Jessica Hoffmann,
"Unmooring to Connect: Holistic Feminisms"
(page 3 of 8)
This past spring, a single mother/writer/activist/organizer named tk
(tanya karakashian) tunchez took a road trip across the U.S. called
The
New Mythos Tour. Drawing on the work of Gloria Anzaldúa and her
notion that we need a new mythos—"A massive uprooting of dualistic
thinking in the individual and collective consciousness"—to begin a
process "that could, in our best hopes, bring us to the end of rape, of
violence, of war,"[2]
the New Mythos Tour was at once a means to raise
funds to bring radical mothers and community caregivers together at the
Allied Media
Conference in Detroit this summer, and an attempt to do some
consciousness shifting, community building, learning, and organizing in
places from Philly to Albuquerque.
In San Francisco, the members of POOR Magazine, a
poor-and-indigenous-people-led organization, are doing much more than
publishing a magazine. They are making media and doing media-skills
trainings as a form of anti-poverty organizing; they are hosting poetry
readings, reclaiming education, organizing take-back-the-land actions,
performing plays, and fighting cuts to public assistance. They are also
developing a project called Homefulness, a collective-housing experiment
that will offer a solution to houselessness that shouldn't feel so novel
(but does): housing. It will be not money but sweat equity that entitles
people to live there. And Homefulness will provide housing for currently
and formerly landless people on their terms, not the terms of
class-privileged, liberal social-service providers. These homes, private
residences connected to shared spaces, will include community childcare,
space for political education and art events, shared gardens, and more.
POOR's community, whose members identify as descending from African,
Cherokee, Jewish, Filipino, and many other cultures, is rooted in
multiple traditions and practices. Together they share a holistic vision
that includes intergenerational caregiving and rituals involving singing
and dancing and prayer right alongside, and as part of, political
action. The group's co-founder, a key organizer of all this, Tiny aka
Lisa Gray-Garcia, is a woman who fights for gender justice as part of
her holistic political struggle but doesn't call herself a feminist
because of mainstream feminism's racist and classist legacy.
On blogs, a multiethnic, rooted-all-over-the-place network of radical
women and gender-nonconforming people of color are sharing stories and
organizing strategies, doing community-organizing work, making art, and
building community that is not limited to a single geographic location.
These media makers, artists, and organizers are making blogs "not for
career-boosting, but for survival," writes the North Carolina-based
blogger and organizer
Alexis Pauline Gumbs. And
when one of them needs a new computer or financial support during a
health or relationship crisis, online appeals to each other and their
readers have continually turned up resources to meet the need.
At the Pachamama Skillshare, I met Pa'ti Garcia, a body worker whose
vision and practices blew me away. She led a DIY gynecology workshop
that celebrated the feminine without essentializing it, that centered
queer possibilities and pleasure, and that offered a vocabulary for
talking about genitalia beyond the gender binary. She recently
co-founded Ticicalli Yahualli, an L.A.-based collective of
people-of-color birth workers. As we talked about bodies and California
cities and time and other things, she mentioned that writing's not her
thing, and she's been dreading updating the copy on her website. I
quickly offered to help with that. When I needed a temporary place to
stay recently, she made me dinner and offered a bed for the night.
Of course we can, and should, and do share resources.
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