We are committed to providing culturally relevant and efficient programs and services designed to foster successful transition, retention, persistence, achievement and graduation of scholars.
Future Events
We are continually planning events to help us come together. Check back often to see what's coming up!
Signature Events
Qhort
Qhort is a way for students new to WSU to create their cohort. Qhort is a way to meet new friends, connect with faculty and staff, and learn more about campus and community resources
Q*Hort Events are typically held at the beginning of each semester, as part of welcome events.
Queer History Month
LGBTQ+ History Month was founded in 1994 in the U.S. by Rodney Wilson, an openly gay high school teacher in Missouri. Wilson gathered community and national leaders, including educators, in the quest to dedicate a month to celebrating and teaching LGBTQ+ history. In 1995, the National Education Association endorsed LGBTQ+ History Month at its general assembly. In 2009, President Barack Obama declared LGBTQ+ History Month a national history month.
The month of October was selected because it is within the academic calendar year and created space to acknowledge existing observances during the month, including the anniversaries of the first and second LGBTQ+ marches on Washington (1979 and 1987, respectively) and National Coming Out Day (established Oct. 11, 1987, during the second LGBTQ+ march on Washington). LGBTQ+ History Month now also includes International Lesbian Day (Oct. 8), International Pronouns Day (Oct. 19), Spirit Day (Oct. 20), Asexual Awareness Week (Oct. 17 – 21) and Intersex Awareness Day (Oct. 26).
InQueery Symposium
InQueery 2025
“The Politics of Visibility, Surveillance, and Biopower in Authoritarian Times”
InQueery 2025 Symposium
Thursday, October 23, 2025
Agenda
• 4:00 p.m. Opening Remarks
• 4:15-5:30 p.m. Concurrent Panels
• 5:30-6:00 p.m. Break
• 6:00-7:00 p.m. Keynote: Dr. Toby Beauchamp, “Embracing Trans Regret under Authoritarianism”
This year’s InQueery Symposium invites work that explores how visibility, surveillance, and biopower shape everyday life under authoritarian systems. Drawing inspiration from keynote speaker Toby Beauchamp’s Going Stealth, the symposium asks how surveillance—from airport screenings to online tracking—enforces gender norms, racial profiling, and state control.
Beauchamp’s work challenges us to think about how systems of recognition and misrecognition harm trans communities while also impacting cis, queer, disabled, and racialized people. The symposium calls for critical and creative engagements that examine how surveillance regimes demand both compliance and resistance, and how queer, feminist, disability, and decolonial politics can disrupt these logics.
In a moment marked by global struggles—from immigration enforcement to the genocide in Palestine—this year’s theme asks: Who gets to be seen, who is made invisible, and what does it mean to refuse recognition on empire’s terms?
2025 Keynote
Toby Beauchamp
Toby Beauchamp is Associate Professor of Gender and Women’s Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He is the author of Going Stealth: Transgender Politics and U.S. Surveillance Practices, which explores how surveillance systems enforce gender norms and expand state control.
This annual event brings in guest speakers to create an intellectual space for intersectional and interdisciplinary conversations that center issues around gender, race, sexuality, and identity.
This event is hosted in partnership with the LGBTQ+ Center and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.
Lavender Graduation Celebration

Lavender Graduation Celebration is a time to celebrate. This event is open to everyone. We welcome students graduating from all levels at WSU: undergraduate, graduate, and professional students. This event is hosted in the spring and celebrates those graduating in Spring, Summer, or Fall.
Lavender Graduation Celebration participants will receive a special stole and tassel as a token of our appreciation and to celebrate all that our students do for our community. Students, faculty, staff, friends, and family are all invited!
You can learn more about the history and tradition of Lavender Graduation Celebration from an interview with Dr. Sanlo.
Invitations to Lavender Graduation are sent to students engaged with the LGBTQ+ center. Anyone can request an invitation by emailing sa.lgbtq.center@wsu.edu.
Queer Archives
Photograph from Andrew Whitver, part of the "Higher Ground" exhibition (1984).
Co-founded by Josie Cohen-Rodríguez and Lotus Norton-Wisla in Fall 2022, the WSU Queer Archives is a collaborative initiative between Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections (MASC) and the LGBTQ+ Center at Washington State University. Its mission is to preserve and share untold stories of queer life in rural communities and their connections to urban spaces—centering joy, community, and intersectional resistance.
Palouse Queer Studies Summit

Palouse Queer Studies Summit
2026 Theme: Methodologies for Survival
The Palouse Queer Studies Summit is an annual event featuring art exhibits, presentations, panel discussions, poetry readings, and interactive workshops led by students, faculty, staff, and community members. This event creates space for dialogue, learning, and creative expression across diverse perspectives.
The Summit is free and open to all.
Opening Reception:
Date: Friday, April 3
TIme: 5-7 p.m.
Location: Terrell Library Atrium
Event Details:
Date: Saturday, April 4
TIme: 8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Location: Elson S. Floyd Cultural Center
Event Sponsors:
- Department of History
- Department of Art
- Program in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
- College of Education, Sport, and Human Sciences
- Department of Sociology
- ASWSU Gender and Sexuality Alliance
- Office of Multicultural Student Services
- African American Student Center
- LGBTQ+ Center
- Women*s Center
2026 Keynote
Tourmaline
Tourmaline is an award-winning artist, filmmaker, and cultural force whose visionary work explores Black, queer, and trans histories. A TIME 100 honoree, her artwork is included in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Tate, and MoMA.
With a bold voice rooted in joy, resistance, and truth-telling, Tourmaline invites global audiences to imagine a more expansive future. Her recently published book, Marsha, is a deeply personal and poetic tribute to legendary LGBTQIA+ activist Marsha P. Johnson.
Palouse Queer Studies Summit 2026 Overview
Friday, April 3
5:00–7:00 p.m. Opening Reception
Featuring a screening of Happy Birthday, Marsha! and a Q&A with director and keynote speaker Tourmaline.
Discussion facilitated by Sister June T. Sanders & Josie Cohen-Rodríguez
Saturday, April 4
8:00–8:30 a.m. Coffee & Pastries
8:30–9:00 a.m. Welcoming Remarks
9:00–10:15 a.m. Concurrent Sessions 1
Living Room
Workshop: “Whose Empathy? Cultural Pluralism and the Politics of Artificial Intelligence's Affective Simulations”
Shae Ortega, Washington State University
Knowledge Room A
Workshop: “Writing Queer Joy as Active Resistance: A Poetry Workshop"
D. Hopkins, Washington State University
10:15–10:30 a.m. Break
10:30–11:45 a.m. Concurrent Sessions 2
Living Room
Workshop: “Other Spaces for Other People: Identifying and Developing Consistent and Inclusive Movements Across Social and Geographical Boundaries”
Brandon Haddock, Gonzaga University
Knowledge Room A
Queer Worldbuilding and Community Solidarity:
Chair: Josie Cohen-Rodríguez
- “Ink, Paper, and Solidarity: How Die Freundin Built a Survival Network”
Madison Tupper, Washington State University - “Voices in the Silence of Care: Queer community support in the AIDS epidemic”
Ryan Hollister, Washington State University - “Dungeons & Dragons as Mutual Aid Formation & Resistance”
Raymond Lindquist, Washington State University
11:45 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Catered Lunch
Remarks from Co-Chairs (12:30-12:45 p.m.)
Josie Cohen-Rodríguez, Cecil Decker, Sienna Guadagnoli
Poetry Readings (12:45-1:00 p.m.)
River Adonis & Sienna Guadagnoli, Washington State University
1:00–2:15 p.m. Concurrent Sessions 3
Living Room
"Mental Health Matters: Minority Stress, Resiliency, and WSU Counseling & Psychological Services"
Victoria Mackey, Kaitlyn Vanson, and Nicole Henry, Washington State University
Knowledge Room A
Two Visions of Geospatial Queer Existence: Kinnar Voices & the Great Salt Lake:
Chair: Jaime Díaz
- “Of Ghosts & Gods: A Multi-Modal Exploration of Kinnar Voices & Histories”
Ishita Suri, University of Washington - “Salty Survival: Disrupting Extractive Frameworks Through Environmental Ethics of Care at the Great Salt Lake”
Shae Barber, University of Montana
Knowledge Room B
Queer Identity and Spaces in Art, Archive, and Manifesto:
Chair: Lotus Norton-Wisla
- “Found and Formed: Queer Identity Seen Through the Practice of Collage”
Loren Brown, Washington State University - “MANIFEST M(W)E: The Manifesto as an Unabashed Declaration of Aliveness and Resistance”
Arshia Batra, University of Washington - “Guerrilla Archivism: The Queer Spaces of Donald R. Heil”
Steinar Goheen, Washington State University
2:15–2:30 p.m. Break
2:30–3:45 p.m. Concurrent Sessions 4
Living Room
Workshop: “Medical and Mental Health Gender Affirming Care on the Palouse”
Sunday Henry, Ashley Wilson, and Elizabeth Hobbs, Washington State University Cougar Health Services
Knowledge Room A
Queering the Body: Social Sex, Liberating Labor, & Women’s Body Image Diversity:
Chair: Olivia Pavek
- "A Conceptual Analysis of the Sex/Gender Distinction: Introduction of the Concept of Social Sex”
Skyler Barzee, University of Idaho - “Queering Labor: Queer Liberation of Socio-Sexual Labor Roles in Pregnancy”
Eleanor Colgan, Washington State University - “Testing Queer Theory: Body Image Diversity in Lesbian/Bisexual and Heterosexual Women's Social Media Content”
Cara Brauen, University of Montana
4:00–5:00 p.m. Keynote Address
Poetry Reading: "There's No Excuse (Anymore)"
Hope Dela Cruz, Washington State University Campus Civic Poet
Invited Keynote Speaker: Tourmaline
5:00–5:30 p.m. Book Signing
Tourmaline will be available to sign copies of her new book, Marsha: The Joy and Defiance of Marsha P. Johnson (2025). The WSU Bookie will have a limited number of copies available for purchase following the keynote address.
Call for Proposals
Proposals are now being accepted for the Palouse Queer Studies Summit: Methodologies of Survival. Submissions are open to all students, faculty, staff, and community members. Presentations, workshops, panels, academic papers, visual art, and creative writing or poetry readings are welcome.
All proposals related to gender, sexuality, and queer experiences will be considered. Preference may be given to proposals that address themes such as local community issues, access to resources, current legislation, coalition building, global perspectives, historical analysis, or art connected to the summit’s themes.
Proposal Details:
Proposal Deadline: March 22
Full Submission Guidelines: Submit a proposal or learn more!
Questions? Email sa.lgbtq.center@wsu.edu