Black Deaths Matter: #BlackLivesMatter and True Crime Storytelling
Content Warning: murder/extreme violence, anti-Black violence, anti-Black racism
Last summer, Nia Wilson was stabbed and murdered in front of her sister Letifah (also stabbed) at a BART station in San Francisco. At 18 years old, Nia bled out at the station with Letifah by her side. Nia’s is a story of gendered violence, but importantly racialized violence. Nia’s case reminds us that it’s not just the patriarchy that produces toxic masculinity but white supremacy & whiteness that condition that violence, as well.
from @ms.unfathomable
In November of 2017, I wrote a blog post about Feminism in True Crime communities. I explored, on a topical level, how popular true crime spaces have begun centering women and reclaiming narratives of violence. I ended my last blog post with the idea that true crime is ultimately stories about toxic and violent masculinity. Thus, there seems to be some inherent link between the act of sharing true crime stories and feminist resistance. However, as with nearly all corners of feminism in the United States, white women have centered our/their stories and voices above those of others. The salient and pressing question that faces feminists interested in true crime is: where is the potential for feminist community-building in these spaces? And what kind of work will it require to get there?
I posited some broad answers to these big questions at the end of my first blog post. But, I want to circle back specifically to the murders of women of color who often disappear without the attention or care of some supposedly-feminist true crime circles. There is a tendency in true crime spaces to categorize white deaths as tragic and undeserved, yet those of people of color (particularly those of black and indigenous women) as political. I want to explore how the pillars and work of the Black Lives Matter movement can also apply to the narratives perpetuated in true crime communities. Making sure that all stories are given attention, outrage, respect, time, and scrutiny is a necessary (and a very overdue) step towards more feminist true crime communities.
Black Lives Matter’s (BLM) name delivers a concise, unapologetic proclamation. The name--imagined and stated first by Alicia Garza, Opal Tometi, and Patrisse Cullors--was formed in response to the personal and political valorization of white bodies & lives above all others. In particular, the black community in the U.S. has been reminded time and time again that their lives are disposable the U.S. government. BLM’s crucial work sheds light on how black and brown bodies are targeted for death, while white supremacist logic facilitates both the erasure and fetishization of black trauma. BLM responds most often to cases of police brutality against black folks across the States. However, their core principle is affirming the value of black lives while recognizing the pain & injustice of the loss. Not only can this principle be translated to how murder and loss is discussed in dominant true crime circles, but needs to be integrated into frameworks for how feminists understand true crime and the importance of trauma storytelling.
From left to right: Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza, and Opal Tometi. Photo from Politico.