Collective Writing: Notes on Methodology

Author Bio: 

Debarati is a feminist research scholar and hand-embroiderer. She is currently pursuing an MPhil in Women's Studies from Jadavpur University. She is passionate about womxn-centric cultures, practices, movements and feminist epistemology.

Ghiwa Sayegh is an anarcha-queer writer, independent publisher, and archivist. They are the founding editor of Kohl: a Journal for Body and Gender Research and the co-founder of Intersectional Knowledge Publishers. They have an MA in gender studies from Université Paris 8 Vincennes – Saint-Denis. They are passionate about queer theory, transnational circulations, global economies, and imagined or unknown histories. Their influences are Audre Lorde and Sara Ahmed.

Niharika Pandit is a PhD researcher at LSE Department of Gender Studies. Her research is an anticolonial feminist inquiry into everyday politics of living under military occupation in Kashmir and grounded in feminist, anticolonial thought and transnational feminist epistemologies. She is an editorial collective member of Engenderings and a writer. Her research and writings have appeared in Economic and Political Weekly, Association of Political and Legal Anthropology, the Polis Project, Feminist Review blog, Engenderings, The Hindu among others.

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Debarati Sarkar, Ghiwa Sayegh, Niharika Pandit. "Collective Writing: Notes on Methodology ". Kohl: a Journal for Body and Gender Research Vol. 7 شماره 1 (07 سپتامبر 2021): pp. -. (Last accessed on 21 نوامبر 2024). Available at: https://kohljournal.press/fa/node/314.
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Debarati Sarkar

Write with your eyes like painters, with your ears like musicians, with your feet like dancers. You are the truthsayer with quill and torch. Write with your tongues of fire. Don't let the pen banish you from yourself. Don't let the ink coagulate in your pens. Don't let the censor snuff out the spark, nor the gags muffle your voice. Put your shit on the paper.

Gloria Anzaldúa, “Speaking in Tongues: A Letter To 3rd World Women Writers”

 

The Circle’s Conspiracy of Writers

Also known as the Teta Research Network. The conspiracy’s members are: Ahmad Qais Munhazim, Ahmed Awadalla, Alina Achenbach, Barbara Dynda, Cindy Salame, Dalal Alfares, Debarati Sarkar, Farah Galal Osman, Ghiwa Sayegh, J. Daniel Luther, Jean Makhlouta, Lina Koleilat, Hanna Al-Taher, Maria Najjar, Maya Bhardwaj, Madhulika Sonkar, Malek Lakhal, Myriam Amri, Niharika Pandit, Nour Almazidi, Roya Hasan, Sara Elbanna, Sara Tonsy, Sherine Shallah, Wazina Zondon, and Zenab Ahmed.

Our methodology consists in casting a circle, inviting our ghosts and affects, and invoking our ancestors and histories – how we have come into politics. We let them do the guiding to weave into palpable text, fragments of our multitudes. By grieving together, we create magic together.

 

Fuck the Fucking Lines

The theatricality of the text with its directional notes add to the performance of reading a manifesto before going to bed. One is asked to commit to the text with their embodied presence. The typographical incongruence often becomes full sized images within the text engaging in a dialogue with the written word. “Ghost” appears to represent the phantom presence of the writers’ thoughts, comments, and suggestions as they appeared in the original version of Fuck the Fucking Lines. Ghost belongs to a liminal space between authorship and anonymity. Fuck the Fucking Lines expects its readers and listeners to get on with the programme as a witness with a job at hand: they are expected to not forget.

 

The Writing’s Circle Guide to Hijacking Spaces

This manifesto-like guide came about following days of discussing how spaces within academia rest on histories of injustice and exclusion, especially for those of us who remain invested in anticolonial feminist possibilities in intellectual discussion spaces. As we were sat in one of the writing circle meetings, we wrote titles, half thoughts, personal stories, wishes, strategies, then read them to each other. This guide is to be handled with care. It is destined to be used to occupy and dismantle the spaces that still profit off of our collective dispossession.

 

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