Hannah Arendt
Articles tagged with Hannah Arendt
Tag Archive
- african culture
- Amadou Diallo
- angolan art
- António Alonso
- António Ole
- ariella aisha azoulay
- arte contemporânea
- artistic movements
- artwork
- Bab Cepta
- Biennial – S. Tomé
- biografia
- biography
- black actor
- Cabo-Verde
- Cacau
- Cartum
- Chris Marker
- chronicle
- colonização
- conclusion
- controversy
- coronavirus
- cotton or oil
- creolo
- crioulo
- cultural memory
- dance show
- Denise Fernandes
- descobrimentos
- descolonization
- développement
- documenta fifteen
- Falcão Nhaga
- Fascist Regimes
- favela
- Felwine Sarr
- feminism
- Fim do Mundo
- fragment
- future
- gender equality
- Gérard Quenum
- Germano de Almeida
- Goli Guerreiro
- heteronormative
- Hip-Hop Tuga
- Hugo Vieira da Silva
- Ilha de Santiago
- israel
- Jacinto Lemos
- Jahmek Contemporary Art
- João de Deus Lopes da Silva
- José Cabral
- Lee-Ann Olwage
- letters from angola
- luso-tropicologia
- Mais um Dia de Vida: Angola 1975
- Mão Morta
- Marielle
- Mário Macilau
- Marsha P. Johnson
- martin Luther king jr
- masks
- Mickey Fonseca
- mozambican artists
- Mwamby Wassaky
- Negritude
- Negro. mulheres
- Nollywood
- Octavia Butler
- Pancho Guedes
- Paulo Kapela
- pensamento
- percepção
- poem
- poland
- police brutaliy
- Power
- Remittances
- representação
- representation
- Romuald Hazoumé
- Routledge
- rural
- Ryszard Kapuscinski
- Sado
- Sérgio Afonso
- Sertões
- silence song
- SOS Racismo
- South Facing
- stage
- Tropicália
- uk drill
- Visual Cultura
- William Shatner e Amílcar Cabral
- World Music
- xhibition of the Portuguese World
- “home languages”
 Audre Lorde asks, “What does it mean when the tools of a racist patriarchy are used to examine the fruits of that same patriarchy?” Lorde’s critique of hierarchies within what is then a predominantly white, middle-class, heteronormative, able-bodied second-wave feminism invites reevaluation of the chalk circles of individual identity that fix structural inequality and prevent viable liberation from taking shape. An existentialism disconnected from dynamic modes of praxis grounded in “the interdependence of mutual (nondominant) differences” fortifies oppression.
				Audre Lorde asks, “What does it mean when the tools of a racist patriarchy are used to examine the fruits of that same patriarchy?” Lorde’s critique of hierarchies within what is then a predominantly white, middle-class, heteronormative, able-bodied second-wave feminism invites reevaluation of the chalk circles of individual identity that fix structural inequality and prevent viable liberation from taking shape. An existentialism disconnected from dynamic modes of praxis grounded in “the interdependence of mutual (nondominant) differences” fortifies oppression.		



