Humanity has always excluded Others on the basis of race and gender.
What happens to people who choose to flee, following in the footsteps of
those who resisted enslavement?
This audacious manifesto draws on the legacies of bell hooks, Audre
Lorde, Angela Davis and others to consider the ways in which Black women
have been excluded from, struggled to achieve and opted to reject the
category of 'human'. Sociologist Akwugo Emejulu argues that it is only
through embracing the status of the 'fugitive' that Black women can
determine their own liberation. Fugitive Feminism is a call for the
collective process of speculative dialogue and a bold new model for
action.