In defense of the sanctimonious women's studies set || First feminist blog on the internet

What’s In A Name?

A feminist NYU columnist asks this question in her recent op/ed on taking your husband’s name. I haven’t thought this issue through enough to properly comment on it, but I think it’s a good introduction to this article:

What’s in a name? The new one my husband, Gary (formerly Ruderman), and I (formerly Wilgoren) adopted has three letters from his father’s father’s father and four letters from my patrilineal ancestors — or perhaps from the imagination of some anonymous clerk at Ellis Island.

It’s just a made-up moniker, but it is made up of our commitment to equality, with a nod to family history and a dash of out-of-the-box creativity. Most important, it is a name we share and will share with our potential offspring. To me there is no sound so sweet.

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The Dread Pirate Parton

Suddenly, she makes more sense now:

I’m developing a new theory: that Dolly Parton is an enterprise run almost identically to that of the Dread Pirate Roberts. So when the Dolly Parton we know grows weary and decides to retire, she identifies a replacement who will seamlessly merge into the life of Dolly Parton and carry on the Dolly Parton name and brand, as if nothing had ever happened. That way, Dolly is ageless and lives forever, and people will never have to know what a dark and woeful place the world would be without her and that hair, and the breasts that unwittingly prepared a nation to cope better with Anna Nicole Smith.

Read the rest to find out who’s getting ready to take over the franchise.

Overkill

This is a story about old news.

David Riehm, who was seventeen and a high-school student when all this started, wrote a story about a guy who wakes from a wet dream, proceeds to accidentally sodomize himself with his little brother’s Fischer-Price toy (good detail!) and then gets his head run over by the school bus.

(Does this sound familiar to anyone? It could be a South Park episode.)

His teacher was not happy with his choice of subject matter: “David, I am offended by this piece. If this needs to be your subject matter, you’re going to have to find another teacher. I’m actually a little concerned about your obsessive focus on sex and potty language. Make a change — today!”

He retaliated–not merely by upping the ante on the violence and obscenity, but by changing its focus. He wrote a point/counterpoint essay as a discussion between a creative, misunderstood high-school student named “Tad Warner” and his mean, narrow-minded, puritanical, stupid, jealous teacher, “Mrs. Cuntchesen” (see what he did there?). She commented on that essay, too: “Wow, David. You’ve taken this really personally. Maybe we need to sit down together to talk this through when we have lots of time.”

Apparently, Riehm did have a discussion with his teacher, and she felt that he was willing to modify his language and subject matter a little bit. For a few months afterwards, he wrote stories that she considered appropriate. However, for his final portfolio, David wrote a story called, “Bowling for Cuntchesen,” about a creative, misunderstood high school student who guns down his mean, narrow-minded, puritanical, stupid, jealous teacher. He describes her death in graphic language: “I winced at the shot, but she winced more as the bullet replaced her left eye. In an instant a red mist was produced from the wound, followed by a stead [sic] flow of blood, tissue, and bone fragments. I felt the warm mist speckle onto my face.” Then he describes turning the gun on himself and feeling “at peace.” The end of the story reveals it all to have been just a dream; maybe Riehm thought that would soften the rest of the story. The story contains some misogynist language. He refers to her as “that bitch,” and talks about her stepping “out of line,” and “out of her place.” The story fluctuates between petulance–“Screw her”–and rage.

His teacher felt anxious enough to alert the authorities–not just school authorities, but law enforcement. She explains why in her statement.

Then it gets a little weird:

David was suspended on Jan. 24, 2005. The next night, three men — a Cook County deputy sheriff, a state trooper and a social worker — showed up at Colleen Riehm’s home on the Grand Portage Indian Reservation with a court order to seize her son and commit him to a psychiatric ward 150 miles away in Duluth.

(snip)

David was ordered released from the hospital 72 hours after he had been taken into custody. His mother received $6,000 in medical bills.

And now his family has filed suit.

And now student freedom-of-speech advocates have gotten involved.

On the one hand, it’s horrifying that someone with no history of violence or instability can be involuntarily committed to a psychiatric hospital on the basis of a creative story. It’s also important to note that this kind of writing is everywhere. Johnny the Homicidal Maniac was my drug of choice when I was his age; South Park is my brother’s. It may well desensitize kids–not to actual violence, but to descriptions of it that other people might interpret as serious threats. It is indeed an “overreach,” as Eric Hudson of the First Amendment Center put it. On the other hand, I think it’s in a different class from other incidents he describes:

Hudson’s report points to cases in Texas where a middle school student was held in juvenile detention for six days in 1999 for a Halloween essay for which he received an “A”; in Kansas, where an honors student was expelled in 2000 for her poem “Who Killed My Dog?” about seeking revenge against someone who killed her dog; and in Louisiana, where a student was punished in 2001 for a two-year-old drawing he created at home that pictured his school under attack.

This was not part of an assignment related to horror writing or Halloween. It was not an old piece of writing. It wasn’t directed at someone outside the school or someone who had done something truly hurtful. Riehm wrote an essay about inflicting violence on his teacher. He turned it in to his teacher after fighting with his teacher. If I were Mrs. Merson, I might be offended by the cheerful obscenity of his earlier essays, and I might speak to him about it. I’d probably be worried if he seemed shocked and outraged by a teacher not wanting to see anal rape in an essay turned in for credit. I’d almost certainly be scared if he subsequently turned in a story about…killing me, basically. Besides that, I’d want to err on the side of caution if a student wrote about shooting himself. And I would probably tell someone.

I think there may be a disconnect between the teacher’s feeling “threatened and violated,” as she puts it, and the understanding on the part of the authorities that they had another Dylan Klebold on their hands. It doesn’t sound like Riehm wants to attack the world; it sounds like he has a very specific grudge against “that bitch.”

Edited to Add:

Okay, this is what I was trying to say in so many words: If I were a teacher faced with a student who felt perfectly justified in calling me a cunt to my face in a story where he describes killing me in the most thinly-veiled of terms, I wouldn’t like Eric Hudson calling me a fascist for reporting that student. I don’t know how involved Merson was in the the actions taken by the authorities–I suspect she had no idea he’d be committed. I don’t think she was at all unreasonable to seek help, or to interpret Riehm’s misogynistic insults as hateful.

Harper Lee and Courage

I found this beautiful post by flea through a post at tbogg. Flea reflects on the school integration of the 1960s and the quiet courage of common people in standing up for their beliefs, even as other, good people were reluctant to do so if it meant bringing harm to their families.

My oldest sister was born in 1956, the next sister in 1959. My mother spent the decade of her young motherhood watching The Cheerleaders on television, watching the man in gray – a Christian minister, as it turns out – lead his six-year-old daughter past the howling mob. She watched the terror on the faces of the children and, when integration moved toward South Carolina, she was afraid. She and my father could not bear to put her children on the front line. So the three of us, first my sisters, then, when it was time for me to begin school in 1974, went to an expensive private prep school in a quiet, wooded area of town, a neighborhood surrounded by stables and tasteful estates, miles away from the nearest public school.

The good people that Steinbeck wondered about were terrified. They knew that, due to hundreds of death threats and no support from the all-white local police force, John Howard Griffen’s family had to leave the country after he went undercover as a black man in Mississippi and published his experiences in Black Like Me. Simply put, the good people, and make no mistake they were good people, lacked the courage necessary to make Abraham’s sacrifice. They could not put into jeopardy the life of their child for their political beliefs.

Read the whole thing.

Where Are the “Girl” Designers?

I’ve been wondering the same thing — why aren’t there more famous female fashion designers under the age of 18? I mean, given that so many boys are fashion designers these days, where’s the equality? Girl designers deserve attention, too!

Confused yet? Saying to yourself, “Uh, Jill, there aren’t any famous fashion designers under the age of 18 — pretty much everyone in the fashion industry (except the models, of course) are grown men and women.” That’s what I thought, too — but someone should send the memo to the New York Times, who today are celebrating “Girl Designers.”

Except that these “girl designers” aren’t exactly girls; they’re adult women.

The article is bad on too many levels to get into right now. I just wonder if the day will come when Tom Ford, Karl Lagerfeld, Zac Posen, Narciso Rodriguez, Helmut Lang, Marc Jacobs and Michael Kors are referred to, in the Times Style section, as “boy designers.”

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Translating Arabic Into Injustice

Take this scenario: NYU grad student works as a translator. He is hired by a local attorney, and translates numerous conversations between her and her client. While doing so, he does research for his graduate dissertation. She breaks a court order, and releases a statement from her client to the public; the translator was never asked to agree to the order that the lawyer was bound by. The lawyer gets in trouble for breaking the order, and gets a slap-on-the-wrist punishment. The issue, we think, is settled.

A few years later, the Department of Justice re-opens the case, and decides to punish the lawyer again — only this time, they prosecute her on terrorism charges. They additionally decide to prosecute her translator for aiding and abetting terrorism, simply because he did his job and translated the conversations between the lawyer and her client.

Sounds implausible? It isn’t.

Mohammed’s diligence as a translator and an academic researcher would cost him dearly. In April 2002, he was arrested, along with Stewart and one of her paralegals. They were accused of conspiring to provide material support to terrorists. Two years earlier, Stewart had told a reporter that the imprisoned Abdel Rahman opposed a cease-fire that his supporters had negotiated with the Egyptian government. Though no act of violence ever resulted, the U.S. government claimed that Stewart had not only violated government regulations — which she had agreed to follow — restricting communications with Rahman but that she had also abetted terrorism.

Whatever Stewart may have done, however, it is hard to see how Mohammed can be held responsible for her actions. As a government-approved translator, he was never even asked to agree to the regulations Stewart was accused of violating, and he had no reason to question the lawfulness of his employer’s instructions. During the trial, prosecutors made contradictory arguments. They insinuated that Mohammed had knowingly broken the law in order to further his scholarly research, and even that he was an acolyte of Abdel Rahman. But they also acknowledged that Mohammed had never advocated violence or Islamic fundamentalism. My guess is that the real reason they went after Mohammed was to get Stewart: She knew no Arabic, and Abdel Rahman knew very little English, so without including Mohammed in the alleged conspiracy, prosecutors wouldn’t have had much of a case.

Mohammed, shellshocked by what has happened to him, faces sentencing in March, though appeals will surely follow. Many lawyers have rallied to Stewart’s defense because they believe that the government targeted her in order to deter other lawyers from zealously defending clients accused of terrorism, and because they feel that her case raises serious constitutional issues. Mohammed’s prosecution raises somewhat different, though equally disturbing, questions. Should a translator be sent to prison for following his employer’s instructions, especially when the prosecution failed to prove that he intended to break any law? Can a graduate student’s dissertation research reasonably be construed as contributing to a conspiracy to help terrorists?

Read the whole thing. This is outrageous.

Face Transplant Patient Makes First Appearance

The French woman who received a partial face transplant made her first public appearance since the surgery. She actually looks pretty good (picture with article), although I guess she’s going to have some trouble speaking for a while until things heal.

But here’s the part that jumped out at me about this. I’d heard that she’d been mutilated by a dog. What I hadn’t realized was that it was her own dog:

She described how she awoke to discover her horrible disfigurement after her dog chewed off the lower part of her face while she was unconscious from taking sleeping pills in May last year.

“On May 27, after a very disturbing week and with lots of personal worries, I took drugs to forget,” Ms. Dinoire said, adding that she passed out and fell against a piece of furniture.

“When I woke up, I tried to light a cigarette and didn’t understand why it wouldn’t stay between my lips,” she said, her face slack and emotionless. “That’s when I saw the pool of blood and the dog.”

The dog I had prior to Junebug bit me in the face, and meant it. I had to have her put down after that, because she kept baring her teeth at me. But that was triggered by me getting too close to her chew toy. I just can’t fathom passing out and having my dog chew my fucking face off.

UK Stands Up For Women’s Lives

Maybe I’ll move to London.

The British government will today publicly defy the United States by giving money for safe abortion services in developing countries to organisations that have been cut off from American funding.

Nearly 70,000 women and girls died last year because they went to back-street abortionists. Hundreds of thousands of others suffered serious injuries.

Critics of America’s aid policy say some might have lived if the US had not withdrawn funding from clinics that provide safe services – or that simply tell women where to find them.

Way to go, British government! This issue refers, of course, to the Global Gag Rule, which cuts off U.S. funding to any organization abroad that so much as mentions the word “abortion.” U.S. funding never pays for abortion abroad, so this isn’t an issue of foreign aid paying for actual procedures. The Gag Rule cuts off funding to any group that tells pregnant women if abortion is a legal option; lobbies its own government for reproductive rights; or performs abortions with its own non-U.S. funding. This rule further extends to HIV/AIDS funding, meaning that numerous AIDS clinics have been de-funded, cut back and shut down in the name of “pro-life” politics. And the clinics that are losing funding are the very clinics that are attempting to prevent unintended pregnancies in the first place, and that provide basics like prenatal and well-baby care.

DFID asked IPPF to produce a report on the scale of the damage caused by unsafe abortion. Death and Denial: Unsafe Abortion and Poverty, is published today. It reveals that an estimated 19 million women will risk the consequences of an unsafe abortion this year, of whom 70,000 will die. This accounts for 13% of the 500,000 maternal deaths each year. Reducing unsafe abortions is critical to reaching the UN’s Millennium Development Goal on cutting maternal mortality, said Mr Thomas.

Women’s low status in many poor countries makes them vulnerable to sexual coercion, abuse and exploitation, says the report. Almost 50% of sexual assaults worldwide are against girls aged 15 or less.

The death and injury toll is highest in countries where abortion is illegal or severely restricted, as in Kenya, where some 30% to 50% of maternal deaths are a result of unsafe abortion.

The Family Planning Association of Kenya, an IPPF member, chose to forfeit US funds rather than sign the “global gag” clause. It was forced to close three reproductive health clinics, scale back others and slash outreach programmes.

But restricting abortion is life-affirming.

When abortion is banned or highly restricted, and when women are lied to or blocked from basic access to reproductive healthcare, they die. The current U.S. policies kill women, period. They are not pro-life. And the UK deserves a huge round of applause for taking a big step to protect women’s health and women’s lives.

Thanks to Ms. Lauren for the link.