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

Grandmothers

This isn’t the post I was going to write today.

I was going to write about the right to fuck up in feminist/progressive/social justice communities. Maybe you’ll get that one later in the week.

But this morning I woke up late and the first thing Twitter told me was that Elizabeth Taylor had died. I posted a brief comment on my Tumblr.

And then my phone rang. And my father told me that my grandmother had died last night.

She had been sick; I knew it was coming. Still, it hurts.

When you lose someone the immediate response is to think about all the things you didn’t know about them or the things you didn’t tell them. The time you didn’t have.

My grandmother was in her nineties–she had outlived her husband, the grandfather I never met, by over 30 years. Most of that time she lived alone, first in the house where she raised her kids, then an apartment and finally in a nursing home. She sewed me doll clothes when I was little and peppered her speech with French expressions and the occasional dirty joke. The last time I saw her we drove past a classic car and she made a joke about dating when she was young and kissing in the backseat. I wish I remembered her exact phrasing. I know it made me giggle.

On that same trip my mother and I got drunk and talked about boys and she told me about the guy who broke her heart before she got married.

We too often don’t share personal stories with the members of our family–our adult lives, our politics drive wedges and we spend less time together. Our infinitely busy lives get in the way.

So it becomes easier in a way to mourn celebrities whose lives were lived in public. We know more about Liz Taylor than we do our own families.

This week is the anniversary of the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire. Women led a general strike in 1909–mainly Jewish and Italian immigrant women. I’ve been thinking about those women a lot in the past couple of weeks, since I watched the documentary on PBS.

I watched it, and I didn’t really write about it other than to encourage people to watch it. Because it’s our history. It’s MY history, as a third-generation immigrant on either side, a Jewish woman, a worker, a rabble-rouser, a very-occasional organizer.

We are so often separated from our history. From our grandmothers. They are old and dead and gone by the time we are old enough to talk, and people our own age are more interesting. Books and dating are more interesting. We remember that history on anniversaries or birthdays, when grandma comes to visit and we cover our tattoos and button that extra button on our shirts, when we read a book that reminds us, when we watch a movie that our grandparents grew up on.

My first tattoo was a maple leaf, for my French Canadian heritage, gotten with a girlfriend who has a matching one and matching Quebecois family. My second was words from Les Miserables, in my maternal grandmother’s French but from the book my paternal grandmother gave me when I was nine and dared me to read. My most recent one is words from Emma Goldman, my favorite (Russian-American Jewish) revolutionary. My kitchen walls have framed photos of Liz Taylor, Jane Russell, Gene Tierney, and Rita Hayworth.

Even as I carry them with me, I am often too wrapped up in my own life to stop and think.

Elizabeth Taylor. grandmother. Emma Goldman. grandmother. Clara Lemlich. grandmother.

My grandmother loved to play Scrabble and warmly accepted my gay cousin’s boyfriend and my tattooed, Muslim-convert ex. She ate chocolate after every meal and drank beer with her pizza. But still there is so much I don’t know about her. So much I only thought to ask as she was older, sicker, not able to share those stories so well.

So much, today, I wish I could ask her. So much history she saw.

What do you wish you could ask your grandmothers (whether they’re blood grandmothers or otherwise)?

Righteous Providers, Medical Pariahs?

When we talk about the stigma associated with abortion, the conversation is often about the experiences of women who choose the procedure. Sometimes we talk about abortion providers, specifically the harassment and violence they endure to courageously provide women with medical care. But what about the harassment abortion providers receive from within the medical community?

I recently interviewed a friend of mine who performs abortions and other routine reproductive health care. Her words speak for themselves.

Me: Tell me about your experience as an abortion provider within the medical community.

Doctor: Although the majority of physicians favor legal, safe abortion, some tend to think of it as a shameful kind of care to provide. In general, status within the medical community has to do with faculty appointments and research grants. People who provide abortion are frequently excluded from faculty positions at academic universities for political reasons (even at a non-religiously affiliated university, all it takes is one anti-choice department member to keep someone out for good).

It’s hard to be somewhat of an outcast in one’s own community. It’s hard to see the president of the American College of OB/GYN make statements about his personal distaste for abortion, and to see your entire sub-area of expertise nearly entirely excluded from conference programs. It’s hard to know that some of your colleagues disrespect you for what you do and think your job is “dirty” somehow, and while they’re glad you do it, they’re glad they don’t have to.

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Why is the Gay Rights Movement is So Far Ahead of the Abortion Rights Movement?

On last week’s episode of Glee, gay characters Kurt and Blaine kissed, and not just a peck-on-the-cheek kiss. A full out passionate, lip-smacking smooch. I was pretty pleased about this (ok, I was grinning from ear to ear) and then I watched this. It’s a video of a group of teens watching the show who jump and squeal when the kiss goes down. And then I started wondering – would a bunch of teens have the same reaction if one of the characters came out and said, “hey, I had an abortion, and I’m so relieved to have my life back”?

I know what you’re thinking – two gay characters finally kissing and a woman talking about her abortion openly and honestly are two totally different scenarios. Who cheer leads for an abortion? But hear me out. For all it’s flaws, Glee has managed to make a gay kid one of the show’s most popular characters. There’s something a little radical about that.

And yet, this question popped into my mind. Is there any hope for a female character who has had an abortion to be so celebrated, so beloved by fans and foes of the show alike? How did the lives of gay characters become central plot points in mainstream tv shows, while pregnant characters still rarely mention abortion?

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Chris Brown, Still Keepin’ It Classy

Chris Brown made his way to GMA this morning and was riding on the high of being relevant again, what with headlines about his penis and the restraining order against Rihanna being lifted. He’s changed his ways, he keeps assuring us, and those anger management classes were a huge help.

But then GMA asked him about Rihanna and I guess that’s when the high ends, because he lashed out and took his anger out on his dressing room:

[…] Brown stormed into his dressing room and started screaming and tearing the room apart. Workers in the building called security. Before they arrived, insiders say a window in his dressing room was smashed, with the glass shattering and falling onto 43rd and Broadway.

Oh Chris Brown… Please take some time to continue working on yourself and your issues. You really need to stop.

Frances Fox Piven Has a Posse

I’m enough of an Internet Personality that I’ve had some hate-tweeters and hate-bloggers in my time. Not a lot, but a few.

But I’ve never gotten as many straight-up nasty responses as when I tossed off a tweet Friday night that “Frances Fox Piven is tougher than you. Fact.”

See, Glenn Beck has it in for Frances Fox Piven.

And I was at the Left Forum for an opening plenary featuring my boss, the fabulous Laura Flanders, Barbara Ehrenreich, Cornel West and Paul Mason (of the BBC). And as a bonus, we got Frances Fox Piven.

The story of how a 78-year-old sociology professor and (brilliant) author became the number one enemy of The USA’s Weepiest TV Host has been told elsewhere. Nancy Goldstein wrote:

Glenn Beck must have thought he had an easy mark when he targeted Frances Fox Piven. Let’s face it. On paper she’s a female widowed lefty academic now approaching eighty. Most of her life’s work has been focused on enfranchising the poor through welfare reform and voter registration. Surely Beck thought that nearly fifty broadcasts worth of inflammatory disinformation and hate-mongering about Piven and their inevitable result—hate mail, comments and phone calls that range from brutally nasty and paranoid to those that cross the line into the genuine death threat category—would shut her up.

So what’s Frances Fox Piven up to that has Beck and his crew so terrified?

She, along with Cornel West, is organizing a massive teach-in on April 5, designed to help boost the movement, begun in Wisconsin (as Meredith Clark wrote right here) to push back on so-called “austerity” cuts.

In other words, she’s organizing. Frances Fox Piven has a posse.

I mean, maybe Beck & Co. should be scared. I hear his audience share is down, and those protests in Madison look like an awful lot of fun–free pizza donated from around the world sounds far better than tea to me.

Nonviolent mass activism is scary, I suppose, when your main interest in life is protecting the interests of those who are already doing just fine. And when you’d done a fairly good job of convincing people who have been struggling that you’re on their side already, you might as well spend a bit of time demonizing your opponents and consolidating your own power.

But that can backfire on you.

Eventually, when you make a huge deal out of a woman that the majority of the US had never heard of, night after night, some people might actually go read her books. And figure out that some of her ideas are pretty appealing. You know, that poor people should work together to leverage what power they have. That maybe while we still have mass unemployment, it’s time for the unemployed to organize instead of waiting around nicely for our corporate overlords to throw us a few jobs.

That a gutted social welfare system is leaving people, often women and children, unprotected when those jobs disappear.

That working-class people have rights, maybe, and are just as valuable as those with FOX News microphones.

Glenn Beck hasn’t been able to shut up Frances Fox Piven. Death threats haven’t shut her up. In between the nasty comments at my Twitter feed the other night, I got responses from her students, present and former. One of them said:

first thing she did in a class was slam her fist on the table and say “you don’t think you have power? you HAVE power.”

That’s what the Glenn Becks of the world are really afraid we’ll find out.

I got a button at that event that says “I Am Frances Fox Piven.” But I’m not. I’m nowhere near that fierce. I hope to be someday.

For now, count me as just part of the posse.

Age limit on foreign men marrying Cambodian women introduced

From the AFP:

MALE foreigners over the age of 50 have been outlawed from marrying Cambodian women in the country under new rules designed to crack down on sham marriages and human trafficking, the government said today [16 March].

Foreigners who earn less than $2,580 per month are also barred from wedding local women, foreign ministry spokesman Koy Kuong told AFP, but the restrictions do not apply to weddings taking place overseas.

Guy Delauney has more at the BBC.

Monday (Not So) Random Ten

Ah, dear readers, we have come to this pass.

I have contemplated doing a Monday, or, indeed, a Friday Random Ten many times before, but then music for which you will make fun of me always comes up in my playlist. So consider this a M/FRT in which I might hurriedly skip ahead on some tracks. Trust me, it’s better for all of us this way. Although you must keep in mind my love of musical theatre and dislike of much music made during my lifetime as we do this. Also that it’s Tuesday where I am.

How does one play along? Well, get out your music player of choice and set it to shuffle, then post a list of the, um, first ten songs that come up.

1. “My Friend” – Groove Armada
2. “Truly Madly Deeply” – Savage Garden
3. “Dublin Sky” – Darren Hayes
4. “I Just Can’t Wait to Be King” (Lion King soundtrack) – Jason Weaver, Rowan Atkinson and Laura Williams
5. “Rain” – The Corrs
6. “Don’t Bring Me Down” – Electric Light Orchestra
7. “Never Tear Us Apart” – INXS
8. Beethoven’s Symphony #3 In E Flat, Op. 55, “Eroica” – Scherzo: Allegro Vivace – Bela Drahos: Nicolaus Esterhazy Sinfonia
9. “Defying Gravity” – Idina Menzel and Kristen Chenoweth
10. “Jet Airliner” – Steve Miller Band

Your turn. There’s a bonus video below the fold.

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Allow me to (re)introduce myself

What up, feminists! I’m excited to be here with you all for the week while Jill is on vacay.

I’m Steph Herold, a reproductive justice activist and organizer. That essentially means that I do a whole bunch of crazy shit to make sure abortion stays accessible to those who need it no matter their income, location, or stage in pregnancy. I also work with abortion providers both to help them engage youth activists and develop productive ways of engaging with the public. I have a day job at this pretty fabulous org, too.

I didn’t always have this complex feminist hustle. I started off working at an abortion clinic after college, and when my colleague and Abortion demi-God, Dr. George Tiller, was murdered, I came out of the activist closet. I started IAmDrTiller.com, and started tweeting (prolifically) about abortion providers and the critical need for the pro-choice movement to more openly and honestly support providers.

Over the course of this organizing work, I got pretty pissed about young feminists being treated like second class citizens in our own movement, so I started the Abortion Gang, a blog with about 15 young people writing about everything from abortion rights to birthing stories to trans activism. We even inspired our own anti-choice spin off blog! I’m pretty proud of that.

I’ve written in a few other places besides the Abortion Gang, mostly RH Reality Check, Jezebel, The Nation, Campus Progress, you get the gist.

Some other info about me: I’m Latina/Jewish/white, went to a public high school school and a private all-women’s college, originally from the DC-area and now in Brooklyn with my feminist boo and our adorable pit bull, Lucky. I have two younger sisters who, in addition to be awesome feminists, are my best friends. I am a total tech snob and the last tv show I really loved was Battle Star Gallactica, although Blaine and Kurt on Glee come pretty close.

I’m pumped to be here with you all and really look forward to the conversation this week.

Black. Male. Feminist?

This is a guest post from G.D. at PostBourgie.

My sister, grandmother and me, circa 1983.

Over at The Root, Byron Hurt has a candid piece about how watching the fraught interaction between his parents as a kid helped plant the seeds for his adult embrace of feminism:

Feminist writings about patriarchy, racism, capitalism and structural sexism resonated with me because I had witnessed firsthand the kind of male dominance they challenged. I saw it as a child in my home and perpetuated it as an adult. Their analysis of male culture and male behavior helped me put my father’s patriarchy into a much larger social context, and also helped me understand myself better.

You’ll have to forgive me for how jumbled/discursive/TMI this is going to read, but this has agitated a lot of stuff I’ve been thinking about and was frankly saving for a much neater Mother’s Day post.

My own, very flawed feminism is also rooted in my childhood, albeit in circumstances very different from Hurt’s. His father’s presence was inescapable. Mine was imperceptible.

And I wasn’t an outlier: there just weren’t a lot of fathers doing the quotidian work of parenting in my South Philadelphia neighborhood, as if all the adult black men had agreed to go into hiding. And so the teachers; the parents who yelled at us to come inside when it got dark, and who organized the church trips, camps and block parties, were almost always black women. My grandmother scooped me up from soccer practice. My mom taught me the rules of football and tied my ties. My aunt helped me with my long division. Her daughter taught me how to shoot free throws. When something broke, one of these women fixed it.

None of these were feminist acts in and of themselves, and those women would never have identified as feminists, but they were (and remain) giants to me. And I was living in a world, albeit not the one they probably would have preferred, in which the traditional gender roles were queered. My world was largely populated by black women who were fantastically smarter and more competent than I was. That didn’t forestall my fantastically awkward attempts to slide into some ill-fitting molds of masculinity, and I still bought into all those gendered hierarchies even though they were especially abstract for me. But all of this hobbled my capacity to see the eventual assumption of gender roles as foregone or necessary conclusions, and stoked a lingering skepticism of the supposed truths on which they rested.

The theory — Patricia Hill Collins, Judith Butler, etc. — would all come later, in college. But the ground was already fertile. Ta-Nehisi Coates wrote about the roving packs of young dudes in B-more who dumped on other young dudes, with no real pretext. So it was where I grew up, where those cats felt less like my contemporaries and more like a capricious force of nature. (I’ve said before that the reason folks at my high school tried hard not to get detention wasn’t because they were well-behaved kids, but because detention meant walking the five North Philly blocks to the subway on your lonesome.) You learned to look over your shoulder, to take the long way to wherever you were going. And if you got caught out there — and most of us did, at some point — that was your fault. You were slipping, actin’ like it can’t happen.

I remember my mom cautioned both my twin sister and me as teenagers to be on point, but there was a different shading to the warnings she gave my sister.

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Hello Again, Feministe

She’s baaaaaaaack…

Jill asked me to help fill in for her while she’s traveling, and though I’m in no way a good replacement for Jill I agreed, even though I’m in sort of a strange head space around Feminist Blogging.

I haven’t been a regular blogger in a while–I was just in Austin for South by Southwest Interactive and someone asked me if I was a “blogger” with that odd note in his voice, the one I that I can never tell if it’s condescension or camaraderie. And I said, really, not so much anymore.

I mean, I maintain a Tumblr but I maintain a line in the sand rule about that blog–it is for me. I don’t owe anyone a post or a response or anything at all. I can ignore it for four days or post nothing but pictures of Robyn or Lauryn Hill. I’ll write long rambling posts that include references to period sex or one-liner abortion jokes.

I still consider myself a feminist, obviously–though lately I’m thinking more about bell hooks’ formulation “I advocate feminism” as a more active line to hold myself to. I’ve been doing maybe more straight-up feminist activism and plotting more work around the issues of abortion and women’s sexuality than ever before lately, and yet I’ve put some distance between myself and the feminist blogosphere.

Maybe because it so often seems to be having arguments we’ve had before. Or because I work too much and I’m busy writing things for people who pay me (I’m a journalist with a full-time job and entirely too much freelance work).

That sounds mean; I don’t mean it to be.

So I’m back here again, and though the server ate half my first post (Chally swears it hates her, not me, but I don’t believe it. Technology’s been out to get me this week.) I’ll be giving blogging a shot again, to see if I can remember what I liked about it so much for a while. To do some thinking out loud, in public, and see if we can’t get somewhere.

I’m not sure quite what I’ll write about yet–maybe about Frances Fox Piven and why Glenn Beck is scared of her; maybe about Wisconsin and Indiana and Ohio and why a resurgent union movement matters; maybe more about Robyn (there can never be enough Robyn).

I hope you have fun, whatever happens. Thanks for having me.