In conversation with Nicole Vulcan
Thereโs a quote by Audre Lorde I keep coming back to:
The words and poetry of Lorde, a self-described โBlack, lesbian, mother, warrior, poetโ are some of the spiritual foods I consume in times that require strength and hope and power ยญโ like the times many of my fellow Americans, and the migrants and travelers weโve long welcomed to our shores โ are living through right now.
Each year, the Source puts together a Womenโs Issue that seeks not to comprehensively cover every single issue that women, femmes, non-binary and other people in our community may be facing, but, through personal and local perspectives, aims to share some stories of their resilience. Our News and Feature stories this week offer an even broader lens on that โ because in these times, there are more for whom the shackles are tightening in.
Feminism is, at its most basic, the notion that all people โ regardless of color or gender or creed โ have the right to live the fullest expression of their lives. Itโs in this spirit that Iโve created this series of Q&As and guest opinions.
Freezing up in fear is a natural inclination during this moment, but for those who appear inside these pages, it seems they also understand another notion that comes from Lorde:
American women continue to have the highest rate of death before, during and after childbirth
The owner of a local pole dance studio talks about the empowerment of the practice
For many survivors, the fear of deportation is as strong as the fear of their abuser.
While many are feeling silenced, local women musicians aim to amplify the voices of the marginalized
The women at Spider City Brewing are fermenting change in the craft beer industry
Girls Who Code seeks to close the tech gender gap
Monoskier Joanna Adams offers insight and inspiration
Mikaela de la Myco, guest columnist answers this weekโs reader question
Read the entire issue HERE!
This article appears in The Source Weekly February 20, 2025.
























