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Author Archives: Anna Clutterbuck-Cook

Earth Hour 2009

29 Sunday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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domesticity, fun, photos, politics

Last night, the city of Boston participated in Earth Hour 2009, a one-hour worldwide event in which people were encouraged to turn out their lights for one hour (8:30-9:30) in support of combating global warming. Hanna and I spent our hour of ecological friendliness playing scrabble by candlelight.


Hanna won infinity points for spelling “Ianto” on the board and thus won the game hands down.

links again

27 Friday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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So it’s clearly that time of year when substantive posts are by and large beyond me. But enjoy the fluff and piffle while it lasts, and look forward to more commentary in May.

Meanwhile, I’m off to WAM!2009 tomorrow over at MIT. Enjoyed volunteeering last year; this year signed up just as an attendee. Looking forward especially to hearing one of my feminist crushes, Julia Serano, participate in one of the panel sessions. Will report back next week.

Meanwhile, here are a few links of note from the past week.

NPR reported on the Quiverfull movement, and I’m not sure how I feel about the fact that the two quiverfull families showcased are from West Michigan. Ah, my home state. Land of radical extremes.

Have recently discovered, and have been enjoying, Greta Christina’s contributions to the Blowfish Blog. For example, her recent post on what’s wrong with the phrase “good in bed.”

Betsy Hartmann over at Alternet calls out Chris Hedges for “overpopulation hysteria” and points out the dangers of attempting to legislate against population growth — namely, repressive policies that curtail women’s ability to control their own bodies and reproductive choices.

My blog was mentioned on Women’s Health News!

John Stewart makes fun of the Pope’s view of condoms. As my sister observed on twitter: “CNN: ‘Pope wrong on condoms’ hopefully not the expiration date.” To which my mother replied: “or . . . what? . . . Pope baby!”

Yes Means Yes reports on the ACLU’s involvement in cases where teenagers have been accused of “child pornography” for taking and sharing naked photographs with their significant others.

Via Hanna (because what link list would be complete without one?), the London Review of Books on my stupid vampire.

She also has some lovely new photos up; for those of you who miss my albums check hers out. Beautiful work.

Another March Birthday Post

25 Wednesday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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holidays, humor, web video

It’s my mother’s 59th birthday today (“Many happy returns of the day, Mum!”), and since she’s categorically opposed to having her picture in the public eye, I offer this (tangentially) fiber-art related amusement.

Via Shakesville (via a genealogy of other blogs).

Booknotes: Quiverfull

22 Sunday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

books, education, feminism, politics

A couple of weeks ago, my own personal copy of Kathryn Joyce’s new book Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement arrived in the mail — just when I was looking for one more way to put off doing school-related reading over Simmons’ spring break. Joyce’s book documents the theology, politics and daily life of families (especially women and girls) who follow the loose collection of conservative ideas that fall under the umbrella of “quiverfull” thinking: a patriarchal family structure that demands wifely submission, opposition to all kinds of family planning, fears of a “demographic winter” for Western nations, home education, and often political alignment with the Christian reconstructionist agenda. Hanna flipped through my copy and asked me how it is I can read books like this and not feel my blood pressure skyrocket. Which challenged me to reflect a little on my addiction to reading books about the intersections of gender, sexuality, politics, home education, and the Christian right. This booknote, therefore, is less of a review and more a motley collection of observations inspired by Joyce’s journalism.

I think what I find most absorbing about the Christian right and the way they think about gender, sexuality, and education, is not their strangeness but their familiarity. And I’m not talking about familiarity due to close proximity (although growing up in a very religiously conservative area means I’ve been exposed to my fair share of right wing bigotry and fear-mongering). No: what I’m talking about is the fact that Christian right’s critique of the American mainstream begins with with many of the same critiques of modernity that leftists put forward. Many of the families profiled in Quiverfull are deeply ambivalent about modernity — about the rise of scientific rationalism at the expense of the irrational and sacred. They critique the way that a capitalist economic system, with its separation work and home spaces (and the resulting age-segregation of children and the elderly — nonworkers — from wage-earners).

As a result, they have created a vibrant counter-culture of their own that, as Joyce rightly points out, shares many of the same characteristics of the radical left. Home birth and midwifery activism among Quiverfull families, for example, “overlaps with back-to-the-land hippie counterculture in some ways. It’s a deliciously amusing irony to some Quiverfull moms, who stake out their territory of natural pregnancy in the odd company of feminist doulas and naturopaths opposed, as they are, to high rates of hospital cesarean sections” (164). Likewise, the modern home education movement, which began as a form of leftist activism (see: unschooling) has since become an overwhelmingly right-wing phenomenon. So much so that — although she makes passing mention of this history — Joyce is comfortable conflating “homeschool” with Christian conservatism throughout most of Quiverfull without specifying that she is, in fact, writing about a very particular subset of the home education population.

In fact, it is precisely the outward similarity of these profiles of radical right and radical left that I find both fascinating and deeply disturbing. For while on the surface quiverfull families and “back-to-the-land hippies” and feminists may make similar lifestyle choices, their reasons for doing so are often diametrically opposed. Whereas leftist, feminist advocates of low-intervention childbirth and home education ground their critique of modernity and counterculture activism in notions of gender equality, democratic social structures, and a commitment to individual human rights, those on the radical right pursue the same forms of activism but root them in notions of gender difference, social structures that unapologetically support the kyriarchy, and the subordination of individual persons to tyrannical group dynamics.

As most of you know, I grew up in a family that was part of the leftist home education tradition. My sibs mixed public schooling with home-based learning, and all of us have gone on to college-level institutional education (and beyond). At the same time, I am firmly committed to the continued legality, and minimal governmental oversight, of home education. In this, like the feminist doulas of Joyce’s book, I find myself in the uncomfortable company of groups such as the Home School Legal Defense Association. Because of this, I believe it is my responsibility to take a long, hard look at the beliefs and practices of those whose political and social agenda I (however occasionally) share — and whose right to continue living as they do I, however abstractly, defend.

Though there was nothing startlingly new to be found in the pages of Quiverfull if you’ve read other work in this area, Joyce does a thorough survey of the disparate strands of religious and political thinking that inform the movement, and remains sensitive to the nuances of class, race, gender, and theological difference that shape individual experience within it. I also enjoyed discovering that by cultivating close relationships with other women, I am apparently in danger of committing the sin of “spiritual masturbation” (which, sadly, is not nearly as kinky as it sounds).

Now it’s back to Carl Rogers’ Freedom to Learn (for my seminar paper in Intellectual History) . . . not to mention keeping an eye out for Jessica Valenti’s latest, The Purity Myth, and Michelle Goldberg’s sure-to-be-absorbing The Means of Reproduction.

links: queue clean-up edition

21 Saturday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

≈ 1 Comment

I’m headed up to Maine tomorrow to pick Hanna up at her parents’ house (they provide lunch, I’m bringing dessert!) so I’m trying to cross things off the “to do” list while I’m at work this afternoon. This includes finally publishing a couple of posts I have had hanging in the blogger queue this week.

First up: here’s a hodge-podge of links I’ve collected over the past few weeks with an eye toward sharing them with the wider world.

I haven’t read the short story it illustrates, but I was paging through a recent issue of the New Yorker when I came across the full-page reproduction of Ryan McGinley’s photograph “Fireworks Hysteric”, which I’m adding to my mental catalog of Awesome Visual Depictions of Women.

Karen Rayne offers some advice about talking with teens about sex, which I actually think is awesome advice for anyone who finds themselves in the position of communicating and educating about human sexuality.

Hanna sent this story about the Riot Grrrls music scene to me with the note “more your thing than mine.” I actually know next to nothing about alternative rock, feminism in the early 1990s, and how the two fit together — so thanks, H, for the link!

This post on anti-gay-marriage bullshit cracked me up; what I loved even more was that in comments people started discussing the ethics of human-cyborg relationships. Seriously. Geeks rock!

A recent personal favorite in the category of “what crazy stuff we humans do”: Christian salt.

As oral arguments were heard by the California Supreme Court on Proposition 8, Slate’s Kenji Yoshino published a piece on a Boston-based lawsuit challenging the lack of recognition of same-sex marriage under federal law.

Via Querki M. Singer in a comment on this thread: How kids in England are smeared in the press, and what to do about it.

And archivists everywhere felt their hearts breaking when this story came out.

I just read Kathryn Joyce’s new book Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement (booknote coming soon!); Mother Jones has an excerpt up at their website.

Diana sent me this link to women’s history resources on the web. Hooray for women’s history month!

Hanna and I have fallen woefully behind on Joss Whedon’s new show, Dollhouse, but I’ve enjoyed Maia’s commentary on the series over at Alas, a Blog (warning: spoilers!): see here and here.

Earlier this week, I blogged about a column on breastfeeding and feminism. DaddyTypes has another smackdown of the same article from the perspective of fathers.

Newsflash from the British Library: “The library believes almost all have not been stolen but rather mislaid among its 650km of shelves and 150m items – although some have not been seen in well over half a century.” This struck me as a very phlegmatic, British description of the problem somehow.

Finally, Jesse over at Pandagon offers this analysis of the conservative worldview and comes to the conclusion that: “I tend to prefer a world which, at some point, can have some form of gender equality that’s not based on the presumption that the other gender is genetically inclined to fuck me in the ear with a rusty spoon.”

Friday Video: I <3 Catherine Tate

20 Friday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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humor, movies, web video

At my apartment, we talk a lot about how much we love the British comedienne Catherine Tate, who — among other performances — can be seen as the brilliant Donna Noble, most recent companion of Dr. Who, the titular character of the long-running BBC series that Hanna has lovingly introduced me to this past year. Donna rocks.

Which, by extension, means Catharine Tate rocks.

Duh.

Which means that we were particularly offended when Germaine Greer took it upon herself last week to suggest that Tate is not funny.

Excuse me??

Obviously, the entire premise of said column is flawed, as Kate Smurthwaite of Cruella-Blog has so thoroughly and amusingly pointed out.

Luckily, as if to underline the point, this video surfaced, showing just how unfunny Catharine Tate really is. Particularly when playing the completely not-funny character of schoolgirl Lauren Cooper and paired with Dr. Who co-star David Tennant in a very serious (cough) and high-minded (coughcough) sketch about Shakespeare.

Refusing the Question

19 Thursday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

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children, feminism

Via a comment over at Pandagon, I discovered a brilliant op-ed by a post-partum doula working in California that takes up the issue of breastfeeding infants and the politics thereof. What I like most about this piece is that the author, Meredith Lichtenberg, refuses to accept the usual terms of this particular controversy.

In popular debates, the question of whether or not it’s preferable to breastfeed or bottle-feed infants and young children is often cast in starkly either/or terms. One camp argues that breastfeeding is of negligiable benefit to babies and a burden to mothers; the other camp argues that lack of breastmilk will do irreperable harm to infants.

Lichetenberg, rather than step into the frey on one side or another, asks us to re-frame the question. The important point is not whether one parenting choice is better or best for everyone, but what parenting choice is best for each individual family. In her column, she is responding to a recent article by Hanna Rosin in the Atlantic Monthly that explores the potential benefits of breastfeeding (and concludes they are minimal). Lichtenberg writes:

The reason [Rosin and I] part ways, ironically, is that she’s missing her own point. Rosin is enraged that Society told her she should breastfeed because it was healthy for babies. Society told her that her own wishes or needs didn’t factor in.

But instead of saying, “Hey, Society, don’t tell me what I need to do! I’m the mom here, and I’ll decide for myself what’s best for me and my baby!” she succumbed to the “pressure”. Three babies later, she’s really mad. And she thinks that that makes a case against breastfeeding.

Lichtenberg’s article is a great example of how to refuse the terms of debate on a controversial topic and re-frame the conversation in a way that is more holistic, more specific, and ultimately (I would argue) more feminist: she reminds women (and their partners) that they, too, can refuse the terms of debate and place the needs of their own families — including their own needs — front and center. That is a feminist position that can encompass all manner of individual parenting decisions, and one that I firmly believe is best for us all.

Are you ready for marriage?

17 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

gender and sexuality, history, humor, web video

Mystery Science Theater short, mocking a Cold War era “marriage preparedness” video.

No further comment necessary, really.

Except that the marriage counselor looks terrifyingly like Brother Justin in “Carnivale.”

Hat tip to Hanna, as is so often the case :).

Shameless Self-Promotion: Essays & Studies

16 Monday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in my historian hat

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

education, history, simmons

The Simmons College journal, Essays & Studies, has just published its Spring 2009 edition, in which I have an essay: ” ‘I have been more or less dissatisfied’: The Educational Project in the Oneida Community.” Also featured is my friend Rachel Searcy, also of the MA/MLS dual-degree program, with her paper ” ‘Seated at the Hearth-side’: The Prescriptive Tradition of Female Nationalist Involvement in Late 19th and Early 20th Century Ireland.”

Because to someone like me that’s british for "eat me"

13 Friday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

feminism, fun

There’s a little market down the street from the Massachusetts Historical Society that tends to stock random imported candies from the UK. For a few months, they were regularly carrying one of my favorite chocolates from my time in Aberdeen, minstrals, and every time I stop in for an iced tea or granola bar, I check to see if they have any. No luck in recent weeks, but their most recent shipment included one of the most intriguingly-marketed chocolate bars Britain has to offer: the Yorkie bar. As depicted above, its current packaging sports the slogan “it’s not for girls,” along with the appropriate signage for those not able to grasp the meaning of the text.

Hanna and I agree that the chocolate is quite tasty, and that our double-x chromosomes did not impede us in the least from enjoying it.

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