“As a high school club soccer player, I would enter into a lifestyle full of convoluted social education about what gender, sex, gender roles, and sexual identity all meant.”
Read More“The moment that I try to make sense out of this composition, I become responsible for what I see; there is so much in front of me that everything I name is a choice, even without me realizing.”
Read MoreSaidiya Hartman is one of the most influential Black scholars alive today, who has made pivotal interventions in the historicization of U.S. enslavement… and our February 2020 Feminist to Know in The Provocateur.
Read More“Tuskegee tells us how the Black body figures into medical discourse and medical knowledge, specifically as it props up globalized narratives of American exceptionalism and materially benefits white health.” (Thumbnail image: The New York Times)
Read MoreGreta answers a question about herpes.
Read MoreZitkála-Šá (aka Red Bird) was a prominent Dakota/Yankton Sioux writer, activist, editor, teacher, and musician in the late 19th and early 20th century… and our January 2020 Feminist to Know in The Provocateur.
Read More“Most of Mendieta’s work strikes the viewer as surreal, magical, jarring, out of place. Mendieta creates new worlds in her images rather than attempting to approximate or reflect worlds that already exist.”
Read MoreGreta introduces her new blog series “Allie Has Questions.”
Read MoreSee what we read and chose for the Uterish Book Club corner of The Provocateur each month of 2019!
Read MoreA variety of online resources gathered just for you!
Read MoreAlex and Greta love YA novels, so they enlisted guest writer Michael Waters to help make a list of the best ones.
(image from the Claremont Public Library — the very library that Alex and Michael have visited together in search of YA novels.)
Read More“Navigating true crime as a feminist is a complex experience, but I do it!”
[Thumbnail image from http://operationtubetop.blogspot.com, image quote from My Favorite Murder]
Read MoreLearn more about the prevalence and history of obstetric violence.
[Thumbnail Image by Noa Snir for Quartz]
Read MoreThe United States created a school in Latin America that graduated dictators, authoritarian leaders, and terrorists. Greta begins to answer why.
Read More“The reality is that there’s really just one, maybe two, ways that society expects boobs to look, and that expectation leaves the majority of people with boobs feeling alienated in their bodies.”
Read MoreThe violent history of IUDs you never knew.
Read More“From her position as a queer/bi woman of color, Tommy absorbs, rather than deflects, objectifying discourses and infuses them with her desires until they are entirely her own.”
Read MoreOn Colonialism, Environmental Degradation, and Reproductive Toxicity in the Marshall Islands
Read MoreNow we can play a fun game called “which decade of the 1800s will Brett Kavanaugh propel us back to.”
Read MoreCharlotta Bass was the first Black woman to own a US newspaper publication, but she did more than just that! Read on for another installation in our Heroes series!
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