1st Edition

Kaleidoscopic Visions The Black, Migrant, and Refugee Women’s Movement in The Netherlands

Edited By Nancy Jouwe, Maayke Botman, Gloria Wekker Copyright 2025
294 Pages
by Routledge

294 Pages
by Routledge

First published in March 2001, this work was the first and only book of its kind in the Dutch intellectual landscape, and it rapidly became a classic for multigenerational audiences with an interest in intersectional theory and praxis. By zooming in on the issues that Black, migrant, and refugee (BMR) women placed on the feminist and multicultural agenda of the late twentieth century, the writers... Read more
New Edition, Foreword - Heidi Safia Mirza, Preface - Sarah Bracke, Dancing in the Rain: Intersectionality in Motion - Maayke Botman, Sarah Bracke, Nancy Jouwe, Nawal Mustafa, and Gloria Wekker, Original Edition, Foreword - Ann Phoenix, Introduction - Maayke Botman and Nancy Jouwe, A Wind-Swept Plain. The History of Thinking with and through Gender and Ethnicity in the Netherlands - Gloria Wekker and Helma Lutz, A Piece of the Puzzle Is Always Missing. Wanted: An Inclusive Curriculum - Troetje Loewenthal, Sacred Fire. Inspiration and Strength in the Organisation of the BMR Women's Movement in the Netherlands - Amalia Deekman and Mariette Hermans, A Woman Who Dances in the Rain. Strategies of Black, Migrant, and Refugee Women in Literature, Theatre, and Film - Isabel Hoving and Gabbi Mesters (in cooperation with Tessa Boerman and Nathalie Frederiks), 'To Preserve My Identity': Identity Formation within the BMR Women's Movement - Esther Captain and Halleh Ghorashi.

Biography

Nancy Jouwe is a cultural historian and freelance researcher, writer and curator. Her interests lie in the past and present of colonial history and slavery from an intersectional perspective. She currently is an external PhD student at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and a crown member of the Council for Culture. Maayke Botman is programme advisor at the Oranje Fonds in the field of Social Justice for the Netherlands and the Caribbean part of the Kingdom. She is also a board member of the Bijlmer Parkktheater and the Rutu Foundation for indigenous and multilingual education. Gloria Wekker is a socio-cultural anthropologist (PhD UCLA, 1992), and professor emerita in gender studies at Utrecht University. Besides her academic work, including The Politics of Passion (2006) and White Innocence (2017), she also writes poetry and prose. In 2017, Science Guide recognised her as second of ten most influential Dutch academics.