Dr. Dorothy Attakora-Gyan
Writer and Independent Shame Researcher, Dee'Archives
A neurodivergent artist and storyteller, Dr. Attakora-Gyan writes fiction, non-fiction essays, blog posts, and poetry. Her writing has been featured in The Feminist Wire, Ottawa Citizen, Canadian Women Studies, and Climate Chaos: Ecofeminism and the Land Question. She writes on themes related to shame, trauma, fear, and other difficult emotions, feminism, racism, mental wellness, neurodiversity, and spiritual practice. Dorothy also features her own drawings, photography, and fashion look book on her website at www.deearchives.com
Media
African Women Cultivating New Forms of Trust and Resistance in Activist Circles
Unlike Rachel Dolezal, Black identity was thrust upon me
Black Women and Vulnerability (pages 24-25)
Inanna Publications
March 26, 2019
978-1-77133-593-5
"Climate change is already under way with unpredictable consequences. Evidence of changes to the earth’s physical, chemical and biological processes is obvious everywhere. Greenhouse gas emissions have increased the carbon cycle concentration in the atmosphere. In the past, half of this carbon was stored in forests, while the other half was removed by oceans, but with deforestation and warming oceans, oxygen is at its lowest breathable point.
Ecological degradation is global and the earth is becoming increasingly inhospitable with unprecedented weather events. The changing temperature has altered the balance of communities and degraded ecosystems. For example, in May 2016, as a result of a drier winter combined with an unusually hot, dry air mass over Northern Alberta, Canada, the temperature climbed to 32.8 °C (91°F) (Daily Data Report) resulting in 49 active wildfires covering an estimated 522,892 hectares. During the summer of 2017, hundreds of wildfires also razed thousands of hectares in the provinces of British Columbia, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.
More destructive events due to warmer ocean surface temperatures are also taking place. Warmer oceans hold less dissolved gases, including oxygen, which affects marine organisms, particularly mammals. In January 2014, in Peru’s Pacific, more than 400 dolphins washed ashore dead (Foley); similarly, in New Zealand, in February 2017, more than 400 whales had beached themselves to die (Farewell). El Niño, which is a cold, low-salinity ocean current that runs along Ecuador, Peru, and Chile, has been heating and altering weather in all Pacific Rim countries. Each of the El Niño and La Niña cycles in the past twenty years have occurred with increased frequency and violence.
In sum, the latest scientific evidence tell us that we are approaching climate catastrophe: global average temperature is rising, if another decade of business-as-usual fossil fuel emissions continues we can reach 2° C, a dangerous warming threshold.
Climate change deepens ethical issues explored and discussed by ecofeminists around the world. This book describes the academic field of material ecofeminism, provides an overview of the land question, and explores how reigning discourses of “sustainable development” have led to a commodification of nature and have effaced the multiple visions, uses, and relationships of local human communities. The articles in this book are spaces of political projects and values that nurture anticapitalist, antipatriarchal, and anticolonial oppressions. We argue that the centrality of resisting the colonization of Mother Earth and Pachamama is supreme."-Inanna Publications
My chapter was called, "Finite Disappointments or Infinite Hope: Working Through Tensions Within Transnational Feminist Movements."
Finite Disappointments or Infinite Hope: Working Through Tensions Within Transnational Feminist Movements
Published by Canadian Woman Studies
January 1, 2015
Vol.31 (1/2), p.85
Biography
Daughter of the Akan and Asante by birth, Dorothy Attakora-Gyan is an Ottawa-based freelance writer and mental health advocate specializing in shame research. She has a doctorate in feminist and gender studies, with a background in sociology, equity studies, and global studies. Her thesis was titled, "Octavia Butler's Parables and Black African American Hyper-Empathic Neurodivergent Feminists: On Shame and Solidarity." The emphasis was to understand how shame obstructs interpersonal relationships within the feminist movement. The goal was to pay close attention to the complexly suppressed shames we encounter when stepping into solidarity with one another, mapping out how negotiating shame can come to represent feminism as a multiplicity. Her next project is titled, Octavia Butler and the Future of Emotions.
Dr. Attakora-Gyan is a trauma and violence informed educator trained in community health, sexual health, and HIV prevention education. She has 10 years of experience in HIV, food sovereignty, and emotions research, and won the Teaching Assistant Award in 2015. She ran her own business from 2009 until 2013, as the Founder and Creative Director of Mina Danielle Designs, an African clothing line.
Visit her website at www.deearchives.com