Womankind

Black feminism is for everybody

I came to black feminism through my mother Vernell Cherry. Vernell was born in 1954 and would six years later become a foster child due to her single-mother’s death. Though she would grow up to be a mother of two girls, a grandmother, an active church member, and a community organiser, her life was lived as a black, physically-disabled, working-class woman. I knew by observation and through conversations with her that her experiences with discrimination, for example, were unique - different from her girlfriends’ and different from my own. But I also saw, through her life, a reclamation of her humanity and a certain consciousness that she exercised through constant struggle - whether by political activism or providing shelter in her home to black women who had recently become homeless. Though I

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Womankind

Womankind7 min read
Eyes Open
Please tell us a little about your experience shooting the women for the series RIPE. How did you find these women? And what was the experience like photographing them? I had observed that strong and confident older women were largely underrepresent
Womankind6 min read
My Journey To Bliss
Until I embraced yoga, my education centred on cultivating my mind. If salvation was ever to come, it would come from the knowledge that I was building up there. It never dawned on me that some of the questions that made me most curious might find th
Womankind4 min read
The Creative Path
In life, we think we know what it is we wish to pursue and why, and off we go in that direction. But alongside this major goal in life there can also exist quiet loves or joys that trail behind us like a smitten lover. Leimomi Oakes wanted a job that

Related Books & Audiobooks