Sometimes rehearsals be like...
‘Where We Stand’
May 1st/2nd
7:30
Miskin Theatre

seen from Switzerland

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Argentina
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Spain

seen from Spain
seen from France

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Yemen
seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from Switzerland
seen from United States
seen from El Salvador
seen from Yemen
Sometimes rehearsals be like...
‘Where We Stand’
May 1st/2nd
7:30
Miskin Theatre
When reflecting on my thoughts when I wrote this, I think of Audre Lorde’s work, The Master’s Tools. I think because the view of feminism was bad or evil, mainstream or lifestyle feminism today has been developed for people to digest and get behind without understanding, recognizing, and addressing the politics and movement behind feminism. And the turn to using the master’s tool of capitalism into feminism, the messages and the work that is getting put into the Women’s Movement, are pushed to the side as extremist.
🎶I’ll stand by you, baby to your darkest hour 🎶 and I’ll never desert you. I’ll stand by you. #wherewestand #standingtogether #birkenstocks #earworm #yourewelcome
Another Favorite Song #FaithEvans #WhereWeStand #Chapter31 💋💋💋 12/9 #BDay
🐠🐠🐠 #otaguro #park #ogikubo #koi #animals #fish #color #us #sneakers #wherewestand #tourist #explore #everyday #tokyo #happy #nature #garden #公園 #魚 #かわいい #大田黒公園 (à 大田黒公園)
we fall 7 times, we stand up 8 times | #wherewestand #cottercrunch
“I wanted to show my family and community of origin that I could go out into the world and be among more privileged class people without assimilating, without losing touch with the ground of my being.”
Bell Hooks
“Some of us from working class backgrounds changed our class status and entered the ranks of class privilege. We understood economic self-sufficiency to be a crucial goal of feminist movement. However, we also believed, a belief now affirmed by experience, that it was possible for us to gain class power without betraying our solidarity toward those without class privilege. One way that we achieved this end was by living simply, sharing our resources, and refusing to engage in hedonistic consumerism and the politics of greed. Our goals were not to become wealthy but to become economically self-sufficient. Our experiences counter the assumption that women could only gain economically by colluding with the existing capitalist patriarchy.”
- Bell Hooks