Amandla Stenberg is used to having a spotlight on everything she does. “I’m always walking this precarious line of having my actions over-politicized,” @amandlasponsored tells TIME. “But at the same time, there’s political intention in the actions.” It’s weighty stuff for a teenager, but Stenberg, 19, stands out even in the current ecosystem of socially conscious young performers. She’s more than a movie star: she’s an activist, political pioneer and leading voice of her generation. Although Stenberg got her start in films like The Hunger Games, she went viral over a school project—a video called “Don’t Cash Crop My Cornrows,” released in 2015, that explored cultural appropriation in a way that was both playful and thoughtful. She talks openly about intersectional feminism and queer identity, building a devoted following on social media—over 1.8 million followers on Instagram. “That’s what I strive for in terms of being [visible] for black girls [and] marginalized people who don’t get representation for themselves in the media.” she says. It’s different when you have millions of fans watching, but that’s not her primary concern: “If that has any sort of political weight or social weight, that’s fantastic,” she says. “I’m still figuring out what box I would like to be defined by,” she says. She reconsiders. “But hopefully, I’ll never be defined by any box.” Amandla Stenberg is one of the three TIME International covers showcasing the Next Generation Leaders. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @geordiewood for TIME

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Amandla Stenberg is used to having a spotlight on everything she does. “I’m always walking this precarious line of having my actions over-politicized,” @amandlasponsored tells TIME. “But at the same time, there’s political intention in the actions.” It’s weighty stuff for a teenager, but Stenberg, 19, stands out even in the current ecosystem of socially conscious young performers. She’s more than a movie star: she’s an activist, political pioneer and leading voice of her generation. Although Stenberg got her start in films like The Hunger Games, she went viral over a school project—a video called “Don’t Cash Crop My Cornrows,” released in 2015, that explored cultural appropriation in a way that was both playful and thoughtful. She talks openly about intersectional feminism and queer identity, building a devoted following on social media—over 1.8 million followers on Instagram. “That’s what I strive for in terms of being [visible] for black girls [and] marginalized people who don’t get representation for themselves in the media.” she says. It’s different when you have millions of fans watching, but that’s not her primary concern: “If that has any sort of political weight or social weight, that’s fantastic,” she says. “I’m still figuring out what box I would like to be defined by,” she says. She reconsiders. “But hopefully, I’ll never be defined by any box.” Amandla Stenberg is one of the three TIME International covers showcasing the Next Generation Leaders. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @geordiewood for TIME


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