• anna j. clutterbuck-cook
  • contact
  • curriculum vitae
  • find me elsewhere
  • marilyn ross memorial book prize

the feminist librarian

the feminist librarian

Tag Archives: fun

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.

Happy Birthday, Birthday Boy!

08 Sunday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

domesticity, fun, holidays


My brother Brian turns 25 today. Happy Birthday Bro! Hope you’re making time between prepping for your art students and designing threadless t-shirts to eat some cake and ice cream. Just think: if you worked at Dunder-Mifflin, Michael Scott would be throwing you a party!

Now all he needs is a magic top hat

07 Saturday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

art, fun, northeastern

Regular readers of this blog will remember that Hanna and I are besotted with the British stop-motion animated series The Clangers, and back in November wrote an open letter to the Obama family suggesting addition of froglets to the new White House family.

You will understand, therefore, our delight last week to discover our friend and colleague Cynthia had introduced, without even realizing that she had done so, a froglet to the Northeastern archives. Please meet Schweinfurth, the Northeastern Froglet.

He currently resides on the reception desk and seems content with his sole possession: a dime. We are currently on the look out for a top hat and gladstone bag, with which most froglets seem to be rarely without.

A few things

01 Sunday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

feminism, fun, gender and sexuality

Books + feminism = irresistible .

mk has a thoughtful, succinct post on how to be an ally up at Little Lambs Eat Ivy.

I haven’t become a twitter-er (twitterite?) yet, but see the writing on the wall, so enjoyed reading this beginners guide to twitter via feministing.

Feministing launches a new weekly sex advice column. First installment here.

Found this slightly chaotic, but thoughtful post on the use of the word “privilege” as a personal slur today and thought it was worth a read. (It references some recent feminist blog drama that I have purposefuly not been following — not enough time or emotional energy — but I think makes sense without the background.) Via, which provides links to said background, which in turn was found via.

New favorite web comic.

After I complained that my rss feeds all favored the informative over the entertaining, Hanna provided me with “true internet fluff” in the form of a dr. who locations guide.

She also directed me to this follow up on the story about teenagers arrested for creating “porn” by sharing naked pictures with their significant others.

And in honor of my birthday month (happy March everyone!) here’s a lolcat that I think bears a striking resemblance to a few of my earliest baby pictures (sorry, they aren’t digitized, so I can’t provide visual verification).

Midweek Lego Post

04 Wednesday Feb 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

fun

From my sister, Maggie, comes this endearing example of (art? social commentary? material culture?) by Christoph Neimann at the Abstract City Blog: I Lego NY. Even though it’s about New York, a lot of the images relate to big city life generally. I particularly liked this one:


Hanna and I like to play this game while we wait for the T. Hanna is much better at spot-the-mouse than I am. She says there’s a trick having to do with un-focusing the eyes. I just think she was a cat in a previous life.

‘Tis the season for lists

27 Tuesday Jan 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

feminism, fun

Something about the end-of-the-old-year / beginning-of-the-new year seems to inspire people to list creation. Or perhaps it’s the proliferation of awards ceremonies in the entertainment industry. Anyway, I’ve been coming across a profusion of lists in the last couple of weeks, and thought I’d post a few here: a list of lists, if you will. And yes, this blog being what it is, it’s a feminist-centric sort of list.

There’s a list of the “Top 100” gender studies blogs over at BachelorsDegreeOnline. As with any such list, it includes blogs I read regularly and enjoy, blogs I’ll now have to check out, and some blogs I’m not sure should have been included in the “feminism category.” I really take issue with the idea, for example, that it’s possible these days to have a “a distinctly anti-male” yet “pro-feminist point of view.” Granted, feminist movements have always included those people who insist on blaming men as individuals for patriarchy and sexism — but I personally don’t think that it should be recognized as feminism.

In response to the above list, Fourth Wave Feminism is compiling an alternative list of “Radical/WOC/Alternative/Global” feminist blogs which will also be fun to explore.

Last week, Hanna forwarded me an article from the Guardian naming the favourite female renegades of five women in cinema.

The bloggers over at Evil Slutopia their top ten priorities for the Obama administration when it comes to reproductive health: “Here’s our top 10, with lots of links. We want it all.”

Merry Christmas

25 Thursday Dec 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

domesticity, fun, holidays

Winter Break Booknotes

24 Wednesday Dec 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

fun, movies

I’m headed off tomorrow morning to Logan Airport, for my Christmas Day flight back to Michigan. As Hanna remarked as we were hauling book-heavy her duffel bags down to the rental car last Saturday, “oh, the terrible cost of literacy!” My suitcase and carry-on will, similarly, bear an over-representation of books. A quick (and no doubt incomplete) survey of what’s on the reading agenda for my winter break:

  • Monster Island, and its two sequels — Monster Nation and Monster Planet — by David Wellington. These are apocalyptic zombie novels about what happens to earth after human beings, infected by a mysterious virus, stop staying dead and instead come back hungry for human flesh.

  • Good Omens, co-authored by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett which Hanna has warned me to read with circumspection on the airplane, since spontaneous giggling has been known to occur during reading. Giggles will be welcome after a trilogy about zombies!
  • As will Little Women and Little Men which Hanna and another friend from Simmons, Laura, have impressed upon me the need to re-read and re-evaluate since I never enjoyed them much as a child. I have promised to give them a second pass . . . perhaps with an historians eye they’ll prove more enjoyable (who says scholarly analysis ruins literature?)
  • Perdido Street Station, by China Mieville. I bought this last summer after reading The Scar (set in the same world) but didn’t have the emotional energy to tackle it during the term (Mieville’s fantasy world is a dark one) . . . so I’ll be trying again!
  • On the non-fiction front, I have the new feminist anthology Yes Means Yes, edited by Jaclyn Friedman and Jessica Valenti, which asks its contributors to meditate on how a world that promotes authentic sexual pleasure and agency can help combat sexual violence.
  • Likewise, feminist Linda McClain’s book on the relationship between family relationships and politics, The Place Of Families, was cited in something I read recently on childhood and sexual agency (the exact reference is escaping me) and the copy I inter-loaned at the library has finally arrived — so I’ll get to indulge in my penchant for footnote wandering.
  • Finally, I practically had kittens when I was in the brookline booksmith a couple of weeks ago and saw that Nick Hornby’s third collection of “Stuff I’ve Been Reading” columns, Shakespeare Wrote for Money, is out. I’m saving this one for the airplane, though my seat-mates may not thank me.

And what winter break would be complete without a movies as well as books? My friend Aiden and I were thinking about trying to see Milk before he left town for the holidays, but it didn’t happen. I’m still hoping to catch it in the theater at some point, as well as the new Bond flick. Hanna and I are in the midst of Dr. Who (Season Four) with the second season of Torchwood in the offing as well . . . and it’s been called to my attention in recent days (as somehow we got involved in a debate about the morality of Vader’s death scene in Jedi) that I’m overdue for a review of the six Star Wars films. On a slightly more historical note, I have plans to show Hanna both Goodbye, Lenin! and The Lives of Others, both of which I think are interesting companion pieces to Tom Stoppard’s Rock ‘n Roll.

Snow Duo

23 Tuesday Dec 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

boston, fun, outdoors

The younglings in my neighborhood were busy today (a snow day for the Boston area schools) building snow people in every available space. I snapped a picture of this curbside parent-and-child snow family on my way home through the park tonight.

Kuumaa Kaakaota*

22 Monday Dec 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

boston, fun

This mouth-watering round-up of cafes which serve hot chocolate in the Boston area is at the top of the “to do” list for Hanna and I in the first month of the new year . . . with a little extra time in our schedules, and likely cold temperatures demanding the regular ingestion of hot beverages . . . who could resist?

*”Hot chocolate” in Finnish . . . ‘Cause why not? Who can resist the endless fun to be had from Google Translate?

← Older posts
Newer posts →
"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

Recent Posts

  • medical update 11.11.22
  • medical update 6.4.22
  • medical update 1.16.2022
  • medical update 10.13.2021
  • medical update 8.17.2021

Archives

Categories

Creative Commons License

This work by Anna J. Clutterbuck-Cook is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • the feminist librarian
    • Join 37 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • the feminist librarian
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar