Remember, I'm talking about Crenshaw's approach, not the fact of having multi-faceted marginalised identities. The former is what I oppose.
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I find the approach much less as a rhetorical device but a observation of reality. But that's the difference in our perspectives.
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Then we're talking about different things. I am talking about the tenets and methods of intersectional feminism.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @InspectorNerd and
This is why I broke down Crenshawe's essays. To show what I am and am not criticising.
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I understand u don't feel like u're criticising black women but to criticize research that justifies our struggles comes off as a dismissal
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I do dismiss it. But am not criticising black women because most of them dismiss it too.
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Look. As a writer u know how questions are swayed for biases & u also know u'll stick 2 ur guns on this topic no matter what I say.
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Do you think research would show that most black women are actually intersectional feminists?
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They don't use the title but to support the prosperity of black women is intersectional feminism. 1/2 of black women aren't conservative.
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47% of African Americans identify as liberal and 45% as conservative.
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