Archival Futurity

MEI SUET LOO

IMG_6924Visions Through the Archives of Third World Women’s and People’s Collectives

“Third World struggles formed the groundwork for the cultivation of an anti-racist feminist consciousness in the United States.”Tamara Lea Spira

Two organizations in particular, the Third World Women’s Alliance (TWWA) and Third World Communications (TWC), conceptualized justice and liberation to include ending racism, sexism, imperialism, capitalism, etc. In the era of the Civil Rights Movement, Black Power Movement, anti-war (Vietnam) movement, and second-wave feminism, these Third World Women and Peoples’ spaces were radical and novel in the intersectional approach they took.  

This project, Archival Futurity, brings women and gender non-conforming people of color in conversation with each other and with the Third World Women and Peoples’ of the 70s to continue learning and building with their work. Over two semesters, I collected archival materials from the TWWA and TWC from books, archives, and digital archives. I found fliers, poems, publications, missions, dreams, photos – evidence of badass women birthing new movements, spaces, and ideals for themselves.

The project is not to construct a timeline or a story of what these women accomplished because we can never fully retell the stories and work these women have done through pieces from the archives. But we can use these archival materials as building blocks and tools for our imaginations.

In early April of 2016, I hosted two events, titled after an anthology published by the TWC, “Time to Greez,” calling for women and gender non-conforming people of color to gather for an evening of collaborating, creating, and of course – greezing. With copies of the archival material / scissors / glue / construction paper we set to create a collaborative zine. A zine – an independently published booklet – allowed us to cut / paste / and mark up archival materials that are usually tucked away into history textbooks and archives. In this way, we are at the same time burying our dead twice as well as creating new visions.

Below – is the collaborative zine that came out of my warm warm room by the many many hands that continue to do anti-oppressive work through an anti-racist / anti-sexist / anti-imperialist framework.

“It was important that we could do it on our own. It was very important to us that we publish it ourselves. That people of color had done it on our own. It was important to us that women did it.”Ntozake Shange in regards to her work with the Third World Communications

This idea came into fruition after engaging with Shange’s poems and stories – she is constantly destabilizing past / present / and futures as a way to articulate diaspora, resilience, and daughterhood. As Nadia says, we are all daughters of Shange. We are all daughters of the Third World Women who worked/ cared/ and fought before us. Evidence of this disrupted multi-nodal lineage is in the rituals that are passed down through recipes (if i can cook you know god can), spells and healing ways (sassafrass, cypress, and indigo), movement (for colored girls who have considered suicide / when the rainbow is enuf), and more. This project hopes to collapse the past/present/and future, even if for just a moment, to give us a chance to grapple with diaspora, resilience, and daughterhood.


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Photos taken by MLoo.

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