Chapter Six Chicanas in Movement: Activist and Scholarly Legacies in the Making

2011 ◽  
pp. 192-214
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (5) ◽  
pp. 482-508
Author(s):  
Kimmika Williams-Witherspoon

Following the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and so many others, recent protest in Minneapolis, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Washington, DC, LA, Portland and a host of other locations, both, stateside and abroad are being framed in the public discourse as everything from radical resistance to public madness and everything in between. From the Black Lives Matter movement activist to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion advocates, one of the key components in, both, radical resistance strategies or public expressions of cultural madness, is a ground swelling of rage! But what is rage? How can we recognize it? Historically, what has been the consequences of Black rage? And in this unique, historical moment, what if anything can be done to leverage it? Mining August Wilson’s work for definitions, instances, and consequences of Black rage, this paper interrogates August Wilson’s narratives on rage as a way to talk about the historiography and commodifying of Black rage as a way of victimizing and disposing of Black bodies in America. In this way, we hope to offer suggestions in this historical moment on how to leverage Black rage, rather than to be snared by it.


2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 1241-1254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rhoda Rae Gutierrez ◽  
Pauline Lipman

Author(s):  
Gaurav J. Pathania

With ethnographic data, this chapter demonstrates the everyday life of a movement activist. It highlights how different spaces of the university contribute in changing students’ way of thinking and discusses how a student is inducted, trained, and made part of the movement bandwagon. The university has been evolving over the past five decades of struggle of inside and outside the campus through its students’ activism. This chapter focuses on the inside mechanism of this activism and demonstrates what motives a student to choose the path of activism and how their networks are rooted around Telangana cultural ethos.


Subject A profile of Barcelona’s mayor Ada Colau. Significance Former social movement activist Ada Colau has been Barcelona’s mayor since June 2014. She is the most influential of several radical municipal leaders in Spain engaged in new approaches to the conduct of local politics that are aimed at achieving social and cultural change. Her party, Barcelona in Common (BComu), is in the process of establishing a new left-wing party throughout Catalonia, with the aim of winning the next regional election. Impacts Despite BComu’s radical programme, its coalition with the PSC is likely to remain stable. Colau’s European profile is set to grow thanks to her involvement with the pan-European Democracy in Europe Movement 2025. BComu is likely to push for the introduction of direct mayoral elections in Barcelona, which would benefit Colau.


1970 ◽  
pp. 89-92
Author(s):  
Esther Qamar

Born in 1919, in Argentine; father originally from Bishmizzine, mother Spanish; currently Living in Beirut; recorded at home. Language: Arabic, very elegant andcorrect, no foreign admixture


2012 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 163-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Guard ◽  
D’Arcy Martin ◽  
Laurie McGauley ◽  
Mercedes Steedman ◽  
Jorge Garcia-Orgales

Popular theater has significant, although largely overlooked, potential as a tool for unions to raise members’ political consciousness and strengthen their relationship to the union movement. Activist theater validates workers’ own knowledge, builds workers’ solidarity and self-confidence, and fosters an activist culture. It can also raise gender consciousness within unions. It has particular value for unions attempting to organize precarious workplaces such as call centers, where workers are especially vulnerable and often unfamiliar with unions and union culture. The experience of one group of workers demonstrates how popular theater can be integrated into the labor movement’s repertoire of strategies for building solidarity and revitalizing unions.


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