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

TODAY: Amanda Marcotte at KGB Bar in Manhattan

My endorsement of this book has been suspended. For further explanation, please see this post.

UPDATE: Since posting this (and updating it once), issues have arisen with the images used in the book. Those images are inexcusable, and I stand behind everything Holly said in her post. Those images have also made me reconsider my support of the book. I will be putting up another post tonight (April 25th) explaining this further.

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Amanda is out pitching her book, and she’ll be at KGB Bar in the East Village tomorrow. I will be there as well, with a few other residents of Lefty Blogistan.

KGB Bar is at 85 E. 4th (near 2nd Ave), and the reading starts at 7. If you can’t make it tomorrow, stop by Bluestockings on Thursday for another Amanda reading, also at 7.

And if you can’t make it at all (or even if you can), consider buying Amanda’s book. It’s a great, funny read, and well worth the purchase. It’s also worth supporting progressive authors so that we create and maintain a market for books like this.

Hope to see some of you there!

UPDATE: Many people in the comments section have taken issue with my promotion of Amanda’s book. That’s understandable. I’m leaving the post up because I do continue to support Amanda and the feminist work she’s doing, including her book — but that does not mean that I don’t hear the many people, including many women of color, who have raised very legitimate concerns about white feminists’ appropriation of work created by women of color. I remain unconvinced that Amanda’s appropriated work that wasn’t hers; but again, we’re probably going to end up disagreeing on that. There is some background on this issue here. I understand that many bloggers and commenters no longer link to Amanda and will not be buying her book; I hear that. I was not intending to erase those voices when I put up this post; nor was I attempting to pretend that the events of earlier this month never happened. I was simply trying to promote the work of a feminist writer who I continue to like and respect. In hindsight, promoting her work without recognizing the ongoing controversy was foolish.

I don’t expect everyone (or anyone at all) to agree with me on this. I don’t expect everyone (or anyone at all) to join me in backing her book. I am still going to take the position that her book is a positive contribution to the feminist movement, and I am still going to promote it here. That said, I will not promote it at the expense of other voices, and so I don’t expect this comment section to be perfectly calm. As Crys T said in the comments to this post:

And I don’t think most of us expect you to blacklist Amanda from Feministe. But you have to expect negative commentary if you’re going to bring her or her work up. This event has caused a huge amount of pain, anger and damage to the feminist blogosphere in general. Well, the English-speaking bits of it anyway. And people aren’t going to forget about it any time soon.

That’s fair. And I should have recognized that promoting Amanda’s work right now, under these circumstances, is not a neutral act. But I also hope that I’m clear when I say that my promotion of her book does mean that I think everything that happened this month was totally fine, or that I’m taking Amanda’s “side.” I don’t think Amanda appropriated or plagiarized; but that doesn’t mean that I’m not hearing or respecting the people who think otherwise. A lot of people who I respect greatly have raised issues with the way white feminists have handled things. This is not an attempt to silence them, or to even express disagreement. Perhaps I’m too optimistic in thinking that I can support the voices that challenge the workings of white feminism and also support the work of a white feminist who has been challenged. I’m trying to wade through this one carefully, and apparently so far I’ve been about as graceful as a bull in a china shop. But this is where I’m at right now and what my thought process is. As always, I welcome comments and responses. I just ask that we not do a repeat of comment threads that have been solely about the Amanda issue; this isn’t the place to re-hash and argue over what did or didn’t happen. The controversy about Amanda’s article was about something much bigger than Amanda; I ask that we keep the conversation on that level, in an attempt to make it productive.

Take Back the Night at Barnard and Columbia

To all of you in NYC and the surrounding areas, check out Barnard and Columbia’s Take Back the Night event. The details:

April 17th, 2008
8pm March
10pm Speak Out

The march will meet outside of Barnard Hall on the Barnard campus, which is at the intersection of 117th and Broadway (1 Train to 116th Street). The Speak Out will happen after the March, and last as long as necessary.

Take Back the Night is a national movement that began in Belgium in 1976. At first, the movement was primarily concerned with the role of pornography in perpetuating violence against women. Today, however, on many college campuses nationwide, student-run Take Back the Night chapters largely focus on sexual assault and domestic violence.

The first march at Columbia University was organized at Barnard College as a product of a Seven Sisters conference. The march was held in April of 1988, with a participation of nearly 200 students. Since then, march attendance has grown every year.

They’re also on Facebook. Hope lots of you can make it!

WAM Redux

WAM!

I spent the weekend at the Women, Action and Media conference up in Boston, and it was so fantastic I’m not even sure where to start. First, a million thanks and a big round of applause for WAM organizer (and Feministe guest-blogger) Jaclyn, who put together a really wonderful conference and whose hard work is deeply appreciated. Second, apologies for not posting during the conference or immediately afterwards. I didn’t present at the conference, and I wanted to take the full three days to just take it all in and fully process it before I put up a post. Then I got home last night and saw this, and it just put a damper on my good feelings about the weekend. But WAM was awesome, and deserves to be written about, so here we go.

Friday night started with a keynote from Helen Thomas, one of my long-time journalist heroines. When I was a bitty journalism student at NYU, I wanted nothing more than to be Helen when I grew up, and her speech didn’t disappoint. Ann from Feministing introduced her, designating her “the patron saint of not shutting up.” Thomas eviscerated the media for not properly questioning and challenging the current administration, and told a series of stories about the nine presidents she’s covered in her career. Thomas is pretty old-school when it comes to her feminist views — and considering that she’s 87 years old, that isn’t so surprising (also, fun fact: Her birthday is the day after mine). So there were a few things she said that I wasn’t quite on board with, but her insights and wit were nonetheless a wonderful way to kick off the conference.

Read More…Read More…

WAM!

The WAM conference kicks off tomorrow evening, and I couldn’t be more excited. I’m currently praising Past Jill for not proposing a workshop or speaking on a panel; there are so many fantastic women to meet and learn from that I’m looking forward to shutting up for a weekend and just taking it all in. I mean, just look at these sessions — how will Future Jill even decide what to go to? And while the panels sound phenomenal, I’m most excited to meet all the fantastic bloggers, journalists and other media mavens who are showing up.

Any of you gonna be there?

Great Feminist Event in NYC

I am so, so mad I can’t go to this. But you should:

Women as Breeders – Children as Weapons:
The Right to Abortion and the Whole Direction of Society

Over the past 8 years, under the Bush administration, the power and reach of the Christian fundamentalist movement has reached unprecedented levels in its power and influence over everything from scientific policies like stem-cell research to foreign aid for health clinics in Africa; it has placed powerful figures in the White House and the Supreme Court and commands a base of tens of millions of people.

A central issue to this movement has been the role of women in society and particularly the ability for women to have control over their own bodies and reproductive systems.

Join us February 26th in a discussion with:

Cristina Page,
author of “How the Pro-Choice Movement Saved America: Freedom, Politics and the War on Sex” and spokesperson for birthcontrolwatch.org.

Kathryn Joyce, contributing writer for The Nation and author of “Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement” ( due to be released in 2009). Kathryn will discuss an emerging movement of Christian women dedicated to take up their submissive, motherly roles with a ‘military air'” and with an aim to create a “Christian army” achieving cultural “victory.”

The evening will provide an opportunity to have an honest and wide-ranging discussion that addresses: What is on the horizon for 2009 and is the “Christian Right” over? How do the core beliefs of the Christian fundamentalist movement shape the lives of millions of women currently and how could they potentially impact the American population as a whole in the future? Why is the right to abortion is so crucial and why must it be demanded without apology? A member of World Can’t Wait will moderate the event and discuss how these issues are related to the larger Bush agenda and ” the whole direction of society”.

The event will take place:
Tuesday, Feb. 26th
7:00 – 9:00 P.M.
@ Think Coffee
248 Mercer St (btwn 3rd and 4th st)

For any questions, please contact:
Youth_students@worldcantwait.org

Cristina Page and Kathryn Joyce are two of my absolute favorite feminist writers; I’m really sorry I won’t be getting the opportunity to see them live. Sigh.

If any regular commenters plan on going and want to live-blog it, shoot me an email.