"Of course, not all women of color are sexualized in the same way. For example, while black women are considered lascivious, always consenting and out of control, Latina women are considered exotic or overly sensual and Asian women are considered childish and prude. These particular stereotypes are reinforced through popular culture and pornography (just Google respectively “Asian women,” “black women,” or “Latina women” and then “women” and see what comes up). The common thread here is that nonwhite women’s sexuality is seen as outside the norm of white heterosexuality. It’s therefore something to be uniquely desired, manipulated, exploited, or controlled. Within this rather toxic climate, being a woman of color who’s in touch with her sexuality is an act of resistance. Pushing past the negative media depictions and still finding a healthy, healing, erotic, and functional sexuality is no small feat."
Samhita Mukhopadhyay
sorry y’all but these quotes are so relevant and my queue has a lot of stuff in it so
(via wretchedoftheearth)
"I demand the independence of woman, her right to support herself; to live for herself; to love whomever she pleases, or as many as she pleases. I demand freedom for both sexes, freedom of action, freedom in love and freedom in motherhood."
Emma Goldman
Slut Shame: Attacking Women for Their Sex Lives
In 2011, it’s still considered perfectly acceptable to attack women based on their supposed sluttiness.
Rachel Kramer Bussel at AlterNet tackles slut-shaming and its continued presence in modern society.