Bash Back! News


Questions and Statements From The Trans/Queer People Of Color Caucus
June 7, 2009, 7:45 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

At the Bash Back Convergence this year some QTPOC(queer/trans people of color) caucused and came up with a list of points for the white auxillary to discuss, think about, etc.

Here is that list, spread it:

Having non-western culture experiences is not the same as being POC.
When planning conferences or doing anything, think about gentrification. Gentrification workshop while having gentrifying shows.
What does it mean to date a POC
Does gender as well as skin tone affect the relationship?
Do you find yourself hearing/making racist comments if there are not obvious POCs in the room?
How do you treat your friends depending on skin. What are your expectations of your POC friends?
Why are self-proclaimed “radical” spaces & collectives often only mostly white? Besides the false assumption that POCs don’t care.
Reconciling doing activism that should involve being an ally to POCs (us) socializing & organizing being done by all mostly white people
Why are radical spaces in POC neighborhoods mostly white and sometimes looking like hipsters come into them / instead of being accessible/inviting to the POCs in the neighborhood
Talk about how gender is informed by race and pluralize queer identities. how does misogination inform notions of queer.
Personally, I have felt responsible for being the barometer for my white fellows as to whether or not complex racial situations are OK or not, whether they need to be addressed or not.
Saying things like “fuck culture” when it comes to ‘radical issues’ like female mutilations in Africa, implying that it’s OK for white privileged Americans to enter “other cultures” and tell them mutilations are “not okay” you can’t just be feminist and not actively anti-racist or anti-nationalist
It seems that some white radicals take security less seriously because they come from their place of privilege + POC’s have a hard time getting their security needs met and are met with resistance
What it means to be an ally vs. what it means to be in solidarity. POCs- defining what ally means not whites saying what it is.
Cultural appropriation of indigenous genders “two-spirits”… after events of white hipster variation only.
Cultural appropriation dreadlocks/Mohawks (styles).
Class privileged nature of the convergence space.
What’s an anti-racist campaign look like? Where’s BB lacking??
Consciously seek out knowledge and theory by POC / queer female writers!
Accept experience as a valid form of radical consciousness-raising. Don’t be an intellectual elite anarchist.
love and solidarity,
a BB!er


9 Comments so far
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Is having one show really going to gentrify a neighborhood?

Comment by pika_pik

no. but the space itself is used for MANY shows/events/ etc throughout the last couple of years that have helped.

Comment by bashbacknews

Mohawks?

Comment by atlas

yep. they’re not just a punk thing.

Comment by nativefaggot

Late, but:
“The Mohawks, like many indigenous tribes in the Great Lakes region, sometimes wore a hair style in which all their hair would be cut off except for a narrow strip down the middle of the scalp from the forehead to the nape, that was approximately three finger widths across.[citation needed] This style was only used by warriors going off to war. The Mohawks saw their hair as a connection to the Creator, and therefore grew it long. But when they went to war, they cut all or some of it off, leaving that narrow strip.”

From wikipedia. Mohawks are a good example of how bad cultural appropriation is.

Comment by J.

I think “misogenation” was supposed to be “miscenagation” a pretty dated term for interacial relationships.

Comment by a. rose

although i don’t have all of the answers, i agree that it can be difficult to draw the line and that many, many things can be traced to cultural appropriation. at the same time, people call their hairstyles mohawks and the word mohawk is widely recognized for it’s association with punk subculture. that’s appropriation and it’s fucked. and it’s not okay to invalidate POC experience with oversimplified statements such as ‘we all are indigenous somewhere.’

Comment by white punk

I think it’s ridiculous to say that white people can’t have mohawk hair cuts. I don’t myself but I think it’s very un-radical to say white people shouldn’t be allowed to have dreadlocks or mohawks, just as stupid as saying a “boy” can’t have long hair or a “girl” can’t have short hair.
It’s not cultural appropriation, it’s freedom of expression.

Comment by bashbackftw

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