Subjects -> SOCIOLOGY (Total: 553 journals)
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- European BIPOC Feminisms
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Abstract: Scholarship and activism that center Black feminist thought, Women-of-Color feminisms, Indigenous feminisms, and Queer of Color critiques are not new in the European context. However, they are often overshadowed by white European feminist and queer theorization and political action on the one hand, and U.S.-centric scholarship and activism on the other. In one of the few edited volumes to take up Black feminism from a European perspective, Akwugo Emejulu and Francesca Sobande (2019: 5) note that “too often, when we think of Black feminist theory and activism, we look to the particular Black American experience and seek to universalize and apply it to Europe [,] . . . [a] dynamic . . . [that among other things] ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- “Out in the Streets”: Hip-Hop Narratives in Contemporary
Greece-
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Abstract: Similar to other places in our postcolonial world, the growing popularity of hip-hop scenes in Greek society is related to its embrace of American lifestyles; youth’s engagement in rap, street arts, sports, and graffiti; the proliferation of movies, hip-hop music, and music videos; and the promotion of hip-hop and street dances through talent TV shows (So You Think You Can Dance, Greece You Have Talent). Around the world, hip-hop stems from its practitioners’ ability to develop interstitial spaces of cultural creation outside of institutional forms (Durand 2002). In Greece, like in the Francophone world, the cultural appropriation of hip-hop developed as “a mesh-like network where each point constitutes history of ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Editor’s Introduction
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Abstract: This special issue, guest edited by leading scholars of BIPOC Europe Nana Osei-Kofi and Shirley Ann Tate, although focused on contemporary populations, prompts us to remember that BIPOC Europe has a long, albeit relatively underrecognized history (Ramey 2016). By definition, to speak of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color in Europe implies that these populations are distinctive from the presumptively white European. Yet European whiteness is neither natural nor long-standing. Rather, it is an invention resulting from modernity’s settler colonial, colonial, and imperialist projects in Africa, the Americas, Asia, the Indian subcontinent, and Australia, as are the designations Black, Indigenous, of Color, and their ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Are Reindeer the New Buffalo' Climate Change, the Green Shift, and
Manifest Destiny in Sápmi-
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Abstract: In 2016, well-known Sámi artist Máret Anne Sara, from a reindeer herding family, created an art installation called Pile’o Sápmi with two hundred reindeer skulls as a protest against and a symbol of the Norwegian government’s decision of forced slaughter of reindeer to reduce the size of herds in Finnmark, which were considered unsustainable. Pile’o Sápmi references the extermination of the buffalo in North America, where piles of buffalo skulls were a common sight at the height of the buffalo hunting era in the late nineteenth century. Sara sees similarities between the two countries’ policies; in the United States it was the white settlers’ political strategy to destroy Indigenous peoples’ source of living and ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Flamboyant: Wildness, Loss, and Possibility in Feminist Organizing in the
Netherlands-
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Abstract: “What is in a name.”Flamboyant is the name of our center.We are continuously asked how we got our name and what it means.Here it goes:Flamboyant: Flaming (Van Dale)Flamboyant: The most beautiful ornamental tree of the tropics. He gets about twenty meters high, has wavering leaves like an acacia, and blooms with big bunches of beautiful flowers in the colors of a flame, varying from yellow-orange to fire red. When the tree blooms, the flowers look ablaze, hence the name.Contrary to other trees/plants from the tropics, nowadays known as Dutch house plants (the ficus, hibiscus, etc.), the Flamboyant tree has not been tamed and would prefer to die instead of shrinking in the Dutch living room.—FlamboyantContrary to ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Motherwork, Daughterwork: Exploring Activist Mothering within the Latin
American Diaspora in Sweden-
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Abstract: We are the children who have witnessed how our mothers’ lives have been torn apart by a labor market with low wages and tiring physical work, mothers who have been thrown out of the system straight into poverty.In the last decade, cultural productions covering fiction, poetry, theater, and artwork have explored and documented the experiences of growing up in Sweden as daughters of migrant mothers (Karam 2018). Many of these artistic pieces, illustrated by Macarena Dusant’s statement in the epigraph, acknowledge the work done by mothers in contexts not only of political exile but also of institutional and everyday racism in Sweden.These voices challenge one of the deepest forms through which gendered racism (Essed ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Intersectional Vulnerabilities and the Banality of Harm: The Dangerous
Desires of Women of Color Activists-
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Abstract: In our work exploring women of color’s activism in Europe, we have noted how activists have expanded their discussions about the successes and obstacles they face in their organizing and mobilizing to explicitly include their emotional landscapes (Hochschild 1979; Wingfield 2010; Berlant 2011; Hemmings 2012; Ahmed 2014; Pedwell 2014; Lewis and Hemmings 2019). Beyond the usual discussions about fighting white supremacy, patriarchy, capitalism, xenophobia, and homophobia, we see activists explicitly struggling with their own emotions and how those feelings are simultaneously creative and destructive forces in their networks and organizations. Of late, exhaustion, burnout, and precarity are the undercurrents that ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Gendering the Nador/Melilla Border: Immigrant Muslim Women, Economic
(Under)Development, and Structural Violence-
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Abstract: There [at the hospital] they told me that a coworker had died.They didn’t give me her name, but they told me she had a BA. Then I knew it was Safia, my friend for seven years.On a winter morning in November 2008, Safia Azizi was taken to the hospital after she was crushed by approximately 350 of her coworkers who were chaotically trying to pass through a labyrinth of blue-wired metal doors— referred to as la jaula (the cage)—to cross the border into Melilla, Spain, from Beni Enzar in the province of Nador in Morocco. By the time help came, she had gone into cardiac arrest and died shortly after from pulmonary hemorrhage. Her friend Dunia from Marrakesh recognized her at the hospital El Hassini in Nador after she ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Matter and Memory: Black Feminist Poetics and Performance in Berlin,
Germany-
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Abstract: The Afro-German poet May Ayim wrote her poem “Blues in Schwarz Weiss” (“Blues in Black-and-White,” hereafter referred to as “Blues”) one year after the fall of the Berlin Wall. She was thirty years old, a celebrated writer who had already toured her poetry and performed it on three continents. Five years earlier, she had studied with Audre Lorde, who became a mentor and encouraged her to coedit the first Afro-German anthology, Farbe Bekennen (Showing Our Colors), in 1986.1 With the fall of the Berlin Wall and the political reunification of East and West German territories (1989–90), white nationalism rose and people of color were attacked by racist mobs. A few years later, the 1992 English translation of the book ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Couwenbergh’s The Rape of the Negress: Visual Violence, Theological
Erasure, and Black Feminist Fugitivity-
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Abstract: Amid the thick first half of the seventeenth century, a nascent Dutch Republic was emerging into its own sense of European identity on an exponentially expanding global stage. The winds of the Protestant Reformation had not spared spinning the windmills of the Dutch provinces, as an extended war broke out between the Protestant and Catholic states of central Europe, with political motives often parading as religious ideology. The Dutch spirit of dissent and revolt persisted through the Eighty Years’ War—the Dutch war of independence (1568–1648)—that ended with the official founding of the Netherlands in 1648. But the Dutch had already been on the imperial move, even as they trudged the road to European autonomy. ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Strategies of Visibilization: Searching for Contact Zones between the
Periphery and Center in mumok’s Exhibitions, 1998–2018-
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Abstract: This photo essay is based on Strategies of Visibilization, which is a spatial installation of the complete list of artists who participated in exhibitions at the Museum moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wienmumok between 1998 and 2018.1The installation was initially presented from August 31 until September 25, 2021, at Mz* Baltazar’s Laboratory, a feminist creative space in Vienna (see fig. 1), and was also shown at the “De/Colonizing Knowledge” conference at the University of Vienna from November 19 to November 21 (see fig. 2), and online on December 22, 2021.In alignment with the work of Jul Tirler (2020), Strategies of Visibilization takes into consideration that racist, nationalist, right-wing populist and ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- Writing Letters as Counter-Archiving: An Afro-Nordic Feminist Care
Practice-
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Abstract: This essay is a letter-writing dialogue among four feminists of the African diaspora living and working in the Nordics. We wrote to each other with the aim of thinking collectively about counter-archiving, as we felt this was a practice that linked our individual approaches to Black feminist study. We wrote our letters during the fall of 2021, just as COVID restrictions were temporarily lifted in Norway, Finland, and Sweden. This was a historical moment of grief, death, racial violence, and an overall individual and planetary vulnerability. We discovered through our writing how we had all been longing for contact with other Black1 feminists working in and from Nordic universities, involved in community activism ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- I Am Queen Mary
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Abstract: I Am Queen Mary is a transnational public art project created by La Vaughn Belle of the U.S. Virgin Islands and Jeannette Ehlers of Denmark—two artists connected by their shared Caribbean roots and colonial histories. Together they created the first collaborative sculpture to memorialize Denmark’s colonial impact in the Caribbean and those who fought against it. This monumental work debuted in March 2018 in front of the West Indian warehouse in Copenhagen in commemoration of the one hundredth anniversary of the sale and transfer of the Danish West Indies (now the U.S. Virgin Islands) to the United States. The first monument to a Black woman in Denmark, I Am Queen Mary made international headlines as a symbol that ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
- 2023 Paula J. Giddings Best Article Award
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Abstract: Sandra Ruiz for her article “A Light for a Light: Minoritarian Aesthetics and the Politics of Grief-Work,” Meridians 21:2Bio: Sandra Ruiz is an associate professor of theatre and English at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is the author of Ricanness: Enduring Time in Anticolonial Performance (2019), coauthor of Formless Formation: Vignettes for the End of the World (2021), and a coeditor of the Minoritarian Aesthetics series. She is the cofounder of The Brown Theatre Collective and creator of La Estación Gallery.Abstract: How does loss tear a hole in the world and produce a collective remaking of a new social order in which grief-work is not contained singularly but is a process done in feminist ... Read More PubDate: 2023-07-21T00:00:00-05:00
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