At NUS, the Women's Campaign recognises that intersectionality must play a key role in everything we do as liberation activists and within feminism as a whole. We define intersectionality as the theory of how different forms of oppression intersect and impact on people’s lives. When sexism and gender are discussed without looking at other types of identities and oppressions, the dialogue often revolves around the experiences of the more privileged women in society. This can mean that the issues and experiences of the more socially marginalised women are overshadowed, dismissed or erased.
As a student movement we must acknowledge how the concept emerged from black feminist thought and has since then evolved to become an important educational benefit to multiple liberation movements. Therefore the women's campaign has created the following resources to enable women's and feminist groups on campus to learn how to embed intersectionality into activism.
Here are some more resources about intersectionality:
On Intersectionality in Feminism and Pizza
Kimberlé Crenshaw, "Race, Gender, Inequality and Intersectionality"
Emmys 2015 | Viola Davis Wins Outstanding Lead Actress In Drama Series
Kerry Washington reads Sojourner Truth - Ain’t I a Woman
Sojourner Truth – Mini Biography