ecriturefemme
an extension of eeink focused on feminist thoughtArchive for Uncategorized
Carol Shields in “A View from the Edge of the Edge.” Carol Shields and the Extra-Ordinary:
Women writers often seem willing to engage with vulnerability, including themselves in that vulnerability. As a woman who has elected a writing life, I am interested in writing away that invisibility of women’s lives, looking at writing as an act of redemption. In order to do this, I need the companionship, the example, of other women who are writing.
Rachel Blau DuPlessis in The Pink Guitar:
The feminine is where I am colonized. The feminine is the dream of an elsewhere, a someplace uncolonized. The feminine is orange/blush/pink/peach/vibrant red “in” this year. The feminine is a short blue one, or a long plaid one, but never a short plaid one or a long blue one. It is that kind of knowledge. (165)
Honor International Women’s Day!
In honor of International Women’s Day, here’s a few clips from Alix Olson:
Canadian Article on Double Standard for Women, Esp. Hillary
The sexist attitudes toward Hillary Clinton have become glaring. Lemon Hound posted a link to an interesting article that discusses this issue. Even though I chose to caucus for Obama, I’m very aware of this awkward space Hillary has had to inhabit and I don’t like it one bit.
I don’t care how you self-identify — woman, man, feminist, anti-whatever — the blatant sexism in this primary campaign should make you pause.
I’m reading Michael Warner’s Publics and Counterpublics right now. His analysis of the dominant publics sphere as inherently embedded in 19th-Century values seems on target to me. He argues that the the binary between public and private are:
the very scene of selfhood and scarcely distinguishable from the experience of gender and sexuality. That makes them hard to challenge. In the case of gender, public and private are not just formal rules about how men and women should behave. They are bound up with meanings of masculinity and femininity. Masculinity, at least in Western cultures, is felt partly in a way of occupying public space; femininity, in a language of private feeling.
This explains, largely, to me, why sexism has been able to prevail in this primary presidential campaign. I know I often feel the effects of being in the double bind when I choose to speak my mind, in either public or private arenas, because, as Warner points out, speech acts have specific contexts and spaces in which they are considered appropriate. Public space for women’s speech, it seems to me, is still very much under construction.
Avatars of Woolf in Weird Places
Blogging Woolf and the Virginia Woolf listserv that I subscribe to drew my attention to this odd image of Virginia playing hockey. It’s on the cover of a conservative magazine called The Standard Weekly. Sort of random, no?
Disney’s “Story of Menstruation”
Oh, snap! This video is back on youtube! I wrote briefly about this short film once before at my eeink site. I won’t offer an analysis of it now, but it is significant to know that the film was commissioned by Kotex in the 1940s to help, or save, mothers and male doctors from talking about the female body and its processes with young adolescent girls. Joan Jacobs Brumberg discusses this phenomenon in her book, The Body Project. Just wanted folks to know that it’s available once again. It’s about 10 minutes long, well worth it too, but know that it’s longer than you might expect a clip to be.
