project image
Holy Moment Photography
A WOMAN’S RIGHT TO CHOOSE (A GIRL’S GUIDE TO GUNS)

first performed on February 20, 2020
Notsuoh
performed once in 2020

JEANETTE JOY HARRIS

Houston, Texas
jjoyharris@gmail.com
jeanettejoyharris.me

A WOMAN’S RIGHT TO CHOOSE (A GIRL’S GUIDE TO GUNS)
JEANETTE JOY HARRIS

Protection of the physical body is a fundamental political issue, and it takes a particular form when addressing the female body. In “A Woman’s Right to Choose,” I use the “girls and guns” stereotype, imagery from my family history, and a firearm “burlesque” to underscore a discussion about physical safety as a political concept. I am interested in conflicting partisan ideologies that seek to ensure female safety and the paradoxical ways in which they intertwine.

The action begins with me entering a temporary installation with taxidermy deer and photos of women with hunting trophies. I am dressed in layers of hunting clothes and as I take these layers off, I remove hidden handguns. The last layer, which stays on, consists of leather pants and a tank top. I then get ready to go out for the evening. I create and apply gunpowder as eyeshadow, finish my hair with gun cleaning aerosol like hair spray, and apply deer scent as perfume. The final step is taking the handguns and hiding them in my new outfit. Ready for a night out, I leave the space, guns nearly invisible beneath my attire. By the conclusion of this 10-minute performance, I have transformed from a hunter to a “woman” and have left the space with a lingering scent of danger.

Sarah Palin and her right-leaning “Mama Grizzlies” have aligned the protection of the female body with the right to bear arms, citing the second amendment. For this faction, it is through access to firearms that a woman can protect herself and her family.

Left-leaning, pro-choice supporters have aligned the protection of the female body with access to abortion, citing Roe v Wade. For this faction, it is through accessible healthcare and personal autonomy that a woman can protect herself and her family.

Though typically different in political leanings, both “Mama Grizzlies” and Pro-Choice supporters are fundamentally concerned with female agency, empowerment, and are advocating for political change that affects opportunities and access. The ways in which these goals are articulated and the plans to achieve those goals, however, could not be more divergent.