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Paperback Colonize This!: Young Women of Color on Today's Feminism Book

ISBN: 1580050670

ISBN13: 9781580050678

Colonize This!: Young Women of Color on Today's Feminism

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Newly revised and updated, this landmark anthology offers gripping portraits of American life as seen through the eyes of young women of colorIt has been decades since women of color first turned... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

In response to 'racist'

Initially, I wanted to respond to the person who wrote 'racist' to say, that he's an ignorant idiot; particularly for his unexamined complicity in affirming the oppressive hegemony that burdens this culture and society. By attempting to silence and dismiss the marginalized voices of women of color he is only perpetuating racism, and extendedly, sexism, classism, neocolonialism, and homophobia by hiding them and pretending that they don`t exist. However, I thought that maybe his apathy is only the result of being uninformed, unexposed, and/or simply being uneducated. I mean, who has the audacity to tactlessly claim in public that "To think about racism is to be racist. [and that, therefore,] People should think about other things." This is, either written by (1) someone from a position of unearned privilege; inferred by his/her inability to find urgency with the issue; or (2) someone who simply can`t read. Slavery's long dead dude, not the embedded institution of oppressive "-isms" that circulate and reside within this society. And I know that sometimes it's hard to accept or understand that you're an oppressor too. Anyway, that's what I want to say. Instead, I'm going to be passive and say: Well, there's a great distinction between being racial and being racist. A racist is someone who vilifies another person through that person's race; and/or discriminates or commits violence against another person on the basis of that person's race. When a person emphasizes race to substantiate the socio-political flesh of his/her experiences, however, I don't read it as being racist. To me it is a reflection of the reality upon which other people are situated; and how that reality is defined and determined, sometimes, on the basis of one's skin. This book is not "racist." This is a glorious book. A necessary book. A book that must be promoted and made accessible for everyone to read. Yes, it speaks about feminism, but it expands and complicates the term to include ALL women and to acknowledge, more importantly, that race, class, and sexuality intricately intersects with gender in this global matrix of domination and in how some people define or identify themselves. It is, undeniably, for and about women (of color) but only because the particular standpoints of this collection of women profoundly reflect and articulate the relationship between the "powerful" and the "powerless;" both relative terms that constitute the LIVED reality of most everyone. And that, in itself is, in my opinion relatable and worth learning enough to read. This book is also about consciousness, empowerment, resistance, and resilience; a possible source of validation and inspiration for those who may not have been handed any.

Hope for a new radical feminism

Antonio Gramsci once said "we are forced into an interregnum in which the old is dying and new cannot yet be born". 'Colonize This!...' is the new being born. Arriving at a moment when feminism is thought to have been 'achieved' by so many people and more women choose not to identify as feminist, this book announces a thunderous revolt.The editors have selected writing by young women of color that is so compelling you'll have a hard time putting this down. A mixed-race woman describes how her supposedly liberal father, who taught her about black feminism, is having sexual encounters with many women of color, and abusing her mother. This piece is a reminder that male liberalism is not synonymous with an anti-patriarchal, anti-white supremacist politics.The book is also accessible to people in a wide age range, so important at a time when radical feminism is being untaught or worse, ignored, at so many levels of public and private education.Alongside Gloria Anzaldua and Ana Louis Keating's 'revisiting' book, 'This Bridge Called Home', 'Colonize This!' is an important reminder that, as Arundati Roy said, "another world is possible". The aim of both volumes is to demystify threadbare feminist certainties and re-radicalize the ongoing project of tearing down the massive structural forces of patriarchy, white supremacy, and homophobia.

A MUST READ FOR YOUNG FEMINISTS!!!

A REVOLUTIONARY COLLECTION of young women's voices who dare to break silences and challenge their oppressors like the feminists from THIS BRIDGE CALLED MY BACK. Young feminists of color take you there~ HIT YOU RIGHT IN THE GUT~ with explosive personal narratives that resist white supremacy and critically analyze how a new generation of feminists are standing on their own two feet and shouting to the world: "We are here! We fight against domination! You better listen up!" A fresh, young look at women's issues from diverse perspectives. As a young lesbian feminist of color, I am inspired by these women's stories and strength. I couldn't put the book down for a minute! It is a must-read for anti-racist feminist thinkers.
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