Litcius/Paper detail

I Can't Breathe

Sheena Erete, Yolanda A. Rankin, Jakita O. Thomas

2021Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction117 citationsDOI

Abstract

In this paper, three Black women in HCI and CSCW share their experiences of being Black women academics enduring a global pandemic that is disportionately impacting the Black community while simultaneously experiencing the civil unrest due to racial injustice and police brutality. Using Black feminist epistemologies as a theoretical framework and auto-ethnography and testimonial authority as both methodology and epistemic resistance, the authors exercise epistemic agency to testify to their lived intersectional experiences and the various fronts on which they fight to be seen, to be heard, and to live. Additionally, they advocate for more inclusionary policies of Black women and other marginalized populations within the CSCW and HCI communities. We conclude with a call to action for both communities to: 1) stand in solidarity with Blacks in computing; and 2) acknowledge, disavow, and dismantle Whiteness and oppressive power structures in the field of computing, specifically HCI and CSCW.

Topics & Concepts

SolidarityInjusticeGrassrootsAgency (philosophy)SociologyComputer-supported cooperative workGender studiesPower (physics)OppressionResistance (ecology)Black womenEthnographyPolitical scienceSocial scienceAnthropologyWork (physics)LawEngineeringPoliticsEcologyMechanical engineeringBiologyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsInnovative Human-Technology InteractionDigital Games and MediaOpen Source Software Innovations
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