Feminisms

Feminisms

over and over again

Roma – Cagne sciolte | 2014 | 0'21" | iPhone
Carte du pays de Tendre  
M.me de Scudéry 1654
Giuliana Bruno, Atlas of Emotion Verso books 2018 |
São Paulo – Consolaçao students 2 | 2006 | 1'08'' | mini DV
São Paulo – Consolaçao students 3 | 2006 | 1'22'' | MiniDv

Geography as a room of one’s own

Giuliana Bruno, Atlas of Emotion Verso books 2018 | p.209

An Intimate Map

Giuliana Bruno, Atlas of Emotion Verso books 2018 | p.225

Fashioning G Gender and Geography

Giuliana Bruno, Atlas of Emotion Verso books 2018 | p.210

Introduction: Why Commons?

At least since the Zapatistas took over the Zócalo in San Cristobal de las Casas on December 31, 1993 to protest legislation dissolving the ejidal lands of Mexico, the concept of ‘the commons’ has been gaining popularity among the radical left internationally and in the U.S., appearing as a basis for convergence among anarchists, Marxists, socialists, ecologists, and ecofeminists.(…) The new enclosures’ have also made visible a world of communal properties and relations that many had believed to be extinct or had not valued until threatened with privatization.

(…) In this context the idea of the common/s has offered a logical and historical alternative to both the state and the private property and the state and the market, enabling us to reject the fiction that they are mutually exclusive and exhaustive of our political possibilities.

from Feminism and the Politics of the Commons in an Era of Primitive Accumulation
Silvia Federici, Re-Enchanting the World. Feminisms and the Politics of the Commons 2019 | p.102

One factor that encourages women’s role as custodians of the land and communal wealth is their greater role in preserving and transmitting traditional knowledge. As tejedoras de memoria, weavers of memory, as Mexican theorist/activist Mina Navarro puts it, they form an important instrument of resistance, because the knowledge they sustain and share produces a stronger collective identity and cohesion in the face of dispossession* The participation in the new movements of indigenous women, who bring with them a vision of the future shaped by a connection with the past and a strong sense of the continuity between human being and nature, is crucial in this context. With the reference to the ‘cosmovision’ that typify indigenous cultures in Latin America some feminists have coined the term ‘communitarian feminism’, where the concept of the commons is understood to express a specific conception of space, time, life, and the human body.

*Mina Navarro, Luchas por lo común:Antagonismo social contra el despojo capitalista de los bienes naturales en Mexico (Puebla:Bajo Tierra Ediciones, 2015), 248-264.

from Women’s Struggles for Land and the Common Good in Latin America
Silvia Federici, Re-Enchanting the World. Feminisms and the Politics of the Commons 2019 | p.139,140

A further sign of rising feminist consciousness is the emergence of a new critical stance among indigenous women who are questioning the patriarchal structures that govern their communities, especially the transmission of land, which often occurs in a patrilineal fashion. This differential inclusion has major consequences, as Gladys Tzul Tzul, an indigenous scholar/activist from Totonicapán area of Guatemala, points out, as it affects “the registration of the family’s property, the guardianship pf the children, and the symbolic meaning of having children outside of marriage”

from Women’s Struggles for Land and the Common Good in Latin America
Silvia Federici, Re-Enchanting the World. Feminisms and the Politics of the Commons 2019 | p.138