As we continue to navigate the ongoing polycrisis, we are launching a new call for submissions, “Liberation Poetics: Caribbean Feminisms Against Imperialism, from Cuba to Palestine”
❗️Submit here: https://t.co/BHlF08JLZd
‼️DEADLINE: JUNE 1, 2026
We return to you today to continue our call for submissions — “Liberation Poetics: Caribbean Feminisms Against Imperialism, from Haiti to Sudan” ✊🏾❤️🇭🇹🇸🇩
❗️Submit a piece here: https://t.co/BHlF08JLZd
‼️ DEADLINE: JUNE 1, 2026
We return to you today to continue our call for submissions — “Liberation Poetics: Caribbean Feminisms Against Imperialism, from Haiti to Sudan” ✊🏾❤️🇭🇹🇸🇩
❗️Submit a piece here: https://t.co/BHlF08JLZd
‼️ DEADLINE: JUNE 1, 2026
How should Caribbean feminist collectives situate themselves in this moment of polycrisis? This is one of several angles you can take as you craft your submission 💭
As we continue to navigate the ongoing polycrisis, we are launching a new call for submissions, “Liberation Poetics: Caribbean Feminisms Against Imperialism, from Cuba to Palestine”
❗️Submit here: https://t.co/BHlF08JLZd
‼️DEADLINE: JUNE 1, 2026
Today, we’re sharing excerpts from another 2010 essay by Andaiye in “The Point is to Change the World” — titled, “Housewives and other Carers in the Guyanese Resistance of the Late 1970s and Early 1980s: Looking Back” 🇬🇾✊🏾🧵
The small victories they have won encourage them, as does their relationship with women struggling and sometimes winning in Haiti, Venezuela, Chhattisgarh in India; Uganda, indigenous communities in Latin America; Ireland, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Spain.
We’re thrilled to continue our Caribbean Feminist Teach-in series with its seventh instalment — “Post-Indenture Feminist Politics and Indigenous Solidarity,” a session led by Dr. Gabrielle Hosein (IG: grrlscene)!!
🌿 Register here: https://t.co/nM9KbMfN8q