Featured // Vol. 30, No. 2
A Visual Dispatch
essay by Colony Little
Our Past
Browse past issues and articles from the last 30 years
We Called You in Her Name
by Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Michelle Lanier, Johnica RiversDear Reader: These excerpts—from a welcome by Michelle Lanier and Johnica Rivers and lyrical essay, “Written by Herself,” by Alexis Pauline Gumbs—first appeared in A Sojourn for Harriet Jacobs, a chapbook created by The Harriet Jacobs Project to commemorate their inaugural journeys. * * * We called you in her name. You answered. We rang the »
The Buford Highway Farmers Market
by Diamond FordeDO you remember flirting at the fish counter on Thursdays? At the Buford Highway Farmers Market—dark corners, concrete floors, & flags winking in an industrial breeze.
Taking Up Space
by Regina N. Bradley“Sojourning is a daring act of freedom-making and . . . an acknowledgment of reclamation of spaces where Black women and femme folks were historically excluded.” I’m in Edenton, North Carolina. I’m here to do some sacred work. I slowly turn the bowl of white rose petals in my hands. They are moist from freshly »
Down South
by Jet Toomer“The longing for home never ceased, and the sojourn Down South would develop into a summer tradition.” For most of my young life I was denied the truth about my southern Black heritage, and the urbanized Americanized culture around me was teaching me to be ashamed. Of course, this dark skin, these pronounced and molded »
In the Swamp
Abolition. Imagination. Play.
by Kai Lumumba Barrow, Lydia Pelot-Hobbs, Alexis Pauline Gumbs“There are so many different ways that people constructed home in places that one would not desire for home.” On my most recent outing with the Black feminist abolitionist revolutionary artist (and dear mentor of mine) kai lumumba barrow, we went looking for Spanish moss for one of her world-unmaking installations. When she pulled up »
A Visual Dispatch
Images, Art, and the Archive as a Portal to Memory
by Colony Little“The photographs and items my mother brought back with her from Texas tell her migration story, connecting me to the people, places, and events that shaped her life and echo in mine.” In the summer of 2015, my parents rented an RV and traveled from the Bay Area to Fort Worth, Texas, just south of »
In Between
by Ciarra K. Walters“In the most core-shaking moments of my life, I learned to return to these places to move beyond this physical form and ground my spiritual self.” Self-portraiture is the way I navigate myself back to my body. For years, my body did not feel like it belonged to me until I started photographing myself in »
Lydia
by Sally Greene“For we are strangers before thee, and sojourners, as were all our fathers: our days on the earth are as a shadow, and there is none abiding.” —1 Chronicles 29:15 The Hebrew word translated as “sojourner” in the King James Bible has no exact equivalent in English. While for us the concept of a sojourn »
Habitual Return
by Beatrice J. Adams“Habitual return highlights the importance of maintaining cultural practices and history between generations to anchor one’s identity and sense of self.” Helen canned peaches, sewed and patched quilts, and prepped her children for a cross-country trek. Her husband, J. L., had set out months ago with her brothers, joining the steady flow of people leaving »
A Rooming House for Transient Girls
Black Women's Spatial Vision in the Black Metropolis
by Jovanna Jones“Freedom of mobility, accessibility of housing for one night or many, and a safe and secure environment for the many ways young Black women needed to spend their days—that was the point.” One late August night in 1943, Robbie Shields traveled up from Woodlawn in the South Side to Chicago’s northern suburb of Evanston for »
Sojourn
by Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Michelle Lanier, Johnica RiversSometimes you can prepare for a sojourn. Plan your route. Gather resources. Train your breathing. Maybe you will visualize your success. Chant the names you will need to remember. Pray for strength. Some of us write a list of days. Notify our loved ones. Give away our excess. But what you cannot know at the »
How We Exist in the South
Voting for Justice in Southwest Florida
by Ariana Ávila, Lisette Morales McCabe, Lupita Vazquez Reyes, Christina VazquezLess than an hour from Southwest Florida’s highly coveted coastlines and palm tree-adorned roadways lies Immokalee, a rural town where a multibillion-dollar agricultural industry booms. Immokalee is home to approximately twenty-seven thousand residents, who compose the immigrant farmworker population of Southwest Florida, including people from Guatemala, Haiti, and Mexico. This community from the Global South »