Megan Ingram

Megan Ingram (They/She) is a Teaching Adjunct in the School of Kinesiology and Health Studies at Queen’s University, and a creative scholar living and working between so-called Kingston, Ontario and Sooke, British Columbia. Their research interests include disability studies, queer and feminist theory, the sociology of education, and art activism and visual knowledge mobilization. Current research-creation projects include a counterarchiving project on queer and disabled activisms in so-called Tkaronto with the Collaboratory, and work on the intersections of medical records as governmental body archives. Her artistic practice draws on her academic research and lived-experience as a queer, multiply-disabled person to mobilize knowledge in accessible ways for the community it matters to. This work is primarily through documentary film, including an ode to queer friendship (ReelOut Queer Film Festival 2021), disability, sexuality, and gender (UBC Research to Practice Microgrant 2022), and miss/carry (Short Circuit Pacific Rim Film Festival 2024). Their current hyperfixation is the role of memory, and the hazy, complicated ways that our bodies hold stories.