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the feminist librarian

the feminist librarian

Tag Archives: blogging

required reading: jill @ feministe on "call-out culture"

02 Monday May 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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blogging, feminism, harpyness

Cross-posted @ The Pursuit of Harpyness.

I’m sending y’all on over to Feministe to read a post that Jill published this morning on the dynamics of “calling out” the “big feminist blogs” for being less-than-perfect on the issues you care about.

[In some ways,] online feminism is worse for wear. Part of that is what Florence is talking about above — blogs, and especially the “big blogs,” are perceived as institutions rather than collectives of people writing about something they’re interested in when they have time, in order to facilitate a conversation among like-minded people. With the perception of institutionalization comes expectations — that a blog will not only cover about what you think it should cover, but will also cover it in the way you think is most appropriate, using the words you think are the best. Which isn’t totally unfair, but which segues from potentially productive into poisonous when the method of conveying those expectations is Calling Out.

I’m as guilty as anyone else when it comes to partaking in feminist Call-Out Culture. Calling Out, I think, is part of any activist’s growing pains. We all want to do right. We all feel like we’re doing more right than some other people who we perceive as having more power (or influence or airtime) than we have. We all want to be a good _____: feminist, ally, woman, activist. Part of that, if you love an idea (and I think most of us do love the idea of feminism, even if we don’t always love how it plays out in real life), is saying something when you see someone else Doing It Wrong. There should be space for that. We should keep each other in check; we should all want to be better.

But in the feminist blogosphere, “calling out” has increasingly turned into cannibalism. It’s increasingly turned into a stand-in for actual activism. We have increasingly focused on shutting down voices rather than raising each other up. Pointing at the gap has replaced doing the hard, often thankless work of filling it.

I mean it: go read the whole thing.

a year of feminist classics, month two: the subjection of women

01 Tuesday Feb 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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blogging, feminism

unknown woman reading
from the National Media Museum

The Year of Feminist Classics challenge was off to a good start last month with Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792). Check out the project blog for good conversation, contextual information, and links to participants’ own blog posts on the text and the experience of reading.
This month, the group is moving on to read another classic English-language text, this the 19th century essay on “The Subjection of Woman” (1869) published by philosopher John Stuart Mill and likely written in cooperation with his wife, Harriet Taylor Mill. As with Vindication, this work is out of copyright and can be found in multiple formats online.

Internet Archive (various formats to read online and download)

Project Gutenberg (various formats to read online and download)

LibriVox (MP3 audio download)

Please join in with the conversation if you are interested and have time to read even an excerpt of the work. And looking ahead to March, the readers will be moving into new territory with Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House.

live-blogging "downton abbey" (episode no. 4)

31 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

≈ 1 Comment

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blogging, british isles, live-blogging, movies

So here we are at the last live-blog for “Downton Abbey,” Season One. You can read the snark (you know you want to!) in full over at …fly over me, evil angel….

9.16: [Sybil] A: Someone’s got something up her sleeve! M: Someone’s not going to a charity. [Lady and Maggie Smith] M: This is that scene! A: The voice cracks… [as Maggie Smith rationalizes house geography] H: It’s the delivery… M: It’s fantastic… A: I could watch that scene over and over for hours. M: She’s all about practicalities. A: Well, it’s about image, right? Whatever you do is okay so long as society doesn’t find out. M: I wonder if Grandma’s going to back Mary so much now.

9.18: [Anna and Bates, ‘I’m not sure the world is listening.’] A: Good point. [William and Daisy] A: That’s…a stunned look. M: I’m surprised people can’t read Daisy like a book!

I have to say I’m sort of … disappointed in the series as a whole, although invite me back for the visual pleasure any time! And the acting is solid-to-stunning throughout the cast. No; my disappointment comes from what they didn’t do with the script. At least in this first season. At its heart, “Downton Abbey” seems to be really invested in the Edwardian aristocrac, and portraying the intact stratified class system as ultimately a good thing. People within the story flirt with challenging it, but they’re always won over in the end to this way of life: the lord, the estate, the upstairs/downstairs social organization. None of the women seem to see how to break free of the life-paths they’ve been set. Very few servants are asking if that’s the life they want … and when they do, they’re inevitably brought back into the fold.

It’s not that I expected this film to be about socialist revolutionaries. But given that there were radicals in England at the time — often asking very trenchant questions about the “common sense” assumptions concerning class and gender — it rings a little false to have those social critiques all but absent in the world of DA. Particularly since it’s a show that keeps hammering home in the introductions that it’s all about “change.”

I’ll be interested to see what they do with Season 2.

live-blogging "downton abbey" (episode no. 3)

24 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

blogging, british isles, humor, live-blogging, movies

It’s a busy day at work today, folks, and I don’t have time for an elaborate introduction / cross-post. Though I will say two things: 1) every line out of Maggie Smith’s mouth continues to be pure gold and 2) if Bates the valet and Anna the housemaid fail to have some sexytimes — or at least implied sexytimes — by the end of the series, there will be serious dedespondency in our household. You can read our third live-blog of “Downton Abbey” over at …fly over me, evil angel… and catch up with installments one and two there as well. Spoilers after the jump. You have been warned.

live-blogging "downton abbey" (episode no. 2)

17 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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blogging, british isles, humor, live-blogging, movies

Lady Mary prepares to be unwise in her flirtations.

Following up last week’s live-blog of the first episode of Masterpiece Theater’s “Downton Abbey,”
Hanna and I, along with our friend Minerva, gave a repeat performance last night for the second episode (we’re halfway through the series, people! can you stand the drama?!)  You can read the whole blog post over at …fly over me, evil angel....
Obviously Spoiler Warning: Downton Abbey, Episodes One and Two. Return after you’ve seen it if you don’t want any plot points to be given away.
A few tantalizing tidbits …

9.23: [as Bates and Anna giggle] M: Kiss. Each. Other. Please, honey! Make him drop the cane! I’m sorry; I need some smexy times! A: Yeah, he needs to grab her ass… M: There’s a table right behind you!

9.24: [Harriet shows up] H: Go, Harriet! M: Oh, I like you!

9.25: [as Maggie shows up] M: Oh, Maggie — I don’t like you now! M: [as wife defends procedure] Oh, good for you! A: She [Maggie Smith] is so good at that “What? People are contradicting me?”-look.

9.26: [as procedure continues] M: Whoa — that so ain’t right! H&A: Hush!

And predictions for the second half …

Halfway through the show! Guesses all ’round…

A: So the little redhaired girl is going to go off to be a secretary.

M: Bates and whatsherface need to come to some kind of agreement. Understanding.

A: Yeah.

H: Thomas needs…a shagging or a comeuppance…

M: Thomas is going to blackmail his way out of that house.

A: He’s going to use that information to get himself leverage somewhere, somehow.

M: I do think it will backfire.

A: Yeah, he’s going to try. I don’t know what O’Brien wants…but she’s going to be there with him.

M: Her motivation, other than being spiteful, is…

A: If she was acting as if the family was under threat…but she hates everyone!

M: I think she just wants to see people ruined.

A: It’s a very malicious sort of…youngest daughter needs to find some sort of voice.

M: She’s gettin’ close. Middle daughter — all middle daughter is going to end up a little shafted in this story.

A: Which is sad. But yeah. I want to see Maggie Smith and Harriet Jones…

H: Go at it. Oh, god, yes.

M: …preferably in that little cottage parlor. Epic.

[General agreement and headnodding]

Head on over to Hanna’s blog for the full post.

"live-blogging" downton abbey

10 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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blogging, british isles, humor, live-blogging, movies

Hanna and I, along with our friend Minerva, watched the first episode of Masterpiece Theater’s “Downton Abbey” last night and live-blogged it for a post that Hanna put up this morning over at …fly over me, evil angel….

Obviously Spoiler Warning: Downton Abbey, Episode One. Return after you’ve seen it if you don’t want any plot points to be given away.

Because who doesn’t want to see Maggie Smith
play Dowager Lady Crawley?

Rather than post the whole thing here, I’m sending the blog traffic her way. But here’s a taste of the wit you have in store:

9.20: [Dowager Lady and Lady plotting to save money and estate] M: Granny is manipulative and awesome. A: Yeah, it would be a little frightening to be on her side — but it would be frightening to be on the side that wasn’t her!

9.21: [Daisy mooning over sulky footman] M: Daisy is going to end up in the family way… A: And not quite understand how it happened. H: Does she only have one dress? M: Yeah. She’s so going to end up pregnant.

9.22: [lawyer and Lord discussing new heir] Oh god, not Manchester! A: The midlands! “There are worse professions.” “…..Yes.” M: Oh — snap!

. . .

9.57: [Duke: “You might tell that footman I’ve gone up.”] H: Well, you’re not the game there, honey! M: God, how did women survive this time? H: Vibrators. A: I don’t know if vibrators would solve their financial problems…

9.58: [Thomas kneels in front of Duke] Moment of stunned silence. A: This is like slash that gives you the ‘no feeling.’ M: …this is still a little hot. This is like Upstairs, Downstairs with a gay twist! H: They’re…quite sweet? M: Oh — not sweet. H: Nope, not sweet. [as threats pass between footman, Duke] M: Oh, wait — I feel some angry sex coming on…maybe not…maybe…awwww…no slashiness. A: Well, he was being a bit of a bastard. H: Yeah…Maurice without the nice ending. M: Wow… [as footman tries to master his emotions.] H: Yeah…kind of touching.

Read the rest over at …fly over me, evil angel… and watch for the second installment next Monday.

renovation updates

02 Sunday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in admin

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blogging

“I guess if you can die without ever understanding how it happened than you can also live
without a complete understanding of how. And in a way that’s kind of relaxing.” 
~ Miriam Toews, A Complicated Kindness

A very happy New Year to you all!

As Hanna pointed out this morning, the content will obviously be changing as I add more and re-arrange stuff … I just meant none of the posts would be lost! 
I’ve updated my blogroll on the sidebar … tried to make it reflect more accurately the sources of the stuff I read most often on Google Reader and share over at tumblr. Obviously check out the tumblr feed if you want actual snippets of content. 
I’m kinda liking this layout and color scheme. Still trying to decide if I’ll stick with the minimalist header or get my amazing brother to re-tool the old one, which featured Minerva, Goddess of the Blog. Feedback on any and all aspects of the re-design are welcome if you feel so moved. 

notice: blog renovations underway

31 Friday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in admin

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blogging

For the next few weeks or so I’m going to be fussing around with a blog re-design. So apologies in advance for anything super garish that appears (and then hopefully disappears) in the meantime. I’m testing stuff out, trying to decide what I want the look and feel of the site to be like for the next iteration. Rest assured all the content will remain the same! 

’twas the night before the night before Christmas

24 Friday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in admin

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blogging, domesticity, holidays

Fenway Victory Gardens (Boston, Mass.)
December 2007

It’s the eve before Christmas Eve as I write this and Hanna and I are hunkered down with Geraldine for the Christmas holidays. I’m breaking my self-imposed blogging hiatus to wish you all a happy holiday season and to share with you the gracious welcome post the gals over at The Pursuit of Harpyness put up today, announcing the new members of the blogging team. In addition to the founding members Miss BeckySharper, Michelle Dean, PhDork, PIlgrimSoul, SarahMC and sarah.of.a.lesser.god, I will also be in the company of Marie Anelle and foureleven. Hooray for more bloggers to get to know and learn from in the new year!

We’re looking forward to a quiet day tomorrow listening to the carols from Kings’ and eating Joy the Baker’s incredible sugar and spice cinnamon buns. And I’m going to head back off the internets now to read more of Jill Lepore’s The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea Party’s Revolution and the Battle over American Memory (2010) which Hanna bought for me today as a pre-Christmas present.

A warm and restful weekend for you all.

changes afoot in blogland: adventures in group blogging

20 Monday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in admin

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

blogging, domesticity, feminism

Geraldine assists with wrapping gifts
photo by Hanna (2010-12-14). See …fly over me, evil angel… for more!

As we head into the Christmas break I plan to take a couple of weeks away from blogging so that Hanna and I can have some time together sans internets. We need to focus on enjoying the vacation time we both get (many thanks for libraries that are closed between Christmas and New Years!). It’s been an unexpectedly exhausting autumn for our household, due to some personal health and work/life balance issues — issues we’re working hard to address moving forward! — and we just need some time to recoup and reconnect. Without outside distractions.

When I come back in the new year, there will be some changes here at the Future Feminist Librarian-Activist, although I’m not yet entirely sure what those changes will look like.

This is my 679th post on the Future Feminist Librarian-Activist. I’ve been blogging here, more or less steadily, for about three and a half years: roughly the time I’ve been preparing for and actually attending graduate school (my very first post, back in March of 2007, talked about my financial aid and housing decisions).  It seems somewhat appropriate, therefore, that as I transition out of being in graduate school and into professional librarianship, I pause to consider what sort of webspace I want this blog to be, and become.

 In addition, I’ve been offered the chance to join the team of bloggers who write over at The Pursuit of Harpyness, a feminist-oriented group blog I’ve been enjoying since they first started publishing back in January 2009. You’ll be able to find me (and all the other marvelous bloggers!) there roughly three times a week starting after the New Year. If you don’t already follow them (er … us), I highly recommend stopping by and adding Harpyness to your blog reader of choice.



I’d like to take this opportunity to ask you, dear readers, what you’d like to see more of / less of / something entirely new in both this space and over at the group blog.  I’ll be blogging at Harpyness on issues of human sexuality, sexual identities, gender identities, education, politics, economics, and life on the cultural margins. More or less the stuff I do here. But if you have any specific requests, do feel free to drop me a line at feministlibrarian [at] gmail [dot] com or leave your thoughts in comments. As they say over at tumblr, “the Ask box is open and taking questions!”

In addition to group blogging of the feminist persuasion, I may also be more actively involved in the Massachusetts Historical Society’s blog, The Beehive, moving forward, as I take some of the reigns from Jeremy when leaves to begin his position at LibraryThing. We’re still hammering out the details.

In other words, I’ll have my cyber-hands full in the new year when it comes to creating online content. Hopefully, it’ll help me curb my knack for writing impossibly long sentences!

I plan to keep you all updated, here at the FFLA, about my plans for this blog, the feminist librarian reads, and other web-based media as time goes on and life becomes a bit less (fingers crossed!) in-transition.  In the meantime, I have a personal goal of writing 1-2 original-content posts per week for the FFLA (as opposed to cross-posting from Harpyness).  And I do plan to keep up with tumblr since it’s how I share those short-and-sweet internet links that are organic matter that eventually become — or support — all those blogs posts. Or just exist to make us smile (everyone knows, afterall, the internet is made of cats).


A very, very joyous and restful holiday season to you and yours. I won’t promise them, but it’s entirely possible more Christmas-themed cat pictures will make their way to this blog before the New Year.
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