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seen from China
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seen from Russia

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A little hideaway view just as the evening sun set. The winter months make it so easy to convince yourself to stay inside, but I’m making it a goal to get out as much as possible despite that feeling. Excited to share some new stuff in the next few days! stay tuned 👀
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Somewhere around Salmon Arm. Driving without a destination and just capturing snapshots is a magical feeling ☺️
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SOAPBOX SATURDAY CONTINUES:
The University of Victoria is home to the world’s largest archive of printed materials about transgender people — drawn from 17 countries over more than a century — and the first research chair in transgender studies. Beginning Friday, it’s hosting another first: the largest “trans” conference in Canadian history, says university archivist Lara Wilson. Caitlyn Jenner can’t make it to Moving Trans History Forward 2016, but the welcome mat is out for 150 researchers, scholars, artists, transgender people, students and others from around the world. Speakers range from those close to home, including Madison Thomas from the Esquimalt Nation, to those arriving from as far away as Japan: Sonja Pei-Fen Dale will offer her take on “translating toransujend” — making Japanese transgender identities “legible” in English. Even English literature icon William Shakespeare gets his due from UBC English professor Mary Ann Saunders, who will present The (Transgender) Tempest: Shakespeare as Trans Archive. The conference is limited to issues and scholarship specifically relating to transgender and gender-non-conforming people, as opposed to the entire spectrum of LGBTQ issues, Wilson said. UVic’s leadership role in transgender issues makes it a centre for research in all aspects of trans life — from law to history to anthropology and writing, she said, adding it’s a rapidly changing field. “There is such an increase in awareness of transgender people and their struggles, and their contributions to society..."