
+ Beyond Story: An Online, Community-Based ManifestoĬitation: Juhasz, Alexandra and Alisa Lebow. + Bad Feminist: EssaysĬitation: Gay, Roxane. “Ally Bill of Responsibilities.” Wet’suwet’en Supporter Toolkit. + Ally Bill of ResponsibilitiesĬitation: Gehl, Lynn. + Allied Media Projects Network PrinciplesĬitation: Allied Media Projects. “Accomplices Not Allies: Abolishing the Ally Industrial Complex.” (Accessed February 4, 2020). non-euclidean-view-california-cold-place-1982/ + Accomplices Not Allies: Abolishing the Ally Industrial Complex

“A Non-Euclidean View of California as a Cold Place to Be (1982).” Fifth Estate 382 (Spring 2010). Link: non-euclidean-view-california-cold-place-1982/Ĭitation: Le Guin, Ursula K. )Accessed Feb, 6, 2020) + A Non-Euclidean View of California as a Cold Place to Be “A Narrative of Resistance.” Troubling the Line: Trans and Genderqueer Poetry and Poetics. Source: Troubling the Line: Trans and Genderqueer Poetry and PoeticsĬitation: Edwards, Kari.2013. “A Manifesto for the Feminist Artist.” The Furies, Lesbian/Feminist Monthly, 1(5): June-July. Source: The Furies, Lesbian/Feminist MonthlyĬitation: Brown, Rita Mae. Link: + A Manifesto for the Feminist Artist

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+ A Manifesto for Feminist Archiving (or Disruption)Īuthor: Digital Women's Archive North (DWAN) “A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, and Socialist Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century.” Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature, New York: Routledge, 149-181. Source: Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of NatureĬitation: Haraway, Donna J. + A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, and Socialist Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century If we’ve missed your favourite manifesto, please let us know through our contact us page. Are they not one way that we yell at each other and demand better from each other? Certainly, manifestos are a way that we imagine and build new worlds and figure out how we want to be together in this world, as we learn from our mistakes. Manifestos are ways that we communicate rage and disappointment, abandonment and neglect by other feminists. They also help us to respond, to refuse, to build our commitments. Manifestos have helped us to come to understand life in the digital era, in the era of big data, and to make connections between earlier structures of power, domination and oppression and liberation, joy, delight, solidarity, desire and pleasure. They are how we confront and resist white supremacy, ableism, transphobia and transmisogny, homophobia, class privilege and resource-hoarding within feminist worlds, and how we speak to others, beyond feminist worlds about these manifestations, practices and structures of oppressive power. Manifestos have been how we push our analysis and action forward, how we challenge each other, how we build our movements, our intellectual, social, artistic, community practices. These are documents oriented to feminist accomplices, as we tweak our ideas, share risk, understand how privilege works to make life easier for white, cis-, settler, monied, educated, non-disabled women and queers than for Indigenous, Trans- Black and Brown, poor, working-class and disabled women and queers.
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Indeed, haven’t manifestos always shaped feminist life? If we think about texts that have fundamentally structured feminist thought and action over that past century or more, aren’t so many of them manifestos of some kind or another-texts and performances that both remind us that we can do better and offer a path, vision, or fantasy about how to do it?Īrguably, manifestos are how feminists talk to each other, clarify our thinking. We think it’s safe to say that feminist praxis in the digital era has been shaped and characterized by manifestos, more perhaps than by any other form. So we offer this playlist, with links where possible, to help us imagine together a new, better world and how to build it. We hope that this Manifesto Playlist helps us to to imagine and fight for another, more just and equitable world to emerge, to be built, even as we see the ways that this pandemic throws into vivid focus the massive injustice and inequality that makes our current world order possible. While many of us are hesitant to “promote” our own work in the time of COVID-19, we believe that this compilation of manifestos might be the kind of collective knowledge that some of us need right now. Cowan with Jas Rault, Patricia Garcia and Tonia Sutherland
