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Fire Dreams: Making Black Feminist Liberation the South
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Fire Dreams: Making Black Feminist Liberation the South in Franklin, TN
Current price: $29.95

Barnes and Noble
Fire Dreams: Making Black Feminist Liberation the South in Franklin, TN
Current price: $29.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
For thirtyfive years, the New Orleansbased Black feminist collective Women With A Vision (WWAV) has fought for the liberation of their communities through reproductive justice, harm reduction, abolition feminism, racial justice, and sex workers' rights. In 2012, shortly after one of WWAV's biggest organizing victories, arsonists firebombed and destroyed their headquarters.
Fire Dreams
is an innovative collaboration between WWAV and Laura McTighe, who work in community to build a social movement ethnography of the organization’s postarson rebirth. Rooting WWAV in the geography of the South and the living history of generations of Black feminist thinkers, McTighe and WWAV weave together stories from their founders’ pioneering work during the Black HIV/AIDS crisis in the 1980s and their groundbreaking organizing to end criminalization in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrinawith other movements for liberation as accomplices. Together, the authors refuse the logics of racial capitalism and share WWAV’s own worldbuilding knowledges, as well as their methods for living these Black feminist futures now.
is a vital toolkit for grassroots organizers, activistscholars, and all those who dream to make the world otherwise.
Fire Dreams
is an innovative collaboration between WWAV and Laura McTighe, who work in community to build a social movement ethnography of the organization’s postarson rebirth. Rooting WWAV in the geography of the South and the living history of generations of Black feminist thinkers, McTighe and WWAV weave together stories from their founders’ pioneering work during the Black HIV/AIDS crisis in the 1980s and their groundbreaking organizing to end criminalization in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrinawith other movements for liberation as accomplices. Together, the authors refuse the logics of racial capitalism and share WWAV’s own worldbuilding knowledges, as well as their methods for living these Black feminist futures now.
is a vital toolkit for grassroots organizers, activistscholars, and all those who dream to make the world otherwise.
For thirtyfive years, the New Orleansbased Black feminist collective Women With A Vision (WWAV) has fought for the liberation of their communities through reproductive justice, harm reduction, abolition feminism, racial justice, and sex workers' rights. In 2012, shortly after one of WWAV's biggest organizing victories, arsonists firebombed and destroyed their headquarters.
Fire Dreams
is an innovative collaboration between WWAV and Laura McTighe, who work in community to build a social movement ethnography of the organization’s postarson rebirth. Rooting WWAV in the geography of the South and the living history of generations of Black feminist thinkers, McTighe and WWAV weave together stories from their founders’ pioneering work during the Black HIV/AIDS crisis in the 1980s and their groundbreaking organizing to end criminalization in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrinawith other movements for liberation as accomplices. Together, the authors refuse the logics of racial capitalism and share WWAV’s own worldbuilding knowledges, as well as their methods for living these Black feminist futures now.
is a vital toolkit for grassroots organizers, activistscholars, and all those who dream to make the world otherwise.
Fire Dreams
is an innovative collaboration between WWAV and Laura McTighe, who work in community to build a social movement ethnography of the organization’s postarson rebirth. Rooting WWAV in the geography of the South and the living history of generations of Black feminist thinkers, McTighe and WWAV weave together stories from their founders’ pioneering work during the Black HIV/AIDS crisis in the 1980s and their groundbreaking organizing to end criminalization in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrinawith other movements for liberation as accomplices. Together, the authors refuse the logics of racial capitalism and share WWAV’s own worldbuilding knowledges, as well as their methods for living these Black feminist futures now.
is a vital toolkit for grassroots organizers, activistscholars, and all those who dream to make the world otherwise.
















