{"title":"We want ourselves alive and debt free!","authors":"J. Littler, Véronica Gago","doi":"10.3898/soun.80.01.2022","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Verónica Gago is Professor of Social Sciences at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina and author of Neoliberalism From Below (Duke 2017); Feminist International: How to Change Everything (Verso 2020); and, with Lucí Cavallero, A Feminist Theory of Debt (Pluto, 2021).\n She is an active member of the grassroots feminist movement Ni Una Menos, founded by a group of artists, activists and academics in Argentina. Ni Una Menos has described itself as a 'collective scream against machista violence'. It has regularly held protests against femicides, and has connected\n femicide to a range of other issues, including sexual harassment, abortion and reproductive rights, transgender and sex worker rights, the gender pay gap, gender roles, neoliberalism and debt. Its first demonstration was organised in the wake of a 14-year old pregnant girl, Chiara Paez, being\n beaten to death by her boyfriend, in Buenos Aires in 2015. This brought together 200,000 people. In 2016 the movement came to wider attention on social media through the hashtag #NiUnaMenos, and protests spread throughout Latin America, particularly in Chile, Uruguay and Peru, where it prompted\n what has been described as the largest demonstration in Peruvian history. In 2016 Ni Una Menos launched a national women's strike. After sustained campaigning, in 2020 abortion became legal in Argentina; and in 2021 a law was passed giving employment rights to travestis and trans people. Its\n campaigns to reclaim rights and resources continue. In this interview, conducted in July 2021, Jo Littler talks to Verónica Gago about Ni Una Menos, her work and activism.","PeriodicalId":45378,"journal":{"name":"SOUNDINGS","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"SOUNDINGS","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3898/soun.80.01.2022","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Verónica Gago is Professor of Social Sciences at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina and author of Neoliberalism From Below (Duke 2017); Feminist International: How to Change Everything (Verso 2020); and, with Lucí Cavallero, A Feminist Theory of Debt (Pluto, 2021).
She is an active member of the grassroots feminist movement Ni Una Menos, founded by a group of artists, activists and academics in Argentina. Ni Una Menos has described itself as a 'collective scream against machista violence'. It has regularly held protests against femicides, and has connected
femicide to a range of other issues, including sexual harassment, abortion and reproductive rights, transgender and sex worker rights, the gender pay gap, gender roles, neoliberalism and debt. Its first demonstration was organised in the wake of a 14-year old pregnant girl, Chiara Paez, being
beaten to death by her boyfriend, in Buenos Aires in 2015. This brought together 200,000 people. In 2016 the movement came to wider attention on social media through the hashtag #NiUnaMenos, and protests spread throughout Latin America, particularly in Chile, Uruguay and Peru, where it prompted
what has been described as the largest demonstration in Peruvian history. In 2016 Ni Una Menos launched a national women's strike. After sustained campaigning, in 2020 abortion became legal in Argentina; and in 2021 a law was passed giving employment rights to travestis and trans people. Its
campaigns to reclaim rights and resources continue. In this interview, conducted in July 2021, Jo Littler talks to Verónica Gago about Ni Una Menos, her work and activism.
Verónica加戈,阿根廷布宜诺斯艾利斯大学社会科学教授,《来自下层的新自由主义》(Duke 2017)一书作者;国际女权主义者:如何改变一切(Verso 2020);与Lucí Cavallero合作,《债务的女权主义理论》(Pluto, 2021)。她是基层女权运动Ni Una Menos的活跃成员,该运动由阿根廷的一群艺术家、活动家和学者创立。Ni Una Menos将自己描述为“反对大男子主义暴力的集体呐喊”。它定期举行反对杀害妇女的抗议活动,并将杀害妇女与一系列其他问题联系起来,包括性骚扰、堕胎和生殖权利、变性和性工作者权利、性别工资差距、性别角色、新自由主义和债务。2015年,一名14岁的怀孕女孩Chiara Paez在布宜诺斯艾利斯被男友殴打致死,随后组织了第一次示威活动。这次集会聚集了20万人。2016年,该运动通过#NiUnaMenos的标签在社交媒体上引起了更广泛的关注,抗议活动蔓延到整个拉丁美洲,特别是在智利、乌拉圭和秘鲁,引发了秘鲁历史上最大规模的示威活动。2016年,Ni Una Menos发起了一场全国妇女罢工。经过持续的努力,2020年堕胎在阿根廷合法化;2021年通过了一项法律,赋予喜剧演员和变性人就业权。它争取权利和资源的运动仍在继续。在2021年7月进行的这次采访中,乔·利特勒与Verónica加戈谈论了Ni Una Menos,她的工作和行动主义。