brdgt: (Back and Forth Forever by iconomicon)
2011-04-26 09:25 am

I now realize how much I valued our easy intimacy.

I've been remiss in reposting articles here ever since I started using Facebook, so here's some things I've been reading lately:

First of all, I'm not a big fan of Tumblr - it often seems to be the worst kind of social media: no original content or even your own thoughts, just reposting, BUT, these, these I approve of:

Dads are the Original Hipster



And Hipster Animals:





Then, some feminism related links:

Poor Jane’s Almanac
By JILL LEPORE
The New York Times

Cambridge, Mass.

THE House Budget Committee chairman, Paul D. Ryan, a Republican from Wisconsin, announced his party’s new economic plan this month. It’s called “The Path to Prosperity,” a nod to an essay Benjamin Franklin once wrote, called “The Way to Wealth.”

Franklin, who’s on the $100 bill, was the youngest of 10 sons. Nowhere on any legal tender is his sister Jane, the youngest of seven daughters; she never traveled the way to wealth. He was born in 1706, she in 1712. Their father was a Boston candle-maker, scraping by. Massachusetts’ Poor Law required teaching boys to write; the mandate for girls ended at reading. Benny went to school for just two years; Jenny never went at all.

Their lives tell an 18th-century tale of two Americas. Against poverty and ignorance, Franklin prevailed; his sister did not.

Read more... )

Dallas Sports Columnist Displeased With Pitcher’s Decision To Do A Totally Normal Thing

It can be hard to tell that Dallas Observer sports blogger Richie Whitt is a sports blogger, since his professional blog, the one that is actually hosted on Village Voice servers, largely consists of pictures of women in various states of undress and reflections on recent Korn performances, so you could be forgiven for wondering where the hell he thinks he gets off shitting on Texas Rangers pitcher Colby Lewis for having the gall to miss a start in favor of attending the birth of his second child.

I mean, my first question was, what is Richie Whitt doing writing about sports, anyway? Is there not a wet t-shirt somewhere in the whole of suburban North Texas that needs his undivided attention?

Apparently not. No, when Whitt heard that Colby Lewis skipped a game, well, this:

In Game 2, Colby Lewis is scheduled to start after missing his last regular turn in the rotation because — I’m not making this up — his wife, Jenny, was giving birth in California. To the couple’s second child.

That’s right, folks. If you can believe it, this guy attended the birth of his child. Take a moment to collect yourselves if you must. I know news like this can be hard to process. Ok? Ok.

And lest you think that Whitt was just joking, I invite you to read further, wherein Whitt doesn’t really joke at all but just talks about how hard it is for him to wrap his mind around the idea of taking a day off to see your kid born.

Read more... )



Academia related links:

April 24, 2011
Paranoid? You Must Be a Grad Student

By Don Troop

Memo to grad students: Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not about to give you a Ph.D.

A mild case of paranoia might even help you navigate the tricky path to that terminal degree, says Roderick M. Kramer, a professor of organizational behavior at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business.

It's an academic cliché that graduate students are paranoid, but Mr. Kramer has actually crafted a linear model to explain it. The model depicts how factors common to the graduate-school experience—like being a newcomer unsure of your standing, and knowing that you're being sized up constantly—can ultimately induce social paranoia, a heightened sensitivity to what you imagine others might be thinking about you.

"That self-consciousness translates into a tendency to be extra vigilant and maybe overprocess information on how you're treated," Mr. Kramer says. (He published his model in a 1998 paper, "Paranoid Cognition in Social Systems.")

To be clear, he is not talking about clinical paranoia, an illness he studied at the University of California at Los Angeles under the psychiatrist Kenneth Colby, who had developed a computerized paranoid schizophrenic called PARRY. And Mr. Kramer, who has written extensively on the social psychology of trust and distrust, doesn't regard social paranoia as a pejorative term, either.

"It's meant to be almost a playful label to help people remember the consequences of being in these situations," he says.

Not only does he know what you're thinking, but he also knows why. Roderick M. Kramer has developed a linear model to explain the type of social paranoia common to graduate students.

Read more... )

Professor Deeply Hurt by Student's Evaluation
The Onion, APRIL 2, 1996

Leon Rothberg, Ph.D., a 58-year-old professor of English Literature at Ohio State University, was shocked and saddened Monday after receiving a sub-par mid-semester evaluation from freshman student Chad Berner. The circles labeled 4 and 5 on the Scan-Tron form were predominantly filled in, placing Rothberg’s teaching skill in the “below average” to “poor” range.

English professor Dr. Leon Rothberg, though hurt by evaluations that pointed out the little globule of spit that sometimes forms between his lips, was most upset at being called "totally lame" in one freshman's write-in comments.

Although the evaluation has deeply hurt Rothberg’s feelings, Berner defended his judgment at a press conference yesterday.

“That class is totally boring,” said Berner, one of 342 students in Rothberg’s introductory English 161 class. “When I go, I have to read the school paper to keep from falling asleep. One of my brothers does a comic strip called ‘The Booze Brothers.’ It’s awesome.”

Read more... )



A really great article on politics, science, and psychology: The Science of Why We Don't Believe Science
How our brains fool us on climate, creationism, and the vaccine-autism link.
By Chris Mooney, Mother Jones

"A MAN WITH A CONVICTION is a hard man to change. Tell him you disagree and he turns away. Show him facts or figures and he questions your sources. Appeal to logic and he fails to see your point." So wrote the celebrated Stanford University psychologist Leon Festinger [2] (PDF), in a passage that might have been referring to climate change denial—the persistent rejection, on the part of so many Americans today, of what we know about global warming and its human causes. But it was too early for that—this was the 1950s—and Festinger was actually describing a famous case study [3] in psychology.

Festinger and several of his colleagues had infiltrated the Seekers, a small Chicago-area cult whose members thought they were communicating with aliens—including one, "Sananda," who they believed was the astral incarnation of Jesus Christ. The group was led by Dorothy Martin, a Dianetics devotee who transcribed the interstellar messages through automatic writing.

Through her, the aliens had given the precise date of an Earth-rending cataclysm: December 21, 1954. Some of Martin's followers quit their jobs and sold their property, expecting to be rescued by a flying saucer when the continent split asunder and a new sea swallowed much of the United States. The disciples even went so far as to remove brassieres and rip zippers out of their trousers—the metal, they believed, would pose a danger on the spacecraft.

Festinger and his team were with the cult when the prophecy failed. First, the "boys upstairs" (as the aliens were sometimes called) did not show up and rescue the Seekers. Then December 21 arrived without incident. It was the moment Festinger had been waiting for: How would people so emotionally invested in a belief system react, now that it had been soundly refuted?

At first, the group struggled for an explanation. But then rationalization set in. A new message arrived, announcing that they'd all been spared at the last minute. Festinger summarized the extraterrestrials' new pronouncement: "The little group, sitting all night long, had spread so much light that God had saved the world from destruction." Their willingness to believe in the prophecy had saved Earth from the prophecy!

From that day forward, the Seekers, previously shy of the press and indifferent toward evangelizing, began to proselytize. "Their sense of urgency was enormous," wrote Festinger. The devastation of all they had believed had made them even more certain of their beliefs.

In the annals of denial, it doesn't get much more extreme than the Seekers. They lost their jobs, the press mocked them, and there were efforts to keep them away from impressionable young minds. But while Martin's space cult might lie at on the far end of the spectrum of human self-delusion, there's plenty to go around. And since Festinger's day, an array of new discoveries in psychology and neuroscience has further demonstrated how our preexisting beliefs, far more than any new facts, can skew our thoughts and even color what we consider our most dispassionate and logical conclusions. This tendency toward so-called "motivated reasoning [5]" helps explain why we find groups so polarized over matters where the evidence is so unequivocal: climate change, vaccines, "death panels," the birthplace and religion of the president [6] (PDF), and much else. It would seem that expecting people to be convinced by the facts flies in the face of, you know, the facts.

Read more... )



And some funnies:

XKCD + Star Wars:



Probably the best Dinosaur comic ever:

brdgt: (Feminist Definition by Iconomicon)
2010-09-16 03:04 pm
Entry tags:

Women are not worth less.




Join the Fair Pay National Call-in Day

With time running out, the National Women’s Law Center, and other organizations that support fair pay, are joining together today to host a nationwide call-in day to increase pressure on the Senate.

Don’t delay — It’s easy to make the call.

Step 1: Call 1-877-667-6650.

Step 2: When you are connected to your Senators' office, tell them:

■Your name;
■That you are their constituent;
■And you'd like them to pass the Paycheck Fairness Act now and help end wage discrimination against women.

Step 3: Share our new video with your friends on Facebook by pasting this link into your status: http://bit.ly/bbwGe1
brdgt: (Feminist Definition by Iconomicon)
2010-08-18 02:21 pm
Entry tags:

Alternative menstural product activism and scholarship

"When women ignore their bodily processes or, worse, recognize them merely as problems whose solutions are available only through consumerism, internalized oppression takes over. I am suggesting not that detachment from the body - from what Adrienne Rich calls "its bloody speech" - is women's fault, but that when women participate in the silences around menstruation, they allow others to speak for them. Today it is rarely women who define the meaning of their bodily processes and take self-directed action to experience them in ways that are healthy, sustainable, and, for some, enjoyable and renewing. Menstruation is one of those bodily processes, but it is not the only one. Pregnancy, birth, breastfeeding, menopause, nutrition, exercise, health care, even sexuality across the lifespan, are similarly co-opted by social institutions and discourses. Not those who inhabit the bodies, but physicians and other health-care providers, along with corporations, pharmaceutical companies, and their marketing machines, shape our cultures of embodiment. And there are those who feel strongly that feminists - whatever their wave - must resist such so-optation."

- New Blood: Third Wave Feminism and the Politics of Menstruation by Chris Bobel
brdgt: (Default)
2010-05-25 12:06 pm

"Dress your best week"

One of my favorite blogs is Academic Chic ("Three feminist PhD candidates at a Midwest university, on a crusade against the ill-fitting polyester suit of academic yore.") and they came up with "Dress Your Best Week". Well, I couldn't participate at the time because it was hectic end of the semester time, but I want to do so for next week.

"So often, our focus when getting dressed in the morning is how to minimize or downplay aspects of our bodies that we’re just not crazy about. Does this skirt smooth my hips? Does this top hide my tummy? Do these pants make my thighs look slimmer?

But what would happen if you inverted that thought process? What if, instead of dressing to mitigate your so-so, you dressed to highlight the parts of your body that you love most? What if, for a whole week, you committed to self-consciously dressing your best bits?"


The idea is to start by listing at least 5 things you like about your body (ie: great legs, shiny hair, adorable toes, piercing eyes) and dress to compliment those features for a week (and, of course, blog about it). My Birthday WeekTM seems like a great week to do this, so I'm going to start with the list today, so I have the rest of the week to think about what I'll wear next week :)

  1. Fingernails (for some reason - genetics, diet, alien implantation - my fingernails seem to always look like I already have a french manicure - white tips, strong, shiny)
  2. Legs (I put this on here as a challenge to myself because I always thought I didn't have nice legs because I am short, but after getting a lot of compliments on them I am starting to change my mind)
  3. Eyes (probably my most complimented feature)
  4. My curves (I've got some nice D's and a pretty tight little ass if I do say so myself - others agree)
  5. My skin (I'm a pale Irish lass and I try to keep it that way with sunscreen and coverups. The freckles are pretty cute too)


So, who's with me?
brdgt: (Feminist Definition by Iconomicon)
2010-04-22 02:17 pm
Entry tags:

Because objectifying myself totally helps my muslim sisters...

No, I will not be participating in boobquake. Why? First of all, what this cleric said is idiotic and this just gives him attention. Secondly, objectification and the oppression of women are on the same spectrum. This is how you want to fight the oppression of women? Really? Really?

Also, can we say "Open Source Boob Project, redux?"
brdgt: (Girlskickass by x7_453)
2008-06-13 03:00 pm
Entry tags:

A National Conversation on Sexism



Media Charged With Sexism in Clinton Coverage
By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE and JULIE BOSMAN, The New York Times, June 13, 2008

Angered by what they consider sexist news coverage of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, many women and erstwhile Clinton supporters are proposing boycotts of the cable networks, putting up videos on a “Media Hall of Shame,” starting a national conversation about sexism and pushing Mrs. Clinton’s rival, Senator Barack Obama, to address the matter.

But many in the news media — with a few exceptions, including Katie Couric, the anchor of the “CBS Evening News” — see little need for reconsidering their coverage or changing their approach going forward. Rather, they say, as the Clinton campaign fell behind, it exploited a few glaring examples of sexist coverage to whip up a backlash and to try to create momentum for Mrs. Clinton.
Read More )
brdgt: (Bitches Get Stuff Done by crazyvictoria)
2008-06-09 09:44 am
Entry tags:

Glass half full



I think this editorial and the one I posted yesterday combined make some great points: That this election shows how the battle against sexism is NOT won and how far we've come that it became reasonable for a woman to run for president.


Op-Ed Columnist: What Hillary Won
By GAIL COLLINS, The New York Times, June 7, 2008

As the sun was sinking on Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, the nation’s wounded feminists were burning up the Internet.

They vowed to write in Hillary’s name on their ballots in November; to wear “NObama” T-shirts all summer; to “de-register” as Democrats. One much-circulated e-mail proposed turning June 3, the day Barack Obama claimed the nomination, as a permanent day of mournful remembrance “like the people in Ireland remember the Famine.”

“The passion is very intense,” said Muriel Fox, a retired public relations executive in New York who was one of the founding members of the National Organization for Women. “It’s very much a feeling that Hillary has not been respected.”

Feel free to make fun of them. The women of Fox’s generation ought to be used to it by now. The movement they started was the first fight for equality in which the opposition deployed ridicule as its most lethal weapon. They won the ban on sex discrimination in employment by letting a conservative congressman propose it as a joke. When they staged their historic march in New York in 1970, they heard themselves described as “braless bubble-heads” by a U.S. senator and were laughed at on the evening news.

They had always seen a woman in the White House as the holy grail. Now their disappointment is compounded by the feeling that Clinton’s candidacy was not even appreciated as a noble try.
Read More )
brdgt: (Bitches Get Stuff Done by crazyvictoria)
2008-06-08 05:01 pm
Entry tags:

"When she comes on television I involuntarily cross my legs"


Is it a coincidence that the bubbling idiocy of “Sex and the City,” the movie, exploded upon the cultural scene at the exact same time that Hillary Clinton’s candidacy imploded?

Literally, of course, it is. Figuratively, I’m not so sure.

 

Read More... )
brdgt: (Girlskickass by x7_453)
2008-05-20 12:47 pm
Entry tags:

Debunking the "boys' crisis"

Girls’ Gains Have Not Cost Boys, Report Says
By TAMAR LEWIN, The New York Times, May 20, 2008

The American Association of University Women, whose 1992 report on how girls are shortchanged in the classroom caused a national debate over gender equity, has turned its attention to debunking the idea of a “boys’ crisis.”

“Girls’ gains have not come at boys’ expense,” says a new report by the group, to be released on Tuesday in Washington.

Echoing research released two years ago by the American Council on Education and other groups, the report says that while girls have for years graduated from high school and college at a higher rate than boys, the largest disparities in educational achievement are not between boys and girls, but between those of different races, ethnicities and income levels.
Read More )
brdgt: (Default)
2007-04-25 12:47 pm
Entry tags:

Gender lectures

Looks like next week is officially "gender week:"

The Department of the History of Science Spring Colloquia Series 2007, William Coleman Lecture (Sponsored by the Institute for Research in the Humanities): Robert A. Nye (Oregon State University) talks on "Why Sex is Gender (Again)" (May 2, 2007 – 4:00 p.m. ***L150 Chazen Museum***)

Judith Butler

Judith Butler
Maxine Elliot Professor in the Departments of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature, University of California, Berkeley

Said, Levinas, and the Paradoxes of Universalism

Thursday, May 3, 2007 @ 7:30 PM
Chazen Museum of Art, Room L160

Also, with the "Testimony" Mellon Workshop:

Wednesday, May 2
: Primo Levi for the Present
Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature, University of California, Berkeley
6191 Helen C. White Hall, 4.00 PM

Registration Required. All welcome.
RSVP Alastair Hunt, aphunt@wisc.edu

Judith Butler is a pre-eminent American feminist philosopher and cultural theorist. Her books include Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (1990); Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of "Sex" (1993); The Psychic Life of Power: Theories of Subjection (1997); Excitable Speech (1997); Antigone's Claim: Kinship Between Life and Death (2000); Hegemony, Contingency, Universality (with Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Zizek, 2000). In 2004, she published a collection of writings on war's impact on language and thought titled Precarious Life: Powers of Violence and Mourning. Her most recent book, Giving an Account of Oneself (2005), considers the partial opacity of the subject, and the relation between critique and ethical reflection. She is currently working on essays pertaining to Jewish philosophy, focusing on pre-Zionist criticisms of state violence. She continues to write on cultural and literary theory, philosophy, psychoanalysis, feminism, and sexual politics.

brdgt: (Girlskickass by x7_453)
2007-01-17 11:17 am
Entry tags:

Gloria Steinem on Condi

Why Being a Feminist Does Not Mean Backing All Women
By Gloria Steinem, Women's Media Center, AlterNet, January 16, 2007

There is still a false idea out there that feminists back every woman, regardless of how she behaves. Let's leave that behind right along with 2006.

In fact, feminism is just the belief that all people have the full circle of human qualities combined in a unique way in each of us. The simplistic labels of "feminine" and "masculine" are mostly about what society wants us to do: submerge our unique humanity in care giving and reproducing if we're women, and trade our unique humanity for power if we're men.

So yes, I believe that women have the right to be wrong, with no double standard of criticism. But when we have the power to make a choice, we also have responsibility. Biology isn't destiny, and it isn't a free pass either.
Read More )
brdgt: (Default)
2003-06-25 03:06 pm
Entry tags:

Oh, she's the feminist in the family

According to this article in the Chicago Tribune, I am a member of a very small group of women and a group that is getting smaller by the decade. Only 2% of women use only their birth name after marriage.

It's an ok piece, I do like how they point out how hard it has been for women to even have the right to not change their name after marriage:
"Until the 1960s, some states prevented women from voting using their own names. One of them was Alabama. In 1972, a woman named Wendy Forbush tried unsuccessfully to get a driver's license using her birth name. The court ruled that Forbush had to use her husband's name or legally change her name to her birth name. The U.S. Supreme Court ultimately sided with Forbush."
Check out the Lucy Stone League for more info on name changing laws.

Oh, I found the article through the Ms. Magazine blog. You can read the "letters to the editor" that the article inspired here.

Some other points that Ms. brought up were interesting, like how politicians wives are pressured to change their names. I noticed recently how both John Kerry and Howard Dean's wives are now hyphenated, when they were previously listed with no sign of the Kerry or Dean family name. What do expect in politics, I know, but it still gets my feathers ruffled! One commentor made a compelling case that women are taught to be the peacemakers, thus they give in and take the husband's name.

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