Womanism and Black Feminism in the Work of Carrie Mae Weems
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18533/journal.v5i4.928Keywords:
Social justice, womanism, liberationAbstract
This article examines the liberatory aspects of Womanisn and Black Feminism in the work of artist Carrie Mae Weems. Weems, artist and anthropologist creates artwork that highlights the issues of oppression and giving voice to worldwide issues. Under the theoretical lens of Womanism, the article utilizes Arts- Based -Educational Research (ABER), a non traidtional methodology, which aligns with Womanism to provide into past and present issues of liberation and equity. Womanism, Black women’s feminism, and ABER have the potential to bring issues of equity and social justice out of the academies and into the everyday world for those most in need of liberation.References
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Images
Figure 1. Plate 9 in Ritual & Revolution, by Carrie Mae Weems, 2003 1
Figure 2. (Image 1) in From Here I Saw What Happened . . . And I Cried, by Carrie Mae
Weems, 1995-1996 9
Figure 3. House, Field, Yard, Kitchen in From Here I Saw What Happened . . . And I
Cried, by Carrie Mae Weems, 1995-1996 11
Figure 4. (Image 1) in The Hampton Project, by Carrie Mae Weems, 2000 12
Figure 5. (Image 2) in The Hampton Project, by Carrie Mae Weems, 1998 14
Figure 6. Slave Coast in Ritual & Revolution, by Carrie Mae Weems, 1993 17
Figure 7. Plate 15 in Ritual & Revolution, by Carrie Mae Weems, 2003
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