Image Description: Black and white photo of a light-skin person with a short dark mullet looking into the camera and smiling subtly.
she/they

Gabryelle Iaconetti





Gabryelle Iaconetti (she/they) is a first year PhD student at Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec under the supervision of Dr. Rachel Berger. While they focused on bisexual support group history in Toronto for their MA thesis, their doctoral research project aims to shift the focus from urban centres, examining the establishment of bisexual support groups in smaller Ontario cities. Gabryelle holds a BA and MA in History from Concordia University and MISt (Master of Information Studies) from McGill University. She is also an affiliate of Concordia University's Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling (COHDS), serving on this year's organizing committee for their Emerging Scholars Symposium. Her research interests lie at the intersections of bisexual history, oral history, queer space, queer theory and archives.

Participant in the following FMS projects

More Info

   

2023 – MA in History, Concordia University
2019 – MISt, McGill University
2017 – BA in Classics & History, Concordia University

gabryelle.iaconetti@mail.concordia.ca







 

Concordia University
Communications & Journalism (CJ) Building
CJ 2.130, 7141 Sherbrooke St. W.
Montreal, Quebec H4B 1R6
Canada

Space Accessibility




Connect
Instagram / Facebook / Twitter / Vimeo / Newsletter

info@feministmediastudio.ca
514 848 2424 ext.5975

The Feminist Media Studio is located on the unceded lands of the Kanien’kehá:ka Nation. We seek to stand in solidarity with Indigenous demands for land restitution and reparations.


  
Our work—committed to intersectional and anti-colonial feminist praxis—actively engages and names the predicament of doing feminism on stolen land. We acknowledge that territorial acknowledgement is insufficient to stand in solidarity with Indigenous communities.
Our anti-colonial and decolonial efforts articulated in our Lab Values center resisting extraction in all its facets, de-centering feminist canons, valuing methodologies that oppose white supremacy, and building good relations with human and more-than-humans.
Website by Natasha Whyte-Gray, 2024.    
All Rights Reserved.