Black Feminist Roundtable: Taking Space and Making a Place of Our Own

I went to a panel in late March which was focused on the issue of black feminism in television and film. It was a truly inspiring opportunity to see these black women, all very successful in their fields, just describe the ways that they’ve found to make it in a world that is often against them. One of my favorite speakers at the panel was Morgan Harnell’s discussion of her piece S.A.B.L.E., a choreo-poem about the experiences of black women and their struggle to be seen, heard, and recognized in the face of police brutality and society’s predisposition to ignore and dismiss them.

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Joseph Ndoum
Senior Seminar at Kennesaw State University: A Reflection

It always seems to come back to the question “what is my ethical footprint?” Perhaps not in so many words, but it seems that every movement is inspired, at least in part, by this question. How can we do better? How can we be better? This is at the root of almost every post I’ve made, and every thing I’ve learned in my Senior Seminar class.

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Joseph Ndoum