非洲和泛非精神传统中女性的变革性激进自我护理:神圣的快乐力量、柠檬水自我护理、自爱假期

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE Journal of Women Politics & Policy Pub Date : 2021-01-02 DOI:10.1080/1554477x.2021.1870092
Françoise B. Cromer
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要将激进的自我保健实践探索为解放性的政治抵抗,暴露了一个悖论,即摆脱痛苦不是自由或权利,而是日常实践。这是本文调查的三种激进的自我保健做法的一个特别重要的政治主张:女王母亲Maasht Amm Amen的《欢乐的神圣力量》活动在美国现场直播并亲自举行;Nalokai、Omisade和Julia的柠檬水系列:牙买加珍宝海滩的自我护理和更新静修;以及Oyabunmi在哥斯达黎加多米尼克举办的“爱自己的假日度假”。2018年至2020年间,每一种实践都是由与非洲或泛非精神传统有联系的黑人女性设想、组织和领导的。利用参与者的观察、采访和数字印刷媒体,从这些事件中产生的是受世界观影响的理论和实践,这种世界观反映了对惩罚性公共政策后果的集体精神和政治反应,包括约翰逊的“反贫困战争”和尼克松的“禁毒战争”促成了黑人身体、黑人经历和通过暴力惩罚实施的黑人政治的另类化和征服。因此,这些惩罚性公共政策的执行为其他形式的激进和解放性政治抵抗提供了持久的背景。交叉性作为黑人女性的一种解放性实践,被证明是分析和理解新冠肺炎危机如何暴露种族、健康和经济差异、全球对反黑人种族主义的大规模抵抗、导致警察谋杀手无寸铁的黑人和布朗人的刑事定罪以及激进自我保健事件的兴起的有用方法。黑人女性创造的三种激进的自我保健实践是通过不断发展的战略活动和技术形成的新遗产的例子,这些活动和技术产生了我所说的变革性激进自决。
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Transformative Radical Self-care by Women in African and Pan-African Spiritual Traditions: Divine Power of Joy, Lemonade Self-care, Self-love Holiday
ABSTRACT Exploring radical self-care practices as liberatory political resistance exposes the paradox that freedom from suffering is not free or an entitlement, instead it is a daily practice. This is a particularly important political claim for the three radical self-care practices surveyed in this article: Queen Mother Maasht Amm Amen’s The Divine Power of Joy events live-streamed and held in-person in the United States; Nalokai, Omisade, and Julia’s The Lemonade Series: Self-Care and Renewal Retreat in Treasure Beach, Jamaica; and Oyabunmi’s The Self Love Holiday Retreat in Dominicale, Costa Rica. Each practice was envisioned, organized, and led by Black women linked to African or Pan-African spiritual traditions between 2018 and 2020. Drawing on participant observation, interviews, and digital print media, what emerged from these events are theories and practices influenced by a worldview reflective of a collective spiritual and political response to the afterlives of punitive public policies including Johnson’s “War on Poverty’’ and Nixon’s “War on Drugs’’ which have contributed to the othering and subjugation of Black bodies, Black experiences, and Black politics enforced through violent punishment. The execution of these punitive public policies consequently provides an enduring context for alternative forms of radical and liberatory political resistance. Intersectionality, as a liberatory practice for Black women, proved to be a useful methodology for analyzing and making sense of how the COVID-19 crisis exposed racial, health, and economic disparities, the global mass resistance to anti-Black racism, criminalization resulting in police murders of unarmed Black and Brown people, and the rise of radical self-care events. The three radical self-care practices created by Black women are examples of new legacies being forged through ongoing and evolving strategic activities and techniques that produce what I call transformative radical self-determination.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
9.10%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: The Journal of Women, Politics & Policy explores women and their roles in the political process as well as key policy issues that impact women''s lives. Articles cover a range of tops about political processes from voters to leaders in interest groups and political parties, and office holders in the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government (including the increasingly relevant international bodies such as the European Union and World Trade Organization). They also examine the impact of public policies on women''s lives in areas such as tax and budget issues, poverty reduction and income security, education and employment, care giving, and health and human rights — including violence, safety, and reproductive rights — among many others. This multidisciplinary, international journal presents the work of social scientists — including political scientists, sociologists, economists, and public policy specialists — who study the world through a gendered lens and uncover how gender functions in the political and policy arenas. Throughout, the journal places a special emphasis on the intersection of gender, race/ethnicity, class, and other dimensions of women''s experiences.
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