In this seven part Collection we invite you to explore boundaries with us. What has shaped the boundaries you maintain today? What impacts the boundaries you navigate between social, cultural, and political institutions? What lessons have you learned about your boundaries and those of other over this last year of sharp adjustments, unexpected changes, distance and isolation? Check back here as we publish the seven parts of this collection over the coming weeks.
In Part One of the BOUNDARY collection, Tyrone Cawston describes traversing the boundaries between two sides of themselves and the transformation that entails over the five hour drive between Olympia and the Colville Reservation.
In Part Two, Syd Yang describes a healing heart and the way their road to recovery transformed the way they occupy space, navigate boundaries, and seek hope for the future.
In Part Three of the BOUNDARY Collection, Swetha Ramesh writes about the liminal space that we all experienced during the pandemic, and how that new headspace transforms our perspectives and paths forward.
In Part Four of the BOUNDARY Collection, Olivia Popp writes about finding community in digital spaces that aren't inherently Queer—but rather through a process of queering that transforms them into spaces of learning, sharing, and healing.
In Part Five of the BOUNDARY Collection, Tahirah Alexander Green writes about how showing more or less of our whole selves on social media can cultivate community.
In Part One of the BOUNDARY collection, Tyrone Cawston describes traversing the boundaries between two sides of themselves and the transformation that entails over the five hour drive between Olympia and the Colville Reservation.
In Part Two, Syd Yang describes a healing heart and the way their road to recovery transformed the way they occupy space, navigate boundaries, and seek hope for the future.
In Part Three of the BOUNDARY Collection, Swetha Ramesh writes about the liminal space that we all experienced during the pandemic, and how that new headspace transforms our perspectives and paths forward.
In Part Four of the BOUNDARY Collection, Olivia Popp writes about finding community in digital spaces that aren't inherently Queer—but rather through a process of queering that transforms them into spaces of learning, sharing, and healing.
In Part Five of the BOUNDARY Collection, Tahirah Alexander Green writes about how showing more or less of our whole selves on social media can cultivate community.