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Mehndi Nomadic

Fine Arts & Henna Design by Amy Ebrahimian Baumann
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An EXPLORATION OF ART, history, AND culture.

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Mar 27, 2023
Waldmeister & Happy Accidents : A surprising story of henna and German ethnobotany. 
Mar 27, 2023
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Mar 27, 2023
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Jan 27, 2023
Towards Hope & Resilience : A feminist reading list for 2023
Jan 27, 2023
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Jan 27, 2023
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Aug 17, 2022
An Incomplete History of Henna & Why I Still Practice (14 years later)
Aug 17, 2022
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Aug 17, 2022
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Oct 14, 2021
Painting "Perseverance"
Oct 14, 2021
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Oct 14, 2021

Towards Hope & Resilience : A feminist reading list for 2023

January 27, 2023

The beauty of this planet is undeniable and abounding. So, too, is the violence and oppression which increasingly permeates all strata of our current political, legal, and socioeconomic systems. Although there is nothing novel about their existence, the internet and technology have transformed our awareness of each other to the effect that we can see more explicitly the myriad ways this violence and oppression devastates our communities on a local and global scale, the worst of its effects disproportionately experienced by people of intersectional identities not favoured by the dominant systems. 

This fall and winter, the ugly truth of how violence is enacted upon the mind, bodies, and spirits of women, either with direct intention or as a systemic consequence, has rocked me with waves of deep and visceral depression that I’ve never before experienced in my life. I try not to stew in despair, neither do I want to live in a cognitively dissonant state of willful ignorance at the cost of my humanity. I’m stubbornly struggling to build and maintain a level of resilience which allows me to stay informed while working towards a long range goal of transforming conditions for the better.

These days, I’m finding relief, context, and actionable ideas in the wise words of women who have survived and fought against all manner of exploitation and mistreatment. At times poetic and always enlightening, their deconstruction of the larger forces at play and hard-earned strategic insights geared towards dismantling overarching systems of oppression are giving me hope and motivation. I thought I’d share some titles that I’ve been working my way through in the hopes that you, too, find some hope, encouragement, and knowledge within them!

“If we are not afraid to adopt a revolutionary stance - if, indeed, we wish to be radical in our quest for change - then we must get to the root of our oppression. After all, radical simply means “grasping things at the root”. - Angela Davis.  

Against White Feminism : Notes on Disruption, Rafia Zakaria

Headscarves and Hymens: Why the Middle East Needs a Sexual Revolution, Mona Eltahawy

Women, Culture, & Politics, Angela Davis 

We Should All Be Feminists, Chimamanda Ngoni Adichie

Men Explain Things to Me, Rebecca Solnit

Sister Outsider : Essays and Speeches, Audre Lorde

Feminism is For Everybody: Passionate Politics, Bell Hooks

Abolition. Feminism. Now. Angela Davis, Gina Dent, Erica R. Meiners, and Beth E. Richie

Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today’s Feminism by Seal Press

A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf

Daughters of Copper Woman, Anne Cameron

Zami, A New Spelling of My Name, Audre Lorde 

The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath * great imagery, well written, unique perspective, but has some outdated, offensive terminology.

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