Luzviminda Uzuri “Lulu” Carpenter (she/her) (aka Ms. Lulu or LuluNation) is a Media Justice Advocate, Educator, and Organizer. Ms. Lulu is entering her 10th year as a Performance & Media Arts (PMA)Teacher at
Seattle Girls’ School, She is an advocate for Social & Media Justice and is involved in many community organizations. For example, she founded
Alphabet Alliance of Color (AAoC), a grassroots community organizing alliance for Queer and Trans Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (QTBIPOC), and is still on their core team advisory board. As a community advisory board member, she has sat on the Teacher Advisory Board at the
MoPop Museum; the Community Advisory Board at
Seattle Theatre Group (STG), the Community Advisory Board at
OnTheBoards, the Washington State Advisory Board to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, and as as a former Commissioner and Co-Chair of the City of Seattle
LGBTQ Commission. She has worked and performed for over 20 years in Seattle and the northwest with community organizations that helped to form her analysis around youth work, intergenerational work, gender-based violence, media justice, art activism, and cultural work. They include Washington Hall, Ladies First Project of Communities Against Rape and Abuse (CARA), VoicesRising, Asian Pacific Islander Women and Family Safety Center (now APIChaya), Pinay sa Seattle (now GABRIELA-Seattle),
the Service Board (tSB), YouthSpeaks, and worked as a consultant at organizations such as
Roots Young Adult Shelter, YouthSource, and YouthCare.
Why I Love Middle School: Middle school is the place where new empowered images of self can be created to counter what the world and media tell youth who and what they are. I believe in every generation’s ability to develop new innovative solutions through art and media starting with middle schoolers.