Weaving resistance: Feminist embroidery as a political, affective, and artistic practice within the struggle against feminicides in Mexico City
Arts activisms and gender-based violence through transnational perspectives
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17159/2617-3255/2025/n39a20Keywords:
Artivism/Artivismo, embroidery, gender-based violence, feminicides, feminist movements, Mexico, autoethnographyAbstract
In Mexico, an average of 11 women are murdered every day as victims of feminicide, making gender-based violence an urgent and pervasive crisis. In response to this extreme context of violence, feminist activists have developed creative, embodied forms of resistance and collective healing. One such practice is el bordado (embroidery), which holds a long tradition in feminist protest across Latin America. In this article, I explore the multiple and layered meanings of bordado in feminist activism, drawing on ethnographic fieldwork – including participant observation, field notes and group interviews – with two collectives in Mexico City: Las Siemprevivas and Fuentes Rojas. The results show that embroidery can become a form of emotional solidarity and collective healing, providing a way to express the “unspeakable”, and share experiences of injustice and loss. Embroidery fosters the establishment of meaningful connections, “affective communities” and “de-privatising” the pain. Bordado also serves as a form of (counter-)memory work – dignifying and humanising the victims of feminicide while creating a “textile archive” against forgetting. The embroidery circles ( juntanzas) offer spaces of mutual support, practices of care, and empowerment. Furthermore, as a political act of resistance and denunciation, activists carr y the bordados to demonstrations, exhibit them in museums and public spaces across Mexico and globally. By occupying sidewalks and plazas, activists reclaim public space and transform urban landscapes into sites of counter-memory and feminist resistance. In doing so, they fight the normalisation of violence, oppose victim-blaming, and sensitise the public. In short, bordar (to embroider) is a political, affective, and artistic practice that challenges gender-based violence and enacts collective feminist resistance in Mexico.
