Tumgik
#combaheerivercollective
goodblacknews · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
The Combahee River Collective, formed in 1974, was named for the South Carolina location where Harriet Tubman led a raid that freed 750 enslaved people. A Black feminist organization, the CRC advocated for the rights of all Black women. In 1977, they published the pioneering Combahee River Collective Statement, which outlined the interlocking oppressions of race, class, gender, and sexual, proposing solutions to societal issues such as racism, homophobia, and gender discrimination. #combaheerivercollective #womenshistorymonth #goodbllacknewscalendar #blackfeminism #intersectionalfeminism #blackhistory #americanhistory🇺🇸 https://www.instagram.com/p/CpTEPuJv0I1/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
31 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
Hey friends, I hope you’ll buy or donate a ticket, and/or sign-up as a sponsor for Ignite the Fire: an event to celebrate five years of collective action and political and economic change affecting women of Color and nonbinary people of color. #askmeaboutit cc: @sistafireri Attached are two recent flyers, the link to our EventBrite follows, or reach out directly to me about tickets, donations, sponsorship opportunities, or for more info about the organization and how to get involved in the work. #rezarites #sistafire #blackwomen #communityorganizing #providence #pawtucket #newport #womenofcolor #ambitiousblackfeminist #blackfeminists #combaheerivercollective #justice https://www.instagram.com/p/ChFgNxXOhtf/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
0 notes
rememberebonyjanice · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
“Womanism Is To Feminism As Purple Is To Lavender.” 💜 I’ve read a lot of decidedly #feminist text and there is deep relationship between folk who call themselves #womanist thinkers and those who identify as #feminists. That’s what #WomanismIsToFeminism is speaking to. Relationship. However, in regards to “Relationship” no other political or social framework includes language about deep relationship with all people in its origin and definition. That matters. This means that from its inception, Womanism was thinking about everyone. As the cultivation of this important work has grown, more clear language about centering the most marginalized “the least of these” has been emphasized in that defining but relationship with everyone, regardless of age, race, ability, #sexuality, #gender or difference was being considered in this #praxis AT ITS INCEPTION. “Nobody’s free until EVERYBODYS free.” - #FannieLouHamer “If black women were free it would mean that everyone else would have to be free...” - #CombaheeRiverCollective And because #blackwomen and femmes are rarely centered, there is some tension with that idea that she shld be centered in organizing and movement building... but unless her voice is heard, we ALL (even the privileged) stay bound. So what is your justice work if you know nothing of black women at the beginning - or our impact on every major movement to exist on the continental US and abroad, almost to the exclusion of none? How are you leading or shifting or changing without #blackwomen and #blackfemme voices being lifted? What is your #justice work without us? Really, how? #TheFreePeopleProject Learn more. Get tickets. Find out how to sponsor a scholarship ticket for a #WOC. *We allegedly have some student tickets available as well. 👀 More on that soon. #TheFreePeopleProject Use the comment section below to invite your friends, your college professor, and your Aunt to this discussion. What makes your liberation work sustainable is knowing this learning and healing isn’t a one and done... This is forever! #Feminist #Liberation #Intersectionality #Yoga #AvacadoToast #Nameste #Pilates #Justice (at New Orleans, Louisiana) https://www.instagram.com/p/CEkCWG0Jp8f/?igshid=dlrlb3em3jsj
0 notes
villa-anj · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
My current endeavour. #blackfeminism #feminism #womanup #alwaysastudent #wecanlearnnewthings #everyday #combaheerivercollective https://www.instagram.com/p/CBjOzt-AfOUrtFv_9h3xQ8DGgurk71bGl9QjVo0/?igshid=1m51dnjsjq8n8
0 notes
behavingwhileblack · 6 years
Video
Attended the “Combahee River Collective Mixtape: Black Feminist Sonic Dissent Then and Now” at @barnardcollege featuring speakers Kara Keeling, Jacqueline Stewart, and my former college professor Daphne Brooks. Professor Brooks spoke about black women artists like Odetta, a folk singer and guitarist whose music influenced others, including Bob Dylan and Janis Joplin. Called the “Queen of American folk music” by Martin Luther King, Jr., Odetta was an out lesbian whose protest songs contributed to the Civil Rights Movement. With her performance at the March on Washington and at various other human rights events, Odetta’s legacy lives on in the likes of artists from Solange to Janelle Monae. . . . #odetta #odettaholmes #americanfolksinger #queenofamericanfolk #voiceofthecivilrightsmovement #blackartsmovement #protestmusic #civilrights #humanrights #blackfemalemusicians #blackfemalefolksingers #combaheerivercollective #queerstudies #blackandqueer #blackfeministmovement #feminism #intersectionality #intersectionalfeminism (at Diana Center, Barnard College)
7 notes · View notes
laurentoll-blog · 5 years
Quote
Above all else, Our politics initially sprang from the shared belief that Black women are inherently valuable, that our liberation is a necessity not as an adjunct to somebody else's may because of our need as human persons for autonomy. This may seem so obvious as to sound simplistic, but it is apparent that no other ostensibly progressive movement has ever consIdered our specific oppression as a priority or worked seriously for the ending of that oppression.
Combahee River Collective
Tumblr media
The Combahee River Collective Statement is a call for intersectionality within the feminist movement during the seventies and eighties in the United States. The authors make an argument that individuals are unable to remove one or more of their identities and that it is a combination of these identities that form our oppression and privileges. The quote above taken from The Combahee River Collective Statement, to me, is a response to Afropessimism. “Black women are inherently valuable” is such a powerful way of acknowledging the oppression that black women have felt and the inhumane ways in which black women have experienced oppression and necropolitics in their lives. 
The Combahee River Collective Statement: Black Feminist Organizing in the Seventies and Eighties. Kitchen Table, 1986.
0 notes
blogtcooper-blog · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
When reflecting on my thoughts when I wrote this, I think of Audre Lorde’s work, The Master’s Tools. I think because the view of feminism was bad or evil, mainstream or lifestyle feminism today has been developed for people to digest and get behind without understanding, recognizing, and addressing the politics and movement behind feminism. And the turn to using the master’s tool of capitalism into feminism, the messages and the work that is getting put into the Women’s Movement, are pushed to the side as extremist.
0 notes
0 notes
hellokyleec · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
This week #ontheblog: How We Get Free: Black Feminism and the Combahee River Collective edited by Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor 📚 • • “You should read this book if you actually care about how Black women must get free. It requires that we connect the past to the present and honor the women that came before us, who were radical before we even understood what it meant to be so, and who were willing to put their bodies on the line before we were even born. For me, this is critical literature for conscious resistance in our current time.” • • I know yal think I love everything I read, but I actually started out not loving this book... But as I kept reading, it got better & better. This week’s review is a bit of a long read, so grab your drink & snack of choice & dive in with me! Have you read the Combahee River Collective Statement? Let me know what you thought in the comments below! 🧐 • • #literaryblackgirl #litblkgrl #blackgirlsread #wellreadblackgirl #blackstories #literacy #reading #combaheerivercollective #blackfeminism #feminism #blacklivesmatter  
0 notes
somanythings9 · 7 years
Link
0 notes
goodblacknews · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
The Combahee River Collective, formed in 1974, was named for the South Carolina location where Harriet Tubman led a raid that freed 750 enslaved people. A Black feminist organization, the CRC advocated for the rights of all Black women. In 1977, they published the pioneering Combahee River Collective Statement, which outlined the interlocking oppressions of race, class, gender, and sexual, proposing solutions to societal issues such as racism, homophobia, and gender discrimination. #combaheerivercollective #womenshistorymonth #goodblacknewscalendar #blackfeminism #intersectionalfeminism #blackhistory #americanhistory🇺🇸 https://www.instagram.com/p/CpTEzyqPPaS/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
11 notes · View notes
be-bop-kid · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#combaheerivercollective 🙏🔥
0 notes
chrisstcyr · 4 years
Video
Stephen posted a video to Instagram: FOR FOR THE LIVES OF BLACK WOMEN #vote #vote2020 #gotv #democracy #motiongraphics #motiondesign #typeinmotion #crc #combaheerivercollective https://instagr.am/p/CGNCq4cpjwJ/
0 notes
Text
#combaheerivercollective #blackfeminism #lesbian #blacklesbianfeminism #antiracism #mine
Tumblr media
0 notes
laprogressive · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Combahee’s Legacy for Black Women WorkersSikivu Hutchinson - # #combahee’s #legacy #for #black #women #workers #blackwomen #combaheerivercollective #incomeinequality #economicjustice - http://bit.ly/1IHKjC3 http://bit.ly/2VDtQz5
0 notes
blogtcooper-blog · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
I wrote this based on an article titled, The Making of a New Anti-Racist Feminist Working Class, on the history of the Women’s Movement. Bell Hooks discusses this topic in her book, FEMINISM IS FOR EVERYBODY. Through history, the image of a feminist has been a middle to an upper-class white woman, and many have not talked about how people from the lower class and of color have different problem and issues. Even though the women in these demographics were usually around them, working for them. 
0 notes