In its intersectional meaning within the context of dialectical thinking and the socially constructed binaries of Euro-colonial society, the term "bi" refers to the recognition and acknowledgement of the existence and validity of multiple identities, experiences, and perspectives. It challenges the rigid dichotomies and hierarchical divisions prevalent in Euro-colonial systems by embracing the complexity and fluidity of human existence. "Bi" emphasizes the interconnectedness and interdependence of various social categories, such as race, gender, sexuality, and class, recognizing that individuals can occupy multiple positions within these systems simultaneously. It encourages critical thinking and the rejection of simplistic binary frameworks, promoting a more inclusive and nuanced understanding of human diversity and social relations.

"Bi" zine is  a collaborative zine which explores the term "bi" as it relates culturally to contemporary nuanced conversations surrounding previous social binaries . The zine contrasts lived experiences with antithetical scales of binary gradation  within medicine.

[ Collages : Sade Oyedipe ]
Bi - Partisan
[ "Bipartisanship helps to avoid extremes and imbalances. It causes compromises and accomodates. So let's cooperate." ] 

[ Zbigniew Brezezinski ]











Diagrams concerning perception, specifically obstructions in sight are overlayed with  an analysis of the contemporary American political landscape from a global perspective.
Bi - Racial 
[ Concerning or containing members of two racial groups. ]









Concepts of blood quantum are contrasted with the paradoxical applications in which it exists within colonial Northern America as it relates to the legal language utilized to describe Indigenous Identity.
Bi - Sexual 
[ Sexually attracted not exclusively to people of one particular gender; attracted to both men and women. ]












Illustrations describing the spectrum of visual sight and color are interjected with lived experience ;  which is then calculated on various scales of sexuality with disparate constants and measures intertwined with scales of vision.