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The Ethnic Aisle
  • Submissions/
  • Past Issues/
    • The Joy Issue
    • The Visual Issue
    • The Transit Issue
    • The Blood Issue
    • The Canada Issue
    • The East to West issue
    • The Death Issue
    • The Tongues Issue
    • The Religion Issue
    • The Interracial Dating Issue
    • The White Issue
    • The Food Issue
    • The Election Issue
    • The Queer Issue
    • Past, Present & Future of Racism
    • Downstown vs. Suburbs
    • The Hair Issue
    • The Christmas Issue
    • The Booze Issue
    • The Ass Issue
    • The Wedding Issue
  • About/
  • Events/
  • Contributors/
  • Donate/
  • Sponsors/
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The Ethnic Aisle

The Joy Issue

The Ethnic Aisle
  • Submissions/
  • Past Issues/
    • The Joy Issue
    • The Visual Issue
    • The Transit Issue
    • The Blood Issue
    • The Canada Issue
    • The East to West issue
    • The Death Issue
    • The Tongues Issue
    • The Religion Issue
    • The Interracial Dating Issue
    • The White Issue
    • The Food Issue
    • The Election Issue
    • The Queer Issue
    • Past, Present & Future of Racism
    • Downstown vs. Suburbs
    • The Hair Issue
    • The Christmas Issue
    • The Booze Issue
    • The Ass Issue
    • The Wedding Issue
  • About/
  • Events/
  • Contributors/
  • Donate/
  • Sponsors/

Joy is different for everyone.

And so it was for the Black women who contributed to this issue.

For this issue we focused on black women’s joy because the world doesn’t allow Black women to tell all of their stories. More often than not, we are called on to do the supremely thankless task of responding to tragedy while we’re still processing it.

The frustration, trauma and anxieties arising from those tragedies have made movements out of moments.  And yet, rage propels you right until it shatters you.

And rage - outrage, protest, rioting, resentment, backlash - marks this time. At times, it can feel like there isn’t a lot of room to breathe. Until a friend makes a joke or a child tells you a long story or you hear that one song you needed to.

Hovering over chess boards, eating pizza on hotel beds, on a grandmother’s veranda, in a kitchen, and even on the internet, in this issue we found joy in the spaces where we can simply be.

Lila Bristol makes order of the world by staring down the black and white pieces of a chess board. (She always plays black.) Putting the world into its proper place is why Asheda Dwyer cracks open a coconut in the mornings. And remembering a wonderworld of grandmother’s garden reminds Amanda White where she felt joy as a kid.

Joy allows us to be our fullest selves. As Huda Hassan writes in the feature essay for this issue, “Laughter has the literal ability to physically heal us.” In a year where hate and crisis seem to be constantly around the corner, it has been a complete joy to edit this issue of the Ethnic Aisle.

We, too, needed this.

Sajae Elder

Vicky Mochama


Featured
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Huda Hassan
Through Suffering, We Laugh
Huda Hassan

The same spaces in which we come face-to-face with Black trauma is also where we find healing, with everything from pointed memes to viral dance videos helping us do so.

Huda Hassan
Ella Cooper: Ecstatic Radical Nudes
Liz Ikiriko
Ella Cooper: Ecstatic Radical Nudes
Liz Ikiriko

Ella Cooper's Ecstatic Nudes series places reclamation and resistance at the forefront.

Liz Ikiriko
A Grandma's Love
Amanda White
A Grandma's Love
Amanda White

On intergenerational love and the many ways it manifests for this Black Canadian family.

Amanda White
By Way of Sacred Water
Asheda Dwyer
By Way of Sacred Water
Asheda Dwyer

How the coconut and its water have nourished the diaspora in more ways than one.

Asheda Dwyer
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Lila Bristol
Playing Chess
Lila Bristol

This game of strategy means something different and important for Black kids who play it: Hope.

Lila Bristol
Sharine Taylor
Salons & Sisterhood
Sharine Taylor

For Black women, trips to the salon is about so much more than presses, braids and treatments; but the rituals and connections we forge in these homes away from home.

Sharine Taylor
She Keeps Me Young
Sajae Elder
She Keeps Me Young
Sajae Elder

A conversation between rapper and arts facilitator Sydanie and her young daughter about how they bring each other joy.

Sajae Elder

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