One of the project’s aim was to engage with the public in Poland and in the UK to give voice to and share experiences of Polish LGBTQ migrants in the UK. In order to reach this aim, I collaborated with a diverse range of non-scientific actors to offer my expertise, promote my research results and engage in conversation with the larger public.
I organised three outreach events in collaboration with other academics, activists and artists. Two of them were the evenings of queer migrant performance and art called ‘Polaktastic’, organised in London (June, 2018) and Sheffield (November, 2018). The third one, ‘Body Control’, was organised in collaboration with the Migration Matters Festival in Sheffield in June 2019 and invited the festival’s visitors to engage with the stories of queer migration in the form of zine workshop, performance and art.
I also gave talks about my research at a number of non-scientific events in the UK and in the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, including talks on ‘Queer Eastern Europe’ at the Birmingham SHOUT Festival of Queer Arts and Culture (November 2017), and ‘Queer Zines in Communist Poland’ at the Katowice zine festival Art Bibula (March 2019). During the Baltic Pride in Riga in June 2018, I joined a panel discussion titled ‘Queer after Commies’, which was chaired by a Latvian journalist Rita Ruduša.
Another aim of this project was to look at the role of digital media, especially social media platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, for identity practices, particularly but not exclusively from the perspective of LGBTQ migrants.
I published two blog posts, in which I critically reflected on the design of social media interfaces and their governance, as defined in the media’s ‘Terms of Service’ and ‘Community Guidelines’. One blog post is titled ‘The Intimate (Self-)Regulation of Big Tech’ and was published on LSE Media Policy Blog in August 2017. The other is titled ‘Our Profile(d) Selves: How Social Media Platforms Use Data to Tell Us Who We Should Be’ and was published on LSE Impact Blog in February 2019.
I was also interviewed by BBC Radio 4 journalist, Maria Margaronis, for the programme ‘The Trans Revolution’, where I discussed the growing role of digital media for the popularisation of gender-diverse identity categories such as ‘non-binary’ and ‘genderfluid’.