by Tasha Fierce | May 19, 2018 | afrofuturism blog series
When I was eight years old, I was raped by an older classmate. When I was eighteen, I was raped by the brother of my friend’s boyfriend while we were on a double date. Sprinkled in between those traumas are numerous microtraumas*: racism, bullying, sexual...
by Tasha Fierce | May 14, 2018 | afrofuturism blog series
[attention: there will be spoilers] What is liberation if it requires the enslavement of others? How can we prioritize our freedom while holding space for empathy? Imagining new futures means we do not have to accept the compromises made in the past. We can discard...
by Tasha Fierce | May 7, 2018 | afrofuturism blog series
The white male founders of the United States lived in a world that was not at all one where all men were equal, or where all men had the same access to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness—and for the most part, they were perfectly happy with this...
by Tasha Fierce | Apr 28, 2018 | writing on writing
There is a new-ish section on this site I wanted to point out. I added it late last year but never really announced it; the link just appeared in the navigation menu quietly. This was purposeful on my part, because it is a vulnerable act for me to create space on this...
by Tasha Fierce | Apr 28, 2018 | afrofuturism blog series
Human societies are constantly struggling between the past and the future, rarely fully inhabiting the present. We see evidence of this conflict today more plainly than ever, as climate change threatens humanity’s long-term survival while U.S. politics is...