My Feminism Feels Precarious #iwd2021

Leanne de Souza
2 min readMar 7, 2021

My generation, the X-ers of Australian women, were hopeful of a feminist future much like this tree:

Strong, swollen with recognition and wisdom. A canopy rich with diversity and deep roots. Holding power to account and in place for future generations.

Alas this tree is how I feel today on International Women’s Day 2021:

I feel exposed and lacking acuity. One woman in a nation of women triggered by political spin-doctoring, entrenched entitlement and the silencing of women’s experiences of sexual assault and harassment. I feel unable to ‘give’ any more nourishment or knowledge. Spent. Tired.

Starting university at 45 years old I believed education would give me something I perceived I lacked — a ‘superior’, cartesian mind point of view and understanding of the complexities of culture.

I have learned, unlearned and relearned much. Education has certainly raised a lot of questions and interrogated my positioning and whiteness.

I am so grateful for the feminist scholars encountered along the way. de Beauvoir, Ahmed, Mohanty, hooks, Beard, Doyle, Solnit, Butler, Anzeldua, Moreton-Robinson, Lorde, Morgan have all provided breakthroughs for me to reflect on my own life and embodied knowledges and others’ standpoints.

In the final stretch of my ‘undergrad at 50’ I was enthusiastic about the possibilities of feminist research — to contribute to research grounded in the embodied experiences and lives of all women. The 99%.

But, today my feminism feels precarious.

It is situated on a fault line of tension, trauma, coloniality, anger and resistance.

Tension resides in my mind — learning, thinking, grasping for ‘truth.’

Tension resides in my body — being, doing, risking its healing.

Tension lies between my inner and outer worlds, entangled in my communities and expectations of self and others and others of me.

I feel a burden to ‘do’ the work of ‘yet more feminism’ whilst I seek to realise more action from the work already done.

I am a non-Indigenous Australian woman.

I pay my respects to the Turrubul and Yagera/Yugura Peoples as the custodians of the lands where I work, study and live. I acknowledge that sovereignty was never ceded.

#alwayswasalwayswillbe

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Leanne de Souza

music, books, conversation, alchemy, feminism, justice ; in transition to a creative life > writer ; I live on unceded Turrbul country.