Closing out our season, we turn to the story of Aiyyana Maracle, a multidisciplinary artist, scholar, educator, and storyteller from Canada. A self-described “transformed woman who loves women,” Aiyyana invited audiences to rethink gender and sexuality through a decolonial lens.
For more than fifty years, Aiyanna served as both a maker and keeper of culture, working to bring Ogwehoweh art and knowledge into dialogue with a Eurocentric world. Her work offered an alternative to Western concepts of gender—one rooted in Indigenous ways of knowing and being.
In this episode, artist, activist, and scholar Syrus Marcus Ware reflects on his years of friendship and collaboration with Aiyyana Maracle, from working alongside her as a mentee to helping her organize her archival collection of recordings, costumes, and ephemera. Through performance clips and stories passed down from her grandmother, this episode offers an intimate portrait of Aiyyana Maracle's vision, artistry, and enduring legacy.
Find the archival materials mentioned in the episode at the Digital Transgender Archive website.
This episode of Kindred Transmissions is produced by Umi Hsu and Associate Producer Shei Yu. Hosted by Jules Gill-Peterson. Mixed by Evan Ibarra. Scripted by Umi Hsu and Shei Yu. Theme and episode music by Imogen Teasley-Vlautin. Research by Rachael McIntosh. Graphic Design by Ariel Huang.
This episode contains the voices of Aiyyana Maracle and Syrus Marcus Ware.
This season of Kindred Transmissions is made possible by a grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources and support from Northeastern University.