Women’s History Month Blogfest: Book Discussion of Judith Bennett’s History Matters

historymattersSeveral of my feminist blogger colleagues have decided to host a blog-based discussion of Judith Bennett’s book History Matters: Patriarchy and the Challenge of Feminism (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006.) Each Monday in the month of March, one of them will write a post to her blog and each will comment on each others postings.  They invite others to join in on the fun.

The first post, by The Adventures of Notorious Ph.D., Girl Scholar, is Should politics be historical? Should history be political?

Speaking of women’s history and blogging, Tenured Radical announces that  The Journal of Women’s History will be hosting a round table on this subject.  Here is the call for proposals:

Call for Papers: Feminism, Blogging and the Historical Profession. The Journal of Women’s History invites submissions for a round table on the emergence of blogging as a location for critical thought among women in the historical profession; historians of women, gender and sexuality; and feminist scholars who may, or may not be, historians. Participants may wish to address one or more of the following questions in an abstract of no more than 250 words: What role does self-publishing on the internet play in a profession where merit is defined by scholarly review and a rigorous editorial process? What are the intellectual benefits, and/or costs, of blogging? What are the ethics and consequences of blogging under a pseudonym? What kinds of electronic acknowledgement already correlate with established scholarly practices; which can be discarded; and which need to be attended to, perhaps more rigorously than in printed publications? If many scholarly publications and organizations have already adopted blogs as a way of spreading news and inviting conversation, is blogging itself developing rules and practices that will inevitably produce intellectual and scholarly hierarchies similar to those that blogging seeks to dismantle? Does feminist blogging offer particular opportunities for enhanced conversation about race, sexuality, class and national paradigms, or does it tend to reproduce existing scholarly paradigms and silences within feminist scholarship? Finally, are new forms of colleagueship and scholarship emerging in the blogosphere?

The round table will consist of a short introduction, several essays of 2 – 3,000 words, and a concluding comment/response. Abstracts should arrive no later than July 15, 2009, and can be submitted electronically to Claire Potter at tenuredDOTradicalATgmail.com. Final submissions are due October 1. Pseudonymous bloggers may publish under their pseudonyms, but must be willing to reveal their identities to the editor of the round table and the commenter. Bloggers based outside the United States are particularly encouraged to contribute.

Post Oscars disability blogging

Media dis&dat has some great posts on disability themes in oscar-nominated films, as well as excellent coverage of the protests against the humanitarian award for Jerry Lewis.   I haven’t found any substantive commentary on the Oscar-winning performance by Penelope Cruz in “Vicky, Christina, Barcelona,” so will say a little bit here.

First, I have to say that I was surprised that Cruz was nominated at all — it was not her best performance although it did stand out because the film as a whole was so dull.  By giving her the best supporting actress award, I think the Academy is validating a stereotypical view of persons with mental illness.  Then there’s the underlying current of misogyny that runs throughout this characterization — but that’s become pretty common for Woody Allen nowadays.

I thought Ann Hathaway’s character Kim in “Rachel Getting Married” was a much more nuanced view of a person struggling with addiction and emotional problems.  We get to see raw emotional pain and the family conflicts that ensue — but she’s not demonized either.

Anyway, I’d be interested in hearing other reactions to these performances and others I missed (e.g. “Revolutionary Road” and “The Changeling.”)  As to the Oscar ceremony — BORING!!!!  The only entertaining part was the bit with Tina Fey and Steve Martin (Ben Stiller’s impression of Joaquin Phoenix was entertaining for a bit but got old fast).  I think Fey and Martin should  host next year.

Just because you quote Abigail Adams doesn’t make you a feminist

In her budget address, Governor Jodi Rell used the following quote from Abigail Adams’ letter to her son John Quincy Adams, written on January 13, 1780:

“It is not in the still calm of life … that great characters are formed. The habits of a vigorous mind are formed in contending with difficulties. Great necessities call out great virtues. When a mind is raised … then those qualities which would otherwise lay dormant, wake into life and form the character of the hero and the statesman.”

Apparently, the Governor forgot about another famous quote from Abigail Adams — i.e. “remember the ladies.” One of the proposed cuts will be to the state’s Permanent Commission on the Status of Women.  She also proposed deep cuts in the state’s safety net that serve women, children, veterans, disabled persons, the elderly — in short everyone but the rich Republicans will pay for the current state budget crisis.

Susan Campbell has an excellent critique of the Governor’s proposal.  Nope, Rell don’t got game, that’s for sure.

I propose that the Democrats find a real feminist to run against Governor Rell in 2010.

P.S.  Uh, oh, looks like Big Sister Governor Rell will be watching me and other state employees.  Guess I won’t be blogging from the office anymore!

My hopes have already been dashed. . .

In my last post, I expressed my hopes for the new president when it came to reproductive rights.  After being encouraged by the executive order lifting the Global Gag rule, I am crushed by the latest news from  Reproductive Health Reality Check that President Obama has caved into conservative pressure to eliminate funding for the Medicaid Family Planning State Option from the economic stimulus bill.  This means that women in the U.S. who are unemployed, underemployed, living in poverty, will not be able to get affordable birth control.

To express your concerns about this issue,  call the White House comment line at 202-456-1111 and use these talking points from PPFA.

P.S.  Christina Page’s blog entry on this issue further demonstrates why Chris Matthews is an idiot, like we needed reminding. . .

Gov. Rell: What part of Permanent Don’t you understand?

Like many areas of the country, the Nutmeg state has a huge budget deficit and must make drastic cuts.  According to the Hartford Courant, one of the items on the governor’s “hit list” is the state’s Permanent Commission on the Status of Women.   This agency, and other  state commissions around the country, were modeled after President Kennedy’s Commission on the Status of Women, founded in 1961 to address the enormous gender inequality in the United States at this time  (remember, this was the Mad Men era, when women were supposed to be either in the kitchen or the secretarial pool, not the board room).  Although the President’s Commission disbanded in 1963 after issuing a report on the problems facing American women, many states created Permanent Commissions to continue the important work started under Kennedy.  Various letters and  editorials in the Courant have made strong arguments in favor of keeping this agency alive.  I just want to remind our dunder-head of a Governor what the word “permanent” means.  According to the OED:

a. Continuing or designed to continue or last indefinitely without change; abiding, enduring, lasting; persistent. Opposed to temporary.

Any questions?

Ms-sing the Point

Feminist Law Professors has posted a link to a CNN story regarding criticsm of the Ms. Magazine cover depicting President-elect Obama as feminist superhero.  In addition to missing the point of the protests, Naomi Wolff seems to be implying that critics are fronts for right wing organizations.  Guess there’s no room in Ms. Wolff’s tent for legitimate critique and debate. . .