Adrienne Maree Brown facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Adrienne Maree Brown
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Brown in 2015
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Born | El Paso, Texas, US |
September 6, 1978
Occupation | Writer |
Alma mater | Columbia University |
Genre | Afrofuturism, science fiction, non-fiction; creative non-fiction |
Subject | Activism; Community Organizing; Afrofuturism; Black Feminism; Facilitation; Social Justice; Climate Justice |
Adrienne Maree Brown, often styled adrienne maree brown (born September 6, 1978), is a writer, activist and facilitator. From 2006 to 2010, she was executive director of the Ruckus Society. She also co-founded and directed the United States League of Young Voters.
Brown describes her thought as postnationalism, and others have described it as Black feminism or womanism. She also supports, among others, the Black Lives Matter and prison abolition movements.
Much of her work as a writer is based on the writings of science-fiction author Octavia E. Butler. Her first book, Emergent Strategy, was published in 2017. Other books include Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good, published in 2019, and We Will Not Cancel Us, published in 2020.
Brown also runs podcasts and has released a music project. Additionally, she works as a doula.
Contents
Life and activism
Early life
Brown was born on September 6, 1978, in El Paso, Texas, to a mixed-race couple who met at Clemson University in South Carolina. She is the eldest of three children. Her father was in the military and she spent much of her childhood abroad in Germany (see United States military deployments), as well as in Georgia, New York, and California. As mixed-race children, Brown and her sisters experienced racism in school.
Brown attended Columbia University where she studied African American Studies, political science, and voice. She identifies as bisexual and has recounted experiences with homophobia.
After graduating from Columbia, Brown began working with the Harm Reduction Coalition in Brooklyn, and served as a social justice facilitator at the Social Forum.
She moved to Detroit in 2009 after being invited to consult with Detroit Summer in 2006, and after dating Detroit-based rapper Invincible.
Activism in Detroit and onwards
From 2006, Brown worked with social justice organizations in Detroit.
In 2006, Brown served as a consultant with Detroit Summer, based out of the Boggs Center. From this Brown developed a strong relationship with Grace Lee Boggs, whom she counts as a mentor. Brown was a major figure within the Allied Media Conference as a host and facilitator.
Between 2006 and 2010, Brown also worked as the executive director of the Ruckus Society. She co-founded and directed the League of Young Voters.
Of her work in Detroit, Brown wrote, "Our actions have to be towards the world we want. We need to be guerilla gardening and turning people's heat and water on. We need to be the guerillas putting up solar panels in the hood. That's what Detroit has taught me."
Brown has supported Democratic candidates in presidential elections, encouraging her readers to vote for Joe Biden and Barack Obama.
Brown describes her thought as postnationalism. Others have described it as Black feminism or womanism.
She has also expressed support for the Black Lives Matter movement. In her book We Will Not Cancel Us, she expresses support for the prison abolition movement.
Works
Journalism
Brown is currently a contributor to YES!, a magazine focused on solutions journalism. Brown previously contributed to Detroit-based newspaper The Michigan Citizen.
Books and contributions to books
Brown has published extensively on healing, self-care, trauma, and science fiction. Much of her work as a writer is based on the writings of science-fiction author Octavia E. Butler. Her own writing style has been said to belong to the Afrofuturism genre.
In 2010, she published the Octavia Butler Strategic Reader with Alexis Pauline Gumbs. In 2013, she received a Detroit Knight Arts Challenge Award to run a series of Octavia Butler-based science fiction writing workshops. In 2015, she collaborated with Walidah Imarisha and Sheree Renee Thomas to edit and release Octavia's Brood: Science Fiction Stories from Social Justice Movements, a collection of 20 short stories and essays about social justice inspired by Butler.
Her first book, Emergent Strategy, which examines sustainable social change, was released in 2017 by AK Press to critical acclaim. Brown defines emergence as "the way complex systems and patterns arise out of a multiplicity of relatively simple interactions" and describes emergent strategy as a "life-code" which is effective both in organizing and personal life.
Emergent Strategy has given way to a series of essays published by AK Press on sustainable transformative justice, including the November 2020 release We Will Not Cancel Us And Other Dreams of Transformative Justice and Holding Change: The Way of Emergent Strategy Facilitation and Mediation, out May 2021. The 2020 book We Will Not Cancel Us considers questions of harm, accountability, and transformative justice, speaking primarily to an audience of activists and others organizing around prison abolition.
Brown has contributed to many anthologies focused on justice, transformation, and feminism, including How to Get Stupid White Men Out of Office: The Anti-Politics, Un-Boring Guide to Power (2004), Dreaming in Public: Building the Occupy Movement (2012), Dear Sister (2014), and Feminisms in Motion (2018), How We Fight White Supremacy (2019), and Beyond Survival (2020).
In Beyond Survival (2020), Brown writes What is/isn’t transformative justice (2020), where she pleads for transformative justice rather than “public takedowns” of individuals who engage in wrongful behaviour. She describes transformative justice as: “justice practices that go all the way to the root of the problem and generate solutions and healing there, such that the conditions that create injustice are transformed”.
Brown's anthology Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good was released in February 2019. The book appeared in April 2019 on The New York Times Best Seller list for paperback nonfiction, where it was number six.
In September 2021, Brown published the novella Grievers, her first long-form work of published fiction.
Music
On March 25, 2021, Brown released an EP titled The Sabbatical Suite. It consists of five songs written on sabbatical in 2020, over beats by her musician friend J-Mythos. She has called it "a small odd intimate music project".
Podcasts
Alongside Autumn Brown, Brown runs the podcast, How to Survive the End of the World, which seeks to learn "from the apocalypse with grace, rigor and curiosity" and is currently in its 5th season, as of 2021.
In June 2020, Brown and Toshi Reagon began hosting the podcast Octavia's Parables, which gives an in-depth dive into Octavia E. Butler's Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents.
On June, 23, 2022, Brown appeared on "On Being with Krista Tippett" on an episode called "We are in a time of new suns”.
Work as a doula
Brown also works as a doula. She identifies as a "radical doula", because she sees it as part of her activism.
Awards and nominations
- Kresge Literary Arts Fellow (2013)
- Knights Arts Challenge winner (2013, 2015)