Tusk Magazine 2022

Page 64

Intersectionality:

what is it & how do we use it to our advantage? Do you identify with more than one identity? Are you involved in more than one group or culture? STORY: Alyssa Ortiz PHOTO: Gianna Horvath DESIGN: Emma Rowell

Intersectionality is the understanding that certain aspects of a person’s social and political identities combine to create different modes of discrimination and privilege. It used to be synonymous with the lower class, but now it’s an incredible asset to take back the privilege that we were denied. Coined by Kimberlé W. Crenshaw in 1989, intersectionality was initially used to describe activism for women of color. Truly, the most marginalized groups deal with intersectionality the worst because these groups aren’t considered the norm. Identifying with more than one group deals with more discrimination. Many activists since then have tried to use the term to describe even broader ideas with even more identities intersecting. You’re not just gay, or Black or a woman, but you are a gay, Black woman — a combined level of cultures or groups you identify with. For myself, the complex idea of intersectionality is rooted in being a Latinx woman, in which I aspire to work in a male-dominated field. For me, many people I surround myself with are marginalized groups of people who identify with more than one culture or group. I grew up in a white-dominated city, despite going to diverse schools in my younger years. Representation of women, whether people of color or LGBTQ+, wasn’t prominent growing up and it was clear that we were oppressed.

62 tusk

STUDENT LIFE

As I got older, I began to realize that this was power. It’s powerful to identify with multiple groups. Jacob Fry, a fourth-year communications major with a concentration in entertainment and tourism at CSUF, says he identifies more with his Filipino side and the LGBTQ+ community. “I’ve felt marginalized in both of those groups. I remember feeling like an impostor in Filipino clubs in high school because of my skin color or that I didn’t speak the language. It kind of makes you feel like you’re missing out by not being fully one identity,” Fry said. He says he understood intersectionality late in high school and early in college. He began to learn about his identities and struggled to be confident in who he was. Fry is proud of his multiple identities now, but it took time to get there. “There’s so much to learn and understand, and it makes me proud because it’s who I am,” Fry said. “I get to be apart and relate with so many different groups and people because I understand struggles more than most because of the multiple identities I come from.” He notes progress has occurred for both the Filipino culture and the LGBTQ+ communities.

“Get in touch with your cultures and communities that you feel connected to… It’s important to be proud of who you are, it’s how you become happier,” Fry said. “Just because I understand my identities doesn’t mean other people do. I believe we’re going upwards in the right direction.” Liam Conway, a fourth-year cinema and television arts major, identifies with mostly his Latinx side from his mom and the LGBTQ+ community. “I don’t feel like there’s a lot of Latinx representation in LGBTQ+ community, so I like having the intersectionality so it can teach both cultures about the other,” Conway said. “There’s a lot of toxic masculinity in the Latinx culture, known as Machismo; it’s really hard being criticized by my own family for not being masculine enough.” Conway mentions the benefits of his intersectionality. “The trauma that I’ve seen and been through, it’s led me to become funnier and more empathic as a person. I get to see more stories from people. I can help other people on both sides, like teaching my Latinx family about queer culture, and teaching my queer friends about my grandma and her traditions — it’s nice to do.”


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Articles inside

We Asked CSUF Students One Question

3min
pages 76-80

Music For Thought

1min
page 73

Five Spots To Decompress on Campus

2min
page 72

Cut Excess Energy Consumption

2min
pages 70-71

Fragrance Recs. Based on Your College

2min
pages 74-75

Climb Over the Language Barrier

5min
pages 66-69

Intersectionality

4min
pages 64-65

Black Voices: Ross Blanton

5min
pages 50-53

Grindr

4min
pages 36-37

Black Voices Introduction

1min
pages 43-45

Poem: A Letter, A Plea, A Place To Breathe

4min
pages 48-49

Exploring Bisexuality While in a Relationship 38 Before Your Gynecology Exam

8min
pages 38-42

What the Douche?

2min
pages 34-35

Black Voices: Angela Davis on Campus

2min
pages 46-47

Asexuality in a Sex Obsessed Society

6min
pages 30-33

Mindfulness

4min
pages 18-21

Three Aloe Vera Remedies for Skin and Hair

2min
pages 8-9

Cancer Strengthened My Faith

5min
pages 26-29

Energy Cleansing: Based on our Cultures

2min
pages 24-25

Drunken Cake Pops

3min
pages 16-17

This Story is SPAM

2min
pages 10-11

Live Your Fantasies: Requiem Coffee

3min
pages 12-13

Step into the Dark Side: Shadow Work

2min
pages 22-23
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