THE HIVE has expanded.
The Women and Gender Resource Center’s book club over the past year broadened its scope to include new media, changed its name, and is now the go-to community and discussion group about social issues on the University of Houston campus.
Previously an unnamed simple book club, THE HIVE is open to the entire UH community — all identities and genders, or anyone looking to learn more about gender, inclusion and/or equity. Since its expanded debut in 2020, THE HIVE has yielded some very interesting discussions, particularly as the pandemic has continued and a social justice movement swept the country last year.
“The very first meeting of THE HIVE was scheduled to happen just days after the murder of George Floyd,” said Anneliese Bustillo, director of the Women and Gender Resource Center. “The WGRC staff made a joint decision to postpone our first meeting, scrap all our previous plans and do an entire summer of readings from Black authors, artists, and visionaries. We hoped to elevate voices that had been so often silenced in our education systems. One week later, our knowledge community met for the first time to discuss Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s We Should All Be Feminists, and it only grew from there.”
Named for a beehive — a working environment where every inhabitant contributes — THE HIVE’s goal reflects its inspiration.
Participants are asked to read, watch, or engage with new texts every meeting, but if they are not able to in time, they are still encouraged to attend. Just like in a beehive, the work is done in community, knowing that everyone can bring strengths and knowledge to any space. The WGRC staff picked the name to reflect that community, and because bees are a notoriously female-led species.
Ashlynd Bunce, a UH student who joined THE HIVE in Summer 2020, said it is one of the best programs at UH. Joining during the pandemic and in “the wake of some major social justice movements,” Bunce said, “THE HIVE was an incredibly safe space for those conversations.”
THE HIVE, Bunce said, has made her a “nicer, more mindful person with greater respect to all identities.”
“Conversations flowed so freely, and people were able to express their thoughts with zero judgement,” Bunce said. “There were many meetings that involved some laughing, some crying, and truthfully, some rage — not at each other, at topics being discussed. Because of these conversations, I learned so much more than I thought, gained all new perspectives and it helped me to become a more mindful person when speaking directly to someone or a large group of people. Our words matter and learning how to be more kind is never a bad thing.”
Meeting every month, either virtually or in-person, THE HIVE offers the UH community a chance to discuss books, movies, documentaries, TED Talks, podcasts, etc. Although it was originally intended to be just a summer program, participants demanded more, Bustillo said. In response, the WGRC expanded topics to include more marginalized groups, including Indigenous peoples, the Latine community, ANAPISI folks, LGBTQ individuals, and people with disabilities. Participants are encouraged to suggest readings every semester, and for example, All Boys Aren’t Blue, the Spring 2021 reading, came as a recommendation from the group. WGRC staff review the suggestions and pick ones that align with the semester’s programs.
During Latine Heritage Month, the group read a chapter from Borderlands/LaFrontera by Chicana author Gloria Anzaldua. The staff also plans a few questions to get the conversation started, but the participants largely lead the conversation and discuss whatever topics come forward. Bustillo described it as “kind of half book club, half support group.”
One of the reasons THE HIVE expanded beyond just books, Bustillo said, is because they knew not everyone would have the time to read an entire book. WGRC also prioritized that all texts should be able to be accessed for free, and if there’s a text the group is really interested in that isn’t available for free, the WGRC purchases it for all participants.
“WGRC staff strongly believe it is everyone's individual responsibility to educate ourselves on racism, injustice, and systemic oppression,” Bustillo said about that decision last year. “We hope THE HIVE provided participants with the space to do that work, together.”
Bunce hopes others at UH join THE HIVE, particularly if they want to join the conversations about social justice issues. “Whether you are well versed and do have a lot to say, or if you want to hear others opinions, or if you want to join the conversation but don't really know how, you will find your fit through this program,” Bunce said. “Because of this, it cemented the idea that I want to work to make places more inclusive and welcoming of everyone no matter their story. Snaps, claps, and all the kudos to the WGRC team.”
ABOUT THE HIVE
Previously discussed works
- We Should All Be Feminists (TedTalk/book) by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
- “They Told Me What I was Before I Could Tell Them What I Was,” Black Girls’ Ethnic-Racial Identity Development Within Multiple Worlds (scholarly article) by Lauren Mims and Joanna Williams
- Tweets of Dr. Lauren Mims
- Telling Male Friends ‘I Love You’ Is a Muscle Guys Need to Flex Every Day (Huffington Post Op Ed) by Jeff Perera
- Clip on men’s mental health from TV show This Is Us
- “Going to Meet the Man” (short story) by James Baldwin
- The Mask You Live In (film) by Jennifer Siebel Newsom
- The New Jim Crow (book) by Michelle Alexander
- When They See Us (film) by Ava DuVernay
- “Ain’t I A Woman” (speech performed by Kerry Washington) by Sojourner Truth
- “On Intersectionality” (keynote speech) by Kimberle Crenshaw
- The Hate U Give (book) by Angie Thomas
- “Recitatif” (short story) by Toni Morrison
- Beyond the Binary in the Classroom (scholarly article by Brielle Harbin
- Borderlands/LaFrontera (book) by Gloria Anzaldua
- The Search: Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (tv special)
- All Boys Aren’t Blue (book) by George M. Johnson
- Felix Ever After by Kacen Callender
- The Laverne Cox show (podcast)
- Disclosure (documentary) by Sam Feder