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Tag Archives: election08

Quote(s) of the Week: What Ann & Rebecca Said

19 Friday Sep 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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election08, feminism, politics

In response to charges of sexism against feminist activists from the right-wing media (what alternate universe have we wandered into?), Ann over at feministing writes:

The real sexism against Palin . . . has been the flip-side of the sexism against Hillary Clinton. A sadly perfect illustration of the Catch-22 women face. You’re either a scary, ugly, old, mannish harpy. Or a ditzy, perky, fuckable bimbo. . . The sexist remarks about Clinton and Palin are like our hate mail (“you ugly man-hater!” followed by “gimme a blow job!”) writ large.

Rebecca Hyman, writing at AlterNet, expands on these same themes:

It’s obvious that the caricature of Palin to which we’re being exposed is the inverse of the caricature of Hillary Clinton. Even if you’d missed the first half of the campaign, all you’d have to do is flip the script. If Palin is “better suited to be a calendar model for a local auto body shop than a holder of the second-highest office in the land,” then Clinton is a dumpy, frigid, post-menopausal, castrating bluestocking who only got women’s votes because she was a victim of her husband’s indiscriminate — but hell, with that kind of wife? — sexual transgressions. At least the Right gets the “sexy librarian”; those of us on the other side are stuck with the saccharine Sisterhood of the Traveling Pantsuits.

There are many reasons to be against McCain/Palin as the presidential ticket — not the least of which is their own sexist politics — but I’m proud that feminist writers are insisting on a more nuanced understanding of how sexism is playing out in this race, and how all women — Sarah Palin included! — are judged according to narrow, gender-based stereotypes.

Quote of the Week(end): "Zombie Feminists"

13 Saturday Sep 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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election08, feminism, politics

From Rebecca Traister over at Salon.com:

The pro-woman rhetoric surrounding Sarah Palin’s nomination is a grotesque bastardization of everything feminism has stood for, and in my mind, more than any of the intergenerational pro- or anti-Hillary crap that people wrung their hands over during the primaries, Palin’s candidacy and the faux-feminism in which it has been wrapped are the first development that I fear will actually imperil feminism. Because if adopted as a narrative by this nation and its women, it could not only subvert but erase the meaning of what real progress for women means, what real gender bias consists of, what real discrimination looks like.

I’m torn between terror that she’s got it right and thankfulness that so many feminist writers and activists are speaking out on behalf of a feminist ethic that encompasses all women’s human rights. Go read the whole thing.

Quote of the Week: Politics & Privacy

12 Friday Sep 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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election08, feminism, politics

From this week’s RhReality Podcast, hosted by Amanda Marcotte:

I can’t reiterate enough—every single person declaring that the Palin family deserves privacy on this needs to answer for the privacy of all other women in this country. Do I have privacy? Do I get a right to make my own decisions about my body away from the prying eyes and grabby hands of right wingers? Anyone who supports restrictions on women’s access to birth control and abortion has forsaken the right to hide behind privacy on this. I’m sorry, but that’s how it is. Anything short of that is saying that people in power have privacy and rights, but the rest of us don’t, which is un-American.

I really have nothing more to add, except go listen to the podcast, which is excellent as always.

Dahlia Lithwick on Republicans & Choice

08 Monday Sep 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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election08, feminism, politics

There’s so much great stuff out on the ‘net being written about Sarah Palin and her stance on issues important to feminist activists that I can’t hope to link them all here. But I can’t resist posting a note on this column from the ever-insightful Dahlia Lithwick of Slate on republicans and the illusion of reproductive choice. I think it’s important to respect Bristol Palin’s personal privacy when it comes to her pregnancy, but as many feminist writers have been pointing out, it’s a personal privacy that the Republicans don’t want any other woman to have. That’s what makes the Palin’s family decisions worthy of political attention.

Teen Sexuality & Agency

04 Thursday Sep 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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children, election08, feminism, gender and sexuality, politics


This weekend, while Governor Palin’s nomination as Republican Vice-Presidential Candidate, her hard-line conservative positions on human sexuality, and her daughter’s pregnancy were making headlines, I was reading sociologist Jessica Fields’ insightful new book Risky Lessons: Sex Education and Social Inequality. As Courtney Martin posted over at Feministing (in a review that prompted me to run out and buy the book), Fields “basically lays out a liberation philosophy for sex education.” Reflecting on the fieldwork Fields conducted in sex education classes during the mid-1990s, Courtney writes:

Young women learn to see their bodies as ticking time bombs and young men to see theirs as the uncontrollable fire that could lead to explosion. Instead of promoting self-awareness, responsible exploration, respect for the diversity of sexualities, or compassionate communication, we teach them that their bodies are dangerous. Conservatives want that danger staved off until marriage, where it suddenly becomes holy, and liberals want it staved off along the way — through the use of accessible contraception.

While I obviously advocate safer sex, I also feel like progressives have let ourselves (as per the usual) be only reactive, instead of re-authoring the questions. We must not only ask how we can protect young Americans from unwanted pregnancy and STIs, but how we can encourage them to be self-aware, healthy, and happy. How can we inspire them to author their own questions?

As political commentators discussed teenage pregnancy, marriage, and parenthood, comprehensive vs. abstinence-only sex “education” (I offer a few examples here, here, here and here for those interested), Fields’ book offered a what I thought was a fascinating counterpoint to the conventional wisdom. What struck me most about the political coverage was that the majority of Americans — whether they identify as liberal, conservative or somewhere in between — assume teenage sexuality is something dangerous, unhealthy, morally wrong. To be a sexually aware and engaged teenager in America is to be held suspect by the majority of adults as irresponsible and the result of bad parenting. As previously noted on here at the FFLA, this isn’t the only attitude adults can take about teenage sexual expression, and (in my opinion) far from the ideal. In Risky Lessons, Fields prompts us to re-visit this common-sense assumption and ask ourselves how we might better support young peoples’ exploration of the physical, emotional, and political pleasures and perils of their emerging adult sexuality.

In the early 21st century, “Sex education” has been reduced to risk reduction (if you believe in “comprehensive” sex ed) or eradication (if you believe in the abstinence-only doctrine). Young people deserve sexuality education that provides them with intellectual and emotional resources for making sense of their adult bodies, relationships, and agency in the world as sexual beings. And I hope that (if anything good can possibly be said to come from a Republican ticket so deeply opposed to providing those resources to all of America’s teenagers) the Palin nomination and the resulting debates over teenage sexual expression can provide us a critical moment of reflection on these issues and a chance to consider the liberatory potential sexuality education.

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

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