Why Intersectional Feminism Matters

[Music]

you just gotta switch to microphones

oh this is the right one never mind um

okay so hello how many of you

consider yourselves feminists

all right now how many of you consider

yourselves intersectional feminists

oh okay

um so there’s just one word difference

between these two ideas

yet a world of meaning so feminism

essentially states that men and women

should be equal

and that’s great but unfortunately

however unintentionally there’s also

kind of this idea of inequality between

women

in it because there’s pre-existing

social structures of oppression

which exist in our society creating

inequality along the lines

of race ethnicity ability and sexuality

and class and so unfortunately

when we’re fighting for equality

by just dismantling the patriarchy we’re

not actually

getting rid of all these systems

oppression which means not all women are

equal

take for example um the rallying cry

75 cents on the dollar is not enough

well

this only holds true in the us for one

and even in the u.s

it only holds true for some women wait

women

um for hispanic women it is 54 cents on

the dollar

for black women it is 64 cents on the

dollar and for indigenous women it is 59

cents on the

dollar while globally only 20 to 30

percent of the disabled population is

even employed

and for women with disabilities they are

two times less likely than them with

disabilities to even get a job

um so this is where intersectional

feminism comes in

which essentially states that a woman’s

oppression

is a result of many facets of her

identity

which cannot be separated from each

other as they function

both to create and her oppression

as well as stating

that so in order to liberate women and

create equality for all people

and between women we need to fight to

end all systems of social

oppression um so these are great

academic definitions i love them

but they’re a bit distant from

reality so what i’m going to tell you

today is a story of our history and

that’s the history of eugenics feminism

so one day i was sitting across from

this kid in debate class

and he turned to me and said you know

your life probably would have been a lot

better for you if you were

never born you know because you’re

disabled

and what he said in this one sentence

essentially summed up

the main idea of eugenics which is this

19th century social

movement and pseudo and debunked

pseudoscientific idea

that certain people are inherently more

worthy

because of real or perceived biological

differences

and as a result we should socially

select for the genes that we consider

most desirable um so some of you might

start

to think well doesn’t this mean we can

get rid of genes that

code for deafness or blindness

or being born paralyzed um

one this kind of stems from enables

thinking that people with disabilities

leave these horrible awful lives that we

get rid of our disability in a second

that we cannot meaningfully contribute

to society

news flash not true um

and two who gets to decide whose life is

worthy

and the answer in

around the turn of the century when this

was a really popular movement

was scientists uh predominantly white

male scientists who had

able-bodied scientists to perfect the

pseudoscience

which said that immigrants of color

black people

and indigenous populations and the poor

were those with unworthy genes um and so

had to go

and unfortunately a lot of early

feminists

adopted this thinking in order to

position themselves as citizens

essentially saying give us reproductive

rights and freedom

and we will be responsible citizens with

them we will contribute to the moral

betterment of this world um and it was

feminists like mary stroups the founder

of mis

international in the uk um that is now

an international organization hence its

name

and margaret sanger who founded the

organization which would become planned

parenthood

and i want to specify my talk is not

to dismantle or destroy any of the work

these organizations have done

they are wonderful organizations that

have taken steps to distance themselves

from these women and their original

founding legacy

um however eugenics feminism has played

a part in our world and has

even to this day shapes the struggle for

reproductive freedom especially for

women of color and disabled women

um take for example a 2015 court case

from kenya

in which five women sued the kenyan

government and mis

international claiming that because they

had aids they had been forcibly

sterilized

in government hospitals which mis had

recommended to them with some knowledge

of what happens there

um and it isn’t just these five women a

kenyan activist

wrote a report called robbed of choice

in which she

concluded that this is a systemic issue

across public health facilities and

many women went out to protest this

wearing shirts that said

and the forced sterilization of women

with aids and

my body my womb my rights and you think

in 2015

we should that shouldn’t have had to ben

said yet it did because a multitude of

different

systems of oppression had acted upon

these women to take away from them

their choice over their own body and

reproductive rights

to start with um they contracted hiv

and then become disabled because um

once you a chronic illness is considered

part of the disability community

and so someone had decided

or that these women no longer could have

control over their body or make their

own responsible

choices about their reproductive rights

and so they took them away um this stems

from the idea that people with

disabilities cannot be in control of our

own bodies

at its very least harmful it’s people

who physically move me when i use a cane

or people in wheelchairs it’s doctors

not listening to people with

disabilities and at its most harmful

it is women getting forcibly sterilized

um the second thing is that these women

were poor and they had no other choice

but to go to these hospitals even if

they had an idea of what might happen

and lastly as someone with a uterus you

have a lot more power

over what the future demographics of

this world are going to look like

simply because you have the power to

create another living being

um and so this can be scary to people

who are used to having control over the

world in its population

and while they aren’t the ones carrying

out these unconsensual

sterilizations they are the ones who

have every reason not to put stories

like these on the front pages of

newspapers

and to sweep them under the rug and this

is why we need intersectional feminism

because stories like these are not the

ones being told in

across the media we don’t know that 75

cents

is on the dollar is still a dream for

many women and that disabled women

struggle to get jobs today

and so why don’t we hear about these

stories why aren’t feminists why are we

out in the streets with our pink

hats

telling people that these things are

happening that for sterilization is

still a thing

and it’s because these things do not

happen to

white cis women in wealthy western

countries

and so feminism moves on to different

fights and different struggles

leaving many women behind and when these

issues are

brought up as part of the present rather

than the past

it said oh no that’s an issue for the

disabled community oh no that’s an issue

for the indigenous community

well one we’re stronger we’re far

stronger united than we are divided

and two no because

these are issues facing women and these

struggles are facing them

because they are both women and part of

these communities and you cannot

separate the two

um and so we need intersectional

feminism

so that we can address this we can look

at the multitudes of different ways in

which

systems of oppression affect women and

we can truly end them all

to help all women reach equality and so

before i go i want to leave you with

what you can do to help support

intersectional feminism

the whole theme of tonight theme of

tonight is starting conversations

and that’s exactly what i’m asking you

all to do when you talk

about feminism frame it in a way to

address the multitude of ways

women encounter inequality and equality

and talk about it frame it in an

intersectional

lens additionally know our past

know the past of feminism and know the

past of its leaders the good

the bad and the ugly and finally

when talking with your little siblings

your nieces your nephews and your

cousins about

powerful women from the past tell them

the full truth about these women

and make room for a new set of women

from the past who are equally as

powerful like ida b

wells doria shafik rosa may billinghurst

and audrey lord

in conclusion our world is moving

forward

we are discovering more about our

history every day and the same should

apply to our feminism we need to know

its past so that we can define its

future so that it truly fights

for equity for all women and we frame

and we do this by framing it in an

intersectional lens

thank you and good night

[音乐]

你只需要切换到麦克风

哦,这是正确的,

没关系,好吧,你好,

你们中有多少人现在认为自己是女权主义者,你们中有

多少人认为

自己是跨界女权主义者

哦,好吧,

所以这些之间只有一个词的

区别 两个

想法,一个有意义的世界,所以女权主义从

本质上说,男人和女人

应该是平等的

,这很好,但不幸的

是,无意中也有

这种女性之间不平等的想法,

因为在我们的社会中存在预先存在

的压迫社会结构

社会

在种族、种族能力、性取向

和阶级方面造成不平等,因此不幸的是,

当我们通过废除父权制来争取平等时

,我们

实际上并没有

摆脱所有这些制度

压迫,这意味着并非所有女性都是

平等的 例如

,美元兑美元 75 美分的号召力还不够

好,

这只适用于 一个人的美国

,甚至在美国

,它只对一些女性

适用 虽然全球只有 20% 到 30

% 的残疾人

有就业机会,

而对于残疾女性来说,她们

找到工作的

可能性是残疾

女性的

两倍

是她身份的许多方面的结果,这些方面

不能彼此分开,

因为它们

既可以创造又可以压迫她

,并

指出为了解放妇女并

为所有人

和妇女之间创造平等,我们需要努力争取

结束所有社会压迫制度,

嗯,这些都是很棒的

学术定义,我喜欢它们,

但它们离现实有点远,

所以我今天要告诉你的

是一个故事 我们的历史,

这就是优生女权主义的历史,

所以有一天我

在辩论课上坐在这个孩子对面

,他转向我说你知道

,如果你

从未出生,你的生活可能会好很多,你知道,因为 你是

残疾人

,他在这句话中所说的话

基本上总结

了优生学的主要思想,这是这场

19 世纪的社会

运动和

伪科学的观点

,即某些人

由于真实或感知的生物学

差异

而天生更有价值,并且作为一种 结果,我们应该在社会上

选择我们认为最理想的基因,

所以你们中的一些人可能会

开始思考得很好,这是否意味着我们可以

摆脱

编码耳聋或失明

或天生瘫痪的基因,嗯,

这种茎 让我们

认为残疾人

离开了这些可怕的可怕生活,我们

在一秒钟内摆脱了

我们无法做出有意义贡献的残疾

对社会的

新闻快讯不是真的嗯

和两个谁来决定谁的生活是

值得的

,答案

是在世纪之交,当时这

是一个非常受欢迎的运动

是科学家,呃,主要是白人

男性科学家,他们有

健全的科学家来完善

伪科学

黑人

移民、土著居民和穷人

是那些基因不配的人,所以

不得不离开

,不幸的是,很多早期的

女权主义者都

采用了这种想法,以便将

自己定位为公民,

本质上说给我们生殖

权利 和自由

,我们将与他们一起成为负责任的公民,

我们

将为这个世界的道德

改善做出贡献 成立了

将成为计划生育的组织

,我想说明我的谈话是 n

不是要拆除或破坏

这些组织所做的任何工作,

它们是出色的组织,

它们已采取措施

与这些女性及其最初的

创始遗产保持距离

争取生殖自由的斗争,

尤其

是有色人种妇女和残疾妇女的斗争

嗯,以 2015 年肯尼亚的一个法庭案件为例

,其中五名妇女起诉肯尼亚

政府和国际医疗保健组织,

声称因为

她们患有艾滋病,她们

在政府医院被强制绝育 已经

向他们推荐

了那里发生的事情,

不仅仅是这五名女性,一位

肯尼亚活动家

写了一份名为“被剥夺选择权”的报告

,她在报告中

得出结论,这是

整个公共卫生设施的系统性问题,

许多女性外出 抗议这种

穿着衬衫说的

和强迫

患有艾滋病的妇女和

m的绝育手术 y body my womb my rights and you think

in 2015

we should that would not have been to be be

said but it did because 许多

不同

的压迫制度对

这些女性采取了行动,剥夺

了她们对自己身体的选择权,

生育

权从她们感染艾滋病毒开始

,然后变成残疾,因为嗯,

一旦你慢性病被认为

是残疾社区的一部分

,所以有人决定

或这些妇女不再能够

控制自己的身体或做出

自己负责任的

选择 关于他们的生殖权利

,所以他们把他们带走了,嗯,这

源于这样一种观点,即

残疾人无法控制我们

自己的身体

,至少有害的是

,当我使用拐杖或坐在轮椅上的人时,是人们在身体上移动我

,是医生

不听

残疾人的话,最有害的

是妇女被强制

绝育,第二件事是这些妇女

很穷 他们

别无选择,只能去这些医院,即使

他们知道可能会发生什么

,最后作为一个有子宫的人,你

对这个世界未来的人口统计数据有更多的权力,

因为 你有能力

创造另一个生命,

嗯,所以这对于

那些习惯于控制

世界人口的人来说可能是可怕的

,虽然他们不是

执行这些非自愿

绝育的人,但他们是

拥有一切的人 有理由不把这样的故事

放在

报纸的头版

,把它们扫到地毯下,这

就是为什么我们需要跨界女权主义,

因为像这样的故事

不是通过媒体讲述的,

我们不知道 75

美分

对于许多女性来说,美元仍然是一个梦想

,残疾女性

今天很难找到工作

,所以我们为什么不听听这些

故事为什么不是女权主义者为什么

我们在街上和 o 你的粉红色猫

告诉人们这些事情正在

发生,绝育

仍然是一件事

,这是因为这些事情不会

发生

在富裕的西方

国家的

白人顺式女性身上,所以女权主义继续进行不同的

斗争和不同的斗争,

让许多女性落后, 当这些

问题作为现在而不是过去的一部分提出时,

它说哦不,这是

残疾人社区的问题哦不,这

是土著

社区的问题,我们更强大,我们

比我们更团结 分裂

和两个不,因为

这些是女性面临的问题,这些

斗争正面临着她们,

因为她们都是女性,也是

这些社区的一部分,你不能

将两者分开,

嗯,所以我们需要交叉

女权主义,

这样我们才能解决这个问题,我们可以看看

压迫制度以多种不同方式影响妇女,

我们可以真正结束它们,

以帮助所有妇女实现平等,

等等 我走了,我想告诉

你你能做些什么来帮助支持

交叉女权主义

今晚的整个主题今晚的主题

是开始对话

,这正是我要求

你们所有人在

谈论女权主义时做的事情 解决

女性遇到不平等和平等的多种方式,

并以

交叉的

视角讨论它另外了解我们

的过去了解女权主义的

过去,了解其领导人的过去,

好的坏的和丑陋的,最后

在与你的谈话时 小兄弟姐妹,

你的侄女,你的侄子和你的

堂兄弟,关于

过去强大的女性,告诉他们

关于这些女性的全部真相,

并为过去的新女性腾出空间,她们

与 ida b

wells doria shafik rosa may billinghurst

和 audrey

lord 总而言之,我们的世界正在

向前发展,

我们每天都在发现更多关于我们的

历史,这同样

适用于我们的女权主义,我们需要了解

它的 p ast,这样我们就可以定义它的

未来,以便它真正

为所有女性争取公平,我们构图

,我们通过在交叉镜头中构图来做到这一点,

谢谢你,晚安