Antiracist Feminist Queer Praxis

About this Course

This course explores the shifting, open, and curious questions around “praxis” (the act of theorizing and practicing simultaneously). Our examination will dive into readings that offer a range of antiracist-intersectional-transnational feminist and queer perspectives.

Thematic explorations include– what it means to do “ethical” research; exploring the problematics of ‘doing good’ for ‘others’; unpacking the non-profit industrial complex; examining “critical transnational feminist praxis”; thinking through complex accountabilities; and finally, imagining and working towards solidarities across many faultlines of complicity and privilege.

Below you can find the projects of students who explored the struggle related to a social justice movement either in the U.S. or elsewhere

ReMerge and Women’s Incarceration in Oklahoma: An Analysis of Positionality and Power

by Hayden Floyd and Sophia Blaschke

Power, positionality, and structural inequalities within Oklahoma’s carceral system target Black, Indigenous, and low-income mothers. Through conversations with ReMerge, a diversion program, and Dr. Romarilyn Ralston, we learned how policies, policing, and trauma shape women’s pathways into incarceration. Our goal was to learn from and build solidarity with ReMerge – while also exploring the power and positionalities that are seen in within the program itself.