Rémy Chhem (he/him), co-founder of the Super Boat Collective, is a longtime community organizer, particularly within the Cambodian community. Having been previously involved in the Montreal Life Stories project and the Centre Khémara, he is now focused on creating dynamic projects that foster bridges, collaborations, and dialogue between communities and generations. Within the Super Boat People, Rémy leads various projects related to community and family history in addition to culinary and horticultural knowledge. Outside of the collective, Rémy works as an academic researcher in the social sciences, specialising in political ecology and with a marked interest in history and envrionmental justice.
Project statement:
Memories in the spinning mill: experiences of racialized women workers in the restructuring of Montreal’s textile sector since the 1970s
The aim of the project is to create the first version of the script and storyboard for a graphic novel about the perspectives of people from communities of color who have been affected by waves of closures and restructuring in Montreal’s large-scale textile and garment industry since the 1970s. In particular, the project highlights the voices and experiences of a series of immigrant and racialized workers, to trace the daily impacts of this work, from workplace to home. I aim to reflect a diversity of women’s journeys (e.g. ethnicity, age, class), while contextualizing them across different scales of the textile industry, represented in turn by characters such as the contractor, the union, the company and the government. I also aim to represent the physical, emotional and relational drudgery of this sector, whose conditions have gradually transformed and deteriorated over the decades. The project is spearheaded by Paul Tom, a renowned Cambodian-born filmmaker and author, who recently won the TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award (2023) for his first illustrated novel Seuls/Alone. He will be supported by Rémy Chhem, social scientist and community organizer, and a number of CHORN collaborators (notably Steven High and Lauren Laframboise, with whom we have had preliminary discussions).