51: For Malika Imhotep, devotion to black feminist study is a life practice - a podcast by UC Berkeley

from 2019-03-11T16:31:14

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Malika Imhotep grew up in West Atlanta, rooted in a community that she calls an "Afrocentric bubble," in a family of artisans, entrepreneurs and community organizers. Now, as a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of African American Studies at UC Berkeley, she's studying how black women and femmes make sense of themselves in a society designed, in many ways, to keep them out. "Iā€™m interested in how people create new possibilities for themselves, either inside of mainstream society or outside of it, or underneath it or on top of it.ā€

But she couldn't do it alone. She needed to find and nurture a community of thinkers who could aid in the development of her research and her personal journey of discovery. So, she ā€” along with Miyuki Baker, a Ph.D. candidate in theater, dance and performances ā€” started the Church of Black Feminist Thought.

Read the story and see photos on Berkeley News.



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