Full metadata
Title
Practicing Freedom: An Auto-ethnographic Account of a Liberation Praxis
Description
Black Americans and Black folks across the globe continue to proclaim variousunfreedoms we experience specifically due to our Blackness. As we struggle against and
survive through the unfair structures, ways of being, and conditions that are killing us, we
have been creating new survival strategies for living. One of our primary arguments is
that state entities and the anti-Black carcerality embedded in them (e.g., policing, prisons,
hospitals, welfare systems, military, the foster care system educational institutions etc.)
are the primary arbitrators weaponizing violence, injustice, and unfreedom in our lives.
Since the Black Lives Matter uprising in 2013 due to the murder of Trayvon Martin,
leading up to the largest global uprising in 2020 due to the murder of George Floyd, and
the ongoing activism around anti-Black police violence, we who are organizers and
activists have found ourselves seeking out alternative ways to be principled in our
struggles for abolition, transformative justice, and Black liberation. A part of being in
principled struggle is building a praxis (when theory meets practice) of how to conduct
oneself in community with others, and with the state in a way that is aligned with stated
values and beliefs. Much of the organizing work geared towards eradicating anti-Black
violence pulls from the theoretical and practiced interventions of the Black radical
tradition, Black feminist thought, and abolitionism(s) to inform their praxis. This
dissertation will seek out a Black radical queer feminist praxis by conducting an auto-
ethnography using critical art-based Black feminist-womanist storytelling to measure
data collected from my lived experiences as an organizer and activist to uplift the
liberation strategies of an era.
Date Created
2024
Contributors
- Araya, Miriam (Author)
- Anderson, Lisa (Thesis advisor)
- Duarte, Marisa (Committee member)
- Alhassan, Shamara (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
161 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.2.N.193501
Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
Note
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2024
Field of study: Justice Studies
System Created
- 2024-05-02 01:50:57
System Modified
- 2024-05-02 01:51:04
- 6 months 1 week ago
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