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引用次数: 4
摘要
1979年1月至5月间,12名处境相似的黑人妇女在马萨诸塞州的波士顿被谋杀。就在这篇后来成为权威女权主义声明的两年后,Combahee River Collective (CRC)与其他基层组织和当地社区成员一起,围绕这一系列死亡事件展开了动员。儿童权利委员会在这场危机中最重要的干预是制作和分发了一本小册子,最初的标题是“六个黑人妇女:她们为什么会死?”这句话的目的是:(1)帮助受影响地区的妇女知道如何更好地保护自己;(2)指出导致这些妇女死亡的原因,以及该市后来未能以任何有意义的方式承认或应对她们的死亡;(3)证明黑人妇女生命的价值。自1979年以来,针对黑人妇女的连环谋杀案一直有增无减,本文以波士顿谋杀案为契机,讨论了儿童权利委员会的写作和行动主义是如何使黑死病系列化的理论化的,这在围绕连环谋杀案的学术研究中有意义地扩展了。
Why Did They Die? On Combahee and the Serialization of Black Death
Between January and May of 1979, twelve similarly situated black women were murdered in Boston, Massachusetts. Just two years past the writing of what would become their canonical feminist statement, the Combahee River Collective (CRC) mobilized around the series of deaths along with other grassroots organizations and members of the local community. The CRC’s most significant intervention in that crisis was the creation and circulation of a pamphlet that was initially titled, “Six Black Women: Why Did They Die?” that was meant to (1) help women within the affected area know how to better protect themselves, (2) name the conditions that had produced the women’s deaths and the city’s subsequent failure to acknowledge or contend with their deaths in any meaningful way, and (3) evince the value of black women’s lives. The serial murders of black women have continued on unabated since 1979, and this article uses the occasion of the Boston murders to discuss how the CRC’s writing and activism enable a theorization of the serialization of black death that expands meaningfully on the scholarship around serial murder.