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keeping up my end of the bargain

Posted by xJane on January 8th, 2008 at 9:12 am · 3 Comments

I don’t really feel that I’ve been pulling my feminist weight around here recently (and that big long post about American Gladiators really rose from my husband’s comment; I expanded it because I wasn’t certain all our dear readers knew what AG was). And that really also means I’ve not been pulling my blogging weight around here, either. Part of that is busyness and part of that is intimidation. John has all these grand schemes for the future of MoF and keeps posting these great posts…I’m feeling a little out of my league.

So, instead of coming up with my own words, I’d like to give y’all a round up of my favorite recent feminist posts, in no real order, with a few religion posts thrown in for good measure and well-roundedness.

I’m starting off with Penelope Trunk, a favorite source for business (and, sometimes, feminism). She tackles Five Things People Say About Christmas That Drive [Her] Nuts in a very accessible (as always) manner. She also brings up some great come backs that atheists and agnostics can use (she is Jewish) against rabid Christmasers.

California NOW, which I keep giving another chance to get their blog off the ground, floats a little higher with a very brief discussion of the importance of words in framing a debate. In this case, the use of pronouns when we talk about the next president, and how being able to imagine it as a role for a person (without specifying a gender) is, in itself, progress. The post could be longer, more in depth, and less like a Twitter thought, but it’s still a good thought.

A blog I’ve never heard of before but was linked to by someone gives us an update on the state of women’s hockey gear. As a woman who just went shopping for her favorite sport-gear and found her choices to be lacking, I sympathize. Do I want gender-neutral clothing? Yes. Do I also want color choices? Yes. I picked out a lovely teal-and-ivory set that I hope conveys Snow Goddess to all who gaze upon me and then was given 160s and hideous red poles by the rental lady. I shall bring my own (black, just like the ones she gave my husband) poles next time. Do I think polka dots will build confidence? No. But I also believe that, as my sister once said about a football team whose name never mattered to me enough to remember, “If you look good, you feel good. And if you feel good, you play good.” So here’s to playing good: whether you’re male or female; and to looking good doing it. Preferably without polka dots or purple, two crimes against vision.

Feministe has an awesome list of questions for prolifers, you know, the ones who claim that conception is the start of life (which makes me wonder if I’m 9 months older than I think I am). She takes their arguments to their logical conclusions (not even extremes, although some of them are) to point out their absurdity. She brings up the point that doctors count a pregnancy not from its fertilization but from its implantation, since you can’t measure the former and many fertilized eggs get expelled. Which is sorta true, since it’s been my (limited) experience that doctors track it from the last time a woman was not pregnant (her period), since they don’t actually know when it was implanted. But I digress. Go, read it. And read the comments, they continue the discussion.

A quick hit from CNN.com: this article about Bush selling his daughter. I’ve already mentioned it, but it bears repeating. This is our prez, folks.

Ah, Feministing, how do I love thee? Let me count the ways…first off, you continue my discussion of looking good and feeling good with a recommendation to read Trappings, which I shall now have to do. Another good one for comments. Leave your own, or leave it here (or both): what makes you feel powerful? (Men, too, are invited to join the discussion about clothes.)

And then you continue with a story again about men owning their daughters. Makes me glad again that my husband did not ask permission: and also that my father, though a (wing)nut, is not a psychopath.

Another blog I’ve never heard of has an awesome list of Republican candidates and which Buffy villain they most represent. SciFiPolitics, a new genre!

Pandagon has a book review about how bizarre it is to treat virginity as anything other than something made up to keep women in line: “even in the moment of ‘giving’ a man your virginity, you’re more technically presenting him with an opportunity to destroy something that doesn’t exist except as a cultural concept that’s not easily defined”. Hear, hear.

Pharyngula has awesome commentary about more hopeful wishing from the religious. This time, not snow from Ullr, or rain from YAJ, but non-pedophile priests from Catholic-YAJ.

Finally, an awesome religion-feminism post from our own dear Jana over at Sunstone: a visit to a Bat Mitzvah. John told me that they had been invited to a Bat Mitzvah, but this was the first I’d heard of that actually involved a shawl & reading from the Torah. I think I’d've cried, too.

That’s all for now, folks, but I’m back in the game. Go read those great stories while I cook up some of my own.

Tags: Atheism · Blogging · Christianity · Church and State · Current Events · Doubt · Feminism · Gender · Islam · Jana · Judaism · Links · News · Politics · Religion · Science Fiction and Fantasy · Skeptic · Society · Spirituality · Sunstone · Women

3 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Elaine // Jan 8, 2008 at 10:58 am

    In relation to the idea that a father owns his daughters and has the right, duty, or obligation to arrange marriages for them, and the lengths to which women will go to avoid this, there was an article in The Fresno Bee recently about Gurdeep Sihota, the director of college activities at Fresno City College who among other things, had to run away from home at age 23 to avoid a marriage arranged by her Sikh father. I know Gurdeep from my time at FCC; she is an amazing woman. I don’t know how to do links in these comments, but if you cut and paste this: , you will find the story.

    I just count myself lucky every day that I had a father who treated me as a person rather than a possession even when I was a small child, who taught me to have confidence in myself and in my opinions, and who supported me in everything I did, even when he didn’t particularly approve (like when I was baptized into the Mormon church).

  • 2 Elaine // Jan 8, 2008 at 11:01 am

    Hmmm. That web address didn’t get included in my comment. Well, if you’re interested in the story, you can Google “Gurdeep Sihota”, and you should find the story as the first or second listing or so.

  • 3 John // Jan 8, 2008 at 11:51 pm

    Awesome set of links, xJane! There are two that I wanted to link that I never got around to–thanks!

    And please don’t feel guilty, xJane–you’ve picked up my slack countless times, when life restrained me from blogging. We’re here to back each other up. :)

    On our Bat Mitvah experience–I’m restarting the OC Pilgrimage, and that will be my next write up. Look for it in the next day or two!

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