CUNY DIGITAL HISTORY ARCHIVE

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#CancelRent And Eviction Blockades in Brooklyn: Black Queer Women and Femmes Fight for the Right to Housing

Written and submitted by Brooklyn College student Emily Batista over the summer of 2020, this autoethnography focused on the eviction defense of 1214 Dean Street in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. Batista framed this research project as a "vessel to explore the growing calls for 'Cancel Rent' as a response to the COVID pandemic," with specific attention to the underrepresented role of Black queer women and femmes in the history of NYC housing struggles.

This item is part of the City University of New York (CUNY) Distance Learning Archive, a group project developed as part of Prof. Matthew K. Gold's Spring 2020 Knowledge Infrastructures seminar in the Ph.D. Program in English at The Graduate Center, CUNY, in partnership with the Interactive Technology and Pedagogy Certificate Program. The project's goal was to resist or trouble the discourse of catastrophe around the shift to online learning caused by the COVID-19 pandemic by documenting the lived experiences of students, faculty, and staff across CUNY's 25 campuses. Further, the project wanted to document the moment of crisis response by taking a critical approach to educational technology.

Source | CUNY Distance Learning Archive
Creator | Batista, Emily
Date Created | June 2020 (Circa)
Rights | Copyright CDHA Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Item Type | Text (Report / Paper / Proposal)
Cite This document | Batista, Emily, “#CancelRent And Eviction Blockades in Brooklyn: Black Queer Women and Femmes Fight for the Right to Housing,” CUNY Digital History Archive, accessed April 27, 2024, https://cdha.cuny.edu/items/show/12652.

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