
In this powerful second instalment of Beyond One Story: The New Architecture of Feminism, Danielle Robinson examines how modern feminist theory is being rebuilt from the ground up — through class struggle, economic justice, and the global voices that have too often been left out of the narrative.
Across three deeply interconnected chapters, Part Two maps the evolving landscape of twenty-first-century feminism — from the working-class revolt of Feminism of the 99%, to the intellectual and cultural contributions of women of colour, Indigenous women, queer women, and trans women, and the global frameworks reshaping what liberation truly means.
Chapter 4 introduces Feminism of the 99%, exploring how the movement challenges corporate empowerment and neoliberal feminism by centring labour, care, and economic redistribution as feminist issues.
Chapter 5 amplifies the voices from the margins, spotlighting thinkers such as bell hooks, Audre Lorde, Angela Davis, and Linda Tuhiwai Smith, who reframed theory through histories of enslavement, land dispossession, and cultural survival.
And Chapter 6, Queer and Trans Feminisms: Beyond the Gender Binary, asks what happens when feminism expands to embrace all bodies, all identities, and all forms of becoming.
Through these intersecting stories, Danielle reveals how feminism today is less about equality within existing systems and more about dismantling the architecture of domination itself — capitalism, colonialism, patriarchy, and heteronormativity — to build something genuinely inclusive, just, and interdependent.
This episode combines academic depth with lyrical narration, drawing from critical theory, global activism, and personal reflection to illuminate how power, class, and identity converge in contemporary feminist thought.
Whether you’re a scholar, activist, or curious listener, Part Two offers a profound reminder:
True liberation doesn’t simply invite more women into the old structure — it redesigns the structure entirely.