The 53rd Carnival Against Sexual Violence is now up. Check it out — as always, it contains a ton of excellent posts. Thanks again to Marcella for taking the time to make it happen.
posted 1:14 pm at Feministe

This week on Feministe’s reading list: No Cookies for Me, a blog by former Feministe guest-blogger and all-around awesome feminist dude Roy. Roy writes about feminism, gaming, race, and a whole slew of other progressive (and fun) stuff. Head over there, check him out, and add him to your RSS reader.
posted 11:05 pm at Feministe

Muslimah Media Watch is our blog of the week, and if you don’t already read it, head over now. Their tagline is “Looking at Muslim women in the media and pop culture,” and they carry out that goal with much-need skepticism, valuable experience and cutting intellect. In the past few days, they’ve had posts about the Western media’s shocked response to the successful public career of a Pakistani bisexual transwoman; a cartoon “cheat sheet” for the different types of Syrian hejab styles (watch heads explode as some Westerners learn that there’s more than one?!) and the various implications therein; and the art that Muslim women are creating and speaking.
Muslimah Media Watch is updated nearly every day and it presents an essential but often-silenced perspective on media, culture and politics, so add it to your blogroll, bookmarks or RSS feed and enjoy.
posted 12:54 am at Feministe
So I announced two weeks ago that Feministe is going to have a weekly feature highlighting a blog that we read and love, and of course I haven’t followed up on it beyond my initial linkage to Ms. Crip Chick. That all changes now, because I have a graphic. Check it:

Hot, right? So this is going to be a regular Wednesday feature (I’ve even marked it in my calendar). And the blog to be highlighted this week is Black Looks, an incredibly informative, often-updated site focusing on African and African Diaspora women. Sokari, the author of Black Looks, describes her site like this:
I started writing Black Looks back in June 2004 after a number of abandoned blog attempts under different names. At the time I only had a broad idea that I wanted to primarily focus on anything to do with African Women - a very broad term for a whole continent - and the African Diaspora that is socially, politically, racially, culturally, ethnically and sexually diverse. I also wanted to look at human rights, to challenge stereotypes and discuss issues such as gender, sexuality and racism and how these are constructed and manipulated by culture. These are areas that can make people feel uncomfortable because they reach to our core. They often reveal the hidden truths deep within ourselves. Talking about racism and ethnicity and sexuality can be threatening because they require people to consider the possibility that they may have racist or homophobic feelings and attitudes.
I have chosen to write about a range of issues that I have experienced directly or indirectly in my offline life such as gender violence, racism, sexuality, HIV/AIDS and cancer. I view the world as moving further and further to the right with American hegemony contaminating the global space. I wanted to write from a radical and progressive standpoint challenging not only the right but also the liberal community, the so capitalism with a friendly face which is an oxymoron to say the least.
She has tons of good stuff, and if Black Looks isn’t on your RSS feed, add it. In the past few days alone, she’s posted about sex workers from East Africa being denied entrance into a women’s conference in Uganda; class-based organizing in Britain turning racist; and a Cameroonian woman winning a lawsuit against the British government for her horrific treatment while seeking asylum.
Check out Sokari’s site. Next week we’ll highlight another must-read feminist blog, so stay tuned.
posted 8:52 am at Feministe