Say Her Name
#SayHerName is a gender-inclusive racial justice movement that campaigns against police brutality and anti-Black violence against black women in the United States.[1] The movement aims to highlight the gender-specific ways in which police brutality and anti-Black violence disproportionately affect black women, especially black queer women and black trans women.[2] In the hopes of accumulating a large social media presence alongside other racial justice campaigns, including #BlackLivesMatter and #BlackGirlsMatter, the African American Policy Forum (AAPF) coined the #SayHerName hashtag in February 2015.[2]
In May 2015, the AAPF released a report entitled "Say Her Name: Resisting Police Brutality against Black Women," which outlines the goals and objectives of the #SayHerName movement.[3] Following Sandra Bland's fatal encounter with police in July 2015, the AAPF, in conjunction with the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies at Columbia Law School and Soros Justice Fellow, Andrea Ritchie, issued an updated version of the original report.[3] The updated version includes a description of the circumstances surrounding Bland's death as well as several accounts detailing recent incidents of police-instigated violence against such black women as Tanisha Anderson and Rekia Boyd. In addition to these accounts, the report provides an analytical framework for understanding black women's susceptibility to police brutality and state-sanctioned violence as well as offers suggestions as how to best mobilize communities into racial justice advocacy.[3]
Drawing from the AAPF report, the #SayHerName movement strives to address the invisibilization of black women within mainstream media and the #BlackLivesMatter movement.[1] Of its many agendas, one includes commemorating the women who lost their lives due to police brutality and anti-Black violence.[2] To advance this agenda, the AAPF, along with twenty local sponsors and the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies at Columbia Law School, organized a vigil on May 20, 2015, in New York City, where dozens gathered to demand that the public no longer ignore black women's struggles against gendered, racialized violence.[4]
Origins of the movement
The #SayHerName movement arose as a response to both the media's and the Black Lives Matter movement's tendencies to sideline the experiences of black women in the context of police brutality and anti-Black violence.[5][6] For example, police killings of black men as Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown have tended to garner a much higher degree of public outcry than the killings of black women such as Rekia Boyd and Shelly Frey.[7][8]
Critics argue that Black Lives Matter disregards the gender-specific ways in which police brutality and state-sanctioned violence disproportionately affect black women, especially black queer women and black trans women. According to Kimberlé Crenshaw, one of the founders of the AAPF, black women's continued exclusion from stories about police brutality, racism, and anti-Black violence contribute to an erroneous notion that black men are the chief victims of racism and state-sanctioned violence, and underplay issues such as rape and sexual assault by police.[9]
#SayHerName seeks to incorporate more consideration of gender, sexual orientation, and class into racial justice advocacy, an approach known as intersectionality.[10] #SayHerName says it does not intend to replace or overthrow the Black Lives Matter movement, but instead aims to engage in active dialogue.[11][12][13]
Intersectionality within the movement
#SayHerName builds off of pre-existing texts and movements like the 2001 report Whose Safety? Women and the Violence of Law Enforcement[14] – by Anannya Bhatacharjee – in order to expand on addressing systemic violence in a way that is committed to being intersectional. Works that have been published as results of intersectional approaches to victimization through violence include Beth Richie’s Arrested Justice: Black Women, Violence, and America’s Prison Nation (2012) as well as a list from INCITE! Including The Color of Violence: The INCITE! Anthology, Law Enforcement Violence Against Women of Color and Trans People of Color: A Critical Intersection of Gender and State Violence, and Queer (In)Justice: The Criminalization of LGBT People in the United States.[14]
#SayHerName as a movement is largely based on the concept of intersectionality in order to bring attention to the full scope of victims of systemic violence. Intersectionality is a term that Kimberlé Crenshaw was responsible for coining,[15] its earliest usage being dated to 1989. Since then it has become a key element of many modern feminist practices. Brittany Cooper explains how intersectionality provides an analytical frame originally designed to address the unique positions of women of color within rights movements. Its relevance to #SayHerName is highlighted by Crenshaw’s founding position in both the concept of ‘intersectionality’ and the movement itself. The focus on the victimization of black women within the #SayHerName movement is dependent on the notion of intersectionality, which Kimberlé Crenshaw describes as “like a lazy Susan – you can subject race, sexuality, transgender identity or class to a feminist critique through intersectionality.”[16]
Additional factors in an intersectional analysis within #SayHerName include cis or trans status, education, geographical location, and disability[16] – both on the parts of the victims being targeted and the officers responsible for the violence. Kimberlé Crenshaw especially highlights the role of both physical and mental disability as a factor that puts victims at a larger risk of being targeted as threatening or otherwise violent by police. This is exacerbated by stereotypes of aggressiveness and poor emotional control[16] attributed to black women and men in the United States of America.
Homa Kahleeli remarks that over seventy black women have died as a result of either police violence or police misconduct within the past three years.[16] In instances of police misconduct where firearms are discharged, both female and child victims of murder have been objectified with the label “collateral,” which diminishes the violence of murder and erases responsibility of the officer.[16] #SayHerName highlights collateral treatment as a unique form of violence that these victims face in contrast with the black men addressed by the Black Lives Matter movement.
Andrea J. Ritchie argues that in addition to/included within this group of seventy black women is a larger category of people who have been targeted by police violence that #SayHerName addresses. This category includes the high rates of queer and transgender women of color who have been disproportionately targeted. These disparities emerge from gendered norms and stereotypes with roots in slavery and colonialism that have been further contextualized through the war on drugs and the legal debates surrounding LGBTQ rights.[14]
Social media presence
The #SayHerName movement is one of many contemporary social justice campaigns that engage in hashtag activism and digital activism.[17] Coined by the AAPF in February 2015, the #SayHerName hashtag provides an online community for activists, scholars, news reporters, and other social media users to participate in the conversation on racial justice along with other social movements such as #BlackLivesMatter.[2][18]
The hashtag is mostly active on Twitter. Of its many uses, the #SayHerName hashtag has principally served to highlight recent incidents of black women's fatal encounters with police and anti-Black violence as well as upcoming events at which attendants can mobilize.[13]
By addressing recent incidents of police-instigated violence, the #SayHerName hashtag strives to advance one of the chief goals of the movement: to re-integrate black women's lived experiences into mainstream racial justice narratives about police brutality and state-sanctioned violence.[2] Through its engagement with hashtag activism, #SayHerName situates itself within a recent social historical development in which the media's tendency to disregard or heavily misrepresent events pertaining to racial justice incites activists to commit themselves to digital activism.[18] In addition, with its increasing social media presence, #SayHerName provides an opportunity for a diversity of voices invested in racial justice to contribute to an ever-expanding discourse on black women's susceptibility to police brutality and anti-Black violence.[2][17]
According to advocates, the #SayHerName hashtag has successfully created a safe online place for marginalized groups of all areas of life to come together and mourn their losses. But as the hashtag spreads from Twitter to Facebook and more social media platforms, the rhetoric does not change. Despite the diversity in background, with each woman sharing her story, the same underlying themes of vulnerability to physical police and aggressive sexual violence come up (Huffingtonpost),[19] making it appear that simply saying her name, remembering their faces and bringing awareness is not enough (Huffingtonpost).[19] Experts say that despite being only 7% of the population (Ebony)[20] and outnumbered by white women at the ratio of 5:1 (AAPF),[21] black women and girls have accounted for 20% of the unarmed people killed by police since 1999 (AAPF).[21] In other words, while the hashtag was able to bring awareness on a global platform and make a safe space to spark interest and conversation between different people, statistics are not showing a real change in the level of threat and violence towards women of color (AAPF).[21]
Relationship with #BlackLivesMatter
Although the movement makes an active effort to engage in discourse and conversation with the Black Lives Matter movement, #SayHerName is different in its construct, goals and methods. Feminist theorists such as Kimberle Crenshaw have pointed out that the #SayHerName movement addresses intersectionality of gender, class and disability that play out on black women and girls’ bodies (The Guardian).[22] These are aspects that do not appear to be so readily addressed by the Black Lives Matter movement, which is specifically known as a movement addressing racial inequality within the criminal justice system. In fact, many supporters for the Black Lives Matter movement were largely sparked by outrage of the deaths of young, African-American males at the hands of police with excessive violence and no repercussion from the legal system (The Guardian).[22] In contrast, when stories of African-American women meeting similar fates in just as harrowing circumstances were brought up, the amount of supporters and advocates seems to decrease; female victim’s names and stories are less recognized than the male victims (The Guardian).[22] Simply put, #SayHerName wants to raise awareness of how sexism and racism simultaneously play out of colored female bodies, no matter their background, while still being a safe, inclusive space for all individuals to come together and create discourse (The Guardian).[22]
AAPF's role in the movement
The #SayHerName movement represents one of three recent racial justice initiatives engendered by the AAPF.[23] Since coining the #SayHerName hashtag in February 2015, the AAPF has assumed a central role in mobilizing the campaign – an effort which has culminated into at least two significant events: the AAPF's release of the report "Say Her Name: Resisting Police Brutality against Black Women" and its sponsoring of "#SayHerName: A Vigil in Remembrance of Black Women and Girls Killed by the Police."[10] Both events occurred in May 2015 and have served to disrupt mainstream racial justice narratives that attend exclusively to heterosexual, cisgender black men's susceptibility to police brutality and anti-Black violence.[4][10]
May 2015 report
In May 2015, the AAPF, in conjunction with the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies at Columbia Law School and Soros Justice Fellow, Andrea Ritchie, issued a report entitled "Say Her Name: Resisting Police Brutality against Black Women."[3] The report highlights the goals and objectives of the #SayHerName movement and presents several reasons as to why gender-inclusivity is a critical component of racial justice advocacy.[3][24] In addition to these, the report includes several accounts detailing incidents from the last three decades of black women's fatal encounters with police brutality and state-sanctioned violence.[3][24] To supplement these accounts, the report incorporates an intersectional framework for understanding black women's susceptibility to police brutality by addressing how the interactions between race, gender, sexual orientation, class, and ability inform the violent ways in which law enforcement officials treat black women.[3][24]
After divulging recent incidents of police brutality against black women, the report concludes with several recommendations as to how members of local communities, policy-makers, researchers, and activists can best incorporate a gender-inclusive framework into racial justice campaigns that specifically address police brutality and state-sanctioned violence.[3][10][24] By contributing these recommendations, the AAPF, along with the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies at Columbia Law School and Andrea Ritchie, hopes that the report could serve as a useful resource to which the media, community organizers, policy-makers, and other stakeholders invested in racial justice can refer.[3][10]
After Sandra Bland's fatal encounter with police in July 2015, the AAPF released an updated version of the original report. While the structure of the updated version is similar to that of the original report, the updated version contributes additional accounts of black women's deadly encounters with police and includes a description of the circumstances surrounding Bland's death.[3] By issuing the updated version, the AAPF strives to reinforce the critical, urgent need for policy-makers, the media, community organizers, and other stakeholders to tackle the structural inequalities that render black women within the United States heavily susceptible to police-instigated, anti-Black violence.[1]
Names mentioned in the updated version of the #SayHerName report[3]
- Alexia Christian – Killed by police on April 30, 2015
- Mya Hall – Killed by police on March 30, 2015
- Gabriella Nevarez – Killed by police on March 2, 2014
- Shantel Davis – Killed by police on June 14, 2012
- Miriam Carey – Killed by federal agents on October 3, 2013
- Malissa Williams – Killed by police on November 29, 2012
- Sharmel Edwards – Killed by police on April 21, 2012
- LaTanya Haggerty – Killed by police on June 4, 1999
- Kendra James – Killed by police on May 5, 2003
- Sandra Bland – Died in police custody on July 13, 2015
- Shelly Frey – Killed by police on December 6, 2012
- Margaret LaVerne Mitchell – Killed by police on May 21, 1999
- Eleanor Bumpurs – Killed by police on October 29, 1984
- Kathryn Johnston – Killed by police on November 21, 2006
- Alberta Spruill – Died of police-induced trauma on May 16, 2003<
- Danette Daniels – Killed by police on June 8, 1997
- Frankie Ann Perkins – Killed by police on March 22, 1997
- Tanisha Anderson – Killed by police on November 13, 2014
- Michelle Cusseaux – Killed by police on August 13, 2014
- Pearlie Golden – Killed by police on May 7, 2014
- Kayla Moore – Killed by police on February 12, 2013
- Shereese Francis – Killed by police on March 15, 2012
- Tyisha Miller – Killed by police on December 28, 1998
- Natasha McKenna – Died of police-induced trauma on February 8, 2015
- Sheneque Proctor – Died in police custody on November 1, 2014
- Kyam Livingston – Died in police custody on July 24, 2013
- Rekia Boyd – Killed by police on March 21, 2012
- Aiyana Stanley-Jones – Killed by police on May 16, 2010
- Tarika Wilson – Killed by police on January 4, 2008
- Meagan Hockaday – Killed by police on March 28, 2015
- Janisha Fonville – Killed by police on February 18, 2015
- Aura Rosser – Killed by police on November 9, 2014
- Yvette Smith – Killed by police on February 16, 2014
- Alesia Thomas – Killed by police on July 22, 2012
- Sonji Taylor – Killed by police on December 16, 1993
Spread of the movement
In the evening of May 20, 2015, the AAPF, along with twenty local sponsors, including the Black Youth Project 100, and the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies at Columbia Law School, organized an event called "#SayHerName: A Vigil in Remembrance of Black Women and Girls Killed by the Police."[2] The purpose of the vigil, which transpired at Union Square in New York City, was to commemorate such women as Rekia Boyd, Tanisha Anderson, Miriam Carey, and Kayla Moore, among many others, who lost their lives due to police brutality and anti-Black violence.[2][4] Of the vigil's many attendants, several included the relatives of Tanisha Anderson, Rekia Boyd, Shantel Davis, Shelly Fray, Alberta Spruill, Kyam Livingston, Kayla Moore, Miriam Carey, and Michelle Cusseaux.[4][25] The vigil marks the first time that these family members gathered at the same location for the purpose of honoring the women who died as a result of police-instigated violence.[25]
In addition to commemorating the lives of such women as Shelly Fray and Kyam Livingston, the event featured speeches, singing, poetry, and art by scholars, artists, and activists, including Kimberlé Crenshaw, Piper Anderson, Eve Ensler, LaChanze, and Aja Monet. Given how the vigil occurred one day prior to the National Day of Action on Black Women and Girls, one of its principal aims was to mobilize the New York City community into action against gendered, racialized forms of violence and police brutality.[4][10] By demanding that the public no longer ignore black women's struggles against gendered, racialized violence, the vigil's attendants strove to advance one of the chief goals of the #SayHerName movement: to re-integrate black women leaders and victims of anti-Black violence into mainstream racial justice narratives about racism and police brutality.[2][4]
On the other side of the country in May 2015, black women and girls also stood in the middle of San Francisco, holding signs and displaying painted messages on their bare chests (Common Dreams).[26] Some phrases included “I fight for those who have been murdered by the state”, “with love for female masculinity” and “to end infant mortality” (Common Dreams).[26] These women embodied a number of identities, some of which included queer and transgender individuals, all joining together to recognize state-sanctioned violence and sexual assaults targeting women of color (Common Dreams).[26] Onlookers were said to connect with the emotional stories protesters shared that day through conversation and the vulnerability of being naked, both in the moment and on a political level (Common Dreams).[26] Similar to how historically black women were lynched and subject to physical abuse like black men, today, black women are raped, brutalized and killed by the police, vulnerable to violence and not empathized with or helped (Democracy Now).[27]
References
- 1 2 3 "#SayHerName Brief". AAPF. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "#SayHerName". AAPF. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Publications". AAPF. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "#SayHerName: Black Women And Girls Matter, Too". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
- ↑ Lindsey, Treva B. (2015). "Post-Ferguson: A 'Herstorical' Approach to Black Violability". Feminist Studies. 41 (1): 232–237. doi:10.15767/feministstudies.41.1.232.
- ↑ "A Herstory of the #BlackLivesMatter Movement by Alicia Garza – The Feminist Wire". The Feminist Wire. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ↑ Chatelain, Marcia; Asoka, Kaavya (2015-01-01). "Women and Black Lives Matter". Dissent. 62 (3): 54–61. doi:10.1353/dss.2015.0059. ISSN 1946-0910.
- ↑ Lindsey, Treva B. (2015-01-01). "Let Me Blow Your Mind Hip Hop Feminist Futures in Theory and Praxis". Urban Education. 50 (1): 52–77. doi:10.1177/0042085914563184. ISSN 0042-0859.
- ↑ "From Private Violence to Mass Incarceration: Thinking Intersectionally About Women, Race, and Social Control – UCLA Law Review". UCLA Law Review. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Beyond Saying Her Name". The Feminist Wire. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ↑ "#SayHerName". AAPF. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
- ↑ Moore, Natalie. "Critics Say Women Are Neglected By Black Lives Matter Campaign". NPR.org. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
- 1 2 "Poet Confronts Police Brutality Against Black Women". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
- 1 2 3 "Beyond Saying Her Name". The Feminist Wire. 2015-05-20. Retrieved 2016-12-03.
- ↑ Cooper, Brittney (2016-02-01). "Intersectionality". doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199328581.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780199328581-e-20.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Khaleeli, Homa (2016-05-30). "#SayHerName: why Kimberlé Crenshaw is fighting for forgotten women". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2016-12-03.
- 1 2 Tassie, Keisha Edwards; Givens, Sonja M. Brown (2015-11-15). Women of Color and Social Media Multitasking: Blogs, Timelines, Feeds, and Community. Lexington Books. ISBN 9781498528481.
- 1 2 Bonilla, Yarimar; Rosa, Jonathan (2015-02-01). "#Ferguson: Digital protest, hashtag ethnography, and the racial politics of social media in the United States". American Ethnologist. 42 (1): 4–17. doi:10.1111/amet.12112. ISSN 1548-1425.
- 1 2 Writer, Zeba Blay Voices Culture; Post, The Huffington (2016-07-13). "One Year After Sandra Bland's Death, #SayHerName Is As Important As Ever". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- ↑ "Say Her Name: Black Women Need More Attention from the Racial Justice Movement – EBONY". www.ebony.com. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- 1 2 3 "#SayHerName". AAPF. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- 1 2 3 4 Khaleeli, Homa (2016-05-30). "#SayHerName: why Kimberlé Crenshaw is fighting for forgotten women". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- ↑ "Join the Movement". AAPF. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- 1 2 3 4 "Say Her Name: Resisting Police Brutality Against Black Women | IWDA". IWDA. Retrieved 2015-11-05.
- 1 2 "#SayHerName Vigil in Remembrance of Black Women and Girls Killed by the Police, Wednesday, May 20 5:30pm, Union Square, NYC – One Billion Rising Revolution". One Billion Rising Revolution. Retrieved 2015-11-05.
- 1 2 3 4 "Say Her Name: In Expression of Vulnerability and Power, Black Women Stage Direct Action With Chests Bared". Common Dreams. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- ↑ "Say Her Name: Families Seek Justice in Overlooked Police Killings of African-American Women". Democracy Now!. Retrieved 2016-12-04.