Why intersectional stories are key to helping the communities we serve

Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Neimand, Annie
Asorey, Natalie
Christiano, Ann
Wallace, Zakyree
Publisher
Stanford Social Innovation Review
Date
September 2021
Abstract / Description

Storytelling is the best tool we have for effectively communicating about big, systemic issues like racism, classism, and transphobia. People think in stories. When we don’t have a narrative that tells us how to think about an issue or when the narrative is inaccurate, partial, or too abstract, we fill in the gaps, and the stories we build in our own minds can be flawed and full of biases and assumptions. 

Great stories help us understand systemic issues because they transport us into the lives of the characters. We see the world through their eyes, and we are changed by their experiences because they feel like our own. Great stories can counter existing beliefs by rewriting someone's understanding. They can help communities radically imagine new ways of being and seeing.
Many people communicating for social change are exploring how to tell diverse and inclusive stories that do the important work of centering marginalized communities while building understanding about how inequality persists. Intersectionality—a theory with roots in Black feminist thought, including the work of Sojourner Truth, Anna Julia Cooper, Barbara Smith, Audre Lorde, Angela Davis, bell hooks, Patricia Hill Collins, and Kimberlé Crenshaw—can help. (author introduction) #P4HEwebinarApril2024

Artifact Type
Reference Type
P4HE Authored
No