Abstract
AbstractHistorically and globally, Black people have engaged in practices of maroonage to resist bondage and re‐make free homes and communities. In this article, I offer maroons as a keyword and assert that Blackgirls are present‐day maroons in plain sight who resist structural bondage and re‐make practices of survivance in the pursuit of freedoms on an everyday basis. Through the article, I share and analyze ethnographic data as well as poetry and lyrics written by Blackgirls and womxn who enact their/our resistance and maroonage in plain sight.
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