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#winona laduke
progressivemillennial · 5 months
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taylor14firefly · 6 months
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"Someone needs to explain to me why wanting clean drinking water makes you an activist, and why proposing to destroy water with chemical warfare doesn't make a corporation a terrorist."
—Winona LaDuke, "Canadian Oil Companies Trample on Our Rights" (2013)
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elegantzombielite · 1 year
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"Someone needs to explain to me why wanting clean drinking water makes you an activist and why proposing to destroy water with chemical warfare doesn't make a corporation a terrorist."
Winona LaDuke, activist, environmentalist, economist, and writer (b. 18 August 1959)
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zuko-always-lies · 2 years
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vanitastergioula · 1 year
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sacredfolly-blog · 3 months
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The Next 100 Writing Prompts
Shaking out the bones!  Here are 100 more ways to play! 100 more prompts to breathe in and roll with. Almost two years of words worth leaping from. Check out my guidance on writing at the bottom of the page. Really – if there is only one rule, keep your hand moving. Have fun! Now go! 101.  “[I’m] learning to love the beast.”  Kit Krash 102. “It’s so deep I don’t think that I can / Speak about…
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diddyrivera · 4 months
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additional resources to marxist feminism:
living a feminist life by sara ahmed
the rise and decline of patriarchal systems by nancy folbre
this bridge called my back: writings by radical women of color by cherrie moraga and gloria anzaldua
delusions of gender: how our minds, society, and neurosexism create difference by cordelia fine
close to home: a materialist analysis to women's oppression by christine delphy
(pdf) the feminist standpoint: developing the ground for a specifically feminist historical materialism
(medium) on women as a class: materialist feminism and mass struggle by aly e
(sagejournals) capital and class: the unhappy moments of marxism and feminism: towards a more progressive union
(substack) the marxfem pulpit by abigail von maure (earth2abbs on tiktok)
if anything else related to marxist feminism, just let me know :)
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additional resources to eco feminism:
gossips, gorgons, and crones: the fates of the earth by jane caputi
parable of the sower by octavia e butler
neither man nor beast: feminism and the defense of animals by carol j. adams
bitch: on the female of species by lucy cooke
fresh banana leaves: healing indigenous landscapes through indigenous science by jessica hernandez
the intersectional environmentalist by leah thomas
right here, right now by natalie isaacs
feminism or death by francoise d'ealibonne
violent inheritance: sexuality, land, and energy in making the north american west by e cram
animal crisis: a new critical theory by alice grary
unsettling: surviving extinction together by elizabeth weinberg
land of women by maria sanchez
sexus animalis: there is nothing unnatural in nature by emmanuelle pouydebat
windswept: walking the paths of trailblazing women by annabel abbs
andrea smith - rape of the land
andy smith - ecofeminism through an anticolonial framework
carolyn marchant - nature as female
charlene spretnak - critical and constructive contributions of ecofeminism
heather eaton - ecological feminist theology
heather Eaton - The Edge of the Seat
janet abromovitz - biodiversity and gender Issues
joni Seager - creating a culture of destruction
karen warren - ecofeminism
karen warren - taking empirical data seriously
karen warren - the power and promise of ecological feminism
l. gruen - dismantling oppression
martha e. gimenez - does ecology need marx?
n. sturgeon - the nature of race
petra kelly - women and power
quinby - ecofeminism and the politics of resistance
rosemary radford ruether - ecofeminism: symbolic and social connections
sherry ortner - is female to male as nature is to culture?
sturgeon - the nature of race
val plumwood - feminism and ecofeminism
winona laduke - a society based on conquest cannot be sustained
if anyone has any other recommendations related to eco feminism, plz let me know :)
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additional resources related to trans feminism:
the empire strikes back: a posttransexual manifesto by sandy stone
(chicago journals) trapped in the wrong theory: rethinking trans oppression and resistance by talia mae bettcher
(philpapers.org) trans women and the meaning of woman by talia mae bettcher
the transgender studies reader by susan stryker and stephen whittle
if anyone has other recommendations related to trans feminism, plz let me know :)
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additional resources related to anarcha feminism:
the anarchist turn by jacob blumenfeld
we will not cancel us and other dreams of transformative justice by adrienne maree brown
burn it down: feminist manifestos for the revolution by breanne fahs
reinventing anarchy, again by howard ehrlich
anarcho-blackness by marquis bey
a little philosophical lexicon of anarchism from proudhon to deleuze by daniel colson and jesse cohn
joyful militancy by nick montgomery and carla bergman
wayward lives, beautiful experiments by saidiya v. hartman
we won't be here tomorrow and other stories by margaret killjoy
writing revolution by christopher j. castaneda
paradoxes of utopia by juan suriano
twelve fingers by jo soares
for a just and better world by sonia hernandez
if anyone has other recommendations related to anarcha feminism, plz let me know :)
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dailyanarchistposts · 1 month
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Chapter 4. Environment
Recommended Reading
Nirmal Sengupta, Managing Common Property: Irrigation in India and The Philippines, New Delhi: Sage, 1991.
Winona LaDuke, Recovering the Sacred: The Power of Naming and Claiming, Cambridge: South End Press, 2005.
Jan Martin Bang, Ecovillages: A Practical Guide to Sustainable Communities. Edinburgh: Floris Books, 2005.
Heather C. Flores, Food Not Lawns: How To Turn Your Yard Into A Garden And Your Neighborhood Into A Community. White River Jct., Vermont: Chelsea Green, 2006.
Jared Diamond, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed, New York, Viking, 2005.
Murray Bookchin, The Ecology of Freedom: the Emergence and Dissolution of Hierarchy, Palo Alto, CA: Cheshire Books, 1982.
Elli King, ed., Listen: The Story of the People at Taku Wakan Tipi and the Reroute of Highway 55, or, The Minnehaha Free State, Tucson, AZ: Feral Press, 2006.
Bill Holmgren and David Mollison, Permaculture One: a Perennial Agriculture for Human Settlements. Sydney: Corgi books, 1978.
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library-fae · 4 months
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the fact that second wave feminism has been co-opred by transphobic cis white women as a creation made by and for cis white women is so aggravating because second-wave feminism was literally the time when the black panthers were advocating for black and brown people (including women) and their rights, the stonewall riots that was led by black and brown trans women, books on support of abortion rights, pioneered by black intersectional feminist florence rae kennedy, the indochinese women's conferences from 1971 fronted by women of colour, especially vietnamese women...
everything angela davis, audre lorde, winona laduke, chela sandoval, anna nietogomez and kimberly crenshaw did... and that's just the people we are most aware of
im so tired of history being gentrified, whitewashed, colonised and the removal queer people and people of colour from our past
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grubloved · 2 years
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environmental rhetoric class booklist (updated periodically)
music
Joni Michell, Big Yellow Taxi
poetry
Wendell Berry, The Peace Of Wild Things (link here)
movies
Soylent Green (1973)
essays, articles
Aldo Leopold, Thinking Like A Mountain (pdf link here)
Monsanto Magazine, The Desolate Year (a response to silent spring - pdf here)
The New Silent Spring (newspaper article, link here)
Terry Tempest Williams, The Refuge Of Change (link here)
Christine L. Oravec & James G. Cantrill, Tracking the Elusive Jeremiad: The Rhetorical Character of American Environmental Discourse, from The Symbolic Earth
Robin L. Murray & Joseph K. Heumann, The First Eco-Disaster Film? from Film Quarterly (2006) 59
Winona Laduke, Ricekeepers (link here)
John E. Ikerd, Towards an Economics of Sustainability (link here)
Susan Owens, Is there a meaningful definition of sustainability? in Plant Genetic Resources (link to request full copy here)
fiction books
Edward Abbey, Monkey Wrench Gang
nonfiction books
Aldo Leopold, A Sand County Almanac
Rachel Carson, Silent Spring
ML Lincoln & Diane Sward Rapaport, Wrenched from the Land: Activists Inspired by Edward Abbey
Barry Commoner, The Closing Circle
Alan S. Gross, The Rhetoric of Science
M. Jimmie Killingsworth & Jacqueline S. Palmer, Ecospeak: Rhetoric and Environmental Politics in America
Carl G Herndl & Stuart C Brown, Green Culture: Environmental Rhetoric in Contemporary America
Christine L. Oravec & James G. Cantrill, editors: The Symbolic Earth: Discourse and Our Creation of the Environment
Sidney I. Dobrin & Sean Morey, Ecosee: Image, Rhetoric, Nature
Mark Meister & Phyllis M. Japp, editors: Enviropop: Studies in Environmental Rhetoric and Popular Culture
Noël Sturgeon, Enviromentalism in Popular Culture: Gender, Race, Sexuality, and the Politics of the Natural
Simon Dresner, The Principles of Sustainability
Susan Schrepfer, Nature's Altars: Mountains, Gender, and American Environmentalism
Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass
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ivettel · 2 years
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here are some indigenous activists and groups to check out so you can keep being engaged after this gp!
indigenous climate action
indigenous environmental network
assembly of first nations
winona laduke
âpihtawikosisân
jesse wente
dallas goldtooth
native women's association of canada
aptn news and cbc indigenous (for news)
definitely have missed people but these are the main ones i keep up with, feel free to add!
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hiiragi7 · 7 months
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From Recovering the Sacred by Winona LaDuke.
Reminder that white people have always done the "we have to find a real [person of oppressed group] to speak on this" shit when it comes to cultural and racial debates and have always ignored when people of oppressed groups spoke out.
White people mask racism by hiding beneath a facade of progression, claiming to be "only wanting to listen to the 'right' group".
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radiofreederry · 1 year
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On this day in my universe, US President Bernie Sanders has announced he will not seek a second term in office. His Vice President, Winona LaDuke, has announced her intent to succeed him in 2024.
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lacangri21 · 1 year
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For fucks sake. Winona LaDuke was head of an organization and didn’t handle the sexual harassment of one of the employees well.
To her credit, she did apologize and resign, but the whole “I don’t believe in using the Colonial Carceral System” makes me want to rip my eyes out. As Chief Wilma Mankiller said, “I've run into more discrimination as a woman than as an Indian." Before we are Native, we are women. We all face the same types of sexual violence in our lives to varying degrees.
I hate when marginalized communities do this. Like the collective Indigenous fight to free the man who murdered and raped Anna Mae Aquash because of the White Penal System. Motherfucker raped an Indigenous woman and ended her life, but because he’s Native we must not want him in prison. What the fuck. Why does every group hate women?
Winona has done some great things but fuck. This. Shit.
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