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Suggested Readings

Some of our favorite zines, essays, and theory available online, for those looking to learn more about anarcha-feminism. These readings are selected by members of the collective for their relevance to the themes of our project, or our own individual anarchist thinking, and are deliberately limited to shorter texts (or collections of shorter texts) that can be read in one or two sittings, except the very last section. Not all of these works are explicitly anarchistic or feminist in their political sensibilities, some are works of history, sociology, anthropology, and so on, but all of them have influenced our anarcha-feminist thinking and the ethos of this project. The list will grow as we continue to add new items.

Note that some items may be listed in more than one section.

Also be sure to check the footnotes, as some of the texts, while we still recommend them, need to come with disclaimers or specific content notes.

Confused about where to start? Here’s a guide!

Table of Contents:

  1. Anarcha-Feminism
  2. Feminism
  3. Transfeminism
  4. Anarchism
  5. Youth Liberation
  6. More
  7. Books and Longer Works
  8. We DON’T Recommend…

Anarcha-Feminism

Various Authors, Quiet Rumors: an Anarcha-Feminist Reader
Various Authors, Dangerous Spaces: Violent Resistance, Self-Defense, and Insurrectional Struggle Against Gender
Kristen Anderberg, a Man’s Heaven is a Woman’s Hell
Words to Fire Press, Betrayal: A Critical Analysis of Rape Culture in Anarchist Subcultures
Courtney Desiree Morris, Why Misogynists Make Great Informants
Ray Filar, Notes Toward a Theory of the Manarchist
Mona Eltahawy, How Many Rapists Must We Kill?[1]Content Note: this essay by queer anarchist Mona Eltahawy has some significant oversights, especially in its casual use of problematic language of “socialization”, language that has been … Continue reading
Mona Eltahawy, Inciting Liberation
J. Rogue, De-Essentializing Anarchist Feminism: Lessons from the Transfeminist Movement
Coordenação Anarquista Brasileira, Feminism and Organized Anarchism
E. Connor & Beck Levy, Your Options Are Limitless: A Polemic
Lee Shevek, Intimate Authoritarianism: The Ideology of Abuse
C.E., Undoing Sex: Against Sexual Optimism
Sky Palace, “To Be Liberated From Them (Or Through Them)”: A Call for a New Approach
Lovely Alyxander, Since 2010 At Least 1300 Women and Children Have Been Sexually or Physically Attacked by UK Cops. PT 1 PT 2PT 3
Estelle Ellison, Pushing Back Against Mass Abuse Apologism
Anonymous, Why She Doesn’t Give a Fuck About Your Insurrection
Ramona, Safer Spaces, False Allegations, and the NYC Anarchist Bookfair
Lilith, Gender Disobedience: Antifeminism and Insurrectionist Non-dialogue

Feminism

Combahee River Collective, The Combahee River Collective Statement
John Berger, Ways of Seeing
Sara Ahmed, A Killjoy Manifesto
Sara Ahmed, The Complainer as Carceral Feminist
Anonymous, Dangerous Intersections
Monique Wittig, One is Not Born a Woman
Young Women’s Empowerment Project, Girls Do What They Have to Do to Survive: Illuminating Methods Used by Girls in the Sex Trade to Fight Back and Heal
Juno Mac and Molly Smith, Sex
Juno Mac and Molly Smith, Work
Linda Martín Alcoff, Norming Sexual Practices (from Rape and Resistance)
Madeline Lane-McKinley, On Complaints and Apologies: Feminist Theses Against Carceralism
Emi Koyami, Understanding the Complexities of Sex Trafficking and Sex Work/Trade (Foldable zine version)
L. Cornum, First Women, Then the Nation: Confronting Colonial Gender Violence in Canada and the US
M. Sandovsky, Letters to L: Paranoia and Visions
Rebecca Hall, Not Killing Me Softly: African American Women, Slave Revolts, and Historical Constructions of Racialized Gender
Hannah Summers, The Illusion of the “Real” Rape Victim
Donna Haraway, Situation Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective
Ann Ferguson, Sex War: The Debate between Radical and Libertarian Feminists[2]We include Ann Ferguson’s piece as a recommendation because it is a reasonably succinct and accurate contemporaneous summary of the feminist Sex Wars of the 1980s, including the things both … Continue reading
Joy James, Violations
Monique Plaza, Our Damages and Their Compensation: The Will Not to Know of Michel Foucault
Stephen P. Knadler, Leo Bersani and the Nostalgia for White Male Radicalism
Moya Bailey, They aren’t talking about me…

Transfeminism

Note: all the texts below are products of a specific sociocultural and historical context. The language and terminology of both radical transfeminist circles and broader society has changed over time, and especially since the trans tipping point around 2014, and some of the texts below use outdated language or terms that are now dispreferred, but were commonly used or preferred among radical trans politics at the time of writing. Please keep this in mind as you read.[3]For example, In contemporary discourse (especially in the UK), the word “transwoman,” written without a space in between, is frequently used as a transphobic dogwhistle by TERFs. This has … Continue reading

Various Authors, Dangerous Spaces: Violent Resistance, Self-Defense, and Insurrectional Struggle Against Gender
Lee Shevek, Butch Anarchy
Porpentine, Hot Allostatic Load
Jules Joanne Gleeson & Nathaniel Dickson, The Future of Trans Politics
J. Rogue, De-Essentializing Anarchist Feminism: Lessons from the Transfeminist Movement
Emi Koyami, The Tranfeminist Manifesto[4]While the Transfeminist Manifesto is an important seminal text, it is also shaped by the time and context in which it was written — it’s sort of a snapshot of a particular era in some … Continue reading
Sayak Valencia (translated by Olga Arnaiz Zhuravleva), Necropolitics, Postmortem/Transmortem Politics, and Transfeminisms in the Sexual Economies of Death
Jennifer Worley, “Street Power” and the Claiming of Public Space: San Francisco’s “Vanguard” and Pre-Stonewall Queer Radicalism
Joni Alizah Cohen, The Eradication of “Talmudic Abstractions”: Anti-Semitism, Transmisogyny and the National Socialist Project
Brooke Holmes, Marked Bodies: Gender, Race, Class, Age, Disability, and Disease
Talia Bhatt, Understanding Transmisogyny, Part I: Misogyny and Heterosexualism
Talia Bhatt, Understanding Transmisogyny, Part II: Homophobia and Transphobia
Talia Bhatt, Understanding Transmisogyny, Part III: Constructing the Transsexual
May Peterson, Dialectical Feminism: An Unburial Theory

Anarchism

Lee Shevek, Against a Liberal Abolitionism
David Graeber, Oppression
David Graeber, Dead Zones of the Imagination
David Graeber, i didn’t understand how widespread rape was. then the penny dropped
David Graeber, Two Notions of Liberty Revisited
William Gillis, When “Restorative Justice” Means Restoring Peace, Not Justice
William Gillis, Bad People
sasha k, Some Notes on Insurrectionary Anarchism
CrimeThinc, Accounting For Ourselves: Breaking the Impasse Around Sexual Assault in Anarchist Scenes
Zoé Samudzi & William C. Anderson, The Anarchism of Blackness
Revolutionary Anti-Authoritarians of Color, An Anarchist Introduction to Critical Race Theory
Håkan Geijar, Affinity Fraud and Exploitable Empathy

Youth Liberation

John Wall, Childism: The Challenge of Childhood to Ethics and the Humanities
Toby Rollo, Feral Children: Settler Colonialism, Progress, and the Figure of the Child
Toby Rollo, The Color of Childhood: The Role of the Human/Child Binary in the Production of AntiBlack Racism
A. Mark Liddle, Gender, Desire, and Child Sexual Abuse: Accounting for the Male Majority
Mills & Lefrançois, Child as Metaphor: Colonialism, Psy-Governance, and Epistemicide
Ulrike Roth, Speaking Out? Child Sexual Abuse and the Enslaved Voice in the Cena Trimalchionis
Anarchasteminist, James Cantor, paedophilia, and the “Gender Critical” movement
Jenny Kitzinger, Who Are You Kidding? Children, Power, and the Struggle Against Sexual Abuse
Arthur Silber, On Torture: The Truth That Lies Within (Excerpt)
Lee Shevek, The Right Wing Hates Children: the Weaponization of “Groomer”
Jennifer Worley, “Street Power” and the Claiming of Public Space: San Francisco’s “Vanguard” and Pre-Stonewall Queer Radicalism
Wesley Ware, Rounding Up the Homosexuals: The Impact of Juvenile Court on Queer and Trans/Gender-Non-Conforming Youth
Suzanne Zeedyk & Fionna Raitt, False Memory Syndrome: Undermining the credibility of
complainants in sexual offences

More Recommended Readings

Stuff that didn’t fit neatly into the above categories. Some have either anarchist or feminist frameworks, others do not.


Reny Taylor, Indicted Victims: Black Males and Sexual Vulnerability
Revolutionary Abolitionist Movement, Burn Down the American Plantation
Joseph A. Boone, Vacation Cruises; or, The Homoerotics of Orientalism[5]Content Note: although many of the texts dealing with subjects like sexuality and exploitation recommended on this page necessarily cover sensitive and difficult subjects, there is a long-standing … Continue reading
Walter Johnson, On Agency
northshore, Autonomously and with Conviction: A Métis Refusal of State-Led Reconciliation
William Gillis, One Giant Red Flag, Folded Into a Book
Cheryl Harris, Whiteness as Property

Books and Longer Works

In general, the above recommendations are intentionally limited only to texts that are relatively short, can be read in one or two sittings. Below are a few longer works that we think are invaluable sources for any anarchist, feminist, or liberation-minded person.

Juno Mac and Molly Smith, Revolting Prostitutes: The Fight for Sex Workers’ Rights (not available on LibGen, but available on Z-Lib with the Tor Browser and Z-Lib login)
Sherronda J. Brown, Refusing Compulsory Sexuality: A Black Asexual Lens on Our Sex-Obsessed Culture
Patrick Joseph Ryan, Master-Servant Childhood: A History of the Idea of Childhood in Medieval English Culture
Sara Ahmed, Living a Feminist Life
Saidiya Hartman, Scenes of Subjection: Terror, Slavery, and Self-Making in Nineteenth-Century America
Jules Gill-Peterson, Histories of the Transgender Child (not available on LibGen, but available on Z-Lib with the Tor Browser and Z-Lib login)

We DON’T Recommend…

Some commonly recommended and cited books and articles aren’t all they’re cracked up to be, for various reasons. But people still ask us what we think of them all the time (because of how commonly they are recommended!) So for convenience, we’ve decided to start including a few of the texts that people have asked us about, but that we don’t particularly see as useful sources for anarchist ethics or theory — either because they’re just not that good, or because (as is sometimes the case) they’re actively pernicious or promote oppressive ideologies in the guise of “radical” language. Are we saying no one should be allowed to read them or that it is bad or morally wrong to read them? No. I mean, we read them, didn’t we? We’re just noting that we don’t particularly recommend them. As with the recommendations, our list will grow as we think of things.

These include:

Judith Levine, Harmful to Minors: The Perils of Protecting Children From Sex (Why not?)
Sarah Schulman, Conflict is Not Abuse (Why not?)

Footnotes[+]