Exeter Pride
martha-jane posted a photo:
A few shots from Exeter Pride
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Pride Kickball
Portland State Campus Rec posted a photo:
We turned the Urban Plaza into a kickball court on May 6, 2016, as we marked Portland State University’s Pride in May celebrations Campus Rec style.
Family Equality Council's 11th Annual Night At The Pier Hosted By Gloria & Emilio Estefan
Family Equality posted a photo:
“NEW YORK, NY – MAY 09: Ana Villafane (C) and the cast of “On Your Feet!” perform onstage during the Family Equality Council’s 11th Annual Night at the Pier hosted by Gloria & Emilio Estefan on May 9, 2016 in New York City. (Photo by Andrew Toth/Getty Images for Family Equality Council)”
Chilling on my balcony after returning from a shopping trip to Basingstoke
joanne.lockwood1965 posted a photo:
Limit(less) Project: Kaamila
mowunna posted a photo:
Kaamila: Queer Somali (USA)
“My name is Kaamila. Currently, I use she pronouns and they pronouns. I am Somali American, biracial, and Black. I identify as a bisexual queer dyke and a fluid femme and, at the moment, a womxn. I claim my identities loudly and proudly, my small personal acts of political resistance against the ways in which biphobia, femmephobia, and misogyny show up in my life and in society. And simultaneously- maybe it’s because I grew up in a biracial, bicultural household, constantly remolding myself to survive; maybe it’s because I’m a Gemini and the stars said it would be so- it’s hard to feel like any word holds all of me or I fit quite right in any place or space. I’m always busting out binaries and sliding along spectrums and gallivanting across the vast galaxy of gender and desire and identity.”
– Kaamila (Queer Somali, She/Her & They/Them, IG: @kaamoh)
Donate to support the project: HERE
About Limit(less)
Limit(less) is a photography project by Mikael Owunna (@owning-my-truth) documenting the fashion and style of LGBTQ African Immigrants (1st and 2nd generation) in diaspora. As LGBTQ Africans, we are constantly told that being LGBTQ is somehow “un-African,” and this rhetoric is a regular part of homophobic and transphobic discourse in African communities. This line of thinking, however, is patently false and exists an artifact of colonization of the African continent. Identities which would now be categorized as “LGBTQ” have always existed, and being LGBTQ does not make us “less” African.
Limit(less) explores how LGBTQ African immigrants navigate their identities and find ways to overcome the supposed “tension” between their LGBTQ and African identities through their fashion and style. The project seeks to visually deconstruct the colonial binary that has been set up between LGBTQ and African identities, which erases the lives and experiences of LGBTQ Africans. #LimitlessAfricans
Donate to support the project: HERE
Website:
limitlessafricans.com/
Facebook Page:
facebook.com/limitlessafricans
Tumblr:
limitlessafricans.tumblr.com
Sunny Afternoon shopping @ M&S and then a walk around Petersfield Lake
joanne.lockwood1965 posted a photo:
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