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

Goodbye, Mr. Hitchens

I don’t expect that Christopher Hitchens will be a favorite among Feministe readers, but he is a personal favorite of mine. Often wrong, often sexist, a total alcoholic misogynist disaster, but — a phenomenal writer, a modern philosopher, a true curmudgeon. I have a soft spot for people who, though they may be wrong sometimes (and right others), make me think longer, harder and more deeply. I have a soft spot for people who don’t fit neatly into ideological categories, and whose wrongness makes me interrogate my own position, and defend it more thoroughly. Christopher Hitchens was, for me, one of those people. He was one of my very favorite modern writers and thinkers. And I am truly sad to hear that he passed away today, at the age of 62. He was as far from a saint as they come, but God (who is not great) bless him.

“She always knew who she was.”

The Boston Globe has a sweet, heartbreaking, heartwarming story of Nicole Maines, her twin brother Jonas, and their parents. Nicole knew from toddlerhood that she was a girl, and her family and friends are supporting her in developing “a physical female body that matches up to [her] image of [her]self.” Nicole is fourteen.

From the beginning, Nicole* liked Barbies, mermaids, and princess dresses, wanted to know when she would “get to be a girl,” and cried hating her body. Identical twin Jonas told their father, “Dad, you might as well face it. You have a son and a daughter.” It took them an adjustment period, more than a few mistakes, and a lot of research, but they did–Wayne and Kelly Maines took the bold step of… trusting their child. They contacted a physician who specializes in child gender management services, and with judgment and cruelty from some sides and acceptance and support from others, they embraced their daughter. By fifth grade, she was wearing long hair and dresses and living fully as Nicole. Now, at age 14, under the supervision of the physicians of the Gender Management Services Clinic at Children’s Hospital in Boston, she is taking drugs to suppress puberty until she can begin estrogen therapy to help develop a grown woman’s body.

Read the Maines’s story at the Globe–there really is more to it than I can do justice. Even with the judgment they’ve suffered–and the family ended up moving to a different town to escape the abuse of some in their community–what’s striking is the support they’ve gotten from the kids’ friends and their new school. Jonas, of course, loves–and is protective of–his sister, and their parents love having a daughter. And every family, whether their children are transgender or cisgender, could learn a lesson from them.

“I believed in Nicole,” her mother said. “She always knew who she was.”

*post has been edited to correct name and pronoun errors on my part; discussion of that is in comments

Parents: Time to Panic

No one wants their kids to smoke. But what if your kid is pretending to smoke, kinda-sorta? From an actual news broadcast, kids are smoking Smarties.

Posted in Uncategorized

Photoshop-by-numbers

Though we generally notice the more egregious offenses, when a magazine cover barely resembles the celebrity it’s supposed to portray, we’re so jaded that we let it fly, much as we accept that a Picasso is going to kind of look just about person-esque.

Now scientists at Dartmouth can identify precisely how cubist a cover photo has become on a scale of 1 to 5.

Ads pulled from All-American Muslim

Bowing to right-wing pressure, dozens of advertisers have pulled their ads from the TLC show All-American Muslim because… Muslims, I guess? They are human beings who live out their belief systems differently, just like human beings who follow every other religion everywhere. But that’s a problem, I guess? Because here’s what the Florida Family Association had to say about it: