Scrapbooking and Feminism

The Clutter Museum blog hosts an interesting post about scrapbooking. Below is an excerpt:

“…when we scrapbook, we’re not just “telling stories” as a journalist, or even a photojournalist, might. Instead, we’re imposing narratives, and therefore fairly explicit meanings, onto our lives. We omit many details and bring others into sharp relief. Most of us put the best possible face we can on our family life. And isn’t that our job as wives and mothers? (Single women certainly have some of the same impulses, which may be centered more on self-presentation, forging a sense of extended family, or the role of daughter.)

“We pose and then crop photos. We frame them in paper of particular patterns. We stencil. We write brief journal entries. We apply stickers with pre-printed words And the results are, well. . . here, here, and all over here. (In this sense, perhaps scrapbooking is kin to blogging, where most of us use templates created by others but fill them with our own photos and journal entries, but do so often by basing our posts on what we’ve seen on others’ blogs (through memes, responses to posts, etc.).

“In light of these first thoughts, could scrapbooking be considered feminist? Could a self-described feminist participate in scrapbooking without feeling too much angst? If the prescribed, cookie-cutter Creative Memories brand of scrapbooking makes us uncomfortable, how far from it do we need to go before we’re back in emancipatory territory? What does a feminist scrapbook look like? Does it use new or recycled materials? What does it chronicle? Does it attempt a linear, chronological narrative?”

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The Long Story Part 3: “Humiliation”

“Strength comes from refusing to be shamed.”

Blogger “Manxome” at”Climacteric Clambake”has written very powerfully about her experiences with sexual abuse, and just posted Part 3: “Humiliation.”

The introduction to this “Long Story” series is here. Part 1: “Petrification” is here. Part 2: “Dehumanization” is here.

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“Makeup and Women at Work”

This piece has three authors: Devon Carbado, Mitu Gulati, and Gowri Ramachandran. Here is the abstract:

“This is a story about gender, makeup and the law. Darlene Jespersen, a bartender, was fired from her job of fifteen years at Harrah’s Casino because she refused to wear makeup. Jespersen responded with a lawsuit that traveled to the Ninth Circuit, where she was represented by LAMBDA Legal, the preeminent gay rights litigation organization. Makeup, some will argue, is a trivial thing. Why would Darlene Jespersen (choose to) lose her job over makeup? More generally, how did favoring (as opposed to prohibiting) a practice that so many women (but not men) engage in become the basis for a sex discrimination suit? Why was LAMBDA involved? What is at stake? Isn’t makeup a vehicle for women to express their autonomy and individuality? Finally, do we really want the federal government involved in policing employers’ makeup policies?

“Because anti-discrimination law has been wedded to a biological conception of sex, it has not grappled well with sex discrimination cases that implicate makeup and grooming. This is particularly problematic in today’s labor market because few contemporary employers are likely to exclude all women from their workplace; they are far more likely to engage in intra-gender screening based on whether a woman’s self presentation is in accord with social scripts about gender normative behavior. Using Jespersen as a point of departure, we reveal how makeup is implicated in this screening process and explain why its regulation ought to be conceptualized as a form of discrimination on the basis of sex.”

The full paper is available here.

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Margaret L. Satterthwaite: “Crossing Borders, Claiming Rights: Using Human Rights Law to Empower Women Migrant Workers”

This article was published almost a year ago, but seems timely and important now. Here is the abstract:

“Focusing on the exploitation of migrant domestic workers, this article develops and then uses the methodology of applied international intersectionality to analyze human rights treaty law. It argues that when intersectionality is used as an interpretive methodology instead of simply a critique, the resulting analysis allows for the identification of robust standards relating to individuals who otherwise appear to be unprotected by the human rights framework. Other scholars, writing in a critical mode, have demonstrated the ways in which the failure to use an intersectional approach leads to the erasure of experience by groups that suffer overlapping forms of discrimination, and have suggested that intersectionality should be used in the human rights context. Shifting the focus, this article argues – more affirmatively – that intersectionality can be applied as an interpretive methodology to existing international human rights standards to produce a wide variety of empowering norms that advocates can begin to use right away.

“The paper begins by describing the major forces combining to create gendered labor migration flows. The next section presents the concept of applied international intersectionality, considers the issue of women’s “vulnerability,” and comments on the power of human rights law to reach “private,” non-state conduct. The bulk of the article is devoted to demonstrating the benefits of applied international intersectionality by using the methodology to excavate human rights protections relevant to violations facing migrant domestic workers. The article concludes by emphasizing the need to both insist on enforcement of existing protections, and to remain attentive to emerging claims.”

It can be downloaded here.

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Good Things to Read

“The Death of Viola Liuzzo, March 25, 1965,” at Bats Left, Throws Right.

“I am a person of color, for what it’s worth,” at Blackademic.

“Why Women Lawyers Quit Their Jobs and Feminism is still Necessary,” at Doing Justice.

Overview of the “IP and Gender: The Unmapped Connections” Conference held at American U last Friday, by Rebecca Tushnet at her 43(b)log.

“On the Future of Academic Publishing, Peer Review, and Tenure Requirements,” by Kathleen Fitzpatrick at Notes Toward A Meeting on the Future of Academic Publishing; see also The Big Idea at same.

“The Conscience Clause,” by Jaana Goodrich at The American Prospect Online.

“Sight Unseen, Lunch Revisited,” at Heavens to Mergatroyd.

“Suffering from Too Much Gender Balance,” at Mad Melancholic Feminista.

“Turning Back the Clocks,” by Red State Blues at Blondesense.

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Stupid Girls, Stupid Profs?

During the panel discussion on Feminism and Women Under 40 held at Pace Law School on March 21, 2006, one of the speakers touted the new Pink video, “Stupid Girls,” as an example of how feminists can harness the media to distribute their messages. During the Q&A, audience members then raised some interesting questions about whether Pink is reinforcing stereotypes of the fashion-averse, tomboy feminist on the one hand and a vapid, image-conscious “stupid girl” on the other. No matter how one comes out on that question, the video is thought-provoking and worth the watch (after the obligatory commercial that seems to come with all internet-available copies of the video). As a law professor, my main question about the emphasis on pop culture is whether young feminists have given up on the law as an agent of social change. Perhaps young feminists look to pop culture to distribute feminist messages because they think the law’s work is “done.” Or perhaps feminist lawyers and feminist law professors — myself included — have not done a good enough job articulating what work still needs to be done.

— Bridget Crawford

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Michael Selmi and Naomi Kahn: “Women in the Workplace: Which Women, Which Agenda?”

Abstract:

“Much of the work family literature that has blossomed over the last decade has focused on professional women and has emphasized policy changes that would be of less utility to many other working women and men. In this symposium contribution, we explore the recent data on working time to demonstrate that in today’s economy more women are underemployed rather than overemployed. We also demonstrate that although professional women tend to work the longest hours, they also tend to have the greatest means, both in income and workplace benefits, to support them in achieving a workable balance between their work and family demands. We discuss the most prominent policy proposals for helping attain this balance, including a greater emphasis on part-time work and shorter workweeks, and critique them for their failure to address the needs of most working women. Finally, we suggest several alternative proposals, including lengthening school days, addressing domestic violence, and challenging the stubborn gender norms that prevent further progress for equality in both the workplace and the home.”

Download the full article here.

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Why This Blog Will Never Be “Popular”: Patriarchy only likes to read about itself.

While I appreciate all the helpful advice I’ve received about how to increase blog traffic and visibility, I’m probably not going to take much of it. To paraphrase Twisty of I Blame the Patriarchy (commenting here), if this site was to become widely popular, it would mean that the “Feminist Law Professors” blog was capitulating to the evil forces of the dominant culture, because patriarchy only likes to read about itself. It’s very nice to have readers – many thanks to everyone who stops by, and special thanks to the wonderful feminist law profs in the blogroll, especially those who contribute content – but the goal here is communication and community. And I just don’t care which male law professor has the biggest, um, blog.

–Ann Bartow

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Parody

The original:
gay1.jpg

The parody:
gay2.jpg

The story here, more details available via GreeneSpace.

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Why CEOs Get Paid More Than Law Profs…

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Via Financial Rounds.

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The Dixie Chicks are “Not Ready To Make Nice”

You can listen to their new song here. A little twangy for my tastes but I like the sentiment:

“…I made my bed and I sleep like a baby
With no regrets and I don’t mind sayin’
It’s a sad sad story when a mother will teach her
Daughter that she ought to hate a perfect stranger
And how in the world can the words that I said
Send somebody so over the edge
That they’d write me a letter
Sayin’ that I better shut up and sing
Or my life will be over
…”

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“The Meritocracy Myth”

Read an interview with Lani Guinier about her forthcoming book, “Meritocracy Inc.: How Wealth Became Merit, Class Became Race, and College Education Became a Gift from the Poor to the Rich,” which will be published in 2007. Here is an excerpt:

RP: You refer to college education as a gift from poor to rich.

LG: Anthony Carnevaly made that statement when he was the vice president of the Educational Testing Service. He did a study of 146 of the most selective colleges and universities and found that 74% of students came from the top 25% of the socio-economic spectrum. Only 3% came from the lowest quartile and 10% (which is 3% plus 7%) came from the bottom half. So that means that 50% of people in the country are providing substantial state and federal taxes to both public and private institutions even though they are among those least well off and are being excluded from the opportunity.

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“The Happy Feminist” on Why So Few Women Reach The Top Of Big Law Firms

Three part series!

1. Mentoring and Neworking

2. Prejudices and Other Factors

3. Billable Hours

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”Assuming that both spouses are competent, neither one is a master possessing the power to override the other’s constitutional right to deny entry to their castle”

”In today’s world the only advice that an officer could properly give should make it clear that each of the partners has a constitutional right that he or she may independently assert or waive. Assuming that both spouses are competent, neither one is a master possessing the power to override the other’s constitutional right to deny entry to their castle.” These words come from Justice Stevens’ concurrence in Georgia v. Randolph, in which the Supreme Court ruled that police cannot search a home when one resident invites them in but another asks them to stay out. NYT article on same here. Roberts, Scalia and Thomas didn’t seem too happy about this idea at all, so they dissented.

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Today is the 95th Anniversary of the Triangle Waist Company Factory Fire

Read about it here, at a site maintained by the Catherwood Library, where I spent a good portion of my undergraduate years studying, doing my reserve reading, talking to my friends (and getting shushed for it, and deservedly so) and working 10-15 hours per week for minimum wage, all while I was enrolled at Cornell University.

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The Asch Building on the corner of Greene Street and Washington Place was a new”fire-proof”building but the blaze on March 25th was not their first. It was also not the only unsafe building where young immigrants worked 6 or 7 days each week.

“Even today, sweatshops have not disappeared in the United States. They keep attracting workers in desperate need of employment and illegal immigrants, who may be anxious to avoid involvement with governmental agencies. Recent studies conducted by the U.S. Department of Labor found that 67% of Los Angeles garment factories and 63% of New York garment factories violate minimum wage and overtime laws. Ninety-eight percent of Los Angeles garment factories have workplace health and safety problems serious enough to lead to severe injuries or death.”

Thanks to Pen-Elayne for the reminder.
–Ann Bartow

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“The Only One”

Below is an excerpt of a post entitled “The Only One” at My So Called (ABD) Life:

I wrote some time ago about the concerns I had about becoming a professor as a person of color and I still carry some of those concerns–however, they have new dimensions now that I know where I’ll be working. Actually, the only one that has been largely alleviated (for now) is the issue of service obligations–I am very fortunate to have a chair who is extremely invested in protecting junior faculty. We are not even allowed to have service obligations in our first year outside of just one departmental committee. I am also even less concerned about the “oh she must be an affirmative action hire” BS–I’ve dealt with it long enough to see it coming, but I think it may be more of an outside of the department issue since my record is in the open for everyone in the department to see, and they chose me. However, I do wonder how my colleagues are going to feel about my salary which I know is on the high side for a new asst. prof (all salaries are very very public–I knew what everyone made before I even applied). But more importantly, I still have some concerns about:

* Finding a Mentor: I strongly believe that my chair is going to be a great mentor. But I can’t ignore our differences in terms of race and gender. How my chair experiences the academy will be different from my experience. Ideally, I would love to know that I have more than one senior faculty member I can go to/learn from–at least one of whom shares my race/gender. But I am aware that my options are limited. 1) The overwhelming majority of my department is young–I like that for my own social comfort and for the feeling that I don’t have to worry about too much “tradition” or “we’ve always done it this way” politics, but it does make for more peer relationships within the department than mentoring relationships. 2) I know the exact number of Black women on campus and they are all junior faculty–so again, good peer opportunities and I’m glad I won’t be the only one of the tenure climb, but little opportunity there for mentorship. Final analysis: It could be hit or miss. I will still have some mentors from other institutions, but I really hope I will find someone on campus with some institutional history that can assist me in navigating my New School.
* Being a Mentor: I have no doubt that I am going to be swamped by students. I look forward to that challenge–students are the #1 reason why I am in this biz. When I met with students during my interview, I could literally see the sparkle in their eyes when they realized I could be their professor. Without saying it, they told me “we need you” and that was an overwhelming feeling–especially coming from the women of color in the room. I’m only a few years (if that) older than some of these students, so slowly my concern is transforming from the obligation of mentorship to the knowledge of mentorship–what do I really know about being a mentor?? Especially for students of color?? I know one lesson I have learned through my process as a grad student is the danger of seeing mentorship as an opportunity to raise “mini-me.” I want to be a good support in helping these students achieve their best, not what I think is best for them.
* Being the “Black woman” professor: What is nice about my position is that I’m responsible for an entire subarea of my discipline–an area that is not predicated on my own interest in issues of race and gender. So I will get to “flex” a fairly large skill set that I do have in terms of disciplinary knowledge. But I know that what makes me different and “interesting” is my interest in African American women’s studies, and that is the primary area I will be working to get pubs out of. So the jury is still out on this one. I got a lot of questions during my visit about the race/gender stuff and I know I will have to work to show–“hey, I can talk about other things you know.”
* Being the “only one”: Man, I was really hoping this wouldn’t be the case, again. It isn’t anything I can’t deal with and my strategies are always the same. I’ll be close to family and friends and the school is located in an area rich with diversity–so even though I might be the only one in my department, I definitely won’t be alone. Academe is too often isolating, as an insidehighered piece just pointed out, and being a person of color can definitely increase those feelings of isolation. I do have concerns about managing the “social” aspect of being a faculty member. I don’t–on the surface–have a lot in common with my department. I’m not from the North or Midwest, I don’t have a husband or kids, I’m not in my 30s or above, and oh yeah I’m not White. Judging by the places I was taken for meals during my interview–we don’t share similar tastes. I still don’t know just how social my department is outside of the office. The vibe I got was that everyone was pretty friendly and that there were some folks who hung out with each other more than others. But as a person of color, I sometimes feel extra obligated to be social, because when I’m missing from an event, everyone really notices. Why? Because I’m generally the “only one.”

Read the whole post here.

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“Ask Bill” by Stephanie McMillan

napoli.jpg

From here, where there is a clearer version. Via Feministing. Update: You can buy a print of this cartoon here.

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“The Old Negro Space Program”

A very funny bit of satire, via Professor Kim’s News Notes.

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Hippocratic Oaf

From Lingual Tremors:

6:30 a.m. in the hotel elevator after a very rough night’s sleep. A guy gets in, sipping his coffee. I’m sipping my coffee, laptop in the other hand.

“What are you?” He asks.

“A teacher. What are you?” I ask.

“Ha! An orthopedic surgeon. I make more money than you.”

Elevator doors open, our characters exit into their day.

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Piigpen has Become Her Mother

And you’ll enjoy her post about why this is a good thing:

“For as long as I can remember, my mother has been a gregarious customer. She can tell you where the fast food drive-through cashier gets her hair done, how many kids the grocery clerk has, and how many times the waitress at her favorite restaurant has left her husband.

“Over the last few years I have felt myself becoming more and more like her in this respect. A couple of nights ago when Lunadyke and I found ourselves surrounded by a number of the waitstaff at one of our regular restaurants, I knew that I have indeed become my mother. They all stood around us laughing and joking. And mind you, none of them was our server for the evening. They feel so comfortable with us now that they make jokes about us “not swinging the waiter’s way.” They mix us special blends of iced tea, and they regularly “forget” to add an entree or salad to our check. Some of them even sit at the table with us to chat. My mom was no fool – it’s a good thing to get to know your waitresses and waiters and to treat them well. It fosters good will and respect. And as an added benefit, you know no one will ever spit in your food.”

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Feminism, Body Issues, and Sisterhood

This post at “Morphing Into Mama” triggered this post at I Blame the Patriarchy, which inspired a lot of blogosphere conversation. Here is an excerpt:

“…according to this astonishing post, our Morphing Mama believes that if you gain a few pounds or cut your hair or in any way alter the physical appearance of your hot prenuptial self after you get hitched, you are guilty of”false advertising.”

Who might one construe as the consumer injured by this false advertising?

“Husband,”that’s who (that’s what the Morphing Mama calls the dude she married.”Husband.”).

Then the Morphing Mama drops the bomb that will cause the shitstorm that would eventually drive her to close comments on the post.

“Personally,”she writes,”I think it would be unfair to Husband if I gained a bunch of weight and did nothing about it.”his remarkable statement reflects our heroine’s capitulation to the patriarchal feminine hotness imperative. Whereas she sensibly repudiates the absurd notion that she should be”in love”with her brisket-shaped kid, she cannot bring herself to reject the authority of the Male Gaze. For instance, the photo in her sidebar, presumably of the author, depicts a young woman in delicious contrapposto with a stroller, gorgeous shampoo-commercial hair, and a really hot ass.

The Morphing Mama (or”MIM,”as she is known on the blog) married a guy to whom she attributes this speech:”‘You’re not going to chop of all your hair now that we’re married, are you?’ he asked nervously.”

MIM believes that before she got married, she”advertised”herself to this hair-fetishist as a commodity: a weight-specific brand of sexy conformity to patriarchal hotness standards. Furthermore, she thinks it would constitute an ethical lapse if she were to relax her white-knuckle grip on skinny long-haired femininity. In other words, it is her wifely duty to maintain her hotness.”Husband”signed up for hotness, remains a big fan of hotness, and, as a male in a patriarchy, is entirely entitled to hotness. To deprive this hotness consumer of hotness would be”unfair.”….

… The thing is, in a world where women are the sex class (by which I mean Planet Earth), even morphing mamas are expected to display themselves according to male standards of fuckability as defined by pornography, and those who fall short are subject not only to public censure and ridicule and fat jokes, but to the ultimate horror: not being hot enough for Husband.

Today Maia at Alas, A Blog surveyed the terrain, and wrote a really interesting overview of the debate. It is well worth reading, as are Morphing Mama’s own reactions.

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Women Candidates as “Mommies” and “Cleaners”?

The title of this NYT article had promise, “Women Wage Key Campaigns for Democrats” but it was downhill from the very first sentence:

“If the Democrats have their way, the 2006 Congressional elections will be the revenge of the mommy party.”

Later in the piece the author parenthetically explains: “Republicans profess to be unworried about the new wave of female candidates for what is often described, sometimes disparagingly, as the “mommy party.” (Supposedly, in the shorthand of political positioning, Democrats are more concerned with nurturing, caring and domestic policy, while the Republicans care more about security.)”

Supposedly? According to whom? Could NYT columnists like Maureen Dowd have had anything to do with this “shorthand”? What exactly does it mean? Why is nurturing and caring the opposite of “security”?

If being essentialized as “mommies” by the NYT isn’t enough for female political candidates to endure, they have the added burden of being othered and outsidered as the “clean” gender by Democratic leadership, to wit:

“In an environment where people are disgusted with politics in general, who represents clean and change?” asks Representative Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, the chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. “Women.”

and

“Celinda Lake, a Democratic pollster working for three female House candidates this year, said, “If you want to communicate change, honesty, cleaning up Washington, not the same old good old boys in Washington, women are very good at communicating that.””

Nice to know the Democratic Party is finding women useful.

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Well This Is Icky

This morning someone arrived at this blog via a Google search for “college girls fucking professors.” It was the post about “Google Searches and Germain Greer Porn” (in conjuction with Google’s somewhat-imperfect-shall-we-say algorithms) that apparently caused this. “I Blame the Patriarchy” (back at its old site), a wonderful and fiercely feminist blog, came up a few places below this one, with a search return linked to a post that doesn’t even mention Google. Go figure.

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Rethinking Welfare: A panel discussion with Mary Childers, Dana-Ain Davis and Annelise Orleck on March 29th in NYC

Wednesday, 29 March, 7:00 PM
Sulzberger Parlor, 3rd Floor Barnard Hall

“In Welfare Brat, her stunning memoir of growing up in the United States’ welfare system, Mary Childers describes navigating the treacherous terrain of American poverty, out of the Bronx neighborhood where crime, arson and racial tensions were constantly on the rise, and into a life of hard-won self-sufficiency. The work of anthropologist Dana-Ain Davis surveys this same social landscape by exploring the complicated relationship between poverty, gender and race, while Annelise Orleck brings the full resources of the historian to bear in Storming Caesar’s Palace, her compelling account of how a group of welfare mothers and their supporters built one of the country’s most successful antipoverty programs.”

“On Wednesday, 29 March, we’ll welcome Mary Childers, Dana-Ain Davis, and Annelise Orleck, not only to share their insights into a flawed system that often traps those who receive it in a vortex of desperation and dependence, but also to imagine useful, practical and achievable alternatives to that system. By focusing on the state of American welfare from the vantage of several different disciplines, we hope to provide an expansive view of its problems and its possible solutions. It’s a conversation that anyone committed to struggles for economic justice won’t want to miss.”

This event is free and open to the public. We hope to see you there!

Barnard Center for Research on Women
email: bcrw@barnard.edu
phone: 212.854.2067
web: http://www.barnard.edu/bcrw

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Congratulations to Lydia Loren! First Woman to Hold Deanship at Lewis & Clark School of Law

Lydia will become “Interim Dean” on July 1st, and everyone who knows Lydia knows how lucky Lewis & Clark is to have her.

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“The Battle To Ban Birth Control”

Salon recently published “The Battle to ban Birth Control” by Priya Jain, which is informative in and of itself, and also contains some useful links. Below is a short excerpt, but you can read the whole thing here:

“…the anti-birth-control movement’s efforts are making a significant political impact: Supporters have pressured insurance companies to refuse coverage of contraception, lobbied for “conscience clause” laws to protect pharmacists from having to dispense birth control, and are redefining the very meaning of pregnancy to classify certain contraceptive methods as abortion. In increasing numbers, women and men opposed to contraception are marshaling health facts and figures to bolster their convictions that sex for anything but procreation is morally wrong and potentially deadly. Although its medical arguments are really just thinly veiled moral and religious arguments, using findings that are biased and unfounded, the rising anti-contraception movement, echoed by the Catholic Church, is making significant inroads. Leaders of the pro-choice movement know it, are worried about it, and realize they can’t take it lightly, as they mount their own strategies to battle it.

“It is very hard to awaken people to the threat,” says Gloria Feldt, the former president of Planned Parenthood, “because who can believe that something so accessible can be at risk? But that’s what [people] said when they started attacking Roe, and now look at how close we are to losing Roe.” …

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A Few Comments About “Comments”

This blog has generated a fair amount of e-mail, but not too many on-site comments. Yesterday a Feminist Law Prof explained that this might be due to technical difficulties, hence this post. Commenting at this blog requires that you do the following:

1. First you must register as a “user” (see “register” link at bottom of blogroll on right).
2. Once you have successfully “registered,” using the name and password you registered with, you need to “login,” (see “login” link at bottom of blogroll at right).
3. Now click on the title of any post you want to submit a comment about.
4. Type your comment in the box at the bottom of the post, then click “submit comment.”

If you try this and are still unable to post a comment, please send an e-mail explaining what went wrong in as much detail as possible to feministlawprof@yahoo.com

Comments are very welcome, but nasty, obnoxious or spammy ones will assuredly be edited or deleted. Here is a cautionary tale about comments. Early in March, The Disgruntled Chemist attended a “Campus Republicans” meeting and posted about it. Here’s what happened afterwards in The Disgruntled Chemist’s own words:

“I got linked by LittleGreenWhateverTheFuck, Jihad Watch, Protein Wisdom and a couple of pro-Muslim sites simultaneously the other day. Consequently, people in the comments section wish to inform me that I’m a Jew-hating Jew lover who hates the Prophet Mohammed and wants to put the US under Sharia law. Oh, and I hate the Baby Jesus, apple pie, baseball and your mom.”

Probably best if this community saves that sort of vitriol for faculty meetings, where it belongs, right? Seriously though, if there is a technical problem precluding comments, hopefully it can be solved if y’all clearly explain what it is going wrong.

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Scott Moss, “Against ‘Academic Deference’: How Recent Developments in Employment Discrimination Law Undercut an Already Dubious Doctrine”

Brand new! Here’s the abstract – it’s long and the fact that the first two words of the final paragraph are “In short…” cracked me up, but it looks like a very interesting piece:

“When the defendant in an employment case is a college or other institution of higher education, the plaintiff usually will face an”academic deference”argument. Citing the importance of their”academic freedom,”defendants and sympathetic courts have asserted that federal courts should decline to”invade”higher education with”federal court supervision.”Whether or not courts cite the”academic deference”doctrine expressly, they certainly have proven hostile to professors’ claims of discrimination, dismissing as a matter of law claims that seemed quite strong, or at least solid enough to allow a factfinder to rule either way. Indeed, empirical evidence shows that faculty plaintiffs rarely prevail in civil rights cases. The bulk of the”academic deference”precedents are gender discrimination cases, which illustrates the extent to which the doctrine has been a significant barrier to the use of Title VII to redress the gender segregation that has proven so persistent in academia and various professions.

“This Article argues that courts should reject the entire idea of a special”academic”deference to employment decisions challenged as discriminatory. The legislative history shows that Congress did not intend any special deference for academia, and there is no need for it, because courts can and do look for discrimination in other similar fields of employment. In many ways, there is less justification for deferring to academic than other employers, both for policy reasons (because of the importance of diversity in education) and doctrinal reasons (because of academic employers’ tendency to defend denials of tenure with little evidence other than self-interested testimony as to entirely subjective reasons). Courts’ frequent refusals to scrutinize academic employment decisions for discrimination risks leaving continued gender segregation and inequality in a large and important sector of both the labor market and our educational system.

“This risk of unredressed inequities is particularly troubling because academia is the sort of labor market in which social norms are unlikely to be effective at preventing discrimination. Social norms can be powerful protectors of fairness in other contexts, sometimes obviating the need for formal, legal protections. Yet academia has many characteristics making it the sort of labor markets in which social norms are likely to be weaker, unable to prevent misdeeds such as discriminatory employment decisions.

“While the”academic deference”doctrine has drawn criticism for quite some time, this Article adds an additional voice to the chorus by analyzing various unrelated strands of employment discrimination case law, mostly of recent vintage, that severely undercut the doctrine as a basis for granting employers summary judgment or judgment as a matter of law (“JMOL”) – the procedural devices that doom most academic plaintiffs’ claims. Specifically, courts have stressed that, under the leading recent Supreme Court precedent on proof of employment discrimination, summary judgment and JMOL are inappropriate where employers’ defenses are vague and subjective or where employers’ defenses rely too heavily on the testimony of interested parties. Thus, even if the notion of academic deference once had merit, it is in increasing tension with other, more firmly grounded employment discrimination principles.

“This Article also argues that even to the extent that courts accept the doctrine of academic deference, the rationale for such deference is limited to the context of promotion-to-tenure. Accordingly, courts applying the doctrine to failure-to-hire cases are applying precedent sloppily, extending a doctrine beyond its original rationale.

“In short, the penchant of many courts to dismiss employment discrimination claims based on”academic deference”is misguided in a host of ways. It threatens to leave academia an island of civil rights lawlessness, essentially exempt from Title VII – a dangerous outcome for a society in which there is such gender inequity in academia and such a consensus that equal educational opportunity is the path to social progress and personal success.”

Download the whole article here!

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How to Get Reported To David Horowitz by “Students for Academic Freedom”

Aspazia at Mad, Melancholic Feminista reviewed the “Students for Academic Freedom” Manual and has some observations about it here. She has also written up a list of instructions you can follow to increase your chances of getting reported! It isn’t exhaustive – she doesn’t even mention teaching in a Southern school as a great way to skew the odds in your “favor.”

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Cecilia Fire Thunder on Abortion as a Question of Sovereignty

From Indianz.com, via I Blame The Patriarchy:

“When Governor Mike Rounds signed HB 1215 into law it effectively banned all abortions in the state with the exception that it did allow saving the mother’s life. There were, however, no exceptions for victims of rape or incest. His actions, and the comments of State Senators like Bill Napoli of Rapid City, SD, set of a maelstrom of protests within the state.

“Napoli suggested that if it was a case of”simple rape,”there should be no thoughts of ending a pregnancy. Letters by the hundreds appeared in local newspapers, mostly written by women, challenging Napoli’s description of rape as”simple.”He has yet to explain satisfactorily what he meant by”simple rape.”

“The President of the Oglala Sioux Tribe on the Pine Ridge Reservation, Cecilia Fire Thunder, was incensed. A former nurse and healthcare giver she was very angry that a state body made up mostly of white males, would make such a stupid law against women.

“To me, it is now a question of sovereignty,”she said…last week.”I will personally establish a Planned Parenthood clinic on my own land which is within the boundaries of the Pine Ridge Reservation where the State of South Dakota has absolutely no jurisdiction.”

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Fabulous Feminist Legal Theory Visiting Opportunity

The Feminism and Legal Theory Project is looking for someone who has a sabbatical or semester leave (or otherwise does not need a salary) who may be interested in coming to Emory and spending the Spring 2007 semester taking over the Project. There are no specific duties (specifically NO teaching); just lots of opportunities to do some interesting work, meet some interesting people and use the FLT budget and other resources for things like a workshop on the topic of your choice and/or to bring in those scholars you have always wanted to meet to spend a week or two visiting with you at Emory.

The visiting FLT Project Director would have a faculty office at Emory. There will be full-time administrative support and secretarial assistance through a Project Associate, as well as all the other attendant”perks”the Project and Emory have to offer. Although there is no salary, there is a small supplemental living stipend.

Please send inquires and indications of interest to:

Martha Albertson Fineman
Robert W. Woodruff Professor
Emory University – School of Law
Gambrell Hall
1301 Clifton Road NE
Atlanta, GA 30322
Phone (404) 712-2421; FAX (404) 727-1973
mfineman@law.emory.edu

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Excerpt From A Note From A Friend Who Is Visiting Turkey

“Just took a tour of the Sultan’s hareem. It is revisionist history at its best… The tour guides showed us the the quarters of the black eunuchs. They declined to explain why the eunuchs had to be BLACK. Two American college students thought that it was a cool job to be surrounded by 1000 slave girls, being the only men other than the Sultan. I think that “eunuch” is not on the SAT, or they are prepared to sacrifice a lot for female company.”

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Law Prof Blogging and Commercial Advertising

Dan Solove has once again updated his law professor blogger census, see this and this. He noted:

My latest tally is 235 bloggers, with 47 new bloggers and 14 bloggers who departed the blogosphere since my last census in November 2005. [Someone needs to coin a term for a blogger who has left the blogosphere — “blogged out” perhaps?] That’s a net increase of 33 bloggers since November 2005, where I had counted 202.

Dan Markel raised some concerns about how meaningful the census numbers actually are, stating in pertinent part:

To my mind, these stats seem inflated on a couple dimensions. Don’t get me wrong: I’m certain they are accurate in that Dan S. has dutifully reported all the information reasonably available to him. But I fear they are misleading in that various people (men and women) who are listed as bloggers are barely blogging, and certain blogs have relatively very few posts, and usually those blogs, and many others on the list, have very few readers.

I admit a little confusion as to why Markel felt the need to parenthetically break “various people” down into “men and women.” In any event, Solove offered this reply, observing:

I agree with a lot of what Markel writes. In my census, I do not look at the frequency at which a law professor blogs, so ones who post only once in a blue moon are still counted. I adopt this policy because I don’t want to create some rule for how frequently one has to post to be deemed an “active” blogger. Nor do I have time to check to see how often folks are blogging. So Markel is right — my census is limited in that it is basically a head count.

Law professors use Lexis and Westlaw to count how many times an article gets cited, and they get invested in how many times a paper gets downloaded from SSRN, so of course they are going to pay attention to how many times a blogger posts, how many comments the post elicits, how many posts a blog features, how many links a blog draws, and how many pageloads ultimately result in consequence. Law profs can’t resist quantifying stuff like this! But as long as we are talking metrics, how much revenue is generated by blog ads? Who runs ads and who doesn’t, and why or why not? These are statistics that would be interesting as well.

Let’s look at a few numbers related to the upcoming “Bloggership: How Blogs Are Transforming Legal Scholarship” Conference. Not counting the “Welcome” by John Palfrey and the “Introduction” by Paul Caron, there are 22 speakers, 20 of whom are law professors, 19 of whom are law professor bloggers.

Out of the 19 law professor bloggers speaking, four represent a single blog, the Volokh Conspiracy (Yes I am aware that Orin Kerr now has a blog of his own as well). Three of the other law prof bloggers are part of The Borg (a.k.a. the Law Professor Blogs Network). All four of those blogs, plus, as far as I can tell, at least four of the “independent” law prof blogs, run paid “for profit” type advertisements. So do the blogs of the two “non law prof” law bloggers represented. Seven of the blogs represented, however, do not seem to feature “for profit” ads (exempting ads for books and other publications authored by blog contributors).

Is this representative? Are the majority of law prof blogs running paid advertisements? Are the majority of law prof bloggers getting paid for their efforts? Shouldn’t that be part of any “how blogs are transforming legal scholarship” type conversation? Generating income from any form of legal scholarship is an accomplishment bordering on the miraculous in many respects, but not one that should go unobserved, or uninterrogated.

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UGA Law Conference: “Working in the Public Interest: Challenging Poverty Through Law” on April 7 & 8

The University of Georgia School of Law, the Student Bar Association, and the American Constitution Society are pleased to present: “Working in the Public Interest: Challenging Poverty Through Law”

This first annual conference will take place on April 7-8 in Athens, GA. The conference will commence with this keynote address: “Restoring the American Dream: Fighting Poverty and Expanding the Middle Class” by former U.S. Senator John Edwards at 11:00 a.m. on Friday, April 7. Limited seating is available; please register online here.

SATURDAY, APRIL 8
Breakfast will begin at 8:00 a.m., followed by a day of panels, lunch roundtable discussions, and an afternoon career networking reception.

    Panel topics include:

Issues Impacting Economic Security for Low-Income Women and Their Children
Accessing the Ballot: The New Voter ID Law and How it Affects the Poor
Vigilante Justice: Meeting Poverty at America’s Borders
State Policies in the South: Restrictions on Reproductive Autonomy for Low Income Women
A Different Kind of Justice: Problems and Possibilities for Indigent Defense
Civil Gideon: Why Don’t We Have a Right to Legal Counsel in Civil Cases?
Trends in Community Economic Development Work: What’s Next?
Capital Punishment: A Discussion Over a Moratorium
Pleasing the People: The Politics of Poverty

Visit this website for updated speaker information. For questions, contact: wipiconference@gmail.com To sign up for the conference, register online here.

The event is completely FREE for all attendees. Please note that priority registration ends on March 31, 2006.

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“Why I’m Still Married: Women Write Their Hearts Out on Love, Loss, Sex, and Who Does the Dishes”

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“Why I’m Still Married: Women Write Their Hearts Out on Love, Loss, Sex, and Who Does the Dishes,” edited by Karen Propp and Jean Trounstine. From the Amazon.com page:

“Whether they’re on their first marriage or their fourth, each of the 24 contributors to this thought-provoking collection has terrific stories and wisdom to share, and they all do it masterfully. “Nobody is a perfect match and we have to accept that,” writes Marge Piercy, who has learned to accommodate her husband’s quirks, just as he has hers. Editor Propp’s husband expressed his annoyance:anger, actually:over differences so viciously that after five years she began fantasizing about leaving. Instead, she went to the Internet, read about verbal abuse and learned to stand up for herself. NPR reporter Maria Hinojosa says, “I stay married because this is the one person who understands how to help make me into a better person.” You might not agree with everyone’s theories:Hannah Pine defends her choice to be a mother in an open marriage:but each one deals with the real problems, and pleasures, of marriage. As editor Trounstine puts it: “[m]arriage doesn’t have the excitement of the illicit or the thrill of the daredevil. It’s more like the quiet hum of the everyday and the occasional surprise of the sunset.”

BUT SEE:

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Middle School v. The Bush Presidency

From McSweeney’s Internet Tendency: “Parallels Between My Living Through Two Years of Middle School and the Two Terms of the Bush Presidency”
BY TEDDY WAYNE

– – – –

The radical changes going on around me make me uncomfortable.

I am unhappy about the way things are, but feel helpless to do anything about it.

Shame is my dominant emotion.

I feel very insecure and vulnerable.

Others supposedly feel as I do, but whenever I turn on the TV it seems otherwise.

At times, I wish I lived in a faraway country.

I want to rebel against anyone in a position of authority.

Social mobility is a fallacy.

I find myself frequently watching sports for comfort.

It’s totally unfair that when I screw up I get in trouble but when my superiors do, nothing happens.

What I represent is repugnant to foreign women.

Flying is much more terrifying than it should be.

When I talk to friends on the phone, I’m afraid someone is listening in.

People tell me things will only improve after this, but I don’t believe it.

I constantly think the world is going to end.

I really dislike the arrogant popular guy elected as my president.

French is considered lame.

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Carnival of the Feminists – Number Eleven!

All kinds of great links and commentary here, at Angry for a Reason!

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Verna L. Williams, “Private Choices, Public Consequences: Examining Public Education Reform Through a Feminist Lens”

The abstract:

“Using the Supreme Court’s decision in Zelman v. Simmons-Harris as a focal point, this article examines the meaning of private choice in public education reform. In Zelman, the Court addressed the validity of the Cleveland city schools’ voucher program, which provided public money for students to attend private parochial schools. The Court concluded that because the program gave parents a”true private choice”it did not run afoul of the Establishment Clause. This article submits that the subtext of the decision, however, suggests that the Justices were influenced by the abysmal condition of the Cleveland schools and were reluctant to tie the hands of public officials seeking to remedy the shortcomings of a system that had failed primarily poor students of color.

“The article foregrounds this concern and applies critical feminist theory to interrogate the meaning of choice in this context. In this connection, the article examines the events that lead to enactment of the voucher program at issue in Zelman: specifically, three decades of school desegregation litigation characterized by state”recalcitrance,”“hostility”and”reckless maladministration,”in the words of the district court. The article concludes that the crisis precipitating enactment of the voucher program was a crisis of the state’s own making. In this regard, the article posits, the voucher program entrenched historic and ongoing racial subordination in the school system, and in so doing, failed to provide meaningful, nondiscriminatory choices to parents, as understood by critical feminist theory.”

Download here!

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Phyllis Goldfarb, “A Theory-Practice Spiral: The Ethics of Feminism and Clinical Education”

Abstract:

“Should law school classes cultivate professional skills or should they advance a broad intellectual agenda? This Article examines the relationship between theory and practice from the standpoint of two movements within law’s academy: clinical education and feminist jurisprudence. Although the former is often thought of as a practical movement and the latter a theoretical movement, the Author’s intention is to demonstrate the fundamental methodological similarity of the two movements, and hence, the problematic nature of the theory-practice label. Further, this Article examines the ethical impulse that sparks clinical education and feminism, suggesting that each movement’s perceptions of the theory-practice relationship are embedded in ethical concerns and have far reaching ethical implications.

“Section I of this Article begins with the reading of a text from the perspective of each of these intellectual movements. Section II examines more specifically the respective ways that feminist and clinical educators describe and justify their choice of methods. Section III surveys the similarities and differences between the methodologies of the two movements. This leads, in Section IV, to an analysis of the implications for clinical education if it drew more explicitly from feminist methods, the implications for feminist jurisprudence if it drew more explicitly from clinical methods, and the implications for legal education if it drew more explicitly from each. Section IV concludes with an exploration of how recasting our understanding of the theory-practice relationship also recasts our understanding of ethics and ethical inquiry.”

Download it here!

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Which Left, Exactly?

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From “This Is Broken.”

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The Octavia E. Butler Memorial Scholarship Fund

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“Octavia E. Butler (1947 – 2006) was a brilliant African American writer who broke barriers with her courageous and profoundly truthful books and stories. Winner of many awards including a MacArthur Fellowship, and speculative fiction’s highest honors, the Hugo and the Nebula, Octavia was greatly loved during her lifetime and will be greatly missed.”

“The Octavia E. Butler Memorial Scholarship will enable writers of color to attend one of the Clarion writing workshops, where Octavia got her start. It is meant to cement Octavia’s legacy by providing the same experience/opportunity that Octavia had to future generations of new writers of color. In addition to her stint as a student at the original Clarion Writers Workshop in Pennsylvania in 1970, Octavia taught several times for Clarion West in Seattle, Washington, and Clarion in East Lansing, Michigan, giving generously of her time to a cause she believed in.”

More information here.

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Feminist Law Profs! Post Conference Announcements Here!

I don’t really get the point of all the mailings from other law schools, they generally go right into my recycling bin, but I receive quite a few, so someone somewhere thinks they are accomplishing something somehow. But are they? When I get “invited” to attend a conference or lecture by virtue of an impersonal mailed circular that arrives less than two weeks before the advertised happening is set to take place, I have to assume that the point of the “invitation” is simply an exercise in institutional promotion and postage wastage that is intended to inform me that the event is occurring more or less as background noise, and there is no expectation whatsoever that I will actuallly register and attend.

I don’t think that the relevant conference organizers are intentionally communicating a message of, “we’re giving this really cool conference, hahahahaha, too bad your geeky distantly-located self can’t come,” but sometimes that is almost what it feels like! Even if attendee spaces remains open and hotel accomodations are still available, my tiny public-law-school-in-a-poor-state travel budget will not cover the cost of market rate hotel rooms or last minute airline tickets. Receiving a symposium announcement a week before an appealing-sounding event that I would have considered attending if I’d had adequate notice can really smart. So, one thing that blogs like this can be used for is to publicize conference announcements early and often! So please take note: I’m happy to post any event related in any way to gender, feminism and law, just e-mail the pertinent information to: feministlawprof@yahoo.com

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Call For Submissions: An Anthology

“There is a new ilk of academics and scholars. We are queer, trans, of color and culture; from the working-class; we are deaf; tattooed and pierced up; we teach from wheelchairs or wield canes; we don’t change our registers, we don’t think we have to; we are the first ones. We are the academics who embody difference in ways that are very visible. We upset the academy’s investment in sociocultural normativity, whiteness, and class mobility.

“We speak truth to power: Our materiality puts people on the edge. We remind our departments that their perception of diversity calls for a safe production of race, gender, sexuality, and culture. What’s the point of these diversity initiatives if they refuse to acknowledge reality: Diversity isn’t about some monolithic tokenized person the academy “lets in” on the condition this said person doesn’t get too uppity or forget their place.

“This is a call for submissions: Write your stories (academic or creative pieces, or a mixture of both) of observations, experiences, theories:those moments when you alone challenged some unspoken given in the academy. Write about that sexist prick in the department who’s always rude to you when you’re making Xerox copies. Write.

“Send a 500 word abstract, 2 page single-space proposal, or 5-7 page working draft, and an SASE to: R. Burgess, Ohio University, Ellis Hall, Athens, OH 45701, E-mail: cerasse@gmail.com by June 16th 2006.”

Via Blackademic.com.

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Rather Creative Uses of Latex Accoutrements

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Via Mad, Melancholic Feminsta.

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From this site.

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From here.

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From this link.

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From here.

The photos came from various AIDS Awareness functions.

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Echidne of the Snakes on “Blogging Feminism”

The wonderful Echidne writes:

“…[F]eminism is more than just addressing topics of sexual or gender equality. It’s a part of a larger outlook on the world, a way of seeing it and the creatures in it from an angle of equality or respect or even humility, of believing that each creature matters in some sense, and not just as a tool for some other creature. And this is an approach which makes life interesting and rich and meaningful, the listening and the learning and the odd connections it allows us to make, the sharing of the universe and its wonders and then finding this same universe inside ourselves, connecting the selves to yet another selves and back again.”

And this blogger says “Amen.”

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Garance Franke-Ruta Asks: “Is The New York Times Still Pro-Choice? And Where are the Women?”

At The American Prospect she writes:

…”The past two years have seen one of the most contentious and closely watched presidential contests in 40 years, the retirement of the first female Supreme Court justice, the appointment of two new justices, and an attempted Senate filibuster against one of them specifically because of liberal concerns about how he would vote on choice issues. And during that period, not one op-ed discussing abortion on the op-ed page of the most powerful liberal paper in the nation was written by a reproductive-rights advocate, a pro-choice service-provider, or a representative of a women’s group.

“Instead, the officially pro-choice New York Times has hosted a conversation about abortion on its op-ed page that consisted almost entirely of the views of pro-life or abortion-ambivalent men, male scholars of the right, and men with strong, usually Catholic, religious affiliations. In fact, a stunning 83 percent of the pieces appearing on the page that discussed abortion were written by men.” …

“It has not always been thus. The Times was just as dedicated to the topic in 1991-1992, the last time abortion rights were as contested as in the past two years. But it was much better about printing women’s opinions on choice issues back then. Of 129 mentions of abortion during that two-year period, 46 were in columns or op-eds written by women. That’s 36 percent female voices on abortion in 1991-1992, compared to just 16 percent (less than half as many) today. In other words, the absence of women writers cannot be explained by a genuine shortage of women qualified and eager to discuss the topic in a prominent publication.” …

Read the entire article here.

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Go Directly to Guantanamo! Do Not Pass Go, Do Not Collect $200

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The Patriot Act Game: “The object of the game is not to amass the most money or real estate, but to be the last player to retain civil liberties.”

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What’s Wrong With This Picture?

According to this BBC News article:

“Desperate Housewives star Teri Hatcher has revealed she was sexually abused by an uncle during her childhood. Hatcher says she kept the attacks secret until 2002, when the 14-year-old victim in an abuse case against uncle Richard Hayes Stone committed suicide. The actress told Vanity Fair magazine she helped prosecutors by corroborating evidence against her uncle. Prosecutors say Stone pleaded guilty to four abuse counts after Hatcher got involved and was jailed for 14 years.” [Emphasis added.]

Now here is the cover of the Vanity Fair that contains the article revealing Hatcher’s sexual abuse:

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Why the visible underwear, and why is she clutching a disheveled shirt? Is she supposed to look like she has just been assaulted? What’s that all about? More at Ms. Violet’s Musings.

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On Google Searches and Blogs: “Men to Andrea: We want Germaine porn”

From a post at the blog Vociferate:

“This week, on reading the search terms that weirdos had used to get to my blog, I found the third of what seems to be becoming some kind of trend. This week it was ‘fucking Germain Greer’, in weeks gone by it has been ‘Germaine Greer cunt pictures’ or ‘Germaine Greer’s cunt’.

“Now, I had no idea Germaine had such a powerful sexual hold over the male mind. I’m not saying she’s ugly, but I was certainly surprised so many men seem to think she’s so infinitely delish that they search for Greer porn over any other type. Evidently, there must be some underground movement set up in response to just how fucking hot Germaine happens to be, and unlike in most circumstances, her age hasn’t put anyone off. Germaine is now in her sixties, and apparently still one hot mama! …

… “Men searching for porn are not looking for healthy expressions of female sexuality, they’re looking for unhealthy expressions of male sexuality. Females are used in porn, but porn isn’t really about them. This is why the men after Germaine porn were looking for images of her being used in one way or another. So, men were looking for turn-on material of a feminist being used as a thing. The reduction of a feminist is sexually exciting, a feminist woman is more threatening to men than even a non-feminist woman, and if reducing non-feminist women to things is sexy, reducing feminists to things is more so.

“Porn isn’t about the sexuality of women, it is about the degredation of women. These men were not searching for porn featuring Germaine Greer because they find her sexy, they were searching for it because they wanted to see an uppity woman get put in her place. They wanted to see some feminazi bitch fall under the dominance and mastery of the penis. Porn is not an expression of male horniness or libidinous nature; porn is an expression of male fear of women and desire to humiliate and degrade them to make themselves feel better. Seeing women ‘fucked’ makes men feel like men because it features the conquering of something frightening. Porn can never be congruent with with emancipation of women because it is about the submission of those same women.” …

You can read the entire post here. It resonated with me because I have seen the Google searches that have brought folks to this blog, and some (e.g.”law professor boobs orgasm“) are a little disturbing.

–Ann Bartow

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“Sexing Gender, Transing Homos: Travail of Sexuality in Contemporary Iran,” A Lecture by Afsaneh Najmabadi on March 23rd

Sexing Gender, Transing Homos:Travail of Sexuality in Contemporary Iran, A lecture with Afsaneh Najmabadi
Thursday, 23 March, 7:00 PM
Sulzberger Parlor, 3rd Floor Barnard Hall

Free & open to the public; no reservations required.

“On Thursday, 23 March, in honor of Women’s History Month, the Center is particularly proud to highlight the work of historian and gender theorist Afsaneh Najmabadi, whom we were lucky to consider our colleague during the nine years she taught in Barnard’s Department of Women’s Studies. Now at Harvard, Professor Najmabadi’s most current research is a cutting-edge study of the ways in which concepts and practices of sex and sexuality have transformed from the late-nineteenth-century to the present day Iran.

“Responding to a number of international media news stories that report not only an increased recognition of transsexuality in contemporary Iranian culture, but also an apparent society-wide permissiveness that encourages sex-change operations, Professor Najmabadi invites us to question whether this trend truly empowers transsexuals or, instead, reaffirms and narrows various social codes – from the psychological to the medical to the legal – that allow any kind of sexual and gender non-conformity to be labeled deviant, to be criminalized. In such system, argues Professor Najmabadi, same-sex desire becomes “unreadable except for people stuck in the ‘wrong bodies’; it makes homosexuality as such illegible and illegitimate not only as a publicly recognized possibility, but also for one’s own self-perception.” Her lecture promises to make for a uniquely thought-provoking evening, one you certainly won’t want to miss.

“Afsaneh Najmabadi is Professor of History and of Studies of Women, Gender and Sexuality at Harvard University. Her most recent book, Women with Mustaches and Men without Beards: Gender and Sexual Anxieties of Iranian Modernity, is a study of cultural transformations in 19th-century Iran centered on reconfigurations of gender and sexuality, and is the winner of the 2005 Joan Kelly Memorial Prize, awarded by the American Historical Association. Professor Najmabadi’s previous publications in English include The Story of Daughters of Quchan: Gender and National Memory in Iranian History and Women Autobiographies in Contemporary Iran (editor and contributor). She has been a fellow at Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard Divinity School’s Women’s Studies in Religion Program, the Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women at Brown University, and Harvard’s Nemazee Fellow at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Harvard University.”

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