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As I listened intently to Black Girl Podcast while doing chores or whatever it is that I do with the sound of BGP feeding me life in the background, I was given pause by co-host Scottie Beam's question: Are you black or a woman first?


In trying to answer this question for myself and listening to the girls struggle to do so, it finally opened my eyes to why a black feminist movement is imperative to the culture. It's because for a lot of us, our womanhood is primarily attached to our identity as a person of color.

I cannot identify my struggles as a woman without exploring my intersectional place in this world as a black individual, first.

Therefore, a white feminist movement doesn't serve me, given the privilege that allows them to focus on their one role in this world. And although, historically we all have struggled to integrate the f-word (feminist) without the negative connotation that comes with associating your identity with feminism, we've reached a point where that f-word is thrown around almost too loosely. Nonetheless, I'd be lying if I didn't admit that I would like to find my place amongst the feminist forces of women who have come before me.

And although I don't directly identify as a feminist, many of my values are similarly aligned with the goals of the black feminist movement. So, I've made it a point to gain the perspective of all the black women who came before me, those who have helped us make the transition from simply being "strong black women" to black feminist over the course of time.

Those who made way for a movement that we could call our own, and their writing was and is imperative to these efforts.

That said, this prompted me to create a summer reading list filled with the feminist findings of my own people as my starting point. I asked a diverse group of women from various backgrounds the black feminist books I should be reading and these were their recommendations. Click through the gallery below:

“Where We Stand: Class Matters” by Bell Hooks

Many people pinpoint the issues within the black community without so much as a suggestion to help create opportunities for upward mobility for people of color. However, black feminist pioneer Bell Hooks offers a potential means of creating advancement opportunities in our communities in Where We Stand: Class Matters, as she focuses on the significant intersections of class and race. She does so by sharing unique insights gained through her own success and experiences throughout life, including her time in New York but by also wholly reflecting on her past in all capacities--including her childhood in Kentucky.

What are some books on your summer reading list?

 

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