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#anarchafeminisminpractice — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #anarchafeminisminpractice, aggregated by home.social.

  1. When I reached out to the queer- and trans-owned feminist @roomofonesownbooks in Madison, WI, stolen Ho-Chunk lands, about doing an event related to my latest edited anthology, the bookstore folks suggested that I, in turn, ask someone to join me in conversation. That felt delightfully in the spirit of this project, focusing on what anarcha-feminism looks like in practice—which for one thing (among many), makes space for many liberatory voices.

    I’m especially overjoyed that my friend and fellow Jewish anarchist Autumn Miller agreed to be that person, not only for Autumn’s insights and ethics, but the deep care that Autumn lives by, and from what I’ve experienced, routinely lives by. For instance, Autumn suggested that we use this talk+conversation as also a fundraiser for two local folks facing @stopcopcity RICO charges—and of course, I and the bookstore eagerly agreed!

    The book itself is a fundraiser too, or what I call a “labor of love” from me and every contributor to it: all proceeds from #ConstellationsOfCare: #AnarchaFeminismInPractice” (@plutopress, with bold and badass cover design by @eff_charm) will go to anarcha-feminist projects in various rebellious corners of the globe, to be decided with each round of “royalties.”

    But the book is more than mere vehicle for redistributing funds. As someone named Martyna wrote in Polish (likely from a home base in Poland) on Goodreads recently:

    “An inspiring book about a whole range of anarcha-feminist initiatives around the world, from street medics and Food Not Bombs to the Abortion Dream Team. … It can help people who are opposed to the ideas of anarchism to understand what it’s really about, and for me and other anarchists, this book can become a support—a reminds that there are plenty of people in the world who think [and directly act] like us.”

    For at this point in whatever is left of human history, I’m far more concerned about how people practice forms of freedom, and model what it means to collectively nurture and sustain life, than how folks too often mouth words while upholding the murderous status quo.

    Hope to see some of you in person, July 24, 6 pm!

    #CareNotCops (as seen in photo 3 by contributor @sugarbombingworld

  2. Mini, grassroots “review” of my latest, big edited anthology, “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (@plutopress, with gorgeous cover design by @eff_charm), thanks to someone named Hannah!

    Always grateful for the do-it-ourselves ways we think and act—and write—thereby educating ourselves together for freedom. So rather than assuming that book reviews need to come from on high (penned by academics, professional experts, and others), it’s joy to see readers themselves share their thoughts. And in the case of this particular collective—filled with many dozens or even well over a hundred voices bravely telling their own stories of forms of feministic self-organization that too often get overlooked or undervalued—it’s extra sweet when someone finds their own power to voice their perspective. (Because yes, *even* in anarchistic circles, patriarchy too often informs who gets to hold the reins of publishing power.)

    So thank you, Hannah, for this compact review of #ConstellationsOfCare:

    “Wonderfully expansive conversations, recollections, reflections, and creations from different anarcha-feminists groups across the world. I loved the varied backgrounds of the movements, how they came to be, and their struggles and victories. I was fascinated by the conversations on safe spaces, conflict, grief, and medicine. All chapters were very accessible, and each author wrote without defense but [instead] complete openness.

    “‘Love is not keeping your hands clean; Love is courage’ [quoting from contributor @tlalcihuatlx].”

    Appreciation, too, to the good folks at @rubicundbooks for this photo. I always also love seeing my books in the wild, including in such rad bookstores.

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice
    #WriteReadRebel
    #TryAnarchismForLife

  3. Mini, grassroots “review” of my latest, big edited anthology, “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (@plutopress, with gorgeous cover design by @eff_charm), thanks to someone named Hannah!

    Always grateful for the do-it-ourselves ways we think and act—and write—thereby educating ourselves together for freedom. So rather than assuming that book reviews need to come from on high (penned by academics, professional experts, and others), it’s joy to see readers themselves share their thoughts. And in the case of this particular collective—filled with many dozens or even well over a hundred voices bravely telling their own stories of forms of feministic self-organization that too often get overlooked or undervalued—it’s extra sweet when someone finds their own power to voice their perspective. (Because yes, *even* in anarchistic circles, patriarchy too often informs who gets to hold the reins of publishing power.)

    So thank you, Hannah, for this compact review of #ConstellationsOfCare:

    “Wonderfully expansive conversations, recollections, reflections, and creations from different anarcha-feminists groups across the world. I loved the varied backgrounds of the movements, how they came to be, and their struggles and victories. I was fascinated by the conversations on safe spaces, conflict, grief, and medicine. All chapters were very accessible, and each author wrote without defense but [instead] complete openness.

    “‘Love is not keeping your hands clean; Love is courage’ [quoting from contributor @tlalcihuatlx].”

    Appreciation, too, to the good folks at @rubicundbooks for this photo. I always also love seeing my books in the wild, including in such rad bookstores.

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice
    #WriteReadRebel
    #TryAnarchismForLife

  4. Mini, grassroots “review” of my latest, big edited anthology, “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (@plutopress, with gorgeous cover design by @eff_charm), thanks to someone named Hannah!

    Always grateful for the do-it-ourselves ways we think and act—and write—thereby educating ourselves together for freedom. So rather than assuming that book reviews need to come from on high (penned by academics, professional experts, and others), it’s joy to see readers themselves share their thoughts. And in the case of this particular collective—filled with many dozens or even well over a hundred voices bravely telling their own stories of forms of feministic self-organization that too often get overlooked or undervalued—it’s extra sweet when someone finds their own power to voice their perspective. (Because yes, *even* in anarchistic circles, patriarchy too often informs who gets to hold the reins of publishing power.)

    So thank you, Hannah, for this compact review of #ConstellationsOfCare:

    “Wonderfully expansive conversations, recollections, reflections, and creations from different anarcha-feminists groups across the world. I loved the varied backgrounds of the movements, how they came to be, and their struggles and victories. I was fascinated by the conversations on safe spaces, conflict, grief, and medicine. All chapters were very accessible, and each author wrote without defense but [instead] complete openness.

    “‘Love is not keeping your hands clean; Love is courage’ [quoting from contributor @tlalcihuatlx].”

    Appreciation, too, to the good folks at @rubicundbooks for this photo. I always also love seeing my books in the wild, including in such rad bookstores.

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice
    #WriteReadRebel
    #TryAnarchismForLife

  5. Mini, grassroots “review” of my latest, big edited anthology, “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (@plutopress, with gorgeous cover design by @eff_charm), thanks to someone named Hannah!

    Always grateful for the do-it-ourselves ways we think and act—and write—thereby educating ourselves together for freedom. So rather than assuming that book reviews need to come from on high (penned by academics, professional experts, and others), it’s joy to see readers themselves share their thoughts. And in the case of this particular collective—filled with many dozens or even well over a hundred voices bravely telling their own stories of forms of feministic self-organization that too often get overlooked or undervalued—it’s extra sweet when someone finds their own power to voice their perspective. (Because yes, *even* in anarchistic circles, patriarchy too often informs who gets to hold the reins of publishing power.)

    So thank you, Hannah, for this compact review of #ConstellationsOfCare:

    “Wonderfully expansive conversations, recollections, reflections, and creations from different anarcha-feminists groups across the world. I loved the varied backgrounds of the movements, how they came to be, and their struggles and victories. I was fascinated by the conversations on safe spaces, conflict, grief, and medicine. All chapters were very accessible, and each author wrote without defense but [instead] complete openness.

    “‘Love is not keeping your hands clean; Love is courage’ [quoting from contributor @tlalcihuatlx].”

    Appreciation, too, to the good folks at @rubicundbooks for this photo. I always also love seeing my books in the wild, including in such rad bookstores.

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice
    #WriteReadRebel
    #TryAnarchismForLife

  6. Mini, grassroots “review” of my latest, big edited anthology, “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (@plutopress, with gorgeous cover design by @eff_charm), thanks to someone named Hannah!

    Always grateful for the do-it-ourselves ways we think and act—and write—thereby educating ourselves together for freedom. So rather than assuming that book reviews need to come from on high (penned by academics, professional experts, and others), it’s joy to see readers themselves share their thoughts. And in the case of this particular collective—filled with many dozens or even well over a hundred voices bravely telling their own stories of forms of feministic self-organization that too often get overlooked or undervalued—it’s extra sweet when someone finds their own power to voice their perspective. (Because yes, *even* in anarchistic circles, patriarchy too often informs who gets to hold the reins of publishing power.)

    So thank you, Hannah, for this compact review of #ConstellationsOfCare:

    “Wonderfully expansive conversations, recollections, reflections, and creations from different anarcha-feminists groups across the world. I loved the varied backgrounds of the movements, how they came to be, and their struggles and victories. I was fascinated by the conversations on safe spaces, conflict, grief, and medicine. All chapters were very accessible, and each author wrote without defense but [instead] complete openness.

    “‘Love is not keeping your hands clean; Love is courage’ [quoting from contributor @tlalcihuatlx].”

    Appreciation, too, to the good folks at @rubicundbooks for this photo. I always also love seeing my books in the wild, including in such rad bookstores.

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice
    #WriteReadRebel
    #TryAnarchismForLife

  7. On this last day of the month of January, I took my last look at the last of the page proofs for my next edited anthology: the cover. Then in an email, I gave Pluto Press the go-ahead to send the book to the printer. Then I felt a weird mix of relief, nervousness, disorientation, and melancholy.

    It’s no small thing to end a 2.5-year labor-of-love project with a mere press of a “send” button on a computer. “Anticlimactic” is one descriptor.

    Of course, it’s not really the end. The printed book will be birthed in April, and then I’ll both hold this next “baby” of mine in my hands and simultaneously let it go out into the world (books grow up fast and run off to live a life of their own).

    Still, one suddenly doesn’t have to think about this huge task day in and day out, and equally suddenly, one needs to find the oomph to turn to another book project. That creates a sort of letdown, because there’s really no fanfare involved in sending off page proofs, and no traditions per se around how to “celebrate” or even mark that quiet, simple act.

    So I went about the humdrum of my workday, making some money doing my freelance copyediting of someone else’s book. Then I went to a small but sweet film screening about Appalachians fighting to protect the land and lives they love from pipelines. Then I stood under a star-filled sky, breathing in the crisp wintery air, and thought for a moment about the preciousness of life, grief that knows no borders on this imperiled earth, and all the collective care, love, and solidarity that encircle us even if on many days we don’t see or feel them, because like the moon that I couldn’t see this evening, they are there, especially within the world-building we do with and for each other.

    Then to put a wrap on this day, I pulled up the page proofs that I last looked at this morning, the front and back covers, and let my eyes and heart take in the brilliance of the colors, boldness of the type, and badass-ness of background image—and felt joy. Or rather, felt gratitude overflow to my dear friend @eff_charm for yet again designing a cover that speaks volumes to anarchic promise, even in the bleakest of times.

    For more on the book or to preorder, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

    (Note: I couldn’t figure out how to post vertical cover images, so had to add black bands on either side, but they won’t appear on the final book.)

  8. The last piece in “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024)—or “part 2” of extending (my) solidarity and love beyond borders—was the first contribution I got for this project. Its author, in Helsinki, has been incredibly patient for some two years waiting to see their rebellious “love letter” come out in print. I’ve read it dozens of times in prepping this book and it still makes me teary-eyed in the best of tender ways.

    “Do You Feel the Same?” by Vilja Saarinen

    “As friends have pointed out, we’re like a mix of magnificent things that those working against us have difficulty understanding. They can’t imagine fierceness and care inhabiting the same person, much less a social body that fights to dismantle hierarchies according to ethical principles of shared power. Love is not keeping your hands clean; love is courage.

    “When an event with people with strollers and walkers gets attacked, anyone who rushes to absorb the first blows and actively defend them, despite the consequences that might continue for one, two, four, seven, or even ten years, is defending love.

    “Anyone who dances Kurdish halay to keep up spirits and calm their friends while the police search their bus, home, or squat do so with an air of elegant resistance. Zap, zap, zapê!

    “I am secretly impressed by the determination of the schoolgirl who sat alone in front of the Parliament to protest climate change until she wasn’t alone anymore, and hundreds of thousands of kids and teenagers all around the world joined her. I love all the kids who got inspired, especially the five-year-olds in Tampere, carrying picket signs of animals facing extinction, depicting animals the same size as them. I love each and every one of you!

    “And I get a warm feeling thinking of Nelli throwing the ripe tomato—with the proficiency of someone who has done nothing but throw tomatoes all of her life—that hit the Nazi leader on the head at the perfect second in front of a big crowd in Turku.

    “That is why I am writing to you, from the many places where I know it to be true. From the moments and movements where I have experienced and felt it to be true. Love as a constant practice.“

    For more info on this book or to preorder it, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  9. I persisted in my proofing of some 435 pages of what will soon be “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024), and here are the final two excerpts, both extending (my) solidarity and love beyond borders—stretched across two posts.

    “How We Persisted as a New Anarcha Group in ljubljana” by črne mačke:

    “Through the process of writing this reflection [on our anarcha group in slovenia], a lot has changed for us.

    “We were confronted by our younger comrades about what they feel are generational hierarchies based on experience. We were challenged about various aspects of being gatekeepers of a space we tried to make and keep open for our sisters. We struggled with dynamics within our own collective and in connection with other collectives. We fought our declining mental health—some of us together, and others on their own.

    “We traveled and met people, and hosted groups and individuals here in our space that inspired us. We organized assemblies, protests, and direct actions on different topics. We failed to find the time and energy to keep new initiatives and projects going, and neglected care work. We made mistakes and tried to fix them. We left projects that frustrated us and moved away from struggles that overwhelmed us. We connected with groups that fell apart. We lost contacts, saw networks dying and could not find the energy to maintain them, and yet also formed new connections.

    “We felt excited. We got tired and burned out. We got arrested. We put ourselves and others in danger. We were sometimes depressed, and at other times manic. We were happy, and in other moments, disappointed. We hosted parties and concerts. We felt alive. We felt like our organizing was pointless. We hosted a big international event. We opened a new squat for our comrades from different territories and found space to connect again. We gave and felt love. We saw the point again. We reflected. We retaliated.

    “We persisted.”

    For more info on this book or to preorder it, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    (photo: messy-beautiful page proof against a messy-beautiful circle A seen spray painted on a brick wall)

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  10. Continuing on with “part 2” of the trans joyful contributions to my forthcoming edited anthology “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024) is a piece that feels dreamily in keeping with Tu Bishvat, the Jewish “new year of the trees” that just happened—a ritual that can aid us, like this piece, in not merely imagining but also inhabiting liberatory, queer, and ecological worlds.

    “Movement Midwifery” by Vicky Osterweil:

    “The most beautiful thing I ever saw does not, to my knowledge, have any photographic record. It was early in the morning, some weekday in mid-July 2018. It was an hour before my shift doing data entry in a big office building in Center City, Philadelphia, giving me time to check in with the OccupyICE encampment outside City Hall. When I arrived that morning, however, I didn’t find the mess of police barricades, improvised kitchen equipment, propaganda and handwritten signs, plastic totes, and trash bags as well as bedding arranged underneath the massive, dumpstered billboards we used as canopy.

    “Instead, I saw a forest.

    “The night before, the city had done some landscaping around City Hall, and the activists who were occupying full time had gathered branches and other refuse, then lovingly arranged them on, inside, and across the city’s traffic barricades, in and through the tents, poles, and tables.

    “In the shadow of the enormous monument to state power that is Philadelphia City Hall, under a jerry-rigged awning made from the city’s garbage and offcuts, the ‘disposable’ and dispossessed had built a grove, a space of clean air, beauty, safety, and love; they had transformed thirty feet of pavement into a garden for deep sleep. I started to cry. I knew that we could win.

    “Trans anarchic feminism takes the offcuts, prunings, and refuse of this world, and makes a beautiful forest for our flourishing, pleasure, rest, and joy.”

    For more info on the book or to preorder, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    (The sticker in the photo reads, “Nice shit for everybody”)

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  11. The next two pieces in my forthcoming edited anthology “Constellations of Care” (Pluto Press, April 2024) revolve around some of the prefigurative joy embodied in trans “anarcha-feminism in practice.” But to really give you a full sense of the life-giving character of each contribution, I’m sharing longer excerpts—meaning transitioning from one to the other over two posts.

    “Transition and Autonomy” by Scott/Shuli Branson:

    “As anarchists, the way we do things—bottom up, not top down—is about living: how we choose to relate to each other, how we choose love and relationships over individualized endeavor and competition, how we choose to care even when that means working in the cracks and gray areas. It is a crucial form of direct action, just as militant and risky as confronting police, fascists, and other coercive infrastructure in the streets.

    “In the current context, such direct action looks like informal networks of trans communities that get people hormones and take them to clinics, or regional abortion funds and doula collectives that get people abortions either at home or in a clinic. It’s not merely direct action because these groups typically operate within the gray areas of the law, and not simply because the work is in confrontation with the current arms of the state trying to end bodily autonomy for trans people and pregnant people—though these are both good reasons to name it as such. Even more, this care work is direct action because it’s operating outside the structures of the state in a prefigurative manner.

    “With DIY hormones, anyone can transition whenever they want. This means you can experiment. It means you can stop. It means transition can become multiple, plural, and deindividualized. Not only can you access hormones in community with other trans people, but you can find more people and networks to run your questions by, or organize communal shot-taking events with. When trans existence is under such extensive threat, these collective moments of transition are in themselves a direct action against the world that wants to erase us.”

    For more info on the book or to preorder, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    (The sticker in the photo reads, “All trans bodies are beautiful”)

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  12. Likely no anthology on “anarcha-feminism in practice” would be complete without at least one piece on abortion, especially given the fascist landscape these days. Here’s a glimpse at two contributions on self-determined access, as I continue to finish up the proofs for “Constellations of Care” (Pluto Press, April 2024).

    “Collectively Funding Abortion” by Bayla (aka Bay) Ostrach:

    “The feminist abortion clinic administration, a hundred miles or so up the freeway, had shut down the only independent abortion clinic between Northern California and Portland and terminated all of its staff without consulting the medical director. In that first twelve hours, we coalesced into a collective; (now ex) clinic workers, volunteers, and former staff who rushed to be at our sides all organically mobilized together with shared purpose. …

    “While we did not explicitly discuss, to my memory, a guiding political principle on which to found our [new] sexual and reproductive health organization along with the referral network and fund that it would administer, … the ethos and practical processes we used followed the fundamental anarchist feminist ethics of collective care and informed consent. Having ourselves lost not only a key means of income but also social connection, we channeled our frustration as well as our concern for those who would have been our patients into an unprecedented mutual aid project in the region: the Network for Reproductive Options.”

    “Abortion without Borders” by Megan McGee:

    “While those who trust in states and politicians call for legislative measures to protect reproductive freedom, a network of organizations in Europe has taken a more direct approach, effectively demonstrating feminist anarchist ethics by creating an infrastructure of communal care. Like its name makes clear, Abortion without Borders stretches across nation-state lines. …

    “‘For me, this is actually the feminist revolution,’” says Asia.

    “Adrianna maintains that creating networks is critical to this struggle. ‘I think in groups, we have power. You are not fighting alone. Even as an activist, I feel safer and that I have more possibilities when I’m in this network.’”

    For more info on the book or to preorder, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  13. If you’ve been following along in my series—aka, my ritual—of sharing excerpts from every contribution in my next edited anthology as I proof its pages, I’m making a slight departure. Instead of pairing two essays, here’s just one … because silly me, there’s an odd number of stories in “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024), which somehow befits a queer project. And because given the hardness of the current world, it seems a fitting time for …

    “An Experiment in Addressing Intraorganizational Violence” by Benji Hart:

    “What would it actually take to end sexual violence in grassroots social movements? How do we dismantle massive and entrenched institutions while simultaneously confronting the ways that we as individuals have internalized those institutions’ harmful practices? If our movements are only as strong as our communities, how do we build up both in ways that are committed to fighting gender-based violence for the long haul? How do we make concrete commitments to collective care with the understanding that the apparatuses of the state—including war and militarism—are themselves a source of sexual violence and not the answer to it?

    “These were some of the key questions I asked alongside a small group of organizers as we attempted to plot out the policies and procedures around addressing sexual violence for a new configuration, Dissenters. We did so with the intent of imagining new structures to hold our movements—ones created through a feminist anarchist lens—that centered the needs of the most marginalized members of our communities and made fighting sexual violence a high priority instead of an afterthought. …

    “More than any policy or procedure, it is our social relationships that determine our sense of security. It is the nature of our relationships and the commitments we actively foster therein that either maintain cultures of harm or generate structures of safety. … So much of changing [our] internal culture is actually not about promising perfect communities [but] the ways we respond when violence takes place.”

    For more info on the book or to preorder, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  14. The next two contributions to my “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024) anthology could be misread as being *simply* about cooking, relegating women and queers to the proverbial kitchen. Yet they revolve around relationality as the key ingredient in both surviving and thriving.

    “Communitarian Kitchens: Stoking the Flames of Memory and Rebellion” by Vilma Rocío Almendra Quiguanás, translated by @susurros:

    “Our relationship with our territories is woven into the tulpas, the millennia-old fires of encounters, legacies, flavors, and knowledges. … In the uprisings, strikes, revolts, marches, encampments, popular assemblies, blockades, land recuperations, communal congresses, appropriation of factories, roadblocks, and popular tribunals, and on pickets and barricades, fire has always been present. … Communitarian kitchens and fire are a necessary couple. They have been present and vital in feeding the dignified rebellions that denounce and question the state, transnationals, and all the other powers that have always oppressed us. … [They] have sustained struggles against hunger, for land and water, as a life practice and central axis for collective nourishment.”

    “Supporting the Revolution, One Stew at a Time” by Aleh Stankova and Fenya Fischler:

    “The relationships we formed through our organizing were a big part of what allowed us to sustain this group for so long (to our knowledge, we’re the longest-running Food Not Bombs chapter to have ever existed in London!). Centering relationships also meant being clear about the types of networks we wanted to build: reciprocal, horizontal, caring, and supportive. We truly believe that our group survived despite the odds because of the intentionality with which we built up our political practice, aligning with feminist and anarchist values that saw us resisting engrained hierarchies and patriarchal organizing patterns, and how that manifested in the way we looked out for each other. … In short, care (including food), which is so often devalued and gendered, is in fact the invisible fuel that sustains us in the struggle.“

    For more info on the book or to preorder:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  15. These next two pieces in my forthcoming edited anthology “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024) both offer powerful examples of the role of queer performance in already embodying the lives we dream of inhabiting (and both display glitches in their proof pages—proof that our dreamy efforts will always be perfectly imperfect).

    “Remembrance and Subversive Bodies in Motion” by @breeatlast:

    “It was November 23, 2019. The revolt [in Chile] was in full swing, and I remember the ethereal quality of simply existing in public and seeing it unfold around me. It was early afternoon, and as I was already at Plaza Dignidad, I thought I would take a walk around the area [and] encountered a hastily assembled barricade of construction debris. Music surged from a portable amplifier as a pair of masked tango dancers embraced in the middle of the street. The two of them moved as if they were the only couple left on earth, executing their graceful steps without a care for the growing threat from the drivers who tapped their horns in irritation. … Felipe and Manuel, I would later learn, were professional dancers who performed as Zuinger, a duo committed to breaking the gender binary as well as bringing their queer take on traditional dance into public space. .. I snapped photos and thought, ‘I am finally living in the new world we have fought for. In this world, beautiful, unexpected things will be the rule, not the exception.’”

    Shakesqueer Tucson: Performing Anarcho-Feminism” by @wrenawry:

    “Inmn: Queer and anarchist theater can create spaces for people to play around with ideas in physical and somatic ways that they might only ever get to think about. My hope is that by providing these temporary spaces, those moments can persist beyond the performance.

    “Egg: Theater enables us as creators of a project to inhabit different selves, and try on how we could move these hauntings and the possession of ourselves into our everyday life.”

    “Maggie: The more ways that we know how to tell stories, the better, because I think stories are powerful when it comes to pushing ideas into the realm of reality.”

    For more on this book or to preorder it, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    (Queer anarchy sticker by @rayan.forestgreen)

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  16. How sweet to stitch together my piece from my next edited anthology—“Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024)—with the “quilt” made by featuring 14 artists’ images+words!

    Here’s the intro to my essay, which goes on to offer six vignettes:

    “For those on the margins, making do with scraps is common sense.

    “I’ve no idea if that’s what led me, as a preteen and teenager, to take bits of colorful fabric, cut them into triangles and trapezoids and other queered shapes, and stitch them into square patches. The idea was to someday craft enough that I could then sew them together into a patchwork quilt. I made neat, growing stacks of these patches, setting them aside in my closet. Over those years, I had more than enough for many quilts, many times over, but I never started, much less finished, even one.

    “In parallel with this solo activity, yet stretching back as far as I can remember, I was constantly dreaming up and bringing to life all sorts of otherworldly spaces, also pieced together from scraps, but collaboratively with others. …

    “In hindsight, weaving beautiful social fabrics has been a contiguous thread running through my life. I realize now, though, why I never completed a quilt: one shouldn’t have to do it alone; moreover, the insidiousness of how patriarchy socializes us all made me ‘feminize’ and thus devalue my hand-sewn patches as any sort of contribution. It feels metaphorically accurate that I hid them away in a closet, making my own handiwork invisible. I didn’t yet understand that every labor of love can be a small piece of something much bigger, wholly at cross-purposes with the current social order, when we intentionally and collectively suture those parts into a whole. We have all the material we need, right in our scrappy hands.“

    And here’s a shoutout to the artists in “Illustrating Anarcha-Feminism,” some of whose craft is shown here: @addy_rivera, @entangledrootspress, @amanposters, @graficanarno, @anouk_kuona_, @breeatlast, @erre.erre, @feminist_collages_pgh, @kill.joy.land, @nobonzo, @rayan.forestgreen, @pollinator_press_art, @sugarbombingworld, and @zola_mtl (visit their IG pages!).

    For more info on this book or to preorder, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  17. It’s “good medicine” on this ghoulish 100-day marker of genocide in Gaza to get to pair these two essays together. Both speak to health care amid often-murderous situations, including of structural abandonment and/or statist violence; doing so with both a feminist and anarchist ethics; and why that matters if we’re serious about life and well-being.

    So here are two more excerpts from my forthcoming edited anthology “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024).

    “Solidarity Apothecary: Reclaiming Life” by Nicole Rose:

    “For me, anarchist organizing isn’t about just helping prepare people for their trials or time in prison. It’s not just sharing their addresses publicly to generate letters and fundraising to meet their material needs. It is also about expressing care—unlearning machismo, and actually talking about the effects of state violence on our bodies, relationships, and movements. And it’s about recognizing that care and solidarity comes from nonhumans too; that plants can directly support us in surviving this world. … Care is a radical act, and one of our biggest weapons. Collective care points beyond all the structures we fight against while simultaneously already embodying the alternatives we fight and yearn for.“

    “North Star Health Collective: Tending to the Sparks” by Mags Beall and Cory Maria Dack:

    “Fuck the system! I definitely feel and love to participate in that. But I think of the experience of, say, the small march where I was positioned right by Daunte Wright’s mom. The sentencing [for the killer] had just come out, and as we were calling out the names [of Daunte and so many others murdered by police], there was so much fucking grief. As a medic, I was able to be soft in that moment and just feel that grief with Daunte’s mom as people were naming off the names, repeating back who was murdered, who was lynched, and yelling her kid’s name. I’m super grateful we’re all here for such times, because Daunte’s mom needed to be at that modern-day funeral procession” in Minneapolis.

    For more info on this book or to preorder it, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  18. I went for a late evening walk under a winter sky, when the crisp air makes the stars extra visible and thus extra expansive. My next edited anthology “Constellations of Care” (Pluto Press, April 2024) speaks in part to how “anarcha-feminism in practice” does the same for those often excluded from the universe of liberation. Here are two more excerpts as I work my way through proofing the book.

    “Colectiva Mujeres Subversivas: In Solidarity and Friendship” by Lora Galora:

    “Polilla taught us how to use stencils. We threw all of our ideas together. To start, we wanted to demonstrate freedom and autonomy, so we used a drawing of a bicycle to represent that. We wanted to be inclusive for all kinds of women, so we made the bike long with multiple seats to include a woman with a prosthetic leg. There was one person in high heels and another in boots to portray the spectrum of femininity. We also added a child to represent motherhood. The bicycle was shooting flames to represent the internal fire we all carry, and in the flames we’d written ‘Existe Resiste’ (Exist! Resist!).”

    “Pink Peacock: Lavishly Accessible,” Misha Holleb in convo with Alice Ross:

    “We had the desire to be in and provide an accessible space, and the knowledge that disabled people are disproportionately likely to be poor and hungry, and that queers are disproportionately likely to be disabled, and so on. It was just knowing that people need a thing and so we try to make the thing happen. …

    “Money is an access issue, and that’s always been one of the fundamental principles of the café: that it’s free. … And then there are mental and social access needs. Things like you don’t have to look a certain way, or be between eighteen and thirty-four, to be treated with dignity as a queer person, … or know all about gender theory and what your own gender stuff is in order to come talk to us about trans stuff.”

    “There are a lot of examples around neurodivergence too. We decided early to have autism-friendly days—low-sensory days where we wouldn’t play music—but we changed from playing white noise to things that are less harsh like birdsong because of the collective’s feedback.”

    For more on the book or to preorder:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  19. In proofing my way through my next anthology, “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024), while the powers-that-be so uncaringly go about the business-as-usual of genocide, I’m trying hard(er) to listen to the big, little ways that the contributors speak to what it looks like to make feministic space to humanize each other, in a world that sees most of us as disposable.

    In “Tarps and Gossip: Existing as Resisting,”
    @raanibegum notes,

    “I wanted to extract some deeper organizing wisdom gained from our gatherings on a poly tarp in our designated spot in a park. The truth of the matter is, we are just some whores stubbornly carving out something in a space wrecked by unimaginable hostility. As sex workers and drug users, we are not seen as people able to manage ourselves and our lives. Institutional violence deems us as ‘not human,’ and this translates palpably in the ways we are treated. Rather than being stymied by it, it gives our organizing more freedom. … [We are] not goal oriented [but] instead oriented toward friendship and rest. Some of my favorite Nightshade memories are of people coming to nap. Not only do we build relational trust that allows napping to happen, but we model community naps and community rest.”

    In “Brown Girl Rise: How We Take Care of Our Own,” @tlalcihuatlx describes an organizational “emphasis on the fierceness of our love for each other … a militant resistance to the ways that the culture of white supremacy constantly tries to worm its way into our work and relationships. As Dani [in BGR] defines it, ‘Fierce love is loving people authentically and as they show up, and really loving people to the point where you allow them to be their full self around you and make that love a priority over everything else. I think in our work we are constantly dealing with deadlines and having to present to the world in a certain way to make the work that we’re doing seem legitimate. And I think the way that we really fight against that is with fierce love. No deadline matters as much as the needs of people within this collective.’”

    For more on the book or to preorder, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  20. Onward to the next two contributions in my next edited anthology, “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024), as I continue my own ritualistic practice of sharing glimpses of all the pieces as I proof the pages.

    “Tea, Books, and Thresholds” by folks with @biblianarchafeministe:

    “La BAF [Bibliothèque Anarcha-Féministe] aspires to be a threshold and hopefully a door: we want people to come in because of the pretty books and free cookies, stay because they feel comfortable, and come back because they want to share our struggles or support them. We are aware we fail, and will keep failing, at being a door. Books are frightening or at least intimidating to many, and our own ease with being around books could make us seem elitist. But this manner of acting as a door, an open way into the struggle, is constitutive of who we are.”

    “Unsanctioned Sanctuaries: A Cross-Continental Exchange” between Libertie Valance of @firestormcoop and @xela.de.la.x of @casacoatl2515:

    “Movement spaces are a type of feminist direct action. There’s a tendency to gender the work that supports movements. The work of maintaining a space and caring for a community’s physical needs, it’s reproductive work, the work of caring for our radical movements, and a lot of radical men don’t want to do that work, or they do it and then move onto something more prestigious. I guess nobody is writing books about the nineteenth-century anarchists who cleaned the bathrooms in the Paris Commune! Chances are they were women.”

    “We are the squad you’ve been warned about. The cautionary tale for all who struggle for a better world and are actively organizing. To be feminist is to be vigilant about power hierarchies that we may be re-creating in our interpersonal relationships and within our own political analysis even—and so be able to reflect on our own shit and be intentional about destroying those hierarchical leanings within ourselves first. And feminist because for the last five-hundred-plus years on stolen land, we’ve been under patriarchy, particularly of the white, cis, hetero variety, and that shit gotta go.”

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  21. Here begins the journey—after my prologue—through the pages of my next edited anthology, “Constellations of Care: Anarcha-Feminism in Practice” (Pluto Press, April 2024). I hope you’ll join me in this little ritual of mine with forthcoming books: posting excerpts of each and every contribution after I proofread its pages.

    First up, “The Collective as a Crucial Form” by @tahelmeaboutit, @anemone_of.the.state, @amiweintraub3, Leo Williamson-Rea, and @timetravelfanclub:

    “We are not writing this because we think there is something necessarily new about our story; in fact, there is something wonderfully redundant going on here. When we were feeling insurmountably lonely, scared, and hurt, we formed a collective, and as that collective we created many temporary commons, and held each other and learned together and allowed ourselves to be militantly joyful, which sometimes looked like flipping the table of the campus Republicans or screaming in the faces of neofascist men, but more often looked like 2.5-hour meetings in the dead of winter circled around a pot of tea. All of that is worth talking about because we are all still here; in many ways it kept us alive, that collective form, and it kept us believing in a world that is vastly different than this one.”

    Paired with “Our Affinity Is Our Manifesto,” featuring a Mexico City-based feminist-anarchist affinity group in conversation with and translated by @susurros:

    “We are women of all the fires, born in lands full of misery. Our lives are written in the wind, and our struggles, loves, longings, and desires to change this reality live in the sea, in the waves that beat furiously on the rocks that contain them. Our hair is interwoven, and we move forward together, trying to be a support, company, and embrace, despite everything, despite the uncertainty and this overwhelming moment, despite the repression.”

    For more info on this queer+trans anarcha-feminist collection and a peek at its gorgeous cover by @eff_charm, or to preorder it, see:

    plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice

  22. When one creates books as labors of love, as part of a voluntaristic and self-organized anarchist practice that’s both political and personal, the markers of “success” (similar to other anarchist projects) are almost by definition vastly at odds with the world we so desire to transform. Indeed, that world usually denies that we succeed at anything—except perhaps trouble. Yet often it’s hard for us to craft our own alternate measures—and ones that we, ourselves, feel affirm what we most care about based on our own compass.

    Perhaps that’s what prompted me to lean into rituals—of remembrance, resistance, and resilience—as carriers of the ways we prefigure otherworldly “wins” even when it feels there’s nothing but horror all around us. Or in the case of this ritual—sharing glimpses of each chapter of my next edited anthology as I proof the pages—a ceremonial way of easing me into the transition from laboring on a book for years in private to birthing it into published form and letting my baby go—and then experiencing a postpartum slump.

    In the past, this ritual has lent me a certain joy, a certain satisfaction, that all the hours/months/years have coalesced into a whole that makes me and hopefully many others feel a bit more whole in this broken world. But now, trying to forge ahead with my ritual for this next volume, “Constellations of Care,” while genocide rages—well, it feels bittersweet at best.

    Yet I know, and my ritual is reminding me, that collective care, solidarity, and fierce love are everything; they are all we have against the violence of the social order.

    So here begins my “Constellations of Care” ritual—starting with the page proofs for the title page and my prologue. It opens with this moment in Gaza—“the rubble. The bodies. The genocide,” the experience of grief and rage beyond language—demanding from us shared, collective hearts that let the “YES” of our anarcha-feministic practices “speak louder than words, forming unmistakable patterns of different cosmologies, different worlds, life against their death machine.”

    For more info on this @plutopress book or to preorder, see plutobooks.com/9780745349954/c.

    #ConstellationsOfCare
    #AnarchaFeminismInPractice