menu

Count Me In team publish new book

Count Me In

‘Ordinary in Brighton?: LGBT, Activisms and the City’, the first academic study of LGBT life the city of Brighton and Hove, discusses how equalities legislation was experienced on the ground in the New Labour era (1997-2010) by lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people.

It examines the impact of UK equalities initiatives on the lives of LGBT people and LGBT activism, and presents that alongside many positive changes, there are LGBT people who still feel marginalised and excluded in contexts such as support services and on the scene.

It reveals that place matters in how social change happens: although Brighton was feted as the gay capital of the UK, it did not fulfil this ideal for all LGBT people. This failing to match the city’s branding and legislative requirements provided a bargaining tool that LGBT activists used to press for more progressive policies and practice.

The book draws on the voices of LGBT people who lived, worked and socialised in the city, using data and testimony from questionnaires, focus groups and interviews gathered as part of the award-winning Count Me in Too project which ran from 2005 to 2010.

It charts the development of this innovative project in which LGBT people worked with service providers to gather, analyse and present evidence that would promote positive change for LGBT people.

Ordinary in Brighton? is co-written by Dr Kath Browne, the lead researcher on the project and Reader in Human Geography at the a University of Brighton, with Leela Bakshi, an LGBT activist who has worked with Dr Browne on geographies of sexualities research in Brighton. Both live in the city and worked with local LGBT community organisations alongside developing the research project and writing this book.

The authors say:

“This book reflects on learning from the stories, hopes and views entrusted to the Count Me In Too research project, and develops thinking, linking and extending the research literature, whilst seeking to honour the contributions of those who took part.”

Members of the public are invited to the book launch where people who connected with the project will speak about the book. The launch is on November 23 at the Friends Meeting House in Ship Street, Brighton, starting at 3pm. Everyone is welcome.

The book is framed for academics and activists with interest in research and theories.

To read the publishers’ overview of the book, go to: http://www.ashgate.com/isbn/9781472412942

For more information about Count Me In Too, CLICK HERE:

 

 

MALARKY: Anakana Schofield : Book review

malarky-9781780742700_0

It’s a tightly written and intimate story with the narrator taking us through various events in her life, all centred around the deaths of her husband and son, but not in any particular order. It’s deeply personal and funny as hell, its set in modern rural Ireland and echo’s the slow pace of change, quietly marking the modern with strangeness.  It’s more of the story of a memory and is both startlingly vivid and hallucinogenic on occasion. I loved it. ‘Our Women’ who talks us though her life with, and after, the deaths is an authentic voice of a certain type of Irish Women, seemingly content until a chance meeting volcanically changes her life view.

Anakana Schofield  has constructed a tender and honest study of grief without tearing up the thick boggy peat of memory. It’s carefully cut and dried then smokes on the hearth in front of us as we watch the  effects of death curl up like smoke from an Irish farmers’ fire, it made me snort, laugh, look out the window with my eyes misting up and hold onto it tight. This book seemingly about death is full of the energy of desperate life.  Its languid essence is shockingly broken by some quite startling, and very funny moments of narrative energy, but the entire way through there is this subtle tender feeling from the author of her really caring for her characters. She loves words too; they tumble about in all sorts of delightful ways.

Schofield’s love of prose, the soft lilting dance of Irish dialect and speech and her spot on rendering of the spiralling decent into madness makes this book twist and shimmer and change from one thing to another as you read it, or rather listen to it as the narrators voices are so clear even when they are unreliable.

I was surprised by this book, and also delighted by it, the unadulterated clear voice of its narrator wrapping itself around me and pulling me into the book, all small details and day to day shades and shadows of real life with brilliant flashes of surreal action thrown in. Rubbing alongside James Joyce’s Ulysses (which echo’s through this book) this straggly dark inner monologue touches on the life of a rural mature women who’s vivid erotic imagination of men having sex with each other is contrasted with her endless domestic chores, death shatters her small seemingly secure world which has already been severely dented by revelations from within her own family; her husbands infidelity and her son’s gayness. Her life breaks open and she embarks on a series of adventures which as are funny as they are profoundly moving.

It’s a book about a journey as much as about grief, it’s about love and release, it’s about betrayal and the nature of truth and ends with some subtle dream like twist to suggest the story was rather more than it’s parts. Oh! it’s so sharp and honest in parts and this is where the rich sea of humour comes out, the honesty is searing, the personal refection spot on and the clash of what is with what might be gives out smouldering sparks of humour, its unremittingly dark too, like an Irish winter sky.

A treat to read something so well crafted and ‘our women’s’ forlorn but flamboyant voice has stayed with me long after I finished the book.

For once the publisher’s description is spot on “A wickedly funny and wonderfully deranged literary debut introducing a brilliant new voice in contemporary Irish fiction”

Recommended.

Our now £11.99  Paperback

 For more info or to buy the book see the Publishers website here:

Stonewall launches Global Diversity Champions Programme

 

Stonewall

Stonewall has launched its Global Diversity Champions Programme, a best practice forum for organisations that employ people around the world. The programme will work with international companies to ensure that their lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) staff, regardless of which country they operate in, can perform.

It is currently illegal to be gay in 78 countries and only 59 countries protect gay people from discrimination in employment based upon their sexual orientation. This presents a unique challenge for global organisations committed to treating their gay staff fairly and building a workplace where all staff feel able to perform at their best.

The programme will allow members to share ‘in country’ best practice as well as offering an array of benefits including an exclusive seminar programme and dedicated resources on global workplace topics.

Supported by diversity software specialists Gender Gap, the new programme brings together the expertise of ten major founding partners: Barclays, BP, Citi, Freshfields, Google, IBM, P&G, RBS, Simmons & Simmons and Thomson Reuters and will build on the tried and tested model of good practice sharing and benchmarking to accelerate improvements.

Laura Doughty
Laura Doughty

Stonewall Deputy Chief Executive Laura Doughty said:

“We know that people perform better when they can be themselves. For gay staff in countries where they don’t enjoy equality this can be incredibly difficult and brings a unique set of challenges. Stonewall’s Global Diversity Champions Programme will help international organisations respond effectively to these challenges and help them create workplaces where everyone can perform to their full potential – regardless of their sexual orientation or where they are in the world – as well as supporting gay people ‘in country’.”

Sam Jones, Gender Gap Founder and CEO said:

“Diversity has always been a global opportunity. Embracing diversity in every one of your offices maximises the positive impact on business performance. As a global software company focused on diversity, we’re delighted to support Stonewall on this programme.”

For more information on Stonewall’s Global Diversity Champions programme CLICK HERE: 

 

X