Kaona and Contemporary Hawaiian Literature and Karin Amimoto Ingersoll's Waves of Knowing both speak to Indigenous Hawaiian Science in the context of this discussion, if anyone is familiar with either of their work. 14:22:07 From Sumeyra Buran to All panelists : That’s a great panel thank you all 14:22:26 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Children of Blood and Bone 14:22:32 From Graham J. Murphy (he/him/his) to Everyone : @Taryne: thanks for the wonderful shout-out :-) 14:23:47 From Zoom Admin 3 ICFA to Everyone : Binti 14:24:22 From Cecilia Tan to Everyone : We definitely get this thing in publishing where if there’s a POC author the publishers don’t want to publish it as sf (or even fantasy), they want to put it in “literature” as if by dint of the author being POC, it can only live in the “literary” shelf and not on the genre shelf. 14:24:35 From Sandra Lindow to All panelists : Psychology, sociology and home economics are sciences. 14:24:58 From Cristina Bacchilega to All panelists : For Kanaka ʻŌiwi or Native Hawaiian science and knowledge see also Bryan Kamaoli Kuwadaʻs https://hehiale.com/2015/04/03/we-live-in-the-future-come-join-us/ Kuwada is a scholar and also a science-fiction writer 14:25:39 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Here are the SF texts I was going to recommend as utilizing Indigenous sciences: Andrea Hairston’s Mindscape, Tananarive Due’s African Immortals series, Rivers Solomon’s An Unkindness of Ghosts, Carlos Hernandez’s short story collection The Assimilated Cuban’s Guide to Quantum Santeria, 14:25:44 From Cristina Bacchilega to Everyone : For Kanaka ʻŌiwi or Native Hawaiian science and knowledge see also Bryan Kamaoli Kuwadaʻs https://hehiale.com/2015/04/03/we-live-in-the-future-come-join-us/ Kuwada is a scholar and also a science-fiction writer. 14:26:02 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Nalo Hopkinson’s Brown Girl in the Ring, Sabrina Vourvoulias’s Ink, Celu Amberstone’s “Refugees,” Sanchez/Pita’s Lunar Braceros, Rebecca Roanhorse’s Black Sun, Ted Chiang’s “Story of Your Life,” the works of Nnedi Okorafor, and N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth Series. 14:26:09 From Samantha Baugus (she/her) to Everyone : Would it be possible to get a transcript of the chat so I can get all these book recs? They are going by so fast. 14:27:07 From Joy Sanchez-Taylor to Everyone : Not sure, Samantha, but I can ask. 14:27:45 From Nathaniel Harrington to Everyone : I’m also thinking about Simpson’s “Big Water” in This Accident of Being Lost as an example of a story that’s clearly speculative, but speculative from within an Anishinaabe ontological system rather than a Western one: it’s not speculative because Lake Ontario is intentionally communicating with humans, it’s speculative because she’s imagining heretofore unprecedented ways by which this might happen (text messages over Signal) 14:28:11 From Mary Anne Mohanraj to Everyone : It’s not necessarily seen as SF, but would Keri Hulme’s _The Bone People_ qualify? 14:28:13 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QIjwC-6pf88 14:31:40 From Suparno Banerjee to Everyone : At the risk of doing self promotion: my recent book Indian Science Fiction: Patterns, History and Hybridity (2020) includes a long chapter on epistemology and sf for any one interested. 14:32:45 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Oh Rhonda Knight this is such an interesting point! 14:33:17 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : I agree, I see much more of this coming out in YA. I've been asking authors and there is a perception that it's harder to get out content like this in adult sf/f 14:33:37 From Grace Worm to Everyone : It’s probably too late, but make sure you’re posting to both panelists and attendees in the comments or else only the panelists can see your comments :) 14:34:30 From Kristiana Willsey to Everyone : that’s what I’ve been doing :) 14:34:48 From Isiah Lavender III to Everyone : It's on my buy list Suparno! 14:34:48 From Sumeyra Buran to All panelists : https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=qsqcmRNODwQ 14:35:01 From Grace Worm to Everyone : It’s a mistake I’ve made in the past! And noticed some of the panelists referencing comments we can’t see haha 14:36:02 From Daniel Creed to All panelists : Sorry...question is probably too long because I was thinking through as I was forming the question 14:36:19 From Samantha Baugus (she/her) to Everyone : I don’t know if non-panelists can download the chat—I don’t see the option. If anyone has managed to snag a reading list I’d love to get it. It’s a bit inaccessible for me to get it myself. 14:36:42 From Isiah Lavender III to Daniel Creed and all panelists : It's a great question, though! It needs proper rumination! 14:36:45 From Daniel Creed to All panelists : Thank you, Taryne. This was a blind spot for me 14:36:54 From Kevin Maroney to Everyone : Likewise. I think that only presenters can save the chat . 14:37:41 From Kristy Anne Cox (Eagar) to Everyone : You can highlight and copy and paste the chat thread into a text document, if you'd like to do that. 14:37:43 From Sumeyra Buran to Everyone : https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=qsqcmRNODwQ 14:38:07 From Grace Worm to Everyone : Maybe one of the panelists could post it in the discord after this panel is finished/ 14:38:10 From Grace Worm to Everyone : ? 14:38:46 From Isiah Lavender III to Everyone : Wonderful answer Taryne! Knowledge born from trauma. So Long Been Dreaming is an important collection in this respect (Uppinder Mehan and Nalo Hopkinson) 14:38:54 From Graham J. Murphy (he/him/his) to Everyone : I tried to get as many of the titles copied down as possible, but I definitely missed some (and sorry for the mess of this chat entry): Gloria Emeagwali and Edward Shizhaote (eds): African Indigenous Knowledge and the Sciences: Journeys into the Past and Present. Gregory Cajete (Tewa): Native Science: Natural Laws of Interdependence: https://www.indianpueblostore.com/products/native-science-natural-laws-of-interdependence. • Related: Cajete talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BqoZhp2Zn4 on Native Science—“All things are dependently interrelated in the harmony and balance of the multiverse.” “Native Science is a product of a different creative journey than Western Science…There is a tendency in Western science to negate that there has ever been anything other than Western science.” Artwell Nhemachena, Nokuthula Hlabangane &. Joseph Z.Z. Matowanyika (eds.): Decolonizing Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) in an Age of Technocolonialism: Recentering African Indigenous Knowledge and Belie 14:39:21 From Hugh O'Connell [he/him] to Everyone : you can “select all” and “copy” (control or command + A and control or command +C) 14:39:46 From Zoom Admin 1 ICFA to Everyone : I've got it downloaded. We'll figure out a way to make it available. 14:39:50 From Samantha Baugus (she/her) to Everyone : Thank you 14:39:54 From Grace Worm to Everyone : Thanks! 14:39:59 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : And like Grace said earlier being humble or at least trying to be! 14:40:02 From Jalondra A. Davis to Everyone : I feel like the question was trying to get at how the way BIPOC authors integration of Western science, traditional science fiction tropes and indigenous epistemologies really disrupt the genre categories, like science fiction, fantasy, horror, etc, that attempt to clearly delineate these forms. 14:42:17 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : I must pitch the La Borinqueña graphic novels Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez (Taino storytelling). So so good! 14:43:21 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Also for those with small children (and for adults who like children's films like me) check out the animated film Pachamama on Netflix (Argentinian director Juan Antin representing Pre-Inka and Inka cultures) 14:43:22 From Anindita Banerjee to Everyone : Rita Indiana’s Tentacle is what I just taught together with that! 14:43:29 From Kristy Anne Cox (Eagar) to Everyone : Prism Stalker by Sloane Leong is an excellent graphic novel/comic series, indigenous Hawaiian futurism 14:44:06 From Kristy Anne Cox (Eagar) to Everyone : Lehua Parker's Nihui Shark Saga for a middle grade series, she gets labeled as fantasy but is drawing on traditional stories 14:44:19 From Zoom Admin 3 ICFA to Everyone : So grateful to these people for this panel! 14:44:29 From Kristy Anne Cox (Eagar) to Everyone : Deer Woman 14:44:38 From Brian Attebery to Everyone : An Indigenous Australian book that people might not be aware of is Claire Coleman's Terra Nullius, which overlays sf with colonial history. 14:44:42 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : YES Deer Woman!!! 14:44:57 From Kristy Anne Cox (Eagar) to Everyone : Beth Lapensee did that one 14:46:05 From Kristy Anne Cox (Eagar) to Everyone : The Interrogation of Ashala Wolf for Aboriginal Australian YA 14:46:30 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Oh also fairy tale studies folks would like Anna-Marie McLemore’s Blanca y Roja. Not a gprahic novel, but a wonderful Latinx Futurist book with IS! 14:47:08 From Taryne Jade Taylor to Everyone : Oh yes Ambelin Kwaymullina's work for sure! I love those books! 14:47:18 From Kristy Anne Cox (Eagar) to Everyone : Ambelin Kwaymullina is the author of Ashala Wolf series 14:47:42 From Kristy Anne Cox (Eagar) to Everyone : son of a trickster by eden robinson 14:48:55 From Zoom Admin 2 ICFA to All panelists : Two minutes to 2:50 14:50:15 From Graham J. Murphy (he/him/his) to Everyone : Ambelin Kwaymullina: The Interrogation of Ashala Wolf, The Disappearance of Ember Crow, and The Foretelling of Georgie Spider. Working in different "genres," her book The Things She's Seen written with Blaze Kwaymullina. 14:50:26 From Isiah Lavender III to All panelists : My pleasure and to be on this panel with y'all and my apologies for having to bail! 14:51:10 From Zoom Admin 3 ICFA to All panelists : The bee's knees 14:51:12 From Sumeyra Buran to Everyone : I might suggest Orhan Pamuk and Elif Shafak for sufi fiction and Sadik Yemni for sufi futurism (sufi sf). 14:51:16 From Isiah Lavender III to Everyone : Thank you for coming everyone.. Unfortunately, I've got to go pick up the kiddos! Enjoy our colleagues! 14:51:34 From Daniel Creed to All panelists : Thank you all! 14:51:38 From Charlotte Manzella (she/her) to All panelists : Thank you!! 14:51:39 From Zoom Admin 2 ICFA to Everyone : We're working on a link to put on the program page for the chat. 14:51:57 From Stina Attebery to Everyone : Thank you all—wonderful panel! 14:51:58 From Zoom Admin 3 ICFA to All panelists : Thank you all--wonderful group! 14:51:58 From Beth Feagan to Everyone : I am geeking out. Thank you all!!!! 14:51:58 From Alfredo Suppia to All panelists : Thank you! :) 14:52:03 From Leisa Clark to All panelists : thank you all! this was wonderful 14:52:04 From Valorie Ebert to All panelists : Thank you! 14:52:04 From Jalondra A. Davis to Everyone : Thank you all! 14:52:07 From ALBERT WENDLAND to All panelists : Thanks to everyone. A fabulous panel. 14:52:10 From Cristina Bacchilega to Everyone : thank you so much!!! 14:52:10 From Anya Heise-von der Lippe to All panelists : Thank you so much! Amazing panel! 14:52:11 From FitzPatrick, Jessica Lynn to Everyone : This was wonderful. Many thanks! 14:52:12 From Alfredo Suppia to All panelists : Great talk! 14:52:13 From LTJames to Everyone : Thank you! 14:52:14 From Keith Manuel (they/them) to All panelists : Incredible panel. thank you all! 14:52:16 From Sumeyra Buran to Everyone : Thank you for this fascinating panel! 14:52:19 From Dustin Connis (he/him) to Everyone : Thank you! 14:52:20 From Cecilia Tan to Everyone : Great panel! 14:52:22 From John Glover to Everyone : That was great! Thank you so much 14:52:23 From Natalie Deam (she/her) to All panelists : Thank you, this was amazing! 14:52:23 From Beth Feagan to Everyone : <3 14:52:24 From Noah Slowik (he/him) to Everyone : Thank you so much! 14:52:25 From Alexandria Jochebed Nunn to Everyone : Thank you! 14:52:29 From Kristiana Willsey to Everyone : thank you, this was great! 14:52:32 From Jude Wright to All panelists : Thanks to everyone. This has been great! 14:52:33 From Zoom Admin 2 ICFA to All panelists : I will end it 14:52:33 From dillong to All panelists : dillong@pdx.edu 14:52:34 From RACHEL HARRIS to All panelists : great discussion. Just trying to copy the reading list. 14:52:36 From Nicola Hunte to All panelists : Great panel. Loved it! 14:52:36 From Valorie Ebert to All panelists : This was amazing! Thank you all! 14:52:37 From Brantley Bryant to Everyone : Thank you! 14:52:37 From Sylwia Borowska-Szerszun to Everyone : thank you! 14:52:37 From Dyani Sabin (she/hers) to All panelists : this was so fantastic! Thank you!! 14:52:44 From Rachel Combs to All panelists : Thank you!! 14:52:46 From Zoom Admin 2 ICFA to All panelists : Ending in one minute... 14:52:58 From Tereza Dědinová to All panelists : thank you all! 14:52:59 From Gerry Canavan to All panelists : Thank you all! Terrific panel 14:53:19 From Valorie Ebert to All panelists : Cabana 2 on Discord! 14:53:25 From Mary Anne Mohanraj to Everyone : Thank you! 14:53:33 From Alfredo Suppia to All panelists : Many thanks! 14:53:35 From Alexis Brooks de Vita to Everyone : Thank you! 14:53:37 From Zoom Admin 2 ICFA to All panelists : ending in 30 seconds 14:54:09 From Francesco Nieddu to All panelists : Wwonderful panel. Thank you all!