Women After Dark Book Launch
Women After Dark was born as a refusal of silence. It reframes the night: not as spectacle or stereotype, but as lived reality. The unspeakable, the everyday violences, the systems that obscure and endanger. Drawing on research, reflection, and lived realities, this book reclaims urban space, intellectually, politically, and personally for women who inhabit the night.
It explores concepts such as genderfication, how urban development reshapes neighborhoods in ways that erase or marginalize women’s presence. It examines nightmaking, the policies, economies, and cultures that decide who the city at night is really for. And it asks what feminist night governance might look like how we might imagine safer, more inclusive, and more liberatory urban nights.
This book asks, who is excluded, who is silenced, and who is made hypervisible? It shows how race, class, sexuality, and migration intersect with gender to define nighttime freedoms and dangers. It challenges us to think about public space not just in the light of day, but through the shifting, contested lens of night.
Women After Dark all about is what never made it into daylight.