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A Plurilogue: Stories of Girls’ Resistance

A Plurilogue performance was created with the Stories of Girls’ Resistance, the largest ever collection of oral and narrative history of adolescent girls’ activism, offering a window into girls’ lives and their resistance in all of its messiness, pain, and power.

So what is a Plurilogue?

A Plurilogue, according to our definition, is a collective dialogue – a dynamic exchange of many stories in direct political and radical relationship with one another.

This purilogue is dedicated to anyone on a journey of healing and liberating their inner child.

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“Si se apoyaran los sueños de las niñas y jóvenes feministas, el mundo sería un lugar más amable y pacífico, con menos guerras o ninguna, un lugar donde ninguna persona moriría de hambre y ni viviría en la calle. Tal vez sea una ilusión, tal vez el patriarcado aún se las arreglaría de algún modo para manifestarse en este mundo, pero creo que tendríamos más herramientas, recursos y educación emocional para hacerle frente.”

Carolina Vozian es escritora, trabajadora cultural, facilitadora, feminista y activista cuir(queer). Imparte talleres de escritura creativa, organiza actos culturales y políticos y ha publicado su primera novela y otros textos en volúmenes colectivos. Junto con Andy Andreea, es comisaria de la plataforma de arte especulativo radical lumiposibile.ro. Le gusta sentarse junto a las olas, los ríos, los abetos y los sauces. Nació y creció en la República de Moldavia y actualmente vive en Bucarest (Rumanía) con sus gatos.

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Girls from around the world whose quotes and stories were featured in this debut Plurilogue performance include:

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🇸🇱 Josephine, Sierra Leone

🇳🇮 Maria Jose, Nicaragua

🇿🇦 Revenia, South Africa

🇳🇪 Fati, Niger

🇵🇸 Anonymous, Palestine

🇹🇹 Indrani & Darcel, Trinidad and Tobago

🇺🇸 Ebony, Marilyn, Mason-Sera & Denicia, US

🇬🇾 Akola, Guyana

🇲🇽 Elizabeth, Mexico

🇨🇴 Estefania, Colombia

🇰🇪 Crystal & Po, Kenya

🇨🇩 Glodie, DRC

🇮🇶 Ronak, Iraq 

🇱🇰 Nithya, Sri Lanka

🇪🇭 As-ria, Western Sahara

🇺🇦 Yana, Ukraine

🇺🇬 Edna, Uganda

🇲🇽 Nur, Mexico

🇪🇹 Zemdema, Ethiopia

🇹🇴 Haitelenisia, Tonga

🇬🇲 Musa, The Gambia

🇷🇺 Yumzhana, Russia

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2024 Miembra/es

Please recognise our fantastic actors who performed in the debut of “A Plurilogue: Stories of Girls’ Resistance” from the Brooklyn Emerging Leaders Academy (BELA) high school.

Jeriah

Jeriah Riley Casimir
18 years (she/her)

REPÚBLICA DE MOLDAVIA/RUMANÍA

“It is essential to remember, embrace and heal our inner child as an act of resistance. Only with an embodied sense of liberation, joy and dreams can we collectively build a just new world.”

Rayannie

Rayannie Providence

17 years (she/her)

AS CONVERGENCE

“I believe that girls should dream to help promote the understanding of thoughts and feelings towards their aspirations.”

Neriah Laborde

Neriah Laborde
18 years (she/her)

AS WISDOM

“It's important for girls to dream so they can be change-makers in their society, and create a legacy for themselves.”

Kaylah

Kaylah Wright
17 years (she/her)

REPÚBLICA DE MOLDAVIA/RUMANÍA

“I think that girls should dream so they can envision all the possibilities that they should know they're capable of.”

Valeria

Valeria Tavera

17 years (she/her)

AS GRIEF

“I believe that dreaming is important for girls because it helps girls set goals for themselves, build confidence, and imagine a future beyond what they see around them.”

Rickysha

Rickysha Senatus
17 years (she/her)

AS SHAPE SHIFTING

“Dreaming is important for girls because they have to have a future set up for success, especially Black girls, and it is Women's History Month, so it's all about leaving the history and the legacy behind for the upbringing of other girls.”

Danilla

Danilla St. Louis

18 years (she/her)

AS TRUTH TELLING

“It’s important for girls to dream because it gives us hope.”

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“As a young girl I felt solidarity coming from my girlfriends, sisterhood. From them I feel so affirmed and so loved. I feel the burden of patriarchy on my back, but with them, we share the burden. So much love comes from that sharing and that unity. It gives you energy for the fight ahead. Solidarity is imagining freedom together. It might just be an experiment. But at least if we start it, maybe someone else will continue it.” — Zemdema, Ethiopia

LEARN MORE AND PARTNER WITH US!

The initiative is being seeded by Our Collective Practice, a feminist hub dedicated to building narrative, knowledge, and power with and for girls. Ongoing partnerships and collaborations with Black, Indigenous and women and non-binary people of colour curators, artists, documenters, and communities worldwide are actively developing.

To learn more about the Plurilogue, bring the performance to your community, or explore partnership opportunities, email us at hello@ourcollectivepractice.org.

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