ABSTRACT

Several Afro-Puerto Rican women—those who self-identify, may be interpellated, and/or are epidermalized as Black—are currently building a praxis and expression of decolonial Black womanhood within the realms of street art. This chapter focuses on Colectivo Moriviví and their ‘Paz para la Mujer’ mural to show the ways in which Afro-Puerto Rican women reclaim and highlight their identity as Black women. By doing so, they enact a feminist praxis that decolonizes physical spaces and does away with traditional modes of sociopolitical dialogue.