New Feminist Disability Blog Launched

via Our Bodies Our Blog.  According to their About section:

“FWD/Forward is a group blog written by feminists with disabilities. It is a place to discuss disability issues and the intersection between feminism and disability rights activism. The content here ranges from basic information which is designed to introduce people who are new to disability issues or feminism to some core concepts, to more advanced topics, with the goal of promoting discussion, conversation, fellowship, and education.”

In short, disability is a feminist issue.  Right on!

Roman Polanski and The History of “Rape-Rape” in America

Now that I’ve cooled down a bit about Whoopi Goldberg’s clueless remarks regarding the arrest of Roman Polanski, I think I’ll write a little historical primer for all those out there who are wondering, WTF?

The core of Goldberg’s argument, as I see it, is that Polanski accepted a plea bargain to the charge of “having sex with a minor” aka statutory rape.  So, according to Goldberg, this isn’t “rape rape” — i.e. a sexual assault on an adult woman.  If the 13-year old had been over the age of consent (16), Goldberg seems to suggest, then it wouldn’t “really” be rape.

In order to explain why this line of argument is a crock of shit extremely faulty, here’s a brief history of rape law in the twentieth century (which I’m still working through so be patient folks):

The Women and Social Movements in the United States database has an excellent document project on the age of consent campaign at the turn of the twentieth century.  Since this database is subscription only (although you can access their blog for free), I’ll summarize.  Then as now, the “age of consent” referred to the age at which a girl could consent to sexual relations. A man who had sex with a girl below that age could be tried for statutory rape.  In the late nineteenth century the age of consent in many states was as low as ten or twelve, and in Delaware the age was seven (eww!).   Hoping to protect young girls from sexual predators, reformers started a campaign to raise the age of consent to at least sixteen, and preferably eighteen.  They based their work on that middle- and upper-class men were seducing and impregnating young, white, single girls who were flocking to the cities to find work.  Some of these girls were also victims of “white slavery” (aka sex trafficking) and were lured to the city by the promise of employment, only to find that the job was prostitution.  By 1920, most states had passed laws establishing sixteen or eighteen as the age of consent.

Now, as with other Progressive-era reforms, there were shortcoming to this reform campaign.  Most reformers were white, and overlooked the plight of African-American girls and women entirely (in fact, the reasoning was that by nature, all African-American women were hypersexual, hence it was impossible to rape a black girl or woman because men could not resist these “temptresses.  Ida B. Wells unsuccessfully tried to dispell this myth). The age of consent campaign also was based on compulsory sexual purity for girls and women outside of marriage. In fact, it was at this time that the notion of “sexual delinquency” was conceived.  Moral reformers created homes for “delinquent” and “wayward” girls — ostensibly to “protect” these girls from sexual predators, but also to “reform” their behavior — i.e. make them into virtuous, pure, respectable women.  This resulted in a major asymetry in punishment: men convincted of statutory rape typically served 2-3 years in prison.  A young girl sentenced to a reformatory for sexual delinquency (which included assault by an adult male), was incarcerated until she reached the age of majority (usually 21).  So, a fourteen year-old would serve seven years in a reformatory.

Now, what about “rape rape” — i.e. sexual assault of women over the age of consent?  Well, it depends.  If a white woman charged a black man with rape, then the myth of black male hypersexuality and the culture of white male chivalry ensured that the man would be found guilty (or more likely, lynched before he even came to trial).  Even young boys  (see the Scotsboro boys and Emmett Till). For white men, it was much easier to get away with the crime of rape, since a woman’s previous sexual experience could be admitted as evidence.  So, if a woman was a “slut” — i.e. had intercourse outside of marriage — then it was obviously her fault she got raped because she was “asking for it.” The so-called sexual revolution of the 1960s and early 1970s in some ways actually made this situation worse for awhile: teenage and young adult women reclaimed their sexual agency yet the criminal justice system still assumed that girls who “slept around” deserved to get raped, or rather, that it wasn’t “really” rape because the girl led the guy on.

By the 1970s, this assumption was becoming increasingly untenable.  As I’m finding in my work on the history of emergency contraception, health care workers  along with feminist  activists, fought for more humane treatment of rape victims by police officers, emergency room personnel, and the criminal justice system. As Estelle Freedman’s recent review of the feminist classic, Against Our Will, by Susan Brownmiller, “our view of rape has transformed since the 1970s, from an unavoidable and unmentionable price of being female to an unacceptable crime against the human rights of women.”  During the 1970s and 1980s, feminist groups created rape crisis centers, and courts declared that a woman’s sexual history was irrelevant in a rape trial.  In the 1990s, there was increasing awareness of the problem of date rape, and marital rape became a crime in all 50 states.

The Polanski case occurred when definitions of rape were still evolving.  So, if the victim had been an adult, her sexual history probably would have been used as a way to weaken or dismiss the case against Polanski.

However, by today’s standards, what Polanski did was not just statutory rape, but actual, full-on, rape.  If Samantha Geimer had been over the age of consent,   Polanski would still be charged with “rape-rape” because she said no, multiple times, and was under the influence of drugs and alcohol.  [again, see her testimony before the grand jury].

Added later: see the Rape is Rape website for more information on how you can take action on this issue.

Roman Polanski’s arrest not outrageous but long overdue

roman-polanski-1977--121636799050739400via Edge of the American West.  I agree — Anne Applebaum’s defense of Polanski because he’s old and has had rough life are nearly as creepy as the original crime itself. Historiann has an exceptional commentary on this story as well.

For more ickiness, see the recent documentary about the case, and the victim’s testimony here.

Where was this outpouring of sympathy for Mary Kay Latourneau? Oh yeah, she’s not a French cultural treasure.

Added later:  got in an argument with my sister who thinks that California is wasting too much money going after Polanski.   Needless to say I don’t agree, but then again, I live in the Nutmeg state.

There’s nothing like an epidemic to remind folks of the importance of campus health services

prescott_frontAs I say in my latest article at History News Network. [thanks again for publishing my writing, and promoting my book.]

The Chronicle of Higher Education has an article on the CDC’s latest recommendations for colleges and universities.  Brainstorm blogger Gene C. Fant wonders what impact the epidemic will have on faculty hiring.

Meanwhile, Inside Higher Education talks about the flu waiting game, and has some tips on how to teach students who have to miss classes because of the flu.  How are folks out there adapting their syllabi to address the possibility of absences due to flu?  What about faculty who need to take sick days — is there a plan to make sure classes get covered?

New Emergency Contraception Survey

backupyourbirthcontrol button Since the Center for History and New Media is no longer supporting Survey Builder, I have transferred my emergency contraception survey on Survey Monkey.

Please help me spread the word about it.  While I’m covering the entire history of emergency contraception, my replies thus far have mostly been from women and men whose experience with ECP has been very recent.  Therefore,  I’m especially  interested in getting responses from the earlier history of emergency contraception (aka the “morning-after-pill”) in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s (yes the technology has been around that long).

Colbert makes fun of War on Teen Birth Control

via Our Bodies Our Blog.  Looks like abstinence-only sex education is not the only foolish move by public schools when it comes to preventing teen pregnancy.  Earlier this year, the Washington Post ran a story on a Fairfax, VA honors student who was suspended for taking her birth control pill while at school.  As Deb Hauser of Advocates for Youth argues  “To put birth control in the same category as illegal drugs or handguns stigmatizes responsible behavior.” Amen.  The young woman in this case is fortunate to have a mother who supports her use of birth control.  What about others who are afraid to tell their parents?  States say they don’t need parental permission but what happens if your Mom or Dad finds your package of pills?

Leave it to Stephen Colbert to expose the absurdity of this war on birth control.  Another reason to love the Colbert Report.

Hopefully the negative press from this case, combined with the SCOTUS decision regarding strip searches in schools earlier this summer, may lead schools to introduce some nuance into their “zero tolerance” polices  regarding drugs.

Mind Hacks: Race bias and the menstrual cycle

Translation:  the usual BS about women and their periods.  As one commenter observes, how come no one studies the psychological impact of male hormonal cycles?  In a culture that objectifies women and still treats violence against women trivially, perhaps there are logical reasons for women’s “risk avoidance”?

Mind Hacks: Race bias and the menstrual cycle.

Lessons for Girls: Love your body

ck.brooke2

This post is my humble contribution to a meme started by Historiann.  I’m also going to riff off another post of hers on Brooke Shields.   Now, my adolescent self would hardly have put these two together.  I both hated and emulated her for those Calvin Klein ads — they were one of the (many) reasons I disliked my body.  I dieted strenuously and got real skinny so I could fit into my pair of CKs.  Other girls in my high school went further and were hospitalized for anorexia nervosa and other eating disorders.

In graduate school, I worked with Joan Jacobs Brumberg, and found that what she calls  “bad body fever”  has been a problem that has plagued women for at least a century.  Now that I’m approaching middle age, I’m more tolerant about what my body looks like, even though women of a certain age — like Brooke — who still look fabulous have raised the bar considerably.

Well it turns out that Brooke also had a negative body image as an adolescent and young adult. So, to help out girls today, she works with the SMART girls program, sponsored Tupperware’s Chain of Confidence campaign (and before you start dissing Tupperware, keep in mind that this company started as a way for stay-at-home Moms to make their own money  My Mom sold Tupperware — it pays pretty well, plus you get lots of freebies.  I still loves the ones I got from her).  Between that and her campaign to raise awareness and reduce stigma about postpartum depression, I now really like and admire her.

Another, non-corporate initiative that I like a lot is Love Your Body, sponsored by the National Organization for Women.  It gives great advice on how to protest offensive ads and promote healthy body images. Organize an event on your campus — we do it every year at CCSU.

Back Up Your Birth Control Blogging, One Day Late

back_up_birth_controlAs usual, I’m a day late in blogging, but I’ll just blame it on the fact that I was exhausted from my trip to Bethesda for my talk at the NLM!

So, better late than never — yesterday was the Back Up Your Birth Control Day of Action sponsored by the National Institute for Reproductive Health.  Since this is the subject of my current research project, I’m blogging about it.  Please take action and respond to my Emergency Contraception survey — the link is at the end of my blog.

Encouraging news — a federal judge instructed the FDA to make Plan B available to 17-year olds without prescription.  This is a start anyway.