9/7/24

Part Two: Is There (Really) A Black Feminist Movement?

In this second installment, I explore a pressing question: Is there truly a Black feminist movement — and if so, who is it for?

Drawing from diasporic political frameworks, Black feminist thought, and lived Black trans experience, this reflection examines the tensions between theory and practice, inclusion and erasure, movement-building and gatekeeping.

This talk considers:

• The historical foundations of Black feminist organizing
• Diasporic Black political identity beyond U.S. borders
• The role of Black trans women within feminist spaces
• How liberation movements can unintentionally replicate harm
• What accountability, expansion, and solidarity could look like moving forward

This is not a dismissal of Black feminist legacy. It is an invitation into deeper honesty.

As a Black trans woman rooted in Caribbean lineage, faith, and community organizing, I approach this conversation from both reverence and critique — honoring the labor that brought us here while asking necessary questions about who remains on the margins.

If we are serious about collective freedom, we must be willing to confront complexity.

Watch Part I for additional context.

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