ojaswisharma's review

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Largely inconsistent and flawed. I liked a handful of the essays though.

dreamofbookspines's review

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3.0

Estimated first read between 2004 and 2008.

kaitlinmcnabb's review

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4.0

Great collection of essays.

celadon's review against another edition

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5.0

Colonize This! is an incredible–and I mean incredible–collection of essays. What makes this book so shockingly different is its plethora of varied and relevant perspectives. All of the applicants are women of color, and within that there are women of all different backgrounds including trans women, women of all different classes, sexualities, and one person who is questioning their gender. It was so invigorating to read an anthology where the people submitting the work is anybody who has a pencil and the passion to write an essay. Maybe this will inspire you with empathy and vigor to challenge what is considered normal.

---Long Review To Come---

ravenofoctober's review

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4.0

I think this collection of essays is an excellent read for someone like me--a feminist looking to better understand the intersection of racism, classism, homophobia, and other factors with feminism. There is a wide representation of women of color experiences in these essays.

This book was a hard read at times, because it is unapologetic in its criticisms of feminism, which in general still tends to focus on issues of white middle class women rather than the broader spectrum that includes women of color and their experiences with racism, classism, etc., altogether. I LIKED that it was unapologetic, because it was a good wake-up call to me. The rather narrow view of general feminism was something I understood at an academic level before reading this book, but this collection moved that understanding to a more practical level—how that general focus of feminism ostracizes a wide swath of women, and how it has affected the lives of the women who wrote these essays. The book manages to extrapolate the individual experiences described in the book simply because of the fact that each essay had an instance where the writer had been shunned from a feminist space by white feminists. So it manages to give personal accounts that piece together a larger picture when read together.

I do think feminism has made some strides to rectify this since this book was published in 2002, but it's not my place, as a white woman, to try and say how much improvement on this front feminism has made, because I do not experience the ostracism myself.

Each essay offered a different type of experience by a women of color (some queer, some not. Some grew up poor, some didn't. Etc.); it doesn't cover ALL possible experiences, but I think the editors did a great job of trying to cover as many as possible. This is a book I think white feminists should read to help educate themselves and better understand what women of color go through, but it definitely requires that we get over our knee-jerk reactions of criticisms of feminism.

_sam_m's review

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challenging inspiring medium-paced

5.0

henren's review against another edition

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challenging reflective slow-paced

5.0

avoryfaucette's review

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5.0



As a white feminist, I found this anthology particularly revelatory in the ways that it speaks to WOC experience in white-dominated feminist communities. Many of the authors focus on dual experiences with family and/or country of origin and mostly white US women's studies departments. This collection uses personal narrative to communicate the political realities of these experiences and hold white women accountable, while also providing something WOC of diverse backgrounds can relate to. Strong themes include motherhood, immigrant experience, and WOC feminism.

murphykat's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective tense medium-paced

4.0

An exercise in learning to listen without feeling the need to form a rebuttal. This book contains a collection of stories from various viewpoints on feminism, the lack of intersectionality, and the every day pains of living in the modern era while having to try to navigate your various identities and society’s views of you. Would highly recommend the audiobook version.

elizabeth_anne_elizabeth's review against another edition

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hopeful informative inspiring reflective fast-paced

5.0