In their dynamic work, authors and activists Dr. Allener M. Baker-Rogers and Fasaha M. Traylor center, interrogate, and uplift the lives, leadership, and legacy of historical and contemporary Black women activists in the “City of Brotherly Love”.
Read MoreAfrekete Convos with Black Feminist Future.
Read MoreSupport Black Trans Victims of State-Sanctioned Violence By Donating to The Okra Project.
Read MoreAmerican poet, novelist, and playwright, Paul Laurence Dunbar wrote the poem “We Wear the Mask” in the early nineteenth century. The poem is one of the earliest enunciations of Black people’s experiences navigating between multiple worlds in the U.S. Now over 100 years later, his words are eerily relevant in the face of the 2020 COVID19 pandemic. As we think about the consequences and realties of living in the COVID-19 moment, two queer Black feminist scholars reexamine their own experiences of Black life, Black death, and Black material culture feeding into our newest iteration of the mask.
Read MoreIn her powerful scholarship, Francesca Sobande (she/her) explores the intersections of race, gender, feminism, and popular culture in the lives of Black women in Britain.
Read MoreA historian, activist, educator, and a founding member of the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent (OWAAD), Stella Dadzie is a revolutionary of the Black British Feminist Movement and a trailblazer of the Black radical tradition in the United Kingdom and beyond.
Read MoreNigerian braid artist, body painter, and educator, Nneka Gigi, explores how Black women in the United States and in Africa and in the African Diaspora are maintaining their natural hair during COVID-19.
Read MoreCheck out our “Black and Asian-American Feminist Solidarities” Reading List.
Read MoreFor Mother’s Day, Black Women Radicals’ Executive Director, Jaimee Swift, interviews her mother, Aretha Swift, an advocate and chronic kidney disease survivor on life, faith, and resilience.
Read MoreWriter Doriana Diaz shares her perspectives on the ways the Black community can respond to the disproportional impact of COVID-19 on our lives.
Read MoreCheck out this reading list from our Zoom event, “Black Feminist Perspectives on COVID-19.”
Read MoreCheck out this reading list from our Instagram Live event, “Black, Books, and the Quest for Liberation.”
Read MoreEvery first Thursday of the month, Black Women Radicals will host “Afrekete Convos”, an IG Live series that highlights and uplifts Black women, non-binary, and gender non-conforming activists, artists, and changemakers around the world. This series is in honor of and inspired by the self-described “Black, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet,” that was and is Audre Lorde.
Read MoreA poet, writer, and editor, Maya Marshall is an ingenious literary force to be reckoned with.
Read MoreDynamic and determined, activist and artist Krü Maekdo (who uses fluid pronouns) is dedicated to ensuring that the activism, histories, leadership, and lives of Black lesbians are not overlooked.
Read MoreScholar-activist and filmmaker Dr. Sharrelle Barber (she/her) attended the event in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil where Afro-Brazilian activist and human rights defender, Marielle Franco, spoke at hours before she was murdered. It was a night that truly would change Barber’s life and forever commit her to not only sharing Franco’s story but also to catalyzing transnational, Black feminist solidarities.
Read MoreAs a pioneering poet, activist, essayist, and educator, Dr. Cheryl Clarke has and continues to center and uplift radical Black lesbian feminist literature and organizing. We honor her.
Read MoreAt 15-years-old, human rights activist, poet, educator, Black Panther Party leader, and former political prisoner, Ericka Huggins (she/her) made a vow to serve humanity at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963. Now at 72, the revolutionary is still just as dedicated and committed to the vow she made 57 years ago.
Read MoreA prolific author, novelist, writer, activist, and advocate, Marita Golden is a literary genius whose words and work continue to inspire across generations.
Read MoreAfro-Brazilian filmmaker, activist, and producer, Éthel Oliveira is on a mission to ensure that the life of the late Marielle Franco and the resistance and resiliency of Black people in Brazil are documented.
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