A list of books on intersectionality by Alejandra Ortiz
The other day during a radio interview about my book, the topic of refugees came up. Both the interviewer and I agreed that refugees are used as scapegoats by the media and politicians to instil fear and alienation. This is also the case for trans people – a minority under the LGBTQI+ umbrella. Hate against refugees, the queer movements, sex workers, migrants from the Global South and the anti-racism and women’s liberation movement may seem as if they are separate issues, but I think they are very much connected, intertwined and overlap on multiple levels.
During the interview I was then asked how we can make people more empathetic towards refugees, trans people and those living with these or more intersecting identities. Although I tried giving a concise answer, part of me feels I couldn't bring the full message across. When people ask me these types of questions I always feel a bit lost in providing a succinct reply. Not because I don't have the knowledge that comes with lived experience, it is mostly because each of these topics is in itself a complex one. Much more so when an identity intersects with other ones. Time really is the enemy of complex matters.
One reason I wrote my book De waarheid zal me bevrijden (The truth will set me free), was precisely because I wanted the broader public – the general population with voting power, civil servants and policymakers included – to better understand people like me. I wanted to show the broader public how the intersections of poverty, transness, skin color, violence and patriarchy (among others), can pretty much determine the future of a person and how the person in question is often seen and treated by their environment and time.
In my own book I’ve tried to put together these intersections and effects that macro-policies and ideologies have on the life and ‘micro-aspects’ of a human being. For this list, I made a small selection of books that have touched upon concepts of macro and micro effects of identity restrictions.