A reading list by Alexis De Veaux from her teach-in on “It’s All in the Reveal: Valerie Maynard, Revelation, and Black (Dis) Belonging” for The School for Black Feminist Politics.
Read MoreAnastácia Flora Oliveira, escritora inaugural da Black Women Radicals programa da Dandara dos Palmares, conversa com Diane Menders, Diretora de Estratégias do Instituto Marielle Franco, sobre a vida, liderança e legado da feminista negra brasileira Marielle Franco.
Read MoreAnastácia Flora Oliveira, Black Women Radicals’ inaugural Dandara dos Palmares Fellow, speaks with Diane Menders, Director of Strategies at the Marielle Franco Institute, about the life, leadership, and legacy of Black Brazilian feminist Marielle Franco.
Read MoreWriter Uche Ezejiofor to lead teach-in on Pan-Africanism and Global Black Feminism for our new teach-in series, “Black Feminist Marroonage” for The School for Black Feminist Politics.
Read MoreJoin us for a new teach-in series for The School for Black Feminist Politics on the power, possibilities, and perseverance of radical Black feminist worldmaking.
Read MoreIn this latest installment celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Combahee River Collective, Black queer feminist artist-scholar Mecca Jamilah Sullivan explores the power of Black queer feminist language-making, visions, and possibilities through the work and words of Combahee and Black lesbian feminist, poet, and scholar, Cheryl Clarke.
Read MoreSupport Black Women Radicals’ fundraiser to open a physical location for The School for Black Feminist Politics.
Read MoreFor the 50th anniversary of the Combahee River Collective, After the Storm, a collective of Black and Latinx feminists, scholars, organizers, and teachers of the Greater Caribbean interrogate the teachings of the Combahee River Collective and bell hooks to make visible Afro-Diasporic bonds across the Caribbean and bear witness to the survival, restoration, and rebellion of its people.
Read MoreIn the third installment of our Special Blog Issue, “50 Years of Combahee”, for Chirlane McCray, the Combahee River Collective meant finally being in a space with Black women in which they could make memories and openly have conversations about their daily struggles.
Read MoreIn the second installment of our Special Blog Issue, “50 Years of Combahee”, Margo Okazawa-Rey speaks about the history of the Combahee River Collective, the importance of an internationalist framework in Black feminist thought, and the evolution of her politics from Combahee to now.
Read MoreJoin us for an IG Live, “Survival Pending Revolution: Honoring M. Gayle “Asali” Dickson.
Read MoreJoin us for an upcoming teach-in, “It’s All in the Reveal: Valerie Maynard, Revelation, and Black (Dis) Belonging” by Alexis De Veaux for The School for Black Feminist Politics.
Read MoreA reading list by Kay Coghill from their teach-in on “Clappin’ Back”: A Look Into Digital Misogynoir and Online Harm Reduction Practices” for The School for Black Feminist Politics.
Read MoreTo launch the special blog issue of Voices in Movement honoring the 50th anniversary of the Combahee River Collective, we sat with founding member Demita Frazier, who spoke about the formation of the collective, the impetus for writing the statement, and the importance of establishing clear political commitments, values, and praxes.
Read MoreBlack Women Radicals is celebrating “50 Years of the Combahee River Collective” with a special VOICES IN MOVEMENT blog issue.
Read MoreExploring the pioneering politics of Charlotta Spears Bass, the first Black American woman to run and operate a newspaper and to be nominated for vice-president in the United States.
Read MoreJoin us for an upcoming teach-in, ”The Other Side of Terror: Black Women and the Culture of US Empire” by Dr. Erica R. Edwards for The School for Black Feminist Politics.
Read MoreCheryl Clarke’s newest release, Archive of Style: New and Selected Poems captures the 42-year career of a writer whose unquestionable commitment to engaging the dynamic, beautiful, devastating, hidden, and intimate aspects of Black life – of Black lesbian life – is reinforced again and again.
Read MoreExamining the life of Dorie Ladner, civil rights activist and community organizer who dedicated her life to Black empowerment and liberation.
Read MorePhotographer and writer Anastácia Flora Oliveira writes about the power of ancestry and activism of black women in the African Diaspora.
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