Abstract: This essay situates homelessness within genealogies of gendered racial and colonial dispossession. Through readings of the narrative and activist practices of Moms 4 Housing, a group of unhoused and marginally housed Black mothers in Oakland, CA, I consider how the deprivation of shelter relies on Black exclusion from normative categories of gender and mothering initiated by the Atlantic slave trade. By wresting shelter from a system of property rooted in multiple forms of carceral and colonial theft, I suggest that Moms 4 Housing’s protest of real estate speculation ruptured the afterlife of slavery and coherence of the settler state.
Savannah J. Kilner (Wed,) studied this question.
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