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black./womyn.:conversations featured in New Orleans International Human Rights Film Festival

April 9, 2008

Black Lesbian Feature Length Documentary has New Orleans Premiere on Sunday, April 13, 2008 at 4pm

tiona m.’s ground-breaking, revolutionary, feature-length documentary black./womyn.: conversations…, which features the voices of over 50 lesbians of African descent throughout North America including featuring powerful voices such as Def Poet Staceyann Chin, poet/activist/scholar Cheryl Clarke, and filmmakers Aishah Shahidah Simmons and Michelle Parkerson will have it’s New Orleans premiere at the Fifth Annual New Orleans International Human Rights Film Festival. Scored by New Orleans-based musician Monica Dillon, the screening and discussion with tiona m., Monica Dillon, and Aishah Shahidah Simmons will be held on Sunday, April 13, 2008, 4pm, Zeitgeist - 1618 Oretha Castle Haley Boulevard.

Linking Struggles on Human Rights in New Orleans and Around the World

April 9, 2008

The Fifth Annual New Orleans Human Rights International Film Festival is hosting “Our Struggle is Your Struggle: A Panel Discussion on Human Rights in New Orleans and Around the World.”

This lively and interactive panel will feature a diverse chorus of voices engaged in local, national, and global movements for human rights for marginalized and disenfranchised people in New Orleans, throughout the United States and across the globe.

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Sex Workers and The Media

April 7, 2008

A Tale Of Two Strippers…
by Aishah Shahidah Simmons

Sometime last fall Michael Simmons, my father and comrade in the international struggles to end violence against women, called me to share his passionate rage about all of the positive hype around Diablo Cody’s, (the very talented Academy Award® Winning screenwriter of the film Juno, directed by Jason Reitman) herstory as a stripper to support herself while writing screenplays. Media outlets, from National Public Radio to Entertainment Tonight, raved about “the stripper turned Hollywood screenwriter.”

Before my feminist sisters get upset, I want to be clear that Michael’s (and my) passionate rage isn’t about Sister Diablo Cody. This is not an anti-sex worker piece/peace. While I, as a Black feminist lesbian, critique a patriarchal, sexist, and misogynist world where sex work is, for countless women in the world, the only viable option to make a living, I do not and will not ever critique women for “choosing” sex work to financially support themselves.

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