Community hubs

This is the global Feminist Blogs aggregator. It collects articles from many smaller community hubs within the Feminist Blogs network. For stories from particular places, groups, or other communities within our movement, check out some of these sites.

Share this fundraiser with friends online using ChipIn!

Support Feminist Bloggers!

Feminist Blogs depends on contributions from readers like you to stay running. We're doing a fundraising drive for the months of June and July.

Donations provide for the costs of running feministblogs.org and provide direct financial support to active Feminist Blogs contributors. See the donation page for more details.


March 2010

Pioneer Settlers in Nebraska

"A Lantern in Her Hand by Beth Streeter Aldrich" is the story of Abbie and Will Deal, fictious pioneer settlers in Nebraska. Written in much the same style and tone as books like the "What Katy Did" series, the book, now a classic, despite being rather old-fashioned, is incredibly touching, and manages to protray emotions, describe characters and narrate events far more clearly than many contemporary novels manage to do despite being explicit. Perhaps it is the restraint in "A Lantern in Her Hand" which makes a difference coupled, of course, with the talent of its author.

The book focusses on the life of Abbie Deal from the time that she was a child till the time that she died. It isn't a happy-go-lucky book with a feel-good ending but a chronicle of a woman's life in that era. It tells of her falling in love with and eventual marriage to Will Deal, a man who chose to move to Nebraska because land was inexpensive there although he believed that the land was good. It tells of how she herself was less than enthusiastic to shift but that she lived in an era where if her man shifted, she would, of course, do the same. Although it also mentions that as much as she loved her mother, and siblings, and home, her love for them was less than her love for Will.

Life in Nebraska was anything but easy for many years. Crops failed year after year. The rains didn't come. Grasshoppers became abominable pests. Money was short. And it sometimes took great strength of character to keep her love for her husband intact and distinct from the lack of material comfort. Will Deal is described as a man who says little but feels deeply. And Abbie is described as a woman duty-bound, but one who did not truly seem to feel bound by duty.

"A Lantern in Her Hand" speaks of Abbie as a mother, as a daughter, as a daughter-in-law, as a mother-in-law, as a grandmother, as a friend, as a wife, and, finally, as an individual, although all her wants and needs and desires as an individual were invariably subsumed by the deamnds of one or other of the roles which she played. She gave up music and art as a young woman for her husband, and as an older woman, she made way for her daughters. To her, motherhood was about love first and duty second although she never seemed to preach about it.

By the end of the book, it is difficult to feel anything but much respect for the woman who, fictitious thoguh she is, seems just as real as those women who have lived not merely in the pages of a book.

Note: The entire text of "A Lantern in Her Hand" is available online.


Tagged with: , ,

Happy Census Day! AKA Day of decision for Latinos…

I knew it was coming. I love the Census, I think it’s an amazing thing that our country takes to counting everyone every 10 years. I love that some of us, so far not my household, get to tell the government how we live by answering more than just “How many people live here.” But I was dreading this year’s form for one simple reason – Latinos are no longer a race.

This change happened in 1997 and thus was on the 2000 Census form. I was pissed about it then too, but back then I really believed that a Latino or Hispanic organization would rise up to fight to put us back in the race column. But it didn’t happen. Now the buzz in Latino & Hispanic circles is “What do I check?” I’m asking, I’m getting asked, but I haven’t a clue. You really should read that 1997 memo as it also covers the naming of all race and ethnic categories including our invisible Arab/Middle Eastern sisters & brothers.

The history seems a bit hazy to me. The government did a study about how we fill out ethnicity and race on forms in anticipation for the 2000 Census. One thing they realized is that you have to ask if someone is Hispanic or Latino as a separate question and first. But one thing that also realized is that most Latinos will check “White” if Latino isn’t an option.

Obviously I have an issue with that.

It’s not that I am offended to be considered white, I just don't consider myself white. It’s one of those “It just is,” things in life. Looking at the form, I check yes for Hispanic/Latino. But I’m not Black, I’m not Asian and I’m not White.

American Indian. I’ve considered checking this box and writing down Aztec for my tribe. I’ve also considered writing down one of the many tribes that did live in Texas. My maternal part of my family tree is Tejano, in other words, they were living in Texas when it was Mexico. If we go back far enough, we find a rebellious young woman who ran away from her family in Spain to follow her true love to Mexico. But they settled in what we now call Texas. And may I point out that those of Spanish descent are also under Hispanic/Latino? So that got us nowhere. Also, I feel that claiming American Indian is disingenuous, ya know?

Other. Someone on Twitter said to write human. I get that. I’ve heard it before. But we’re not at that stage of humanity where we can say “there’s no race except the human race…” I wish we were. I want to represent. So perhaps writing Latino/Hispanic/Mexican-American there?

Someone else on Twitter said that LA Mayor Villaregosa had marked white. Of course I can’t find a citation, but it led to ponder why. In a campaign to get more Latinos to fill out the Census – it’s money ya know – he said that Latinos were underreported in the 2000 census. Could it be because we didn’t know which freaking box to check? Maybe someone could have surveyed Latinos to find out why we didn’t fill out the census. I know, I know, immigration status plays a HUGE part in that aspect, but perhaps some of us just didn’t know how to respond and didn’t. Althou 47% of Hispanics/Latinos do consider themselves white.

Latinos have always been in this weird middle ground when it comes to race in the USA. We aren’t black, but we aren’t white. Race relations are often said to be about black versus white. Um, what about us?
 We share a lot of common history with our African-American brothers and sisters. Then again, because we’re not Black, sometimes we’ve gotten a pass. Sometimes we battle for what appears to be the same piece of pie.

I’ve decided that I’m writing in Mexican-American on the Census form. We need to straighten out this confusion before 2020. If we truly are the fastest growing ethnic community in the country, we need the numbers too.

Tagged with:

Silly Site o’ the Day

White Rabbits! And just like that, it's an hour or so later and I'm still awake, having just showered in the hopes that it'll make me sleepy. In the meantime, it's not only April Fool's Day but the day we celebrate as Amy's "anniversary" - today she's 13 years old, and in honor of her we pass on Whack a Kitty:





More at the official website.
Tagged with:

Neutral Language!FAIL

(non-anime post)

I’m taking a community college class right now as a part of the required courses for a post-undergraduate certificate. It’s a watered-down, lowest-denominator community college media class. But hey, the certificate might look good on the resume.

The textbook is made of FAIL. It referred to instant messaging as “[r]elatively new to the Internet” … riiiiiight.

So I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised to see some wonderfully biased language seep in there.

My area of study is Technical Writing … a field designed to write information & technical procedures clearly and concisely – avoiding misleading and biased language. This textbook FAILS! :)


Filed under: FAIL, Misc, Ranting & Raving Tagged: non-anime, sexism, sexist language

Silly Site o’ the Day

Whew! Just got home from work. That's the longest day I've had in awhile.

Before I do the Silly Site, I have a message to pass on to Robin's dad. Dad, we know you've been having trouble with your email, so please go on AOL Messenger or iChat tomorrow so Robin can help you sort it out.

As April Fool's Day is tomorrow. I really hope this BoingBoing plug for Joey Skaggs' parade is real, as I'd love to see it during my lunch hour. Ah, but believe nothing tomorrow, especially things you read online!
Tagged with: ,

Today Is International Transgender Day of Visibility

Today is the second annual International Transgender Day of Visibility. The event started last year when Rachel Crandall, head of Transgender Michigan, was inspired to create a day that celebrated transgendered people, to balance the more somber Transgender Day of Remembrance that focuses on those in the transgendered community who have died.

Visibility can be a double-edged sword for the transgendered. Certainly, the more transgendered men and women are public and open about their situation, the more exposed others will become to the issue and hopefully the more understanding and accepting they will become. However, this visibility, while great for the cause at large, can come at a great personal risk.

Transgendered people who are out (voluntarily or not) can face bigotry, violence, and harassment. They are often discriminated against in the workplace, abandoned by friends and family, and even barred from public places. Further, they have to deal with people who never accept their gender identity, believing instead that the gender a person was assigned at birth is the only real truth. Some even goes as far as to equate being transgendered with being dishonest.

Personally, I cannot understand why people feel the need to judge someone based on which gender they self-identify with, much less why they would result to tormenting another person over it. The majority of people are fortunate enough to be born cisgendered (basically you identify as the gender you were assigned at birth) and we are lucky for it. While no transgendered should feel pressure to out themselves, I celebrate things like the International Transgender Day of Visibility because it brings us one more step towards a more understanding society. If you feel the same way and would like to show your support today, I encourage you to check out the official Facebook page for the event. Happy Transgender Day of Visibility, everyone!

Photo credit: Sweet One

Anger Needs a Voice

Apologies for posting twice in one day, but I saw this image and couldn’t resist. Unfortunately, I have not had the time to stay as current as I would like on the Pope’s alleged complicity, when he was a cardinal, in the Church’s covering up and possibly enabling of the sexual abuse of boys by priests in Germany and the United States, and so I have not been able to write about it in an informed way. Neither the sexual abuse of children nor its being swept under the rug such that perpetrators are able to continue abusing children is unique to the Catholic Church, of course, but, as a survivor of such abuse myself, it is impossible for me not to identify with the anger contained in this cartoon, which I found on Cagle Blogs.



Cross posted on It’s All Connected.

Tagged with:

Happy International Day of Transgender Visibility

Today, March 31, marks the first International Day of Transgender Visibility. The day was designed to celebrate the transgender community or, as Trangriot explains, "The International Transgender Day of Visibility seeks to make transpeople less of a mystery to cis folks, point out that transpeople are all around you in your daily lives and have played roles in shaping our culture and history."

As someone who is learning more and more everyday about the transgender community (and who still feels woefully undereducated on a number of transgender issues), I have to say this idea makes all kinds of sense to me. It's obvious the general population, at least in America, hardly knows anything real about the transgender population. Raising awareness needs to happen, yesterday!

More reading:
Also, this week is the 8th Annual National LGBT Health Awareness Week, with the theme of "Closing the Gap." LGBThealth.net, which has links to all kinds of information, says: "The LGBT community has, on average, worse health outcomes and less access to the care we need than the straight community. We cannot afford to ignore the gap anymore. We need to educate ourselves and our health care providers about our unique health needs as well as our health risks." I can only imagine how big this gap is. I'm a heterosexual woman, and I sometimes run into doctors who doesn't seem to understand, or trust, women.

More reading:


My New Religion Is…

Thinking up meaningless items to post here when I don’t have time or don’t have the gamma to give you poetry. You see, I had another one of those thinking days that actually bled into two days, beginning at approximately 9:32 am yesterday. I know this, because I was dusting a table and on that table stood a clock, and beside that clock were three dolls made in Peru. This is where it all gets very unrelated and becomes….

RUN ON THINKING by Val

Those Peruvian dolls make me think of tropical climates, although it gets damn frosty in the Andes…nevertheless, I’m still thinking about hot climates, which naturally leads me to the bees. You know, honeybees? Well, apparently they are disappearing everywhere and no one knows why, although several theories abound, from some unknown virus or parasite to cell phones. I’m going with the cell phone thing myself. I think the waves are screwing up their ability to find the hive. Our non stop yapping is altering nature? Not laughable really. I once knew a woman who talked incessantly (no not me) about everything from the price of Qtips to how much salt is really in a Big Mac. Anyway, my point is, we need to shut the fuck up. We talk too damn much. Jaysus…Facebook, Myspace, Twitter, Chat roulette, cell phones, iphones, Crackberries, Email, home phone, pagers aaahhhhh! On and on and yet, we don’t really listen to each other. NO ONE listens to anyone. We just yabber yabber yabber all the damn day with a cell phone jammed in our ears. We risk brain cancer and car accidents just to attach that insufferable object to our heads. This brings me to cigarettes. Cell phones are the new cigarette. Don’t believe me? Watch when people use them. I used to smoke, so I know what I’m talking about when we are discussing ball and chain social behavior. They take them out like a pack of cigarettes, flip them open like a pro smoker would tap out a cancer stick and they do it when they are: meeting someone new, on a break, in the car at a stop light, bored, nervous, self conscious and, the most telling time of all: when someone else lights up…err…I mean flips it open. Hmmm causes cancer too but people are so addicted to the constant contact that isn’t really contact at all that they go into denial of brain tumors the way smokers do with lung cancer. There. And all this from two Peruvian dolls on a table. ;)

Now wouldn't you rather look at this? Better than a cell phone eh? ;)


Yay, Carole Joffe!

It’s no secret that I’m a huge fan of author and professor Carole Joffe. Today on the Beacon Broadside blog, she posted an open letter to Congressman Bart Stupak, about the threats he has received and the violence the pro-choice community has experienced.

It’s a great, forceful piece that deserves to be read in full, but I did want to quote one section:

“I wonder, however, if your own experience has made you more empathetic with abortion providers, who have for years endured similar behavior from the same antiabortion extremists who have now targeted you? Though obviously you and the provider community do not agree on the abortion issue, perhaps now you can agree with them that the disagreements over this issue must remain civil. How can we call ourselves a democracy if we cannot express political beliefs without fear of violence?”

Categories: 91