Black Feminism LIVES!

Month

May 2012

53 posts

Apr 30, 2012146 notes

April 2012

41 posts

Queer Black Facilitators of the Future: Press Release

Queer Black Facilitators of the Future

Mobile Homecoming Co-creators recognized in The Advocate “top 40 under 40”

March 30, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:

Alexis Pauline Gumbs, 919-827-2702

Mobile Homecoming

Durham, NC – Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Ph.D and Julia Wallace, M.Div. will be recognized in the May issue of the The Advocate  – the leading gay magazine in America – on the “top 40 under 40” list for their creation of the nationally known Mobile Homecoming project. Mobile Homecoming is an intergenerational experiential archive project that amplifies generations of Black LGBTQ brilliance.

The Advocate says of it’s honorees, “these budding powerhouses, leaders in media, politics… are facilitating our future.” Alexis and Julia are two of only 4 honorees from the Southeast on the list.

As a self-identified “queer black feminist troublemaker,” Alexis also travels the country facilitating workshops, seminars and lecturing on the legacy of Black feminism. Julia, a self-identified black queer theologian, multimedia artist and consultant, says, “Alexis makes trouble that looks like love and IS love.”

Alexis and Julia travel the country in a 1988 RV they call Sojourner, interviewing Black Lesbian elders and Trans Men, facilitating intergenerational community conversations and hosting replay events. Julia explains, “the replay event is a technology where we not only learn about the history of these visionaries but experience the practices that has sustained them.”

Alexis is not new to this sort of national recognition. She was one of Utne Reader’s “50 Visionaries Who Are Changing the World” in 2009; a Black Women Rising Nominee and a Reproductive Reality Check Shero in 2010; and a recipient of the Too Sexy for 501C-3 trophy in 2011. Alexis has been featured on North Carolina public radio and UNC-TV. She and Julia were also featured on the cover of Durham Magazine – that celebrates the city’s style and creativity – for a feature story suggesting that Durham, NC is the lesbian haven of the south.

Alexis and Julia drove their RV across the country in 2011 taking detours and making stops along the way to honor and listen to elders. They say, “it was like a tour of super heroes… our elders had to develop super powers to survive as black people, as women, let alone as LGBTQ people, 20, 30 plus years ago.”So far, they have been to over 50 cities in over 11 states and interviewed over 50 black queer visionaries. They take a “by every means possible” approach to getting the word out about this history and their intergenerational imperative via tumblr, short Facebook videos, an upcoming documentary film, a web series on Q-Roc.tv, and T-shirts,to name a few.

Next up for Mobile Homecoming is learning about sustainable building and living practices that will allow LGBT communities to take care of their elders as they age. They will also be launching a fundraising campaign to resurrect Sojourner or refit another vehicle with a veggie fuel engine to model their vision of sustainable mobile media making.

These “architects of the next decade,” as The Advocate describes them, both have advanced degrees and are founders of many organizations. The Mobile Homecoming project is affiliated with Southerners on New Ground (SONG), supported by Kitchen Table Giving Circle and has collaborated on events with many groups across the country including AARP, The DC Center in Washington D.C., Audre Lorde Project in NY, and Allied Media Projects (AMP) in Detroit. Alexis and Julia believe that “connecting community across generations is what will give us all access to the future we deserve.”

More information can be found at http://bit.ly/Kn0EfK. and videos can be found at http://bit.ly/Kn0EfN




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Apr 30, 20123 notes
Apr 25, 2012166 notes
“I name myself “lesbian” because this culture oppresses, silences, and destroys lesbians, even lesbians who do don’t call themselves “lesbians.” I name myself “lesbian” because I want to be visible to other black lesbians. I name myself “lesbian” because I do not subscribe to predatory/institutionalized heterosexuality. I name myself lesbian because I want to be with women (and they don’t all have to call themselves “lesbians”). I name myself “lesbian” because it is part of my vision. I name myself lesbian because being woman-identified has kept me sane. I call myself “Black,” too, because Black is my perspective, my aesthetic, my politics, my vision, my sanity.” —Professor Cheryl Clarke , from “New Notes on Lesbianism”  (via colorfuldiaspora)
Apr 25, 2012337 notes
Alexis and Julia honored in the Advocate’s 40 under 40 list!

from http://bit.ly/Ka3PY7

Alexis Pauline Gumbs & Julia Wallace  • 29 & 32
Durham, N.C.
Historians, Mobile Homecoming

In 2009, Alexis Pauline Gumbs and Julia Wallace were at a conference in North Carolina, attended primarily by black lesbians, and realized they were the youngest people there. Listening to the older women, “it became very obvious that the choices they had made and the things they had done had made things better for us,” Gumbs says. Adds Wallace: “We became very excited about the experiences they had.” That led the partners in life and work to get on the road and seek out African-American LGBT elders (basically, anyone older than they are) around the nation for a project called Mobile Homecoming. Gumbs and Wallace are documenting their subjects’ lives through video and audio interviews that they plan to assemble into a documentary film by the end of next year, and they are also holding intergenerational events and collecting photos, manuscripts, and other artifacts for an archive of black LGBT life.

The effort “has been affirming and sometimes overwhelming,” Gumbs says. In some cases,  “people have been waiting all their life for someone to listen to them.” Wallace says the project made her realize “we have a responsibility to our elders and our ancestors to take care of each other.” In addition to Mobile Homecoming, Gumbs’s projects include BrokenBeautiful Press, a website where activists can share resources, and Brilliance Remastered, which offers online seminars, individual coaching, and other assistance for scholars. Wallace is founder of Queer Renaissance, which uses the Internet and other media to connect artists, activists, entrepreneurs, and others. Soon the busy duo will be collaborating on a children’s book as well.




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Apr 25, 20128 notes
“

“This country has a virulent history of racist violence perpetuated against Black Women, yet we have tried to protect Black men from racism. Like Black men, Black women have been horribly impacted by white supremacy. Yet, there is often not the same outcry in our communities when a Black woman is raped,” ~Aishah Shahidah Simmons in Brooke Axtell’s “Black Women, Sexual Assault and the Art of Resistance” for ForbesWoman

Read article in its entirety here —>http://onforb.es/JoYwVH

”
—Black Women, Sexual Assault and the Art of Resistance

(via afrolez)

Apr 25, 201231 notes
Apr 25, 20127 notes
Apr 25, 201252 notes
Bridge Called (for @maiamedicine)

After Audre Lorde’s “Bridge Through My Windows”

With wireless string and titanium cans

We lace the time zones in unmetered song

For the sisterhood of thinking through this all day long

Some people call it

“stretched thin.”

They know not the substance of our skin.

We are each of us shorelines

Standing watch from sites another might arrive at or remember

We will never be

the same

unless we ignore everything

rolling ourselves into swallow

So we reach taut and weighted arm to arm to arm

As if we never wanted it to be easy

Taking as our model

Mother Harriet’s up all night thirst for stars.

And her warning

That no one’s turning back.

Apr 24, 20123 notes
listening to "Gnarls Barkley-Transformer" → blip.fm

Dedicated to all my Angry Intellectuals! Transforming the world, each other and ourselves!!! http://tinyurl.com/cz52owt

Apr 24, 20129 notes
I Would Transform: Angry Intellectuals Spell Magic

This Sunday in the Angry Intellectuals: Channeling Rage for Transformation Webinar we honored the fact that our anger is sparked by deep love and a profound desire for transformation.  We realize that our anger requires transformation from each of us and from the world around us.   At the end of our session, as we practiced recognizing the distinction between hate (the impulse to destroy…an impulse we reserve for the interlocking forms of oppression we indeed wish to destroy) and anger (the creative energetic impulse for transformation that we are bringing into our communities with intention), we created this group poem about what we would transform.  And how!

I Would Transform

A group poem by the Angry Intellectuals

i would transform the need to be right into a desire to be in community

i would transform fear of honesty into courage to be held accountable.

i would transform punishment into healing.

i would transform color-blindness into full color.

i would transform ownership into profound communalism

i would transform whiteness into the presence of unconditional love and accountability.

i would transform supremacy into relationship/community.

i would transform self-righteous white women into anti-racist warriors

i would transform individual solutions into collective power, into unstoppable contagious collective power

i would transform SCAF (Egyptian Military Leadership) into sons and fathers in their homes, taking care of their own families and communities

i would transform those who are now police into profound listeners in the face of violence

i would transform schools into places of critical consciousness and liberation

i would transform the academies tendency to overwork, underpay, and devalue revolutionary scholarship into valuing these ways of knowing and these people.

And that doesn’t seem like a radical enough transformation!

i would transform hierarchical organization structures to co-created spaces of accountability.

i would transform exclusion to equity

i would transform isolation and borders into abundance of love

i would transform ICE and immigration policies into organizers rooted in care- using all their radical energies to reunite families.

i would transform racist teachers who seem to hate kids into hologram designers for spaceship child safety seats

i would transform bullies into bootdancers

i would transform the public school system to satellites of black feminist schools across the country.

i would transform homophobic church leaders into humble hip hop hooray cheerleaders for love in all forms

i would transform rent into the most alive soil ever

i would transform my landlord into a rose garden curator

i would transform the property manager into  a beloved son embraced in the middle of the dig deep get it done committee

i would transform legal recourse into delving deep for life-giving resources

i would transform street harassers into corner poets singing love to mother earth

i would transform scarcity into abundance and communities to hold us.

i would transform fast breathe speech and thinking into patient grounded inclusivewisdom.

i would transform the instinct to devalue in the face of anxiety to the impulse courageously honor

i would transform the feelings of betrayal into the gratitude for new knowledge

i would transform defensiveness into deep breaths of listening

I would transform self pity into confidence

i would transform doubt to determination

i would transform fear into freedom

i would transform guilt into action and growth

i would transform forced silence into song.

i would transform myself




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Apr 24, 201243 notes
Apr 24, 20121 note
Mobile Homecoming Interviewee Imani Woody on Housing for LGBTQ Elders TONIGHT




 

Using The Airwaves To

Give Voice To The LGBT Community   

 

DC’S ONLY LGBT FM RADIO SHOW

Every 2nd and 4th Monday

NOW ON AIR TWICE A MONTH!  

  

Tune in tonight, Monday, April 23 @7PM   


for host Sheila Alexander-Reid (on left) 

 

and guest, DR. IMANI WOODY MACKO, 

FOUNDER OF MARY’S HOUSE (on right) 

discuss Housing Discrimination and Homophobia
facing LGBT adults over 60.

Have you thought about life after 60?
When you or you and your partner need an assisted living facility, where can you go?

Options in this area were slim until now! 



As the LGBT community ages, they face many issues. 

One primary issue is lack of available housing.
While there are a growing number of retirement communities, senior housing and other high-end housing options accepting LGBT older adults and couples, the vast majority of these facilities are not very receptive. As a result, LGBT singles and couples have to live a closeted life to be accepted into existing housing options. Mary’s House being built in Washington, DC by Imani Woody-Macko seeks to
eliminate that problem.

 

 

Mission of Mary’s House

To provide safe and affordable LGBT-friendly housing

to adults over 60

  

VISION OF MARY’S HOUSE

To assist in the elimination of overt and subtle discriminatory behaviors specifically in housing for  

people who identify as LGBT   

 

MARY’S HOUSE 

The current planning for Mary’s House will include ADA compliant single rooms with person

ary’s houseal bathrooms, closets, a common living room, a common dining room, a shared kitchen, a small laundry room and an administrative office on the first level. The second level will have approximately 6 single rooms with personal bathrooms, and closets. The lower level will house additional laundry facilities, a conference room, bathroom and storage.  

The outside of the property will have a parking lot for up to 6 parking spaces. Some egress and ingress will be ADA compliant with ramps to enter the front and back of building.

Mary’s House will collaborate with other agencies to coordinate some direct services conducive to the continued independent living of its residents. They tentatively include:

*          Meals

*          Laundry/Light Housekeeping

*          Grocery Shopping/Errands

*          Incidental Transportation  

 

  

Dr. Imani’s Bio  

Imani Woody has a PhD in Human Services specializing in non-profit management. Her thesis is entitled: Lift Every Voice: A Qualitative Exploration of Ageism and Heterosexism as Experienced by Older African American Lesbian Women and Gay Males when Addressing Social Services Needs. She holds a Master of Human Services degree from Lincoln University and is a graduate of Georgetown University’s Paralegal program. Dr. Woody is currently working as a diversity consultant working in the field of aging and issues affecting the LGBT and people color communities. She has worked as the pro bono coordinator of the D.C. Bar and has served as the director of training for the National Association of Protection and Advocacy, coordinating and facilitating trainings across the country for people with disabilities and promoting cultural diversity.

 

As the director of client services at the Mautner Project for Lesbians with Cancer, Dr. Woody managed programs that provided educational and direct services to lesbians and bisexual women with cancer. She was also the program manager for the National Caucus and Center on Black Aged, working on national health programs to educate elderly African American women. Formerly a training specialist for the AARP’s Foundation, Dr. Woody developed curriculum and delivery of on-site and web-based trainings. She trained substantive experts to become trainers through the Train-the Trainer program and provided on-going technical assistance to field trainers. Formerly a co-chair of PRiSM, AARP’s ERG group, Dr. Woody worked to help form the Washington, DC Elder Coalition.

 

Imani Woody has been an advocate of women, people of color and LGBT issues for more than 20 years and has served on the board of directors of the Mautner Project, Women in the Life Association and Whitman Walker Lesbian services. She currently sits on the Board of the Metropolitan Community Churches of WDC the Chair of SAGE Metro DC (an organization serving LGBT elders), and an advisory Board member of the National Resource Center on LGBT Aging. She has been a life coach for more than 10 years and is the founder and principal of Living Life Like It’s Golden, a program that empowers people to live their lives more fully through visioning. She lives with her partner of twelve years in Brookland, WDC. Administration from Case Western Reserve University. Her compassion for people has always been a driving force in her life and profession.




Please listen and call in to 202-588-0893 for what inevitably will be a lively discussion with questions and comments on this topic.   

As always, we need your voices to help educate our listeners. This show is about bridging the gap between the LGBT and the heterosexual communities. Listen in and call in!
It all kicks off at 7pm on 89.3fm   

or LISTEN ONLINE AT WPFW.ORG!! 

Thanks in advance! 

 

Apr 23, 20128 notes
listening to "Major Lazer -  → blip.fm

Rock to how we’re in the same boat and apply for the Eye to Eye Webinar on Radical Collaboration! Let’s get free together! http://tinyurl.com/7dcf7fl

Apr 23, 2012
Sign up for the Eye to Eye Webinar by April 30th! → alexispauline.com

Eye to Eye is an opportunity to get real about how individualism, internalized oppression and a capitalism-produced need to seem smart can get in the way of creating meaningful collaborations and useful intellectual partnerships with the communities that we love the most.  It is also an opportunity to find partners to collaborate with and to create plans for becoming the unstoppable, interconnected, community accountable scholars we want to be!

Apr 23, 20121 note
“The reality is this: when Black straight men and boys are beaten, brutalized, and/or murdered as a result of state-sanctioned and/or white supremacist violence, it becomes (as well it should be) a national issue in the Black community and in a few, definitely not all, instances, the outrage moves beyond the Black community. Yet, when Black straight women, girls, and LGBTQ people are raped, sexually assaulted, beaten, brutalized, and/or murdered as a result of misogynist, patriarchal, state-sanctioned, and/or white supremacist violence, it is too often the victim’s individual issue. There are so many egregious, known and unknown, cases of racial and gender-based violence perpetuated against all Black people, regardless of their gender, gender identity, and sexuality, that it is literally impossible to write about all of them.” ~ Aishah Shahidah Simmons, “Who Will Revere Us? (Black LGTBQ People, Straight Women, and Girls)” (Part 1) for The Feminist Wire.” —Read part one of this four-part article in its entirety HERE (http://thefeministwire.com/2012/04/who-will-revere-us-black-lgtbq-people-straight-women-and-girls-part-1/)
Apr 23, 2012396 notes
Sign up by April 30th! Eye to Eye: Radical Collaboration for Community Accountable Scholars

Greetings Bright Thunder!

Applications are now open for May’s Webinar Eye to Eye: Radical Collaboration for Community Accountable Scholars!  Sign up by April 30th!

Eye to Eye will meet on four Tuesdays in May (8, 15, 22, 29)

Eye to Eye is an opportunity to get real about how individualism, internalized oppression and a capitalism-produced need to seem smart can get in the way of creating meaningful collaborations and useful intellectual partnerships with the communities that we love the most.  It is also an opportunity to find partners to collaborate with and to create plans for becoming the unstoppable, interconnected, community accountable scholars we want to be!

Required reading: Audre Lorde’s Eye to Eye: Black Women Hatred and Anger

The Eye to Eye Webinar Includes:

  • a workbook based on Audre Lorde’s Eye to Eye
  • 4 live webinar discussion sessions facilitated by Alexis Pauline Gumbs and attended by aligned visionary underrepresented scholars
  • inclusion in an ongoing networking google-group for webinar graduates
  • theme songs to release internalized oppression as we reach out into collaboration!

Rate:  $25-50 per participant per session ($100-200 for the whole course) or FREE for one-on-one coaching clients.

To apply for the Eye to Eye Webinar email brillianceremastered@gmail.com with your responses to the following questions:

Contact information: (phone, email)

Who are you and what are you up to?

Why do you want to take this webinar?

What times are you available on Tuesdays in May? (Include your time zone!)

Love,
Alexis Pauline Gumbs, PhD




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Apr 23, 20124 notes
listening to "Whitney Houston - It → blip.fm

@blackfeministbass: “Dedicated to my Angry Intellectuals, rebuking what you gotta rebuke!” http://tinyurl.com/csw35ph

Apr 21, 20121 note
listening to "Whitney Houston - It → blip.fm

Dedicated to my Angry Intellectuals, rebuking what you gotta rebuke!

Apr 21, 2012
Play
Apr 19, 201218 notes
Apr 18, 201217,551 notes
Black Feminist Film School Launch Tomorrow!!! → blackfeministfilmschool.wordpress.com
Apr 18, 20128 notes
again among nature’s flowers: indigo night school survivor sanctuary

Friday, April 20th 6:30pm

(email brokenbeautifulpress@gmail.com for address/directions)

Bring food to share and if you have them lemons, honey and fresh flowers!

Inspired by Ntozake Shange’s brilliant novel Sassafrass, Cypress and Indigo, I present to you INDIGO NIGHT SCHOOL (aka night-time is the right time). We will be convening on the Fridays closest to this season’s new moons into Spring for evening long rituals based on the magical remedies, recipies and rituals of the healer-girl sister in the novel, our beloved Indigo. This is a special sacred space for grown black warrior healers who identify as black women and/or black two-spirit, twinspirit, gatekeeper or genderqueer folks.

Please join me in participating in two more sessions of luxurious, fragrant, nourishing evening rituals where we can set our intentions, support each other and bask in the brilliance of a Black Feminist literary legacy!!!!

This month’s session, during sexual assault awareness month is a specific space of sanctuary for those of us who have survived and co-survived gendered violence structured around 12 year old Indigo’s healing ritual that she invents after someone in her community attempts to assault her.

If you can bring lemons, flowers, or honey, and any food to share, they will be much appreciated!




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Apr 17, 20122 notes
Black Feminist Film School Launch Thursday!!!!! → blackfeministfilmschool.wordpress.com

See you there everyone!!! <3

Apr 17, 201219 notes
Journeystones: Angry Intellectuals Release

This Sunday was the second session of The Angry Intellectual: Channeling Rage for Transformation!   We are training ourselves to use the energy and insight of our anger to create transformative relationships, not to reproduce domination.  Here are some stones on our path.

With love,

Lex

Journeystones: 

After Audre Lorde’s “Journeystones I-X”

a quarry of clarity from the Angry Intellectuals

(or a can of stones to kick)

i can drop my need to be right all the time

i can drop my fear of seeming like a failure

drop my need to be liked

drop my need to fix things for other people

i can drop my tendency to bear it alone….

i can drop the need to always do more…sometimes i have already done (MORE THAN) enough.  capitalism kills.

i can drop my fear of being judged

i can stop faking the funk like any revolution has gone smoothly

i can drop the need to fit in completely. i’m different (in some ways) and it’s good.

and my shoes are cute

i can drop my hard rock need to seem like i can never be hurt

i can drop the fear of never being hurt…and suspecting that the present is simply the past in a new body, time, and person

which also must mean i have to drop a refusal to deal with past hurts

i can drop my expectations of other black women to be the perfect me i wish i was

i can drop my fear of seeming needy

i can drop my fear of being my mother

and me of being my father…

and me of being reactionary

i can drop my need to be right/to focus on just my hurt so that i can see that other’s actions are really out of fear

i can allow compassion, instead of pushing it away.

i can drop my shoulders and release the pent up tension. that’s not even a good warrior pose!

i can drop the teacher/academic/professional pose which hinders the possibilities of radical education

i can drop those standards of grace that were not mine/ours to begin with

i can drop those perfectionist tendencies….

i can drop the idea of speaking to anger or emotion as taking up too much space.

i can drop my fear that i’m taking up too much space.

i can drop my fear that my community won’t hold me.

i can drop my fast conclusions which foreclose the possibilities of allies

i can drop my fear of my own healing and give others permission to heal

i can drop my need to hide love. I feel deeply and I need to say it often.

i can drop my need to seem rational when I KNOW my feelings hold truth

i can drop my distrust of my body.  my body knows the truth!




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Apr 17, 20126 notes
“and what piece of me is it then
buried down there in North Carolina.”
—Audre Lorde “A poem for a poet”
Apr 17, 20128 notes
“Grandmother says words are like that, sometimes one retrieves them from places that are forgotten, places that one has vowed never to revisit.” —Yvonne Vera Under the Tongue
Apr 14, 20127 notes
listening to "Mariah Carey - Emotions Lyrics" → blip.fm

Dedicated to Julia Roxanne Wallace. So thrilled to keep on catching feelings for you! :)

Apr 12, 20122 notes
listening to "edie brickell - what i am" → blip.fm

Dedicated to all the Angry Intellectuals. You know what you know!!!! Here we go! http://www.alexispauline.com/brillianceremastered/?p=158

Apr 12, 20121 note
I Know: Angry Intellectuals Testify!

This past Sunday was the first session of the second webinar in the Brilliance Remastered series The Angry Intellectual: Channeling Rage for Transformation and it was a testimony service indeed!   As part of our process of acting on Audre Lorde’s wisdom that “anger is full of energy and insight.”

This group poem highlights some of the wisdom that our anger reminds us to act on!!!

I Know

A Group Poem by the Participants in the Angry Intellectuals Webinar

Channeling Rage for Transformation

I know that there is magic in my rage, and power in its love

I know that every emotion I express is valid

I know transformation is possible possible possible

I know I have the power to create create create from something, from anything from nothing

I know that my work is valuable and matterfact PRICELESS!

I know that the lives of black girls are priceless and sacred everyday.  Including Sunday!

I know I’m happy I got to go to black feminist “church” this afternoon

I know I am grateful for this space.

I know that we need more of these spaces, for the many more like us out there

I know that state sanctioned, vigilante style, wrongful death–genoicide–is wrong

I know that love is always the answer

I know the power of our knowledge and love is stronger than capitalist ignorance that has those i love captivated.

I know that the revolution begins with the self

I know I have more to learn. I know I must be held accountable.

I know that being present is an uncomfortable lifestyle I must embrace

I know Superiority, Supremacy is not used to having to listen to the invisible.

And, I will not remain invisible.

I know that I am beautiful.

I know that I am more than enough

I know that I am bigger than any institution

I know that we can do this work….

and I know that I am not yet who I desire to be but all things in due time…

I know I am not limited by my physical challenges

I know I have what I need to do the work I am here to do. Actualize!

I know, as a white woman, other white people often don’t want me to respond to racism.

and yes I know that wrong is not my name

I know that my ancestors are right here right now.

I know I am not alone. I am surrounded in love.

I know that I am surrounded in and filled with transformative LOVE!

I know that letting go and not holding on is healing.  Pack light

I know that we have strength in community. Not alone at all.

I know that my emotional clarity and expression will not only heal myself, but my community

I know when we come together to give others the space to express themselves

we give ourselves permission to be who we are

I know that my knowing is growing by the day.

I know that I know that I know that I know that I KNOW!

I know “they” betta act like they know

I know we betta act like we know!

(I know that I don’t want this to end just yet




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Apr 12, 20128 notes
“June Jordan is an architect because she believes in what she calls “the determining relationship between architectural reality and physical well-being.” So the design of a new round and winding Harlem free of corners is based on her belief that a curved landscape will suggest the possibility of generative surprises not only on a walk through the new Harlem, but also in life in general, that it will cultivate patterns of discovery and imagination in the lives of Harlem’s children and adults, situating them as dynamic participants in an ecology of urban living, not just everyday targets of moving harm.” —

-Alexis Pauline Gumbs  June Jordan and Black Feminist Poetics of Architecture

http://pluraletantum.com/2012/04/11/june-jordan-and-the-poetics-of-black-feminist-architecture-site-2-the-intersection/

Apr 12, 20128 notes
Apr 12, 20121 note
Part 2 of my series on June Jordan the Architect: Site 2- The Intersection → pluraletantum.com
Apr 12, 2012
crt: In her essay “The Difficult Miracle of Black Poetry in America or... → curate.tumblr.com

In her essay “The Difficult Miracle of Black Poetry in America or Something Like a Sonnett for Phillis Wheatley” June Jordan illustrates the paradox thusly

“A poet is somebody free. A poet is someone at home.

How should there be Black poets in America?”

Elaborating on the impossibility of…

Apr 12, 20123 notes
Grooves for Geniuses to Get Through Graduate School: The Remastered Tools 101 Podcast

This audio goodness comes from the newest educational program of Eternal Summer of the Black Feminist Mind which is Brilliance Remastered (alexispauline.com/brillianceremastered) especially for community accountable scholars and visionary under-represented graduate students based on the ever blooming brilliance of Audre Lorde!
This podcast is inspired by the brilliance of the participants in the first webinar Remastered Tools 101!  It includes group poems and definitions that we came up with during the webinar sessions and some of my favorite music from NC and the rest of the world!  (Nneena Freelon, Bradford Marsalis, Pierce Freelon, Apple Juice Kid, Fantasia, Frou Frou, Fela Kuti, Stevie Wonder, Suheir Hammad, Goapele, Phillis Hyman and Res!)

At first I had planned for this podcast to be only for the webinar participants and our pre-existing monthly sustainers, but it is just TOO good not to share more widely!  So anyone who makes a donation to Eternal Summer of the Black Feminist Mind or becomes a monthly sustainer in APRIL will get a link to the podcast to groove to yourself or to share with a visonary under-represented graduate student/emerging community accountable scholar who you LOVE!





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Apr 9, 20127 notes
Mobile Homecoming Interviewee Barbara Smith featured by Maker's → makers.com

mobilehomecoming:

We love you Barbara Smith!  Watching these videos all day!!!!

Apr 9, 20126 notes
Apr 8, 2012364 notes
“Remember our sun
is not the most noteworthy star
only the nearest.”
—

Audre Lorde “For Each of You”

I am so excited that the second Brilliance Remastered Webinar (The Angry Intellectual: Channeling Rage for Transformation) starts TODAY!!!!!!

Apr 8, 201213 notes
Apr 8, 201222 notes
Daily Truth: Mantras for Remastering the Day!

In the middle of the fourth and final session (it’s so hard to say goodbye) of the Remastered Tools 101 Webinar, we affirmed the fact that daily truth is a crucial tool for empowered community accountable intellectual work.   In order to stay in each other’s lives every day beyond the webinar we shared the daily mantras that remind us WHAT IT REALLY IS!  We will be putting these affirmations in our homes, pockets, bags, offices so that we can see them everyday and we invite you to do the same!

Remastered Tools 101: Daily Mantras:

“you here to remind people of free” -marvin k white

“I am who I am doing what I came to do.” –Audre Lorde

“Being open to receiving and giving blessings will keep you in touch with your passion, the passion you need to make it to the finish line.   Get excited about your work and know that when you change the way you look at things, things you look at change.  Go get em’ girl.  I wish I could show you, when you are lonely or in darkness, the astonishing light of your being.” –Melissa’s Auntie

“Nothing in the world is as soft and yielding as water, yet for dissolving the hard and inflexible nothing can surpass it.” –Tao Te Ching

“I wish to live because life has within it that which is good, that which is beautiful and that which is love.” Lorraine Hansberry

“Salt water can heal anything.” Lex’s Pop-pop

“Go on and be what we couldn’t.” Mississippi Damned

“We can learn to mother ourselves.”  Audre Lorde

“How you treat yourself if how you treat God.  You are the representation of God in your life.”

“When I let go of what I am, I become what I might be.” Lao Tzu

“Are you sure, sweetheart, that you want to be well.” Minnie Ransom from Toni Cade Bambara’s The Salt Eaters

“Consistency is manifestation.“  Queen Hollins

“There is an invisible red threat that connects all human beings and though it may stretch or tangle it will never break.” Chinese Proverb

“Love is lifeforce.” June Jordan

“A thing is mighty big when time and distance cannot shrink it.” –Zora Neale Hurston

“There is a close connection between sexual repression and extreme aggression.”

“This is my granddaughter the poet.”  Lex’s Grandma

“Caminante, no hay puentes, se hace puentes, se hace puentes al andar./ Voyager, there are no bridges, one builds them as one walks.” –Gloria Anzaldua

“Listen to each person as if she is your great teacher uttering her last words.”-Hafiz

“Safety is always necessarily an illusion.” –James Baldwin

“The work is the diva.” Zakia

“The best way to do it is to do it!” Toni Cade Bambara

“Everything in the universe is within you.  Ask all from yourself.”  Rumi

“Movement is medicine.”  Brown Femi Power

“Relationships not resumes.” –Thaura Distro

“Wrong is not my name. My name is my own my own my own my own.” –June Jordan

“We have the opportunity and the responsibility to become fifty times greater than  we thought we could be.”  Grace Lee Boggs and James Boggs

“We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous.  Actually, who are you not to be?” Marianne Williams

“Warrior get up!” Climbing Poetree

“So it is better to speak, remembering we were never meant to survive.”  Audre Lorde

“Black girls are from the future.” Renina Jarmon




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Apr 4, 201211 notes
Daily Truth: Mantras for Remastering the Day

In the middle of the fourth and final session (it’s so hard to say goodbye) of the Remastered Tools 101 Webinar, we affirmed the fact that daily truth is a crucial tool for empowered community accountable intellectual work.   In order to stay in each other’s lives every day beyond the webinar we shared the daily mantras that remind us WHAT IT REALLY IS!  We will be putting these affirmations in our homes, pockets, bags, offices so that we can see them everyday and we invite you to do the same!

Remastered Tools 101: Daily Mantras:

“you here to remind people of free” -marvin k white

“I am who I am doing what I came to do.” –Audre Lorde

“Being open to receiving and giving blessings will keep you in touch with your passion, the passion you need to make it to the finish line.   Get excited about your work and know that when you change the way you look at things, things you look at change.  Go get em’ girl.  I wish I could show you, when you are lonely or in darkness, the astonishing light of your being.” –Melissa’s Auntie

“Nothing in the world is as soft and yielding as water, yet for dissolving the hard and inflexible nothing can surpass it.” –Tao Te Ching

“I wish to live because life has within it that which is good, that which is beautiful and that which is love.” Lorraine Hansberry

“Salt water can heal anything.” Lex’s Pop-pop

“Go on and be what we couldn’t.” Mississippi Damned

“We can learn to mother ourselves.”  Audre Lorde

“How you treat yourself if how you treat God.  You are the representation of God in your life.”

“When I let go of what I am, I become what I might be.” Lao Tzu

“Are you sure, sweetheart, that you want to be well.” Minnie Ransom from Toni Cade Bambara’s The Salt Eaters

“Consistency is manifestation.“  Queen Hollins

“There is an invisible red threat that connects all human beings and though it may stretch or tangle it will never break.” Chinese Proverb

“Love is lifeforce.” June Jordan

“A thing is mighty big when time and distance cannot shrink it.” –Zora Neale Hurston

“There is a close connection between sexual repression and extreme aggression.”

“This is my granddaughter the poet.”  Lex’s Grandma

“Caminante, no hay puentes, se hace puentes, se hace puentes al andar./ Voyager, there are no bridges, one builds them as one walks.” –Gloria Anzaldua

“Listen to each person as if she is your great teacher uttering her last words.”-Hafiz

“Safety is always necessarily an illusion.” –James Baldwin

“The work is the diva.” Zakia

“The best way to do it is to do it!” Toni Cade Bambara

“Everything in the universe is within you.  Ask all from yourself.”  Rumi

“Movement is medicine.”  Brown Femi Power

“Relationships not resumes.” –Thaura Distro

“Wrong is not my name. My name is my own my own my own my own.” –June Jordan

“We have the opportunity and the responsibility to become fifty times greater than  we thought we could be.”  Grace Lee Boggs and James Boggs

“We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous.  Actually, who are you not to be?” Marianne Williams

“Warrior get up!” Climbing Poetree

“So it is better to speak, remembering we were never meant to survive.”  Audre Lorde

“Black girls are from the future.” Renina Jarmon

Apr 4, 20127 notes
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