Queering Feminist Solidarities

#Metoo, LoSHA and the Digital Dalit

Authors

  • Sara Morais dos Santos Bruss Univ. Potsdam

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17169/ogj.2020.71

Keywords:

Postcolonialism, Feminism, Social Media, Intersectionality, Sexual Harassment

Abstract

At the height of international visibility for #metoo, a crowdsourced list was published on Facebook that contained the names of prestigious Indian academics, accusing them of sexual harassment. The list was controversial not only in that it became a viral phenomenon (and resulted in immediate questioning of the legitimacy of internet culture for politics) but also in that these accusations did not contain information on the circumstances of the alleged crimes, so as to protect the victims’ anonymity. The list was quickly dubbed “the list of naming and shaming” and was met with its strongest criticism from within the feminist movement itself, as established feminists argued publicly against such methods and against the queer Dalit leaker of the document, Raya Sarkar. This paper examines these conflicts of solidarity as conflicts between transnational and local positionalities and argues for the possibility of digital spaces as environments that invite a queering of identity politics, constructive disagreement, and transformative justice, rather than mere conflict and its resolution through a homogenous feminist identity.

Author Biography

Sara Morais dos Santos Bruss, Univ. Potsdam

Sara Morais dos Santos Bruss is a lecturer at the chair of cultural studies at Potsdam University. Her studies of culture and media theory brought her to an increased interest in postcolonial and feminist movements within so-called digital cultures. Writing a genealogy of digital modernity, her dissertation discusses the ambivalences and possibilities of digitally conditioned transnational feminist soldiarity, looking specifically at intersectional movements in India and Germany. Sara is an organisational member of the ongoing project group Storytelling after Haraway at diffrakt: Zentrum für theoretische Peripherie and an editor at kritisch-lesen.de.

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Plakat der European Feminist Research Conference 2018: Motiv Zerknitterte Oberfläche in Rosa- und Grautönen

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Published

2020-03-18

How to Cite

Morais dos Santos Bruss, S. (2020). Queering Feminist Solidarities: #Metoo, LoSHA and the Digital Dalit. Open Gender Journal, 4. https://doi.org/10.17169/ogj.2020.71

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Section

10th European Feminist Research Conference in Göttingen (2018)

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