Loading Events
Loading Events

« All Events

  • This event has passed.

Category: Woman Screening and Panel Discussion

March 8, 2023 @ 7:00 pm - 9:30 pm

Free

Celebrate International Women’s Day with a special screening of the documentary, Category: Woman, co-presented by Innis College, the Cinema Studies Institute, and the Faculty of Kinesiology & Physical Education.

The screening will be followed by a discussion and Q&A with filmmaker Phyllis Ellis, Associate Professor Caroline Fusco, and doctoral student Ali Greey, moderated by sports journalist Mary Ormsby.

Wednesday, March 8 at 7 pm
Attend in-person at Innis Town Hall, 2 Sussex Ave

Category: Woman tells the stories of four athletes from the Global South, who were forced out of competition by medical regulations, the devastation to their bodies and lives, and their passion for sport emboldened by a conviction to stand up for their human rights. Award-winning filmmaker Phyllis Ellis exposes an industry controlled by men putting women’s lives at risk, while the policing of women’s bodies in sport remains, in a more nefarious way, under the guise of fair play.

Ontario-born, Phyllis Ellis has worked in Europe, Asia, Africa, India and the US for the past thirty five years as a filmmaker, writer, actor, and producer. Nominated for a 2021 Emmy, and winner of Best Direction and Best Writing at the Canadian Screen Awards, her feature documentary, Toxic Beauty, has been viewed by over 44 million people worldwide. About Her won the prestigious Donald Brittain award at the Canadian Screen Awards for Best Social Political Documentary Film. Phyllis’s documentary films have been recognized for their intimacy and impact. An Olympian, Phyllis is dedicated to telling stories empowering women’s voices as her work expresses, themes of justice, truth, transformation, and human rights. 

Caroline Fusco is an associate professor of Social Justice and Equity in Sport at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Kinesiology and Physical Education. Her research interests are wide-ranging and include the socio-cultural landscapes and “healthification of play,” urban youth recreation, gender/sexuality and sport, and, more recently, questions of ecological sustainability, animal justice, supply chains, and pollution as they pertain to sports stadiums and events.

Ali Greey (they/them) is a PhD candidate in the University of Toronto’s Department of Sociology. Greey’s research examines the experiences of trans and non-binary youth in their schools. They are the co-editor, with Helen Lenskyj, of two volumes, Justice for Trans Athletes and Trans Athletes’ Resistance (Emerald Publishing). Greey has acted as a consultant for EGALE, TransFocus, as well as a number of national sporting organizations to make sport safer and more inclusive for trans and non-binary people. Greey is currently working on a book about trans athlete embodiment with Athlete Ally and Chris Mosier. They have published a dozen book chapters and journal articles. Their work has been published in peer reviewed journals such as Leisure Studies, Health Education, and The Canadian Review of Sociology. A three-time Canadian champion, Greey is a retired national team boxer and was ranked in the world’s top eight for over two years. 

Mary Ormsby is a Toronto native who grew up playing every sport she could, though she ended up focusing on track and field and volleyball. She attended Ohio State University on a full sports scholarship for volleyball and graduated with a BA in journalism. Mary was hired as a sports reporter at the Toronto Sun in 1981, then jumped to the Toronto Star in 1985 where, over the next 35 years, she worked as a reporter in sports, features, and investigations. She has also worked in broadcasting, most often as a sports roundtable panelist on The Fan radio, CBC, and TVO. Today, Mary is retired but continues to write. She hopes to publish her first book soon.

Anett Negesa is a middle-distance runner. At 18, she won a bronze medal in the 800m at the Junior World Championships. In 2011, she was named Athlete of the Year by the Ugandan Federation and went on to qualify for the 2012 London Olympics. Weeks before the London Games, she was informed by the IAAF that she had high levels of naturally occurring testosterone and was offered serious, irreversible surgery that derailed her career and left with serious side effects. Negesa has not competed internationally since 2012. In 2020, she was granted refugee status in Germany. She continues to train with the hopes of one day, competing for Germany on the international stage.

Dr. Payoshni Mitra is a former badminton player and coach turned gender and sport scholar, a prominent athlete rights advocate, and a leading campaigner in the abolition of sex testing policies in women’s sport. She has more than a decade-long experience of working closely with women athletes across Asia and Africa to enable them to address human rights violations in sports. Her advocacy work on inclusion and nondiscrimination in sport has influenced important social, institutional, and structural changes on an international scale. She is a Director and Trustee at the Geneva-based Center for Sport & Human Rights and was appointed as the first-ever CEO of the newly established Global Observatory for Women, Sport, Physical Education and Physical Activity in January 2022.

Details

Date:
March 8, 2023
Time:
7:00 pm - 9:30 pm
Cost:
Free
Event Categories:
,

Organizer

Alumni Office, Innis College
Email
alumni.innis@utoronto.ca
View Organizer Website

Venue

Town Hall
2 Sussex Ave (Room IN112)
Toronto, Ontario M5S 1J5 Canada
+ Google Map
View Venue Website