Because I am a Woman

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Posts tagged "intersectionality"

roaring-softly:

Hello friends!  My intersectional Rosie the Riveter piece is now available as all SORTS of crap in my Society6 shop, including t-shirts (in an F-ton of colors), hoodies, tote bags, iPhone cases, iPad cases, and PILLOWS.  And you can get free shipping until April 14th if you click here!

SO MUCH WANT. These are beautiful!

(via fem-blog)

femme-swag:

thinkanddiethinking:

HOW TO DEAL WITH BEING CALLED OUT

From the January issue of

THINK AND DIE THINKING

www.thinkanddiethinking.com

YESYESYES.

(via gtfothinspo)

feminishblog:

It takes but a second to replace women’s health with sexual or reproductive health. It’s really that easy… and then you aren’t erasing our trans sisters.

Yes, yes, yes. 

Women with disabilities are twice as likely to experience domestic violence than non-disabled women.
womensaid.org.uk (1995 British Crime Survey, also confirmed by data from other countries)

(via jojoholmes)

Let’s start by pointing out that intersectionality isn’t such a scary word, and gasp, plenty of people who haven’t been university-educated are capable of looking it up and understanding it. Here’s a good definition. It’s not that hard to understand. It’s essentially a useful way of saying that things like sexuality, race, class, religion and ability overlap. For example, a white woman’s experience of sexism may be vastly different from a black woman’s. Has your brain died from exhaustion yet? It’s so condescending to suggest that non-academics just aren’t smart enough to get this.
In clinical psychiatric settings, black women are diagnosed very differently from white counterparts who present with the same symptoms. For instance, black women have considerably higher rates of anxiety disorders than white women. Blacks are diagnosed with higher lifetime rates of simple phobia, social phobia, and agoraphobia. Therapists tend to view African American women as anxious or phobic while perceiving white women who describe similar emotions and behaviors as sad and depressed. Black women are more likely to be described by therapists as hostile and paranoid, and diagnosis for black women is inclined to be more severe than for white women. In these diagnostic differences we see the operation of the social construction of black womanhood that disallows sadness. Therapists are less likely to perceive a black woman as sad; instead, they see her as angry or anxious.

Melissa Harris-Perry Sister Citizen; Shame, Stereotypes and Black Women in America (via brashblacknonbeliever)

shit like this is why social justice is necessary in medicine and health

(via eddiesuave)

as if the mental health system wasn’t fucked up enough.

(via sexxxisbeautiful)

(via sexxxisbeautiful)

typeless:

entropyforever:

Feminism is worthless without intersectionality and inclusion.

fyi

I’ve posted this before, but it needs to be repeated. 

(via getouttaqueer)