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the feminist librarian

Tag Archives: boston

Spring . . . maybe?

13 Sunday Apr 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, photos

We’ve had a couple of beautiful spring days here in Boston this week, when the temperatures have edged toward sixty–on Thursday even seventy! Yesterday, after a morning at the Schlesinger Library doing work on my term paper, I walked home along the Charles River, where humanity was out in force walking their dogs, playing with their kids, jogging, and even (in one intrepid case) sunbathing in a bikini! I tried to do a bit of double-duty, reading Franz Fanon’s Black Skin, White Masks which is our assigned history text for the week, but I also managed to snap a few pictures along the way.

WAM! 2008 @ MIT

25 Tuesday Mar 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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boston, feminism

I just got in from my volunteer orientation for WAM!2008–the Center for New Words’ Women, Action & the Media conference, which is held annually here in the Boston area. I’m volunteering at the registration table Friday night, and plan to spend all day Saturday with the over 500 feminist activists who are converging on the Strata Center to talk about political activism and the media. It was great just to meet the handful of local volunteers who showed up at the orientation session tonight, and remember what a wide range of women are interested and involved in feminist activity.

The conference plans to record and post all the sessions on YouTube and various web-based media outlets, so I’ll be back later in the weekend to share some highlights with y’all. For now, let me say that I’m particularly looking forward to meeting many of the wonderful ladies over at feministing who will be on hand to participate in various breakout sessions, as well as getting to see Silent Choices, a documentary film about African-American women and abortion politics.

Check back for more after the weekend . . .

Biblio-milestone?

11 Tuesday Mar 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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books, boston

On Saturday, Hanna and I went shopping at McIntyre & Moore’s, this spiffy used bookstore in Davis Square, near Tufts University. Their fiction section and children’s book section are paltry, but they have extensive nonfiction titles of all sorts. The impetus for the shopping trip (besides needing a Saturday outing) was the fact that they’re moving and having a 40%-off sale of their entire stock! Hanna walked away with a whole stack of books on Irish history and I picked up a book on the history of sex education in the United States that just became the 900th volume in my librarything catalog. I’m not sure what that says about me, other than that I’ve more or less managed to make up for all that weeding I did back when I initially cataloged my library in 2006.

Campus Safety: Panic or Pragmatism?

19 Tuesday Feb 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

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boston, feminism, simmons

I’ve been meaning to write about the way safety is handled on the Simmons residence campus for a while now, but this photograph finally provoked me into action:


This poster, courtesy of the “gotcha” campaign, in which residence staff come around at random hours to check and see if dorm room doors are locked, is only the latest in a whole series of educational tactics students here at Simmons have been exposed to over the school year. We have also been warned against “piggybacking” (letting someone unknown into the dorm with your swipe card) with posters that describe in ominous terms incidences in which women have been raped and murdered by assailants in their dorm rooms because of an unlocked door.

We also receive campus safety alerts via email, which alert us to acts of aggression that happen in the neighborhood of the college. Each email concludes with a list of basic safety measures:

As always, the College is concerned for the safety of our community members. We recommend the following precautions to maximize your safety:

• Be aware of your surroundings
• Do not walk alone at night whenever possible
• Do not listen to your iPod while walking
• Always make sure to walk on well lit streets staying on the same side as the street lights
• Be aware of the people around you
• If you carry a cell phone, make sure the battery is charged and it is turned on
• If you are walking alone at night tell a friend when you are leaving and when you expect to arrive at your destination

If you see anything suspicious or would like a walking escort between campuses, please call the Simmons College Public Safety Department

While these emails are usually matter-of-fact and probably the best approach to keeping students informed about what is happening around the campus, I also wonder about the ubiquity of these awareness campaigns, and how they feed into a culture of fear about life in an urban environment–particularly life as a woman in an urban environment.

Clearly, as a woman in my mid-twenties, having lived and traveled alone in a variety of places, the question of personal safety is not a new one. And to some extent, I agree with the common-sense advice of the campus officials: it’s usually a good idea to keep your door locked (if for no other reason that the desire not to have someone steal your computer), and to “be aware of your surroundings.” However, it becomes a particularly interesting question to consider in the context of a college campus, surrounded by college-age women who are being sent particular messages about danger in the world and how they ought to protect themselves from it.

As a feminist, violence against women is something I am aware of in a political, philosophical, and personal sense. In feminist circles, we refer to a “rape schedule”–the idea that ability to move freely in the world is curtailed by our awareness of the possibility of physical violence. As Jessica Valenti explains in a Salon interview:

Can you explain the concept of a “rape schedule”?

I first heard about it in my women’s studies classes. It’s the idea that every woman in one way or another lives on a rape schedule. Every action you take is built on an awareness that you could be attacked: from walking with your keys in your hand, to locking your car doors at an intersection, to deciding to go home a half-hour earlier. There is no public space for women; the whole world is a prison where you have to be constantly aware at all times that you’re a potential victim. What’s more terrifying is that it’s not necessarily preventative. Most rapes are committed by people you know and trust and let your guard down with.

So there are concrete ways in which my being-in-the-world is limited because of the fact of my sex: I fantasize about going backpacking in the Adirondacks, for example, but solo camping in remote areas is out; and on the other extreme my freedom to move about urban environments after dark is a constant question mark.

On the other hand, feminists in the last twenty years have raised the question of how much the media spotlight on particular acts of violence (for example, random attacks by strangers) get highlighted while other acts of violence (such as those perpetrated by intimate partners, who presumably would have access to your dorm at your invitation) are not the focus of these scare campaigns.

Also, it is important to note the assumptions this email makes–particularly that it is possible to arrange to walk in company, and that you have an individual whom you can make aware of your daily movements. I don’t believe the advice not to walk alone would be a piece of advice offered to men as a matter of course. And I wonder what those of us who live alone are supposed to do? Call up our closest relative and tell them when we leave work in the evening? What’s with this “while you are sleeping” line in the “gotcha” poster? Coming, as it does, on the tail of flyers that describe the violent rape and murder of a young college girl in her bed while she was sleeping, there’s a definite over-tone not merely of material security against theft but also of sexual violence.

So I am troubled by the way in which women at Simmons college are constantly reminded of their vulnerability (however statistically unlikely) to violent attack. I wonder whether it is simple pragmatism, or whether it is schooling young women into a sense of danger that is, overall, misleading and socially controlling. Thoughts?

Ahem!

06 Sunday Jan 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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boston, humor, librarians

There’s an ad campaign up around Boston right now for Sony’s new electronic “book” device, extolling its virtues over the traditional printed word. Here is my personal favorite:

Like many great ideas, I suspect this particular ad campaign has one (or more) librarians behind it, since early versions of the ad simply read:


One can only imagine that members of my future profession had, shall we say, some constructive criticism for Sony’s PR firm. I believe version 2.0 is greatly improved (though it still doesn’t convince me that anything is sexier than a book).

The Snow Storm (Boston, 2007)

22 Saturday Dec 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, photos

Announced by all the trumpets of the sky,
Arrives the snow; and, driving o’er the fields,
seems nowhere to alight: the whited air
Hides hills and woods, the river, and the heaven,
And veils the farm-house at the garden’s end.
The sled and traveler stopped, the courier’s feet
Delayed, all friends shut out, the housemates sit
Around the radiant fireplace, enclosed
In a tumultuous privacy of storm.

–From “The Snow-storm” (1847) by R. W. Emerson

Let it Snow . . .

13 Thursday Dec 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, outdoors, photos

So today was going to be my last class of the semester (History Methods), but that snowstorm which has been making its way across the States has finally reached the Atlantic, and Boston has decided it can’t handle a little snow. Everyone and their thrice removed cousins are shutting down and getting a head start on their commute home. Here’s what the street outside the res campus looked like at 2:30 this afternoon:

So sadly (and I mean this genuinely), we were not able to hold our discussion about “Where is history headed now?” and eat the chocolate-chip-raisin-oatmeal cookies our professor promised us.

At the same time, I’ve got Glen Miller’s In the Christmas Mood on the stereo and I’m sitting in my room with a mug of hot chocolate watching the snow from indoors . . . what’s not to like about that?

Merry almost Christmas everyone . . .

Who Will Comfort Toffle?

19 Monday Nov 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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art, boston, random acts of kindness

The Boston Bookfair on Friday was lots of fun, though everything I was remotely interested in exceeded my price range by at least hundreds and often thousands of dollars. There was a lovely photography book with black and white 1950s-era images of the Lake District; a medieval manuscript treatise on medicine, illustrated in full color; a pre-suffrage publication by a minister from Indiana arguing on a Biblical basis for women’s right to vote; and a fascinating early obstetrics text by the dude who was responsible for switching the standard birthing position from upright to horizontal (for which he ought to have been flayed).

Children’s books, of course, were wonderful to browse. I found a copy of Four Little Kittens ($75.00), which three generations of Cooks will remember, and several E. Nesbits in first edition (priced at in the hundreds).

The most charming new find was a book by Tove Jansson, Finnish author of the Moomin Troll series, Who Will Comfort Toffle? This is the story of Toffle, who is afraid and alone, and his quest for a friend, so that he will not be so scared anymore. One day, he finds a bottle floating on the water and inside is a message from a person named Miffle, who is also scared and lonely. Toffle sets off on a quest to find Miffle, so that they can comfort each other. Of course, the implicit gender roles are knight-and-lady stereotypes, but the pictures were totally charming.

*Images from One More River and The Moomin Trove respectively.

Fun With Old Things

16 Friday Nov 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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books, boston, fun, history, MHS

Tonight, I am headed to the Boston International Antiquarian Book Fair to admire, well, antiquarian books, manuscripts, and prints, in an atmosphere of bibliomaniacal excitement. A group of us are headed down after work, and my friend Hanna is meeting us there. If I buy anything I’ll report back with pictures! I doubt anything will be in my price-range (<$25) though. Oh, well, it's fun to window shop!

I also thought I’d share this link from the MHS website. It’s our monthly object of the month, which a number of archives have started doing as a way to increase the visibility of their holdings online, and give people a taste of what sort of resources archives have to offer. MIT also has a fun collection on their site.

In the MHS collection, I particularly like the entry showcasing eleven-year-old Sara Putman’s dairy, with an account of her 1862 visit to the aquarial gardens, which was an early Boston aquarium.

Everyone have a good weekend!

Charles River Walk

11 Sunday Nov 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, fun, photos

This weekend, we had more beautiful autumn days–colder, but sunnier–and I had enough time (because of the Veteran’s Day/Armistice Day holiday) to take a long walk along the Charles this afternoon. The photos can be seen here in miniature or in a larger slide show at picasa.

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"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

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