
In this third part of Beyond One Story: The New Architecture of Feminism, Danielle Robinson explores how power is designed into the very structures of daily life — the ramp, the border, the camera lens — and how feminist theory must now move beyond inclusion toward reconstruction.
From disability justice to migration and border politics, and from tokenism to true representation, this chapter sequence dismantles the myths of visibility and autonomy.
Across these episodes, Danielle traces how ableism, nationalism, and neoliberal feminism intertwine to shape who is seen, who is excluded, and who is commodified in modern culture.
Drawing on thinkers like Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, Alison Kafer, Jasbir Puar, Mia Mingus, Kimberlé Crenshaw, and Sara Ahmed, this series examines how the politics of access, movement, and recognition redefine what liberation really means — not freedom from dependence, but freedom through connection.
💬 “Access isn’t accommodation; it’s a redesign of the world itself.”
Part III of Beyond One Story asks:
Can feminism truly be global if its structures remain exclusionary?
What happens when visibility becomes performance, and empowerment becomes industry?
Through lyrical narration and critical insight, Danielle reveals the feminist architecture of justice — one built on interdependence, mobility, and radical visibility.
🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and join the conversation on social platforms @TheDanielleRobinsonPodcast.