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Please check us out on our new site, http://microaggressions.com!

HI! Could you please follow us and help us get the word out about our tumblr? API Collegiate Press is a collaboration between API presses from UC Berkeley, UCLA, Duke, NYU, and USC. We love your tumblr, and we hope you like ours! :]

apicp

Check out apicp.tumblr.com! (Some of our editors were also involved with a college API blog. Much love!)

The blog will be offline this weekend during our transition to a new site!

See you on the other side!

What settler colonialism does is that it sets a ceiling on what the future can be such that we cannot even imagine a future without genocide. This tendency then leaves us to develop critical visions only within the constraints of the possible and then infects all the work that we do.

For instance if we look at the Academic Industrial Complex. We whine and complain about how racist it is. As if the only problem is a few racist administrators who need to be fired. And if we just convince them how great Ethnic Studies is, they’d just give us more money. But if we were actually to imagine a liberatory educational system would this be it? Professors, do we say, “Tenure was the most fun thing I’ve ever done, I wish I could do it again”? Do students say, “You know, I love it when I work really hard for my finals and then get a bad grade anyway, how empowering was that”? We don’t even try to imagine building an alternative to the Academic Industrial Complex. We act as if the problem is that there is racism in the academy, not that the academy is structured by racism. And here’s where we can learn from the Prison Industrial Complex. Is not that the organizing against the Prison Industrial Complex puts forth a model of abolition that doesn’t just say that it’s about tearing down prison walls now but it’s about building alternatives that squeeze out the current system. Similarly, while we might have day jobs in the academic system, why can’t we start building alternatives to this system, build the educational system that we would actually like to see that could then squeeze out the current system as it develops. So, for instance, when Arizona says something like they’re going to ban Ethnic Studies, we think, “Oh no, there’s not going to be Ethnic Studies because the State says so!” We presume the state owns Ethnic Studies and it actually can ban it. We don’t say, “Uh, whatever, Arizona! Ethnic Studies is not a gift from the Academic Industrial Complex or from the state. It’s a product of social movements for social justice, and as long as they exist there will be Ethnic Studies wherever and whenever we go.” And did we ever really think Ethnic Studies was going to be legitimate in a white supremacist and settler colonialist academy? And if ever did become legitimate, we would know we had failed in our task.

Andrea Smith plenary talk at Critical Ethnic Studies and the Future of Genocide, Thursday, March 10, 2011 (via zombifuntime)

some definitions from psychology… discuss!

esprit-follet:

Microassaults: Conscious and intentional actions or slurs, such as using racial epithets, displaying swastikas or deliberately serving a white person before a person of color in a restaurant.

Microinsults: Verbal and nonverbal communications that subtly convey rudeness and insensitivity and demean a person’s racial heritage or identity. An example is an employee who asks a colleague of color how she got her job, implying she may have landed it through an affirmative action or quota system.

Microinvalidations: Communications that subtly exclude, negate or nullify the thoughts, feelings or experiential reality of a person of color. For instance, white people often ask Asian-Americans where they were born, conveying the message that they are perpetual foreigners in their own land.

via racismfreeontario & apa.org

(via fascinasians)

Click through for more in-depth analysis.

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Dear readers,

We’re days away from unveiling a new site - with additional content, resources and ways to interact with the project. However, this means that our costs for hosting and content management will go up as well. Please consider donating to our project! We hope to bring you social justice love throughout the new year and beyond. :)

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Love, Microaggressions

Awkward Privilege, by Michael Cuauhtémoc Martínez

Host/attend a meetup for Rebuild the Dream


MLK Day weekend is coming up! Please consider commemorating the weekend by hosting or attending a meetup for Rebuild the Dream, in conjunction with the American Dream Movement. It’s easy! You can find resources for your event here, including a discussion guide written by one of very own editors!

Awkward Privilege, by Michael Cuauhtémoc Martínez

Contribute Your Visual Art to Microaggressions

One’s experience of a microaggression isn’t always best communicated through words.  Thus, we would like to incorporate visual arts into the Microaggressions Project.  We invite you to contribute artwork inspired by a personal experience of a microaggression or related to an identity for which you have been marginalized.  We are interested in all forms of visual art, including photography, painting, sculpture, multimedia, etc.  If you or others in your community have pieces that fit this description or are interested in creating one, we’d greatly appreciate your contribution!  Submissions will be added to our visualizer to create an interactive, virtual collage.  Please send a digital photo of your artwork along with a brief description of the piece and the microaggression or related identity to submissions@microaggressions.com.   Feel free to email us with your questions and/or comments.  This is a great opportunity to gain far-reaching exposure for your work!  We look forward to your submissions!

Above: Wangechi MuTu, “Female Sex Organs,” 1995

A submission we got:

“Someone at my school posts up the entry from this blog with the implication that the story made a big deal out of something trivial. We had to cancel classes a few weeks back because of an incident of violent hate-crime on campus. Made me scared, angry.”

A great reminder of how these incidents quickly become a part of something much greater.

Forbes writer Gene Marks, a white man, attempts to put himself in the shoes of lower class black youth. Check out the satirical responses by Scientific AmericanWNYC, The Atlantic and others.

How long have you been in France? You speak French so well.

Europeans to Frantz Fanon. In the 1952 book Black Skins, White Masks

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