"There’s a long history of girls who have used their own anguish, their own suffering, as tools for resistance and political agency. Girls’ sadness isn’t quiet, weak, shameful, or dumb: It is active, autonomous, and articulate. It’s a way of fighting back."
http://www.nylon.com/articles/audrey-wollen-sad-girl-theory
"I think it's really important to recognise and foster an alternative to the hyper-positive demands of contemporary feminism right now. We've really fixated on loving ourselves - there's this ethos of excess and approval, making it cool and fun to be a girl. The problem is: it isn't really cool and fun to be a girl. It is an experience of brutal alienation and constant fear of violence. All the amazing parts of girlhood (of which there are many) are survival tactics that girls have created in the face of this reality. I want to stand with the girls who are miserable, who don't love their body, who cry on the bus on the way to work. I believe those girls have the power to cause real upheaval, to really change things."
https://i-d.vice.com/en_gb/article/richard-prince-audrey-wollen-and-the-sad-girl-theory
Hmm bueno, llevo tiempo siguiendo a Audrey Wollen: https://instagram.com/audreywollen
Tantas visitas al hospital se deben a que ha superado un cáncer, por cierto.