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

Oregon militia bulldozes Native American archaeological site, still NBD

During their weeks-long occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, armed militants have declared their intention to return the federal land to its “rightful owners.” They’ve also made it apparent that by “rightful owners,” they weren’t talking about the Burns Paiute tribe, whose ancestral lands encompass the reserve. And on Wednesday, they made their priorities clear when they bulldozed a path through a Burns Paiute archaeological site.

Oh No It’s Award Season Again Thread

Share your thumbs-ups and thumbs-downs here, for whatever production and whoever’s performance, and feel free to go to town with subtext and meta-commentary. Just please be spoiler-aware for those readers who haven’t managed to catch up with various books/movies/TV yet.

I’ll get you started. Consider going to see The Dressmaker.

Spillover #32

Our 32nd #spillover thread is long overdue. Some reminders:

1. #spillover is part of our comment moderation system for keeping other threads on-topic by providing a separate constructive space for side-discussions.
2. Commenters are encouraged to respect the topic of each post and cheerfully volunteer to take off-topic side-discussions into #spillover.

Open Thread with My Kittens

Firstly, my apologies for neglecting to post a seasonal greetings Open Thread a few weeks ago. Belated wishes for a Happy New Year! Secondly, I hope you will forgive me via the adorableness of these three kittens we adopted a a couple of months ago. Please natter/chatter/vent/rant on anything* you like over this weekend and throughout the week.
* with a few netiquette exceptions

The Cost of Living

(As a Clash aficionado, this phrase always makes me think of the EP released in 1979. This has nothing to do with the post, but I thought I’d get it out there and out of the way for myself. I enjoy the mental image of Strummer and Paul Simonon giggling about the phrase–apparently how they came to name the EP. This digression is now over.)

You may have seen this study from the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs, finding that women pay extra money for the products marketed to us. This is not exactly a huge surprise to me, but I’m glad to see someone do the legwork to confirm it. We’re charged more for the products we’re asked to buy even leaving out how much extra buying is demanded of women. Even if we just bought one-to-one the same stuff as men bought, we’d have a surcharge. Obviously, some of this can be circumvented: I don’t know a single woman who buys women’s shaving gel rather than men’s, for instance.

And that’s not taking into account all we have to or are manipulated into buying that most men don’t: tampons and pads and panty liners, make-up and nail polish, contraception, hair products, extra clothing (men can wear a suit to a white-collar interview and a suit to a wedding; I need radically different outfits for those two events), jewelry (most men can and will show up to that wedding without any jewelry on).

Here’s an example from my own life (that makes it an upper-middle class example, of course): I start teaching again soon. Because I had my son, I’ve gone up a couple of sizes. I don’t mind; I still think I look good. But it means I own an entire closetful of clothing that doesn’t fit me. And I can’t show up to teach in yoga pants or a pair of jeans. I hadn’t thought about the gendered aspect of the shopping necessitated by this situation until I mentioned it to a male colleague who said “Wow, yeah, I can just slouch on into the classroom in a shirt and jeans. That’s not fair to you!” No, I guess it’s not. (I’m tenured now, I suppose I could slouch on into the classroom in a t-shirt and jeans, but I don’t think I could count on commanding the respect and deference that a male colleague doing the same thing could, given all the work coming out on how sexist student evals are.)

It costs more to be a cis femme woman than it does to be a cis butch man. I wonder how this breaks down in different gender expressions. What’s the price differential of being a butch woman, for instance? What about a femme man? And how does race inflect these differences? And what is the cost of being trans?

REVIEW: Battlefield 4 (2013)

Last time, we reviewed a historical artefact. Today’s final instalment of this miniseries looks at a more modern franchise, whose sequels have somehow managed to incorporate everything from China to Star Wars

FEMINIST GAME REVIEWS
“BATTLEFIELD 4” (2013)

OVERVIEW ► released in Q4 2013, “Battlefield 4” is yet another military shooter, depicting America’s efforts to stop WWIII from destroying the planet. though it hails from a franchise known for online-only games, this sequel is one of the few with a story-driven campaign for offline play. unfortunately, the sequel’s campaign did not impress gamers upon release. most slammed it as being clichéd in plot, and uninspired in gameplay. to be fair, most critics agreed that the plot was an improvement over “Battlefield 3”, which was notorious for its incoherence and plot holes. still, the sequel’s campaign was less notable for its story than it was for engaging with race, gender and xenophobia, a rarity in gaming. ultimately, the campaign succeeded most at depicting relationships between characters who must learn to trust each other, to stop WWIII.

VISIBILITY ► given contemporary anxieties over China’s global rise, the game engages with similar themes, albeit with some measure of respectfulness. rather than being faceless foreigners, Chinese people are shown to be human beings, evident when dissidents and refugees interact with you. the game’s turning point comes when Irish, a black Marine, brings hundreds of refugees aboard a U.S. ship, despite racist grumbling from crew. yet the Chinese are not just helpless victims. your team includes Hannah, a Harvard-educated agent, albeit with a suspicious background. women veterans are respectfully represented too. Major Greenland is shown as cynical, yet caring toward her troops and true to her word. the game is unusual in not only granting visibility to women and foreigners, but depicting them as vital to the game’s narrative as well.

AGENCY ► the game is unsentimental in depicting war as destructive rather than glorious, but the characters try their best to make a difference anyway. Irish, your squad’s moral centre, never puts following orders above doing good. his efforts save the lives of countless Chinese refugees. Hannah also pursues her own agenda in an effort to stop China’s civil war, though her methods fuel the suspicions of a distrustful Irish. nonetheless, both characters come to earn each other’s respect. by the campaign’s end, both are willing to give up one’s life to save the other. Greenland, the game’s highest-ranking female, has a brief but vital role in helping the heroes, providing them with the means to escape China. though the game might be a military shooter, the campaign is mostly free of the sort of jingoism and macho posturing endemic to the genre.

PROGRESS ► though the game was above average in the handling of its characters, such efforts were overshadowed by the game’s technical failings. despite public beta testing, the game suffered from absurd bugs upon release, which broke the gameplay and even led to class-action lawsuits. nonetheless, the developers continue to fix and update the game, even to this day, which has contributed to its enduring popularity online. in 2015, the franchise’s publisher released “Battlefield: Hardline”, a spinoff praised for its improved plot and wildly diverse characters. “Star Wars Battlefront” is the franchise’s most recent spinoff, though this title was critically slammed for lacking any coherent story. gamers can only hope the developers learn their lesson, and pay attention to the characters and plot of future “Battlefield” instalments.

Despite doing just four episodes, we’ve learned a lot from working on this series. Most of those insights have been technical, like finding ways to simplify our workflows or up the visual quality of our footage. But whilst these videos may be well-crafted or -designed, the most common feedback we get is that the literal lack of voice makes these videos feel soulless – which is the last thing feminist content should ever feel like.

So as we prepare to launch our new playthrough series next month, we’ve already switched up the format to address those flaws. It does involve more work, because quality voice work (i.e. not just a vlogger talking to her iPhone) involves way more overhead, from soundproofing the recording space to compressing all words to be the same volume. But we’ve accrued enough experience over the years that we’ve tried to make the process as painless for us as possible. That’s important to pushing out future episodes in a timely manner.

For the miniseries videos, each took around three days to finish. As we finish the first video of this new series, our workflow involves more than double that amount of work…

Day #1: Play game mission
Day #2: Write script
Day #3: Revise script
Day #4: Record script
Day #5: Edit recorded audio
Day #6: Record game mission footage
Day #7: Edit audio and footage together

Of course, everyone has homework and jobs too, so these days are never consecutive. Heck, for this first episode, we’ve already completed everything up to Day #5, yet the episode likely won’t be done till month’s end, since winter classes just began for this quarter. Our goal is two episodes per month, which will require immense focus on our part.

Then again, if we’re focused solely on feminism for 2016, it means this will be your final carnage fix of the year, from the annals of our editing lab…

When a deadly act of fear and ignorance is deemed “objectively reasonable”

When a grand jury last week failed to pass down an indictment on Timothy Loehmann, the Cleveland police officer who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice in public park last winter, they did so under the influence of three reports declaring the shooting “objectively reasonable.” In other words, in light of the circumstances the officers thought they were facing, it was reasonable for them to shoot Rice after rolling up and assessing the situation for less than a second.

Quick hit: An armed militia has occupied a federal building in Oregon, but whatever, NBD

On Saturday, a group of armed men seized control of the headquarters of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge outside of Burns, Oregon. The building was unoccupied at the time they took control and they hold no hostages, but Ammon Bundy (son of Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy, he of his own anti-government standoff in 2014), has said that they “will be [t]here as long as it takes,” up to several years, adding, “We have no intentions of using force upon anyone, (but) if force is used against us, we would defend ourselves.”