Tanty feminisms

Ryan Persadie
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Abstract

A geneaology of Caribbean feminism is a geneaology of tanty feminisms. Occupying numerous articulations throughout the history of the Caribbean region and its diasporas, the figure of the ‘tanty’, or ‘aunty’ as they are known in non-Caribbean contexts, and the consequential amital social relations they produce have been indispensable to contemporary discourses and practices of Caribbean feminist thought and praxis. The tanty cannot be read as indebted to a singular person, figure or monolithic legacy but operates as a fluid and transnational force of Caribbean feminist knowing that instructs us through non-normative embodied transgressions, and pedagogies of free up. Yet, despite their presence of vital integrity to Caribbean popular culture, community organizing, history, politics and literature, discussions of the politics and pedagogies of tantyhood remain underrepresented in scholarly Caribbean feminist literatures. In this article, I reflect upon my creative practice as a drag artist and self-proclaimed tanty in an annual digital photography series I have produced over the last three years entitled ‘Coolieween’. In this work, I reference Indo-/Caribbean folklore and mythologies, and stories of horror, the grotesque and the paranormal as entangled with queer affects, embodiments and aesthetics. Drag artistry, which, like tantyhood, agitates the invisible boundaries of neo-colonial gender, racial and sexual binaries, provides a critical feminist terrain to metaphorize the institutional crossings of pain and pleasure held within historical and contemporary ontologies of Indo-Caribbeanness. Investigating the pedagogy of this crossing is central to understanding, as well as critiquing, long-standing attachments of pain, injury, pathologization and trauma that have been commonly scripted to Indo-Caribbean subjectivities, often in reference to genealogies of kala pani poetics and other diaspora narratives that have sutured ideas of Indo-Caribbeanness as always-already broken, fragmented and dislocated. In this article, I instead centre paradigms of erotics and pleasure as a transformative medium to turn our optics towards transformative reconfigurations of Indo-Caribbean feminist selfhoods. As I argue here, by thinking with and through tanty feminisms, we are provided with intergenerational and transnational languages of unsettling logic that continually instruct us through everyday modalities of Indo-Caribbean feminist living and being.
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Tanty feminisms
加勒比女性主义的家谱是一个小女性主义的家谱。在加勒比地区及其散居者的历史中,“坦蒂”或“阿姨”的形象在非加勒比环境中被称为“阿姨”,他们所产生的重要社会关系对于加勒比女性主义思想和实践的当代话语和实践是不可或缺的。我们不能把它解读为对某个人、人物或单一遗产的感激,而是作为一股流动的、跨国的加勒比女权主义力量,通过非规范的具体化的越轨行为和自由的教学方法来指导我们。然而,尽管它们在加勒比流行文化、社区组织、历史、政治和文学中具有至关重要的完整性,但在加勒比女权主义学术文献中,关于佃农身份的政治和教学法的讨论仍然缺乏代表性。在这篇文章中,我回顾了我作为一名变装艺术家的创作实践,并在过去三年里制作了一个名为“Coolieween”的年度数码摄影系列。在这部作品中,我参考了印度/加勒比地区的民间传说和神话,以及恐怖、怪诞和超自然的故事,这些故事与奇怪的情感、体现和美学纠缠在一起。变装艺术,就像偷衣一样,激起了新殖民主义性别、种族和性别二元对立的无形界限,提供了一个批判性的女权主义领域,来隐喻印度-加勒比人的历史和当代本体论中存在的痛苦与快乐的制度性交叉。调查这种交叉的教学方法是理解和批判的核心,长期以来,痛苦、伤害、病理和创伤的依恋通常被描述为印度-加勒比人的主体性,通常参考卡拉帕尼诗学的谱系和其他散去的叙述,这些叙述缝合了印度-加勒比人的观念,因为它们总是已经破碎、碎片化和错位。在这篇文章中,我把色情和快乐的范式作为一种变革媒介,将我们的视野转向印度-加勒比女性主义自我的变革重新配置。正如我在这里所说的那样,通过小小女权主义的思考,我们获得了令人不安的逻辑的代际和跨国语言,这些语言不断地通过印度-加勒比女权主义者的生活和存在的日常模式指导我们。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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