“This collection will be an instant classic in feminist and queer of color critique.”
—Sarah Haley, author of No Mercy Here: Gender, Punishment, and the Making of Jim Crow Modernity
“This beautiful two volume collection of essays, poems, and artwork brings a refreshing vibrancy to the radical work of Abolition Feminism. Inspiring, accessible and far-reaching, the books are precisely what is needed right now; clear demands for radical change, reflections on the power of radical organizing, and radical statements of hope.” —Beth E. Richie, co-author of Abolition. Feminism. Now.
“Brimming with dispatches across borders and prison walls, archives of movement building, and striking creative work, Abolition Feminisms describes a breathtaking body of freedom practices. Anyone who engages this two volume collection is guaranteed to learn something new.”
—Mariame Kaba, author of We Do This ‘Til We Free Us
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On Abolition Feminisms Volumes 1 and 2:
“This essential two-volume collection maps the shared roots between abolitionist life-making and feminist resistance, showing us how rebellious organizing and radical care is always at the heart of real change. Brimming with dispatches across borders and prison walls, archives of movement building, and striking creative work, Abolition Feminisms describes a breathtaking body of freedom practices, galvanizing us to do everything we can to help forge the liberatory future that we urgently need. Anyone who engages this collection is guaranteed to learn something new.” —Mariame Kaba, author of We Do This ‘Til We Free Us
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“This beautiful two volume collection of essays, poems, and artwork brings a refreshing vibrancy to the radical work of Abolition Feminism. Inspiring, accessible and far-reaching, the books are precisely what is needed right now; clear demands for radical change, reflections on the power of radical organizing, and radical statements of hope. Readers will be lifted up as they turn the pages, where each entry is a reminder of how abolition feminism is critical to freedom struggles, and our movement will therefore be challenged and changed.”
—Beth E. Richie, co-author of Abolition. Feminism. Now.
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As inspiring as it is edifying, this phenomenal collection – Abolition Feminisms, Volume 2: Feminist Ruptures Against the Carceral State – offers us a broad range of ideas, images, provocations, and organizing approaches enabled by developing theories and practices associated with abolition feminisms. Thanks to the thoroughgoing familiarity of the editors with the grassroots efforts that constitute the groundwork of abolition feminism, we are offered important tools that help us to recognize punitive logics within and beyond conventional carceral contexts and support us as we struggle for a world of mutual care, transformative justice and freedom.
—Angela Y. Davis, author of Freedom is a Constant Struggle
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“Contrary to popular belief, revolutions don’t come with handbooks or blueprints. They do carry histories, memories, manifestos, maps, moments of clarity and deep contradictions, dreams, principles, and real people who endure the oppressions they are seeking to overturn. This extraordinary collective of activists, artists, and scholars understand that this is what revolutions are made of, and that through study and struggle we see Abolition feminism not as a variant or a tendency within some larger liberatory movement but the revolution we need to genuinely overturn things.”
—Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination
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“Abolition Feminisms: Organizing, Survival & Transformative Practice upend feminism’s relegation to an afterthought or appendage of abolition and urges us toward social arrangements defined by caring collectively. Perhaps one of the most exquisite volumes on abolition feminism to date, this gathering of essays, dispatches, art, and poetry features a constellation of vibrant theorists including those who have been criminalized and imprisoned.
Abolition Feminisms offers original insights into the everyday terror and annihilating deprivation facing people inside women’s prisons, the work of imprisoned people to challenge gender and sexual oppression, the structuring role of gender violence to the logic and technologies of the carceral state, the nexus of imperial and domestic modes of repression, the carceral production of gender and sexual normativity, settler colonial and antiblack carceral violence and more. Bierria, Caruthers, and Lober effectively establish abolition’s feminist provenance in an utterly brilliant account of abolition feminism’s decolonial heart, intimate practice, and radical momentum. This collection will be an instant classic in feminist and queer of color critique.”
—Sarah Haley, author of No Mercy Here: Gender, Punishment, and the Making of Jim Crow Modernity
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“The creative, political, intellectual interventions in this book, with their deeply intersectional locations of study and methods of analysis, fuel our ongoing work to understand what we are taking apart and to tear it down fully, once and for all. These articles, poems, and images also provide the warm, inviting entry points we need to imagine how bold, risky, ordinary work done by brave, ordinary people is the only path for building a world in which it is impossible for anyone to put anyone in a cage.”