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The Costs of Liberation

by Kim Hall 0 Comments

Barbara Smith, Black Feminist institution builder

As we have been talking abut the labor of printing and digital expression vis-a-vis the Adair/Nakamura essay, I thought it pertinent to point your attention to the activism around creating a retirement fund for black feminist Barbara Smith, who was a co:founder both of The Combahee River Collective AND Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press.

This is not a fundraising post, but a reminder that influence and even fame don’t always put food on the table and that caring for the elders who uplifted us is also feminist/activist practice. Very successful feminists like Ntozake needed a circle of care and support as they got older and unpaid /invisible labor isn’t just theory!

The dissension that expands the base

by Keller 0 Comments

Readings
• Kimberly Springer, Chs. 1, 2, 4, Living for the revolution: Black feminist organizations, 1968-1980
• Ntozake Shange, A Daughter’s Geography

After discussing how Black women created their own organizations after finding their needs often sidelined in both white feminist and masculinist Black civil rights movements, Springer engages with fissures within Black feminist movements that mirrored the fault lines of power in society at large. At first glance, Black feminism suggests a reprieve from monolithic and hierarchical social organizing. Because “Black feminists’ voices and visions fell between the cracks of the civil rights and women’s movements,” Springer argues that they “conducted their ‘politics in the cracks’” (Springer, 1). These “cracks,” negative spaces breaking away from the establishment, offer a space to experiment with radical agendas and bottom-up change, to chip away at the foundations of the dominant political structure.

On closer examination, however, these “cracks” are not void of power relations, but are themselves constituted by power relations that need to be grappled with. “Though united through a collective racial and gender identity,” Springer reveals that Black feminists “discovered cleavages based on” various additional intersections,[1] such as “class and sexual orientation” (Springer, 63). The idea of a perfectly united struggle against hegemony is itself problematically monolithic.

Audre Lorde, for instance, struggled not only against racism and sexism but also against homophobia, ableism, and U.S. chauvinism. In the Cancer Journals, Lorde reflected that “I am defined as other in every group I’m part of” (Lorde, 18). Notably, this dilemma did not lead her to give up advocating for each group’s political rights. Rather, Lorde is famous for her intersectional methodology of using difference as a source of power and community, rather than a cause for constructing adversarial hierarchies and mutually exclusive competition.

Springer’s “cracks,” then, do not only refer to destruction of hegemony but to the generative use of difference as a basis for political solidarity, instead of insisting on identity as a prerequisite for empathy and shared interests. Here, I use the term “identity” according to its original meaning — the property of being identical. White rich women, for instance, claimed access to “equal” rights in the 1848 Declaration of Sentiments on the basis of their “identity” with white rich men. To these white feminists, equal rights meant rights identical to those of white rich men — meaning, an equal right to own enslaved people; an equal right to exploit the working class by owning businesses; an equal right to hire unpaid or underpaid surrogates for child care and domestic work. Far from challenging white rich men to end colonial capitalist violence, the 1848 Declaration epitomizes the ways in which white rich women’s challenge to power constituted of them jostling with white men for front and center seats in perpetrating colonial capitalist violence — especially against working women and women of color — and reaping the profits, “equally.”

The “cracks” represent a Black feminist refusal to seek “identity” with power. These “cracks” do not build on the foundation of power to include more groups, such as white women and the Irish and the middle class, but work to tear down the foundation of power altogether, and offer a more radical and syncretic way of life in its place. “The heterogeneity of black feminists’ individual political perspectives would yield dissention,” Springer reflects, “but that dissention would in turn expand the boundaries of black feminist politics and the base of the black feminist movement” (Springer, 64). Like roots splitting apart pavement, this rhizomatic disruption of monolithic hegemony creates what Black Lives Matter cofounder Alicia Garza has described as “an effervescence – so, a bubble up, rather than a trickle down.”[2]

These cracks that create more cracks abound in Ntozake Shange’s poetry. The diasporic geography of Shange’s Bocas: A Daughter’s Geography mirrors the dissension that expands the base of intersectional and transnational political solidarity:

i have a daughter/ la habana
i have a son/ guyana
our twins

Shange weaponizes the same slashes used in formal grammar to separate lines of poetry in order to unite people across difference, be it gender or oceans. Like Springer’s “cracks,” Shange’s slashes are a breaking that expands the boundaries of how we see ourselves and our opportunities for collaboration in the freedom struggle. Through her poetic mutilation of the colonizer’s language, Shange demonstrates the need to shatter the power structure and its standardizing mission in order to create a radical future.

 

[1] The term “intersectionality” was popularized by Kimberlé Crenshaw, a Black woman and legal scholar who is not credited often enough for her contribution. She uses the term not simply for people who stand at a crossroads of “identity,” but for people who find themselves targeted by multiple interacting systems of oppression at once.

[2] Great analysis of that TED talk here. Excerpted from Deva Woodly’s upcoming book, Black Lives Matter and the Democratic Necessity of Social Movements.

1976 and 2019

The 70s are an elusive decade to me. I was taught in school to associate it with the elimination of racism. Even at home, a lot of my older relatives focused more on the changes that had been made in their lifetimes, and almost seemed to confine ugliness the past and ignore it in the present.

american son marquee

It is interesting to think about the different shows like “American Son” that have occupied the same space as for colored girls, especially ones that also focus on Black women.

Springer calls attention to the histories of Black feminism that is often left out of history in saying, “[…] The mainstream and black press vilified black women writers, in particular, Wallace and Shange. However, these women are considered pioneers of the contemporary black feminist movement for daring to assert, if not ideologically feminist consciousness, a gender consciousness integral to the struggle for black liberation in the 1970s.” When I read this sentence, my mind went to what I had just seen scrolling through Facebook- the Public’s revival of for colored girls has just been named a NYT Critic’s Pick. Granted, Ben Brantley should not be held as the authority on what constitutes good theatre, but it is hard to conceptualize that a piece centering women of color has gone from being highly criticized (while still successful, I should note), to being a work that seems to be a part of the theatrical canon.

However, I think focusing solely on these successes can be dangerous. On one hand, I think it can be a form of self-protection, similar to what I think my relatives who had survived Jim Crow have done. However, I think it’s important to think critically about the successes and the reasons behind them. It seems that right now in the “post-2016” mindset, people are desperate to prove that they aren’t like that, whatever that is. While I wasn’t around to see the original production, I also wonder what has been left out of history, just like the Black feminists Springer writes about, that would explain why the theatrical women of color were so well-received while women of color in real life were not. I wonder if in 40 years, people will be unlearning and relearning the history of Black feminists, both of the 1970s and of the 2010s. Will they remember why it is so important for this for colored girls to be happening, and to be happening now? Will they know that the audiences are often filled with wealthy, white patrons of the Public who are trying to make America post-racial again? Will they know about Shange’s life and struggles? Will they know about mine?

A New Vision of Feminism

Like in our discussion two weeks ago on “dismantling the patriarchy” it is not possible without the influences of masculinity and how the dominant cultural forces of patriarchy. There is a continual challenge to include all identities in In the same way there is a challenge for our understanding of feminism to capture all identities, as feminism in my view is a localized experience. The fight for “equality” for women is not only racially or socioeconomically specific; but it is also grounded in one’s own experience through culture, ethnicity and personal encounter with their identity as a woman or as other. However, our readings highlight an important effort in the theory of feminism and how it is important to consider the intersectional influences and effects. Without an intersectional lens movements cannot fully fight oppression. Racism for women of color cannot be separated from their gendered oppression.

From an artistic lens, I think that Shange captures this challenge of intersectionality. Her work, and the works of many racially diverse feminist artist draw parallels of the plight of black women and people of color; yet they are able to capture the distinct and unique experience of black women and women of color. One modern artist that I appreciate is Mickalene Thomas. Her art is a process of revisiting and recreating art centered and focused on black women.

 

 

 

“Nappy Edges” Recap & Announcements

Thanks to Nicole and Nia for giving us a lot to think about.  I wanted to highlight Nichole’s final question as something we might also focus on in for colored girls . . . “In what ways does Shange’s poetry invoke the ‘spiritual ethic’ (Collins 286). How does she implement the ‘ancient link between art, ritual and religion” in her poetry (Collins 286)”?

Please don’t forget that I tweaked the syllabus a bit. Instead of reading all three essays from S&F Online, you should pick the essay that best matches your interest. Again, the choices are:

There are so many exciting events coming up:

  • the BOLD book group is doing a live reading of for colored girls . . . this Monday,  October 5th at 5:45pm. At the Courtyard Marriott on 1717 Broadway (Entrance on 54th) 4th Floor. I’ll be leaving from campus at around 5:15 if anyone wants to go.
  • bell hooks is conducting a week of discussions at the New School from October 5-9
  • Nicole recommends Pueblo HarlemOctober 10 from 11am-7pm.  It will be at the Harlem School of the Arts on 141 and St. Nicholas Avenue. It might get you in the mood for talking about Shange’s interest in Caribbean/Nuyorican/Latin@ cultures.
  • Coincidentally, MadibaMist is having a screening/discussion of Thomas Allen Harris’ critically acclaimed film, “Through a Lens Darkly” (which is on the syllabus for next semester) on 10/10 **not free**

Zaki is coming to class on October 22 and October 23rd.

This will involve some adjustment of the syllabus–stay tuned for details.

 

I’ve added a new “music blogpost” prompt. You aren’t obligated to do it, but you might want to try it on  week you are stuck for something to write (and it will encourage you to start incorporating media into your posts!