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Beyond Victim and Perpetrator: Thinking Gender in the Grey

We often think in binaries: victim or perpetrator, right or wrong, truth or falsehood. But what if reality refuses these categories? This piece explores the uncomfortable grey zones of gender, power, and allegation — drawing on feminist theory to ask: Can we pursue justice without losing nuance? Because sometimes, the hardest thing to do is not to choose a side — but to think. Beyond Binaries: Gender, Power, and the Ethics of Allegation Let me begin with a risk. This blog post may be misread — as a defence of patriarchy, as a dilution of feminist concerns, or as a provocation. But perhaps that risk itself tells us something about the moment we inhabit. We are increasingly compelled to think in binaries: victim or perpetrator feminist or anti-feminist just or unjust And anything that attempts to inhabit the in-between — the uneasy, unstable grey — is often flattened into one side or the other. Unlearning the Comfort of Certainty This insistence on binaries is not accidental. As Judith B...

The Most Dangerous Activist Is a Thinking Mind

W e often imagine activism as: marches, slogans, raised fists. But what if the real work begins elsewhere? In thought In questioning In refusing to follow blindly Every protest has a script. But who writes it? And who questions it? This blog asks a difficult question: Are we thinking activists - or just moving bodies? Because without thinking, activism risks becoming performance. Not All Activism Shouts: The Quiet Power of Thinking When we hear the word activism , what comes to mind? Crowds. Slogans. Raised fists. Marches cutting through streets under the sun or rain. These are the visible grammars of resistance—the images that circulate, the performances that get archived, photographed, and remembered. But what we often fail to see is this: every protest has a script. And every script has a place of origin. The Invisible Labour Behind Protest The march is not where activism begins. It is where it culminates. Long before bodies gather in public spaces, ideas have already been draft...