Geographies of race and ethnicity 2: Black Feminist Geographies

This second report on Geographies of Race and Ethnicity considers new developments in Black Feminist Geographies. It considers the spatio-temporal extensiveness of Black Feminist Geographies. It joins calls for more powerfully critical versions of intersectionality in Geography, using in/security as a means of conceptualising forms of negotiative agency. The article then considers the epistemic challenges posed by decolonial Black Feminisms, particularly from African writers. Finally, the article notes that Black Feminist Geographies are a locus for witnessing and honouring the complex humanity of the disproportionately large number of Black people who have died untimely deaths. To survive is a promise.

[1]  F. Oyosoro,et al.  The #EndSARS protest and Black cyberfeminism: a study of the Feminist Coalition and the rise of cyber-feminist ideologies in Nigeria , 2022, Gender, Technology and Development.

[2]  Patricia Noxolo Geographies of race and ethnicity 1: Black geographies , 2022, Progress in Human Geography.

[3]  Caroline Faria,et al.  Sequined Styles, Intersectional Moves: Economic Geography, Let’s Dress Up! , 2022, Economic Geography.

[4]  Amaka Okechukwu Urban Social Hauntings: Disappearing Gravestone Murals in Gentrifying Brooklyn , 2021, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space.

[5]  Colin McFarlane,et al.  Editorial: Geography in the world , 2021, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.

[6]  Danielle M Purifoy The parable of Black places , 2021, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.

[7]  Carrie Chennault Relational Life: Lessons from Black Feminism on Whiteness and Engaging New Food Activism , 2021, Antipode.

[8]  Naya Jones Prologue: Black Dream Geographies , 2021, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.

[9]  Françoise Vergés A Decolonial Feminism , 2021 .

[10]  Archie Davies,et al.  “In Front of the World”: Translating Beatriz Nascimento , 2021 .

[11]  Elizabeth L. Sweet Anti-Blackness/Nativeness and erasure in Mexico: Black feminist geographies and Latin American decolonial dialogues for U.S. urban planning , 2021 .

[12]  A. P. Gumbs In Case You Wanted to Save the Planet , 2020, Transition.

[13]  Lindsey Mantoan,et al.  In The Wake , 2020, Castaway.

[14]  C. Freeman Entrepreneurial Selves , 2020 .

[15]  J. Esson,et al.  Boys are tired! Youth, urban struggles, and retaliatory patriarchy , 2020, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.

[16]  A. Mama ‘We will not be pacified’: From freedom fighters to feminists , 2020 .

[17]  Carolyn Cooper,et al.  Interview with Professor Carolyn Cooper , 2020 .

[18]  Azeezat Johnson Refuting “How the other half lives”: I am a woman’s rights , 2020, Area.

[19]  K. Al-Hindi,et al.  Intersectional geographies and COVID-19 , 2020 .

[20]  Levi Gahman,et al.  Of “madness,” against Babylon: A story of resistance, (mis)representation, and paradox in the Caribbean , 2020 .

[21]  A. Osbourne On a Walking Tour to No Man’s Land: Brokering and Shifting Narratives of Violence in Trench Town, Jamaica , 2020, Space and Culture.

[22]  Camilla Hawthorne Black matters are spatial matters: Black geographies for the twenty‐first century , 2019, Geography Compass.

[23]  Peter Hopkins Social geography I: Intersectionality , 2019 .

[24]  Lioba A. Hirsch In the wake: Interpreting care and global health through Black geographies , 2019, Area.

[25]  J. Nash Black Feminism Reimagined , 2018 .

[26]  Azille Coetzee,et al.  Sexual Difference and Decolonization: Oyĕwùmí and Irigaray in Dialogue about Western Culture , 2018, Hypatia.

[27]  Gabriela T. Richard,et al.  Gendered Play, Racialized Reality: Black Cyberfeminism, Inclusive Communities of Practice, and the Intersections of Learning, Socialization, and Resilience in Online Gaming , 2018, Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies.

[28]  M. Christian,et al.  Transnational intersectionality and domestic work: The production of Ugandan intersectional racialized and gendered domestic worker regimes , 2018 .

[29]  F. Nyamnjoh Incompleteness: Frontier Africa and the Currency of Conviviality , 2017 .

[30]  Hellen Venganai Negotiating identities through the ‘cultural practice’ of labia elongation among urban Shona women and men in contemporary Zimbabwe , 2017 .

[31]  Katherine Mckittrick Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis , 2014 .

[32]  B. Mullings,et al.  Transnational Migration, the State, and Development: Reflecting on the "Diaspora Option" , 2013 .

[33]  S. Wynter,et al.  Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation--An Argument , 2004 .

[34]  C. Mohanty “Under Western Eyes” Revisited: Feminist Solidarity through Anticapitalist Struggles , 2003, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.

[35]  R. Reddock Women's Organizations and Movements in the Commonwealth Caribbean: The Response to Global Economic Crisis in the 1980s , 1998 .

[36]  K. Crenshaw Mapping the margins: intersectionality, identity politics, and violence against women of color , 1991 .

[37]  Patricia Noxolo “My Paper, My Paper”: Reflections on the embodied production of postcolonial geographical responsibility in academic writing , 2009 .