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March 9-7, v.122

Every year on March 8, feminism and feminist concerns are suddenly in the media in a happy and encouraging kind of way. To the extent that focus on world problems can be happy and encouraging. It almost gives you hope for mankind. And then there is the rest of the year. My plan is as follows. Every week (I hope) I'm going to update this post with some of what I come across (with an emphasis on the West), pretending that the days from March 9 to 7 are also days when feminist concerns are important. I'm interested to see how it will look on March 8 2014.

If you do not click on links, you will get little out of this. Also, feel free to add to it through the comments section.

September 21: While Norwegian students have been hard at work since August, Britian is only just doing Freshers' week. It seems to bring out the worst in people. On a much more upbeat, but related note, a group called FORCE teamed up with some students to set up a fake Playboy site to encourage a focus on consent in College parties.

Meanwhile, the horrid Tony Abbot, now Prime Minister of Australia, who you will remember as the target of Gillard's glorious rant on sexism a while back, has in a depressing ironic twist also become primarily responsible for women's issues. This, as many have pointed out, seems like a spectacularly bad idea. Meanwhile, the GOP has also embraced irony.

In other news, I was depressed to find yet more evidence that the tendency Jane Austen was snide about in Northanger Abbey 200 fucking years ago still carries weight:

I will only add, in justice to men, that thought to the larger and more trifling part of the sex, imbecility in females is a great enhancement of their personal charms, there is a portion of them too reasonable and too well informed themselves to desire anything more in woman than ignorance.

Perhaps that is why The London Evening Standard's list of London's most influential people of 2013 provides a woman at number 23, and that is Pippa Middleton.

Excuse me while I go cry in the corner.

Good news of the week: The French are banning creepy beauty pageants for the under-16s.

September 14: Norway had an election, and nearly all the parties that won have female leaders. We will therefore have a female PM. Still, I cannot quite manage to summon up much enthusiasm. What has been interesting is following the way these women are portrayed in the media and by the left. Here is a good analysis. We have also failed to get more women into parliament, being stuck at 39,6%.

The idea that the left can be sexist is a bit painful. We are, after all, supposed to be the good guys; and we have been waving the feminist flag for decades. That may be part of the problem. I suspect the phenomenon is related to the ironic or "enlightened" sexism I mentioned below. Rebecca Kamm, in a discussion of the suddenly ubiquitous Thicke, calls it hipster sexism. In related news, there was another moment of (not-really-)glory from the Star Trek writing team, this time from Alex Kurtzmann.

Meanwhile, the topic of women and video games continues unabated. This time, it is about Metal Gear.

The week also saw its share of general creepiness, like this "experiment" which consists in men kissing women they do not know, the creation of an app designed to look at women's breasts (well done, tech, AGAIN), not to mention this utterly hilarious (albeit involuntarily) man trying to "fix the family" (watch the whole thing), and what a Business Insider CTO feels it is appropriate to say on Twitter.

For once, four out of the six authors on the Booker prize shortlist are women. The BBC twitter account chose to commemorate this by only mentioning the men.

Norway has disappointed me again, as the largest producer of eggs has decided to market surreptitiously towards children by reinforcing gender stereotypes of "pirate" or "princess". TV marketing towards children is not allowed in Norway, something I am ridiculously thankful for; but you can still do this sort of thing. I think the reply they made to the criticism, namely that "we do not want to have an opinion on this sort of thing", is what really makes me angry, though. I wonder how long I can go without eating eggs. Probably a while. I think I'll try.

The good news is that the stupid egg-people have been out-brained by a Swedish 10-yearold. Well done, Sweden.

Let's round this off with a blog on body language and power.

The week's good news is that America now, for the first time (yes, we are still talking about firsts for women in the West), has a female news anchor team. Well done, PBS!

September 7: In a case of generally world improvement, Saudia Arabia has now made domestic abuse a crime. Well done.

Meanwhile, it is still not a good time to be a woman accusing men of rape in the American military.

There was a also a spectacularly ignorant piece on twerking and rape in The Washington Post. "The arrest of the innocent for a crime that did not happen" -- this on Steubenville.

In the comments section last week, Anja linked to Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines", which contains so many naked women with no purpose I had to stop and check that someone actually had written feminist theory about the male gaze and the objectification of women, and that the world was aware of it. Meanwhile, a genderswapped feminist parody of this music video was removed from youtube for being "inappropriate".

The horrible temptation of feminine bodies was also the topic of this utterly hilarious letter from a mother to her sons' female acquaintances (note the particularly spectacular hypocrisy of the beach photos). This week, we also learned that Femen, the feminist group primarily famous for topless protests, was set up by a man. It all gets a bit iffy from there on out.

On a different note: Here is a good, if not entirely recent article on how stereotypes about gender shapes how we perform in science.

Happy note: This Australian Chief Commissioner is calling on men to help make violence against women shameful. It would of course have been more happy if his statistics were not so depressing. And here is another good piece: "A conversation between a father and son".

And finally, LEGO has made its first female scientist minifig. I would be applauding if it had not taken them so long. LEGO still has some way to go before they get back in my good books.

August 31: The great big story of the week taught some of us what "twerking" is. The Onion had the best piece, and therefore gets the gold star sticker. The big badge of hypocrisy goes, as usual, to The Sun. I noticed, in the avalanche of articles, not a single one saw fit to comment on the sartorial madness of or lack of dancing prowess in her male companion.

Now, you might get the impression, from all this outrage, that women should not be sexy. But that is just silly -- as the World Tae Kwon Do Federation aims to show. Sexy women are good if used to promote something else, be it martial arts or The Sun.

In the meantime, we are all on tenterhooks, waiting for Yale to clarify its position on sexual assault. There is a campaign, if you like signing things. Now, I would not think it is not primarily the job of the university to punish offenders (that is what the legal system is supposed to do, after all; though Yale seems to have missed the memo on that, too); but they really are doing an appalling job of taking care of their female students.

In other news, I am beginning to suspect it is a good thing that conductors don't generally speak because seriously, what the hell is Vasily Petrenko on (about)?

I suppose the good news of the week is that it helps to make noise when something is wrong: The lenient sentence of the rapist whose 13-yearold victim was described as a "sexual predator" (by the prosecutor and the judge) is being reviewed.

And here is a good resource from the British Library, if you want to study feminism and women's lives.

Also a woman talking about feminism won the top prize at the Edinburgh Fringe -- proving once again that women just aren't funny.

August 24: The No More Page 3 campaign celebrated its one-year anniversary yesterday. If you still haven't signed it, it is about bloody time you do. Laura Bates, who founded the Everyday Sexism Project, wrote this letter to the current editor of the Sun. Meanwhile, twitter once again decided female sexuality is shameful. And female students in Indonesia may be routinely sexually assaulted by authorities in the future.

The New York Times tried to write women out of computer history with a stroke of the keyboard this week. The internet responded with lists. In related news, Samsung, who are now on the list of people making stuff I will never, ever buy, made this amazingly sexist ad. Its premise? "So easy, even women with their technologically disadvantaged brains can do it -- because vaginas make them incapable of thinking about anything except children and housework!". In slightly happier news, feminist techies are trying to counter the gender-imbalance of Wikipedia.

Someone decided to try to insult Obama by calling him "the first female president". Oh, the wit! If nothing else, it highlights patriarchy's unhealthy ideas about what a man is.

Hollywood, it seems, is still suffering under the delusion that female action leads do not pay. But a bigger problem is highlighted in this very good piece in what is wrong with Strong Female Characters. Read it.

Happy news? This very cool lady, Antoinette Tuff, talked a gunman (with an AK-47 and 500 rounds of ammunition) out of a school shooting. The only thing that can stop a bad man with a gun is a good man with a gun, my arse. This contains a good summary of the conversation, and a link to the recording of the 911 call. How cool is that lady?

August 17: Intersectionality has sometimes been a topic here. On that note, this week saw the #solidarityisforwhitewomen hashtag on twitter. It is worth a look, although as always on the internet there are various levels of good sense presented. The basic tenet is solid: Just as men are privileged above women in our culture, there are other forms of privilege that make white, western, ablebodied, heterosexual women privileged above other women. And it is often tricky to spot that privilege from within,leading to proclamations of what "women" want and what "women" should fight for, as if women's experience is uniform. Here is a nice, geeky illustration. I could instead have given you some statistics on murders of black women, but that would be very depressing and would lack Uhura. You can look it up yourselves.

In another segment on "things that do not really fall under my direct experience, but which are relevant", I came across an interesting meditation on tipping and sexual power, written by a guy who has been experimenting with tipless restaurants (I want to eat there).

Shock of the week: There are properly scary American politicians, see this guy (someone voted for a man who does not realise that it is not his right to control the body and/or beliefs of his daughters). Also, who the hell talked about Obama's diet when he ran for president?

American university populations sometimes appear scarier (and dimmer) than they probably are (god, I hope so). See this and this. Meanwhile, Wired thinks women are the brain-less ones. And while we are on the subject of the portrayal of women and education, can Britain please get over its incessant, repetitive, trite, studpid and clichéd pictures of young girls jumping for their A-levels? There used to be a blog about this but it self-euthanised.

This week also backed me up on my decision to never buy an x-box, as well as my luddite paranoia.

Good news: There is a wonderful new resource that sets out to empower women, set to launch properly in September. It is being done by UN Women, and the goal is specifically economic empowerment.

August 10: Another week of annoying infighting in the feminist world. Not very toxic, but the campaign of #twittersilence was of course met with a counter-campaign of #inspiringwomen. Both are excellent ideas. Imagine if the same people could take part in both campaigns on different days, though. Possibly one day after another! We could have TWO feminist days. But no. Sometimes things are depressing.

Similarly depressing, it has been a week of victim-blaming: A 14-yearold in a prison in Louisiana was apparently asking for it; and Britain also saw the tale of the 13-yearold sexual predator (this claim was made by the prosecutor in the case against her rapist). Can we stop this now? Also, in a related case, the important thing is apparently not to teach people not to rape; it is to teach them how not to get caught.

In old/new news, women are not flooding to IT. Times Higher Education Supplement suggests that in order to fix this we must make IT less nerdy. I was rather miffed by this. Not only because they had this horrid quote:

"Look at all the computing that is used in…health and education…and social care – all things that women want to do and enjoy".
Sydney Padua (author of the wonderful beyond belief 2D Goggles, or the Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage) said it best:
Maybe instead of telling girls it's not nerdy to like computers, we should tell them it's okay for girls to be nerds.
Perhaps the fake geek girl problem could be a good place to start?

New Statesman had a good list of stupid arguments against opposition to "lads mags".

Happy note of the week: Someone made a game in which Princess Peach saves herself.

August 3: Let's start with some borderline absurd statistics from the States: One in three republicans regard "Feminist" as an insult. And it's not much better in the rest of the population. Thank goodness America doesn't have any problems that need fixing.

The rape threats against Caroline Criado-Perez have sparked quite the discussion on/about Twitter. In fact, tomorrow (August 4) generally decent people are expected to stay off Twitter in a show of solidarity/attempt to get Twitter to deal with its problems. I particularly like the irony of staying silent in protest against people who want to silence women. There are some who completely miss the point (and then there are some who seem to get it once their mothers are involved). But the central point of all this is that free speech isn't free if it keeps half the population silent.

Another major story of the week was that Ariel Castro, who held three women captive for a decade, who raped and beat them, was sentenced to nearly 1000 years in prison. Leaving aside the mild surrealism of American sentencing, this was also the occasion of what must be the most offensive speech I have ever heard. "Harmony in that home"? Also note the victim blaming, "I was never violent until I married my wife; she just wouldn't shut up", "these girls were not virgins" (how is that relevant?). Does this man not have lawyers to tell him what is and what is not acceptable? But everyone can see Ariel Castro is a sad, sad specimen, there have been more mainstream bad behaviour this week. Yale's handling of rape (or "nonconsensual sex") suggests that the university does not consider rape that much of a big deal (I am disappointed).

Meanwhile, here is a report on what happened when a woman reported rape and abuse threats in an online game (spoilers: she was told it was her fault for being female, her details were released (making it easier for the people who had harrassed and threatened to rape her if they wanted to act on said threats), and when she complained to the CEO she was banned from the game because he was "tired of hearing of it" -- the poor man). And here is an example of how important the slant of a story is (lovesick victim v scary stalker).

This week's happy note: Feminist Frequency video! -- the 3rd Damsels in Distress video covers some rather interesting points, including the dude in distress role reversal and the use of ironic sexism, which you may read more about in Enlightened Sexism: The Seductive Message that Feminism's Work Is Done by Susan J. Douglas (I'll lend it to you).

July 27: Helen Thomas died this week, which is rather sad as she was quite cool. However, the great news of the week was that a woman had a child (and not only a child, but a BOY child (which according to the brain trust of CNN makes her "brilliant"). In fact, the Duchess of Cambridge's pregnancy has done a stellar job of highlighting some very disturbing aspects of the world media (or, you know, people), and it did not get any better after the birth (seriously).

While "Jesus isn't a dick, so keep him out of my vagina" is one of the most cleverly phrased slogans I have seen, , stupid conservatives predictably did not react well. At all. Here is the 14-yearold's rather more articulate response to the abuse.

Meanwhile, here is all you need to know about Bitchy Resting Face (and why you have not heard about Resting Asshole Face). And here is a good reply to the Men's Rights Movement.

But the good news is that this week the happy notes abound (although, granted, not all of them should strictly speaking in an ideal world be worthy of note at all -- like the fact that CNN has four women discuss something not related to babies or weddings, and others are just happy against a sea of troubles): Foremost among the happy notes, a feminist who scares conservatives has been nominated as a federal judge in the US.

And the news that Jane Austen gets to appear on bank notes has been confirmed, meaning there will be a woman other than the Queen on English bank notes (this, if there was any doubt, goes under the heading of "things that in an ideal world would not make too much of a headline", but there are no women on American bank notes, for example). On the predictably sad side, again, Caroline Criado-Perez, who headed a campaign to ensure there were women on English bank notes, is now receiving rape threats and various other disgusting attention (do click on those links, and tell me again feminism has won in the West) from the trolling depths of the internet (although, sensibly, she seems to have called the cops). In a related happy note, the British Transport Police have teamed up with the Everyday Sexism project and others to prosecute the creeps on public transport, in what is called Project Guardian.

Also, how cool is Nada al-Ahdal? (Although, again, the happy note is made rather less so by the downright disturbing background.) Meanwhile, Iran seems like it may turn more woman-friendly (although the extent is still unclear).

In other news, geek girls have nothing to prove. Although, again, some areas of the internet have DEFINITELY missed the memo. There is this amazing app that can help you fix the gender imbalance of the advertising world. And, finally, there is this wonderful resource for women who do not want to look like a sexy cat or a sexy nurse or a sexy witch on Halloween (or any other costume party, I assume).

July 20: This week, I have been floating in a cocoon of Sherlock Holmes, Tour de France and all kinds of jazzy things, meaning the bad in the world has had to work to get to me. I did vaguely notice that none of the four concerts I went to earlier in the week had as single woman playing, but that may have been down to my choices. While we are on the subject of music, though: Amanda Palmer had a stellar response to the Daily Mail's boob obsession.

The story of the week, though, was that of Trayvon Martin's killer getting off scott free, and the outrage that followed (not strictly a feminist issue, although some of the same structures are definitely in play in this story). What is a feminist issue, though, is the "what if Trayvon Martin had been female" question (which, incidentally, neatly highlights the necessity for an intersectional approach to feminism). And it does throw into high relief this story of a Florida woman sentenced to 20 years for firing a warning shot to scare away her abusive husband. Florida has joined the list of places I will never visit.

Another place I am never setting foot is Dubai. A Norwegian woman was raped and, when she told the police, convicted of sex outside of marriage and sentenced to a 16 months in prison (her attacker got three months less). That is not terribly surprising, coming from the United Arab Emirates, whose record on women's rights is not altogether stellar (and it is noteworthy, and again unsurprising, that this is in the news because it happened to a Western woman). What did surprise me, though, was the Norwegian state broadcaster's coverage: the article states that while Dubai is a place of some strange laws seen from the Norwegian perspective, "tourists and travellers are safe as long as they follow the law". In a piece about how a woman was raped and then imprisoned. Well done, NRK. (Brazil is also not doing very well, incidentally.)

This glorious list of dubious wisdom, meanwhile, warns that feminism will ruin any relationship in your early 20s (I am glad nobody told Tor, so that I got him safely past it and into his early 30s); note that the problem is feminism, not idiots. Perhaps this is why women are going crazy? Or it could be this.

In other news a baby is being created in a woman's body, and apparently it will take over the world. The happy news of the week is that the No More Page 3 campaign hijacked the creepy Sun live babycam and used it to explain why The Sun is creepy as fuck.

Also, here is a good rant.

July 13: A large part of the news media has been cheering Andy Murray as the first British Wimbledon champion in 70-something years, effortlessly ignoring Virginia Wade and three other women. The BBC's John Inverdale somehow managed to make tennis about looks, and the internet erupted in shock and horror that a woman could win without being a blonde. It is tempting to point out that Bertoli looks lovely, but I won't. Because that is REALLY NOT RELEVANT. She is there to play tennis well. And she did.

In related news, Dustin Hoffman spoke about the epiphany he had, that unattractive women can be interesting (well done for realising).

Boris Johnson is still suffering from foot-in-mouth (having single-handedly killed the appeal of the bumbling fool character), this time suggesting that the reason why Malaysia has 68% women in universities is that they are looking for husbands -- it is unclear what particular mix of racism and sexism made that seem a funny thing to say. This CNN person has a similar problem, apparently completely missing the point of the Barbie vs real girl thing I mentioned last week.

Here, meanwhile, is an interesting meditation on the concept of the "working mother", and you should remember that when a female CEO spends $1 billion on the acquisition of companies, it is called a "shopping spree" (cause that is what women do).

There was also a couple of good op/ed pieces this week: This one on the tendency to "other" sexual abuse; and this one on what a society without legalised abortion looks like (like Chile; and this is how Ireland is faring).

Also, this news makes me want to learn necromancy so that I can raise Jane Austen from the dead and make her eat a selection of brains. Then again, who needs female comedians when we have the Texas Senate?

This week there IS a happy note, and it is about as cool as they get: the best ad you'll see in a while (and to make it even better, the thing it is advertising is itself very cool)!

And in yet another pleasant surprise, the Norwegian state broadcaster, NRK, has made a handy page about cool women pioneers. AND here is a Kickstarter which serves as a reminder that men are also victims of patriarchy, as they are socialised into the structures of thought that belong to it.

July 6: Let's start with a misogyny mash-up in this video of the abuse Julia Gillard received during her tenure as Prime Minister in Australia. The abuse is not only directed at living women, but also long dead ones when they venture onto Twitter. Meanwhile, the Norwegian Pirate Party feels that the fact that they have next to no women is not a problem, according to the party foreman, Øystein Jakobsen, because gender, race and continent does not matter on the internet (spoken like a true oblivious white male from the West).

I feel like there should be a natural segue here to the discussion of female representation in video games. I was mildly pleased by this article, that is until I read the bit about giving the games with women characters a pink theme and "feminine fonts" (which fonts are the feminine ones? Please tell me we get courier). And in 2013, Apple iOS action games still do not have female protagonists (the one that does disguises her gender until the very end). And while we are at it, can we talk about women characters and armour? (Here is the right way to do it.

In fact, this week has provided a plethora of examples of absurd beauty ideals. Baby girls should not be bald, there was this discussion of the requirement to always be chirpy (or a Manic Pixie Dream Girl), and the ever glorious Barbie vs real girls.

Also: Ohio and Egypt. I can't even.

June 29: Starting with the happy news of the week: The utterly despicable News in Briefs (with its suggestion that women cannot be naked, pretty and smart at the same time) is now gone. Good riddance and a hearty "fuck you" to Dominic Mohan. Of course, Page 3 remains.

Meanwhile, the LRB has been making placatory noises about their lack of female writers, but unless they do something significant over the next year, I will not renew my subscription again. Of corse, the LRB are by no means alone in this. As my updates here should demonstrate, this is systemic. That does not mean it should not be fixed, however.

In a weird moment of surrealism, Texas became the focus of feminist hero worship this week, as Wendy Davis gave a 10-hour filibuster against some very dodgy lawmaking on abortion. I must confess I am torn on the subject. Filibustering (while a wonderful word) does not seem like the best way to resolve an issue; however, I am giddy that someone kept the profoundly disturbing Rick Perry from getting what he wants. Of course, once again, the icky people showed up on the internet. Seriously, it is overdue a spring cleaning. Or two.

In what can double as good news and bad news, literary theory wins hands down over analytical philosophy when it comes to citing women. (Philosophy is not doing very well.)

Beginning AND ending on a happy note this week, however: Someone made a Tumblr page dedicated to the wonder that is Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Oh, and it looks like there will be a woman on the next £10 note: Jane Austen (not, alas, Mary Wollstonecraft; but I'll take Austen; Austen is lovely). Maybe Mary Wollstonecraft will follow. Or Ada Lovelace.

June 22: The great story of the week is that Nigella Lawson's husband decided it would be a good idea to choke her in public (not the first public display of controlling behaviour). He dismissed it as a "playful tiff", but accepted a police caution (which means officially admitting guilt). Domestic violence is not playful fun times. And while I am sure the choking could have been part of a perfectly consensual s/m moment, the fact that Lawson was crying and later moved out seems to suggest otherwise. A recent global survey shows that 3 in 10 women experience it, and is comparative to smoking in its impact on women's health. As Juliet E. McKenna observes, it is too simplistic to simply tell women to fight back; and here is a story which deals with the "why doesn't she just speak up/leave" reaction.

Part of the disturbing aspect of this story, however, is probably that it happened in a crowded restaurant without anyone intervening. There are also of course those who consider the preservation of the marriage the top priority. And, unsurprisingly, Nick Griffin leapt at the opportunity to show that he is a creep. (On that note, here is a piece on how creeps are often criminals; someone should tell the arsehole who made this kickstarter).

There is also the running topic of women in the movies (when there are any). The reaction to the casting in the Spiderman reboot (there is a Spiderman reboot?) is telling. They are also rather underrepresented in the LRB (who are currently asking me to renew my subscription, leaving me wondering what to do -- as they simultaneously give me this).

Facebook is still disgusting, and while that is because it is a depressing reflection of society, it remains true that it has a made itself accountable by taking on the job of monitoring and deleting breast-feeding pictures. In a similar vein, The Sun's disgusting Page 3 is now 40 years old. And it is not, of course, the only disgusting thing about that paper.

Finally, while it might be tempting to believe that the idea that a woman should "know her place" is limited to Fox News and their oddities, this is what happened when a 17-year-old started a feminist society at school in Britain.

May 15: One hundred years ago this week, Norwegian women go the vote (all of them, that is; not just the well-to-do). Here is a good article on the development of the Norwegian battle for universal suffrage. In a neat coincidence (or not?), Norway also got universal conscription to military service this week. I must confess I have wanted this since I was a kid (ever the contrarian, I was angry that men were allowed to refuse military service, and I would not have the opportunity to flaunt my pacifist credentials).

However, while women can vote and defend the country (and the first woman went into space 50 years ago), we must not attempt to review man-films like Despicable Me. In fact, according to this Republican politician, we should not use our pretty little female brains for thinking at all (it is bound to fail, what with the world being all complicated).

The Australian PM, Julia Gillard, who a little while back had a very satisfying rant in the Australian Parliament, has had another run-in with ridiculous sexists (it boggles the mind). (But to be fair to Australia, it also has some cool cookies.)

Britain, in another mind-boggling move, voted against teaching children about consent and healthy relationships. I cannot help thinking that the battle should have been to get this to Parliament in the first place, not getting it through once it got there.

And in another example of the "spectacularly rude people" section, which is becoming a thing, Anita Sarkeesian got "feedback". I think it is important to not see these things as unrelated. Here is a piece (not as coherent as it could be, but with valid points) on how objectification is not always sexual. Gillard, Sarkeesian, the approach to female characters in entertainment, keeping women to impossible standards of beauty... it is all about seeing women as women, not people.

June 8: Short and sweet today (I have Master's theses to read). In a historical interlude, this week saw the 100 years since Emily Davison threw herself in front of the King's horse in the Epsom Derby. And while we can now vote, the degrading treatment of women continues, as shown in part by the video made by The Everyday Sexism Project (you can now also donate to help fund the project).

There was also the very strange piece by Judith Woods in the Telegraph, in which Kate Winslet is berated for having three children with three different husbands (oh, the horror). Can you imagine that being written about male celebrities? I don't know what is worse, the stupidity of writing it or the commenters that see no problem with it.

And because these are always worth seeing, a Swedish take on women on magazine covers. If you like that, you will probably also enjoy the more geeky Hawkeye Initiative.

But the really big question of the week is of course whether there can be a female Doctor. I am generally not in favour, especially if Moffat is writing it (although I must say I enjoyed Joanna Lumley in The Curse of Fatal Death), but I have been a little baffled by the shock and horror at the idea (most beloved aspect of the Doctor = penis?). Seriously, wouldn't Helen Mirren be perfect?

June 1: In the early parts of this week, Facebook was still going strong with the crazy. They seemed to take a particularly dastardly turn by deleting people's reporting history and publishing statements that there was no problem whatsoever and could we all just go away now please. But then, on Tuesday, someone with a bit more sense clearly came back to the office (and I have mental images of a fit being thrown), because Facebook made a complete about-turn. I am somewhat impressed (less so with what preceded it).

This week also saw the Cannes film festival, with its Palme d'Or, which offered five times as many filmes about female prostitutes as filmes by female directors. It also gave Roman Polanski the opportunity to say stupid things about how women's control over their reproductive system has killed romance, and how it is apparently indecent to give women flowers.

Unsurprisingly, the proudly politically incorrect crawled out of the woodwork when a study showed that mothers are the sole or primary breadwinner in four out of ten households with children (and that women increasingly like to work full-time). There was the The Bible sez that the wife outearning her husband will make him sad argument, and of course Fox news thinks it means society is dissolving, because science. People are actually saying this, as if it is an acceptable thing to say.

Happy news of the week: Anita Sarkeesian published her second Damsel in Distress video. It was of course quickly taken down again, as the dredges of the internet came out to report it (incidentally, I imagine these are the same people as those who argued against taking down the Facebook rape and domestic violence pages because of "free speech"). This was not surprising. What surprised me a little was that not only was the video automatically taken down (apparently, if enough people flag it, that is done as a precaution), but someone with a human brain and eyes then confirmed this take-down; the video was restored when Sarkeesian appealed this first decision. Can we stop with the stupid now, please? Also, go watch the video. And you could also do worse than read this on how women have been fighters, too.

May 25: This week my boycott list suddenly got rather longer. I bring you the campaign to end gender-based hate speech on Facebook (I have never been happier to be without a Facebook account). Facebook, as I am sure you are aware, has had a long history of banning breastfeeding pictures, photos of breast cancer survivors and their mastectomy scars, feminist campaigns and more feminist campaigns. This is because they have user guidelines against "obscenity" and "pornography"(something which itself does not seem to function optimally).

What they do not have guidelines against is graphic content that encourages violence against women. Have a look at these examples of the atrocious things they allow (trigger warnings galore). Reporting these pages yourself will therefore often not get you anything beyond a polite note that Facebook has looked at it and found nothing that contravenes the guidelines.

The problem with Facebook is that as users you are not really their customers (as people have often observed, you are the product); they therefore have little incentive to listen. Once logic and human decency fails, the only way to get a company like Facebook to change its mind is therefore to target its advertising revenue (although I am sure cancelling your Facebook account wouldn't hurt). The campaign has therefore centered on trying to get the advertisers to put pressure on Facebook. With some, but depressingly limited, success.

I would, for example, have expected Dove, whose brand identity revolves around supporting women against sexism, to take this seriously. They haven't (thereby losing about a million points and any and all good will they may have accumulated with their semi-sensible advertisements). Audible has taken it even further, deleting any criticism from its Facebook page (and according to reports, blocking people who mention it). A number of others are making sympathetic noises, but hiding behind what appears to be deliberately obtuse talk of not being able to control what content their ads end up next to. Which is such an extreme example of missing the point that I am seriously concerned for the minds that run businesses these days. Here and here and here is some further reading.

Argh. So, I am angry and in a boycotting mood. Who's with me?

The good news? Someone made a nifty set of snarky fake ads that should be spread around the internet as soon as possible.

Has anything else happened this week, you ask? Well, there was the deeply silly handling of the criticism against Star Trek, and some odd ESC stuff in Norwegian papers. More interestingly, perhaps, a new study on men who rape was released in Norway. I haven't read it yet, but it looks interesting.

May 18: This week, Disney lost all the "not entirely evil" points they had accumulated by proxy through Pixar's Brave by turning Merida into a fucking princess. And by "princess" I mean unnaturally skinny and well groomed (complete with orderly curls and make-up), without those pesky weapons. Shame on Disney. Brenda Chapman, the woman who made Merida, is not happy with them, either.

Wouldn't it be great if little girls could be told that they could be Disney princesses (which, while not my life goal, does seem to have a strange appeal for some) without having to conform to such an absurdly narrow and unhealthy feminine ideal? There is enough of that elsewhere. And yes, "elsewhere" includes the film industry (seriously: it is actually moving down-hill, and they are left to pass off the same-old damsel in distress as empowerment).

The reactions to Angelina Jolie's announcement that she is having a double mastectomy (which, incidentally: well done!) illustrate the problem of the film industry's way of treating women. The Gist made this hi-larious headline (because this is all about her being a sex object). And the internet showed itself from its usual charming side as men came out sympathising with the plight of Brad Pitt. Because women are not people.

This is not limited to Hollywood culture. Reddit is as good an illustration as any. And if you had any doubts that UKIP should go in the nutty pile, one of their donors confirmed it recently with his statement that women should not wear trousers, because

This is hostile behaviour - they are deliberately dressing in a way that is opposite to what men would like.

So, yes. It has been a depressing week. Not helped by more same-old rape culture from a Hong Kong official. We've been over this before. Amnesty has recently done some research on Norwegian attitudes to rape, however; it seems to suggest that the Norwegian education system is failing women quite spectacularly. P3 had a documentary on the most common form of rape (which not done by the stranger lurking in the bushes). I confess I am a little shocked to learn that according to Amnesty's research, 1 in 4 Norwegians consider a women partially responsible for the rape if they joined the man at a nachspiel. And that 28% of Norwegian men consider a woman partially responsible if she flirted with the man. Seriously? Who are these people? What is wrong with them?

Um, yeah. So I guess Angelina Jolie talking about her double mastectomy was this week's happy note. You can comfort yourself with some science fiction written by women, if you like.

May 11: First off: wow. Yes, that links you to the horror film in which feminists will kill you. There are also people in the real world who think Women have the magic power to affect tectonic plates with their clothes.

Moreover, this week gave us a very strange piece by Barbara Hewson, a lawyer who thinks the age of consent should be lowered to 13 so that the post-Savile round-up can stop hurting the poor old lechers. It is kicked around a bit here. Seriously.

In other news, the world should band together to make sure Eddie Cuffin never procreates. It shouldn't be too hard.

This week notably saw the rescue of three women who had been held captive, beaten and raped for a decade. Here is an article on the link to domestic violence. Here is an article on the perception of female purity, which contains some interesting observations from Elizabeth Smart, who was also kidnapped and held for a long time. And here is one on the practice of bride kidnapping in Kyrgyzstan.

On a happier note: The No More Page 3 campaign hit 100 000 signatures this week. I assume you are among them. Here is how The Sun responds.

On another happy note: Here is a song about The Princess Who Saved Herself (will provide happy mental images of a dragon drinking tea).

May 4: In honour of May the 4th (be with you) I thought I'd start on a sci fi note: Here is a blog asking why women are always in tubes in the future. Seriously, have a look at these old sci fi illustrations. Is this still going on? I do not know, but I know that Uhura is a liability beacuase she loves too much. That is right: they seem be taking her character in precisely the direction I was afraid of. She holds the crew together with her compassion? She is supposed to be a kick-ass linguist, not an embodiment of femininity!

In other news, the Times Higher Education Gender Index was interesting. I would still have liked to see some graphic representation of the difference between temporary staff, mid-level lecturers and full professors, though. At any rate, Norway is behind Turkey (so is everyone else).

Norway has also been scaring me lately, as Høyre have decided they are all in favour of freedom of choice, except where women's bodies are concerned: they are attempting to limit abortion. That KrF is taking the loony path should not be a surprise, but I had expected different things from Høyre.

The loony fringe is at it in Britain as well: One of UKIP's men has declared that businesses should not employ women of childbearing age. UKIP had a bit of a scary election this week (scaring me, that is). Political nutters are fine, but they have an uncanny tendency to seep into majority politics.

On a happier note: One of the US colleges finally decied to do something about its rape problem, rather than ignore it and assign book reports as punishment for the offenders.

April 27: I am in Berlin and have been blissfully oblivious (without internet) most of this past week, hence the sparsity of this entry. I have learnt, however, that there is a War on Men, according to some (positively disturbing) concerned citizens. I have heard of these guys before (notably Eivind Berge, who famously endorsed rape), and it never ceases to amaze me. The Men's Rights Movement also pops up in less violent ways, like seeing attempts to create women-only spaces in traditionally male dominated areas (like the gym or a poker tournament) as an attack on men. It always makes me a little sad, mainly because there are a lot of ways in which men are also oppressed by the structures of a patriarchal society, and it would therefore benefit them to join feminism in the fight against them, rather than to try to create yet another binary opposition. I suspect the problem is that many of these people find thinking a little difficult, though. 

While I have been railing on about The Sun (and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future -- have you signed The No more page 3 petition?), there are still problems at home. Let's fix that. 

I am also rather dismayed that Wikipedia has decided to join the Dark Side. I guess it was inevitable: if you have people who are not trained in questioning problematic structures of thought in a society doing the editing, the edited result will reflect those structures of thought. Until someone points out how stupid it is. Which someone has now done. I guess that is today's happy note.

April 20: Sometimes my eternal optimism takes a beating. This has been one of those weeks. This is in part because it has been a week of in-fighting in the feminist world, and if there is one thing that depresses me beyond any other, it is feminists using silencing tactics on each other (as if there weren't enough other people out to do just that to us). This week, Helen Lewis was the target, but not too long ago the same thing happened to Suzanne Moore (who had inarticulately been trying to make this point), and before that there was someone else. Here are the particulars of one such "conversation".

As Zoe Williams points out in this comment piece, the importance of intersectionality to feminism is obvious (you cannot be against one type of structural discrimination without opposing them all), and there is no doubt that feminism has had a problem of privileging a white, middle-class female experience as "universal womanhood" (which is often unhelpful, becuase prejudices like to band together). But the idea that you cannot speak except about your own particular experience would shut down the feminist movement as a movement all too quickly. And we cannot afford that, because we need to kick Facebook somewhere where it hurts, and gape in open-mouthed astonishment at people like this.

This week also saw the one-year anniversary of The Everyday Sexism Project, which has been a great combination of depressing and uplifting. Depressing because of the stories it highlights (and the repetitive nature of these stories); uplifting because it actually manages to highlight them, and to show why experiences which on their own are often dismissed as a joke or even a compliment are insidious, overwhelming and downright bad.

There have also been one or two comments about the unhealthily thin beauty ideal this week (with reports that model agencies are using anorexia clinics as a hunting ground). I have a horrible feeling, however, that "the beauty ideal is unhealthy" and "models are too thin" has become meaningless phrases because they have been repeated so often. Like "bottle neck", we no longer stop to think about what the words mean -- it is just how it is. And I am left want to kick something.

This, however, is also the subject of this week's happy note: Dove has made it the central point of their latest ad, in which women describe themselves to a forensic artist, and are then in turn described by others. It is a nifty way of highlighting the sometimes crippling self-criticism that the beauty ideals of our society force on women. This, LEGO, is what you should do in advertisements.

April 13: Margaret Thatcher died. This is feminist news, how? you may ask. After all, the woman famously declared feminism "poison" and claimed she had received no help from women's liberation (glorious expression of the absurdity of her belief in the independence of the individual). Feminism has, to a large extent, cordially returned the feeling. But it really is interesting to see the glee with which her death has been celebrated, despite the fact that she has not been a force in British politics for decades. (Not to mentioned the gendered quality of the words used about her on places like Twitter -- as someone observed, calling Thatcher a "slut" seems a little beside the point.)

I was also intrigued by assertions like "The first prime minister of female gender, OK. But a woman? Not on my terms", which raises the question of what exactly makes someone a woman. But I think on of the best comments was actually made by Russel Brand (I know!): "Barack Obama, interestingly, said in his statement that she had 'broken the glass ceiling for other women'. Only in the sense that all the women beneath her were blinded by falling shards. She is an icon of individualism, not of feminism."

This week also saw Equal Pay Day celebrated in America. According to this piece women in 2013 earned what men did in 2011. While not as dire as America, there is a definitely gendered pay discrepancy in Norway as well.

The Everyday Sexism Project has been pointing out that while Facebook bans images of women breastfeeding (the horror), they happily display pages endorsing rape and domestic violence. Ask me again why I'm not on Facebook. Everyday Sexism also had a campaign this week, on the sexual harassment of women on public transport. You can find some harrowing stories under #endsh on Twitter.

If you had a look at that, you will be very ready for some good news right about now. And here it is: change is possible. Mariam Chamberlain, one of the pioneers in gender studies, died last week, and this lovely article looks at how much things have changed in academia with the advent of this approach. It makes me happy.

April 6: While you may be a pioneering rocket scientist, your main asset will still be cooking if you are female (or so the first version of New York Times obituary for Yvonne Brill would seem to suggest). Explore offered this photo as a corrective.

Syria, as our very own foreign minister has observed, is fast becoming the new Balkan in terms of rape as a weapon of war (the aftermath of which has been a topic here before). I am not suggesting this is a weapon which only affects women, but it does so disproportionally (like hunger). And it is not limited to Syria.

In more upbeat news: There is a Women in the World summit going on (organised by the Women in the World Foundation), which seems to have gathered together all the big hitters, and which is covering a plethora of interesting issues. Of course, it must come as no surprise that part of the media coverage has taken care of more vital issues, like whether Angelina Jolie is Stylish or Sloppy in her sartorial choices at the event.

March 30: After last week, I shied away from the news a bit. As a result, I am now more well balanced. Somewhat. As a side effect, I have less to show the class; I have, however, managed to gather a few observations.

Bleeding over from the depressing depths that were last week, Public Shaming had a good commentary on the 40 hottest women in tech debacle and the desperate attempt to make it appear acceptable ("we used normal looking women!"). Sexism is always more fun with a side of snide comments.

In happier news: The news broke that the BBC launched a database on "expert women" in order to help their journalists diversify their sources. It has been a bit of a problem. It will be interesting to see if the database has any effect on their actual output, but it is good that they are trying. In a world where women are not socialised to put themselves forward as experts, and where the word still too often means "white middleclass man", a public broadcaster like the BBC has a special responsibility to help change perceptions.

Oh, and President Obama has nominated the first female head of the Secret Service.

It helps take the edge off the realisation that there has not been a single female writer in the last 60 episodes of Doctor Who, and only one since the show's reboot in 2005.

March 23: The world can be a depressing place to wake up to, and social media is making the idiots I have spent much of my life shielding myself from all the more accessible. I cannot tell whether that is good or bad. At any rate: The rapists of the Steubenville case were convicted and sentenced, and all the maggots crawled out of their lairs and onto Twitter.

The Public Shaming Tumblr page (which will be very useful when the revolution comes) has gathered some of the atrocious fuckwits in four posts so far: Read this, this and this (and this on how it is not limited to the Steubenville case). Can we just get this out of the way and into the open in case there was ANY DOUBT? If you see a girl (or, you know, a boy) passed out drunk, you DO NOT HAVE SEX WITH HER (or, indeed, him) or stick things into the openings of their body. I'd have thought that was clear. The phenomenon you are encountering here is called rape culture, in its current incarnation of victim blaming ("if you go down a dark street/drink/wear X it is really your own fault if you get raped") and slut shaming ("this woman is not pure enough to be raped"), with a dash of "men cannot help themselves" (were I a man, I would be horribly insulted by the assumptions of rape culture).

If you are dismissing this as a simple case of "idiots online", you would be wrong. CNN (in)famously did a horrendous job of it, with their reporter going off on a rant about the poor boys and how the verdict had ruined their lives (not, you know, that fact that they chose to rape). (If you feel inspired to tell CNN to go fuck themselves, signing this may help.) The CNN story is indicative of a wider pattern. And here's another piece on all of this for good measure.

Give me a moment to breathe. I get angry.

Now. Today's dose of "boys can't be expected to play a girl in a game". Never mind the fact that girls have somehow survived playing boys for years.

I don't have happy news to end on. In fact, this week just kept getting more and more depressing. Lucy Meadows, who was an innocent caught up in the tabloid monstering of trans men and women, probably killed herself this week. If you have time, I recommend you read the TransMediaWatch's submission to the Leveson inquiry.

On a more upbeat note, I Fucking Love Science came out as a woman (not having Facebook, I had never heard of it and couldn't take part in the shock and outrage). Actually, that is not quite what happened, but going by the responses you'd have thought it was some shameful secret she had sneakily kept quiet in order to spring it on the unsuspecting public at the right moment.

Even my upbeat notes are depressing. It's been that kind of week in feminismland.

March 17: (Yes, I was supposed to do this yesterday; I plead marking).
This was always going to be about highlighting tendencies, and here is the first one: Epad femme has finally arrived (how did we do without it; oh, yes, that's right; just like everyone else). See also, from earlier years, this Ellen video on Bic for her. Not the end of the world? Not as insidious as LEGO Friends? Maybe not; but damned annoying and insulting.

In other news, there was a good article on rape in literature and films in The New Statesman. And meanwhile, the rest of the world is going steadily to hell in a handbasket -- especially if you are a woman in a conflict zone, but also elsewhere.

And ending on the upbeat note again (because it is good for mental health): the Veronica Mars kickstarter is looking very healthy, demonstrating once again (to those who doubt it) that kick-ass women as protagonists is not a way to lose an audience.

March 9: To get us started: Amazon.co.uk once again showed itself to thrive at the nadir of human decency last week, helping to sell "Keep Calm and Rape A Lot" t-shirts (produced by Solid Gold Bomb), as well as "Keep calm and Hit Her" and variations thereof, accidentally demonstrating that algorithms hate women, too. Except, while the claim is that the t-shirts were automatically generated by matching an inane slogan with random verbs, "keep calm and +verb" does not give any result for a number of other verbs. Moreover, according to reports, "her" (not "him") was added at the end of a number of these t-shirts. I am no computer expert, so for all I know there is a perfectly reasonable explanation for this.

In a more upbeat segment: Feminist Frequency has finally published the first video in the Tropes vs Women in Video Games series, which caused such consternation and misogynistic dimwittery (yes, I made up that word) when it was launched. Please watch it.

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Version 184

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Version 185

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Version 186

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Version 187

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Version 188

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Version 190

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Version 191

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Version 192

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Version 195

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Version 196

Camilla, 11.03.14 07:42