Heterosexualism and the Colonial / Modern Gender System, María Lugones
Colonial Dependence and Sexual Difference: Reading for Gender in the Writings of Simón Bolívar (1783-1830), Catherine Davies
(you can download those last two articles here if you don’t have access to jstor)
The Coloniality of Gender, Maria Lugones
Romancing the Transgender Native, Evan B. Towle and Lynn M. Morgan
Scientific Racism and the Emergence of the Homosexual Body, Siobhan Somerville
Asexuality as a white supremacist dream
The Empire of Sexuality, Joseph Massa
“Some Could Suckle over Their Shoulder”: Male Travelers, Female Bodies, and the Gendering of Racial Ideology, 1500-1770, Jennifer L. Morgan
White Sexual Imperialism: A Theory of Asian Feminist Jurisprudence, Sunny Woan
Rethinking Sex-Positivity, Rebecca John
Women of Color Seen As Always Sexually Available, Jaclyn Friedman
Tag: feminism
Honestly get vaginas and ovaries out of feminist art, like??? Not everybody is a cis girl, tiffany the terf, go back 2 making wooden vaginas on etsy
Okay honestly OP of this post is young enough to be forgiven a little ignorance, but the fact that I’m seeing this reblogged by people who I know should know better is making my eye twitch.
Vaginas are a heavily stigmatised body part in and of themselves. The fact that vaginas have historically been believed to belong exclusively to women is obviously the driving force behind the stigma, but that stigma has well and truly gotten strong enough to detach itself from gender – people who would swear they love and respect women as people still find vaginas viscerally icky.
This is a problem. It is a problem that kids in school are being given woefully incomplete, inadequate, unsafe sex ed because no one in the education system wants to mention the V-word. It is a problem that the field of gynaecology still lags so far behind other medical professions. It is a problem that sexually active adults around the world would rather risk ovarian cancer than face the humiliation of exposing their genitals to a doctor. It is a feminist problem, a major player in the ‘women’s bodies are gross and dirty and inadequate’ field, although clearly cis women and trans men and trans women and nonbinary AFAB folks are all impacted differently by it.
There is absolutely, 100% a problem in the world at large, and in the feminist movement specifically, with people eliding genitals with gender identity. There is absolutely a shitty TERFy push to lock trans women out of our communities and that’s something we should all as feminists be on guard against. But the solution to the problem is not ‘stop drawing icky vaginas’, like fuck, what is this, the monthly shareholder meeting of Conservatives ‘R Us?
For as long as vaginas are held to be an inherently shocking and gross and taboo feature of human anatomy, representing them in art will be a valuable feminist act. It’s not about who does or doesn’t have a vagina – it’s about the fact that those of us who do have vaginas are suffering for it and would like that to stop.
Fucking Christ, feminists, keep drawing vaginas. Draw vaginas until your wrists ache. Draw vaginas until we have obliterated the last person in the world who thinks that vaginas are dirty and shameful and should be kept private. Print out this post and draw a vagina on it and send it back to me, I don’t give a fuck. Just keep drawing vaginas, because apparently the world still finds them so disgusting that credible self-identified progressives are now joining the fight to keep them under lock and key.
if cisgender vaginas bother you so much, go draw some trans vaginas! men can be feminist AND have feminist vaginas. problem solved.
Incel redditor perilously close to inventing feminist analysis of society
You can do it buddy, one more little baby step!
he’s almost there
(note: I have no romantic or sexualized experience myself, so I admit *some* of these points rely entirely on secondhand stuff and media)
One thing I think is not talked about very much is that straight men live pretty much desexualized lives if we’re not actually having sex at that moment, and then there’s not much room to be the object rather than subject.
As I’ve said before, we men don’t have clothing options for “dressing sexy” in masculine clothing (there is cross dressing but that is different). There’s no male equivalent to the short skirt or low cut top. There’s no male lingerie that isn’t seen as a joke.
Further, we just don’t get validation for our sexuality outside of a sexual partner. We are almost never complimented for our looks or sexiness from platonic friends like women are, especially same sex friends.
There really aren’t many straight male role models for raw aesthetic sexiness in mainstream culture (besides unnaturally muscled men). In fiction, male characters are almost never attractive for embodying sexiness but rather for doing things (saving the world, being extremely witty, being a genius, winning the tournament, etc.). Their sexiness is non-aesthetic and sometimes is in spite of their aesthetics.
Anecdotally, it seems like a lot of men aren’t even called physically hot and sexy by their own sexual partners, who themselves focus on personality. There’s not much room to fulfill the role of passive sexism object for you partner for many/most men.
I think it is telling that a lot of porn for men ignores the man’s personality and has a woman just throwing themselves at the man, overcome with lust.
Also there the fact that women seem to rarely approach men and some seem to often expect the man to do most of the sexual escalation, especially in the early stages.
We talk about women of color or women who are disabled being sexualized, but we don’t talk about how all straight men are desexualized and denied the ability to be sexualized object.
oh my god… that’s why they send dick pics
“witness me!”
There are occasional reddit threads about things like this: “guys who send unsolicited dick pics, why do you do it?”
The answer always seems to be some combination of slot machine mentality (“maybe this one will like it, and make the other 50 worthwhile”) and a desire for witness. Surprising numbers of people admit that it’s validation even if the reaction is negative, simply because they’re still being viewed in a totally sexual context.
At the very least that has obvious consequences for people trying to reduce dick pic sending. There’s some core of people who can’t possibly be reached with “it’s not attractive to women” because that was never their expectation.
More broadly, I think efforts to get (Western?) men to emphasize with objectification wildly underestimate the challenge they’re facing. It’s not just a sympathy shortage, it’s a totally unfamiliar feeling. Making things even harder, it’s a feeling a lot of men say they wish they could have.
The usual narrative on not (politely) complimenting the appearance of unknown women is “sure, it’s nice if it happens once, but think about how annoyed you’d be if it happened all the time”. Fine in general terms, but I think a lot of men don’t have any way to intuit the emotional difference between too-frequent compliments and being pestered with too much of something totally innocuous like requests for the date.
The comments on those articles are frequently from men saying they’ve literally never received a single compliment from a stranger on their appearance, and can’t imagine what it would be like. The ones who have are often talking about a single, years-old compliment they still cherish. That’s not a framework that supports more than a purely theoretical understanding of what’s it’s like to be valued for your appearance too heavily – or at all.
Obviously that’s not universal, any more than all women are catcalled, but it seems like a really serious communication failure to appeal to a sense of objectification that much of your audience has literally never felt, and desperately wants.
Reblogged because thefutureoneandall describes exactly why I have trouble empathizing with feminism columnists.
Can confirm, I’d take literally any compliment on anything at this point, and would cherish it.
one day we gotta get all the men and all the women to sit down together and hash this stuff out between them, how hard can it be.
This discussion kind of reminds me of a story that made the rounds about a year ago, where
a woman, after having gotten a bit tired with dick pics, decided to try to get her “revenge” of sorts, by sending unsolicited vagina pics to 40 random men:Let’s be honest: while I enjoy penises, I don’t necessarily want
unexpected visual boners intruding on my day. I wondered, “What would
guys do if I turned the tables and sent them an unexpected vagina pic?”
And so, in my own twist on revenge porn, I sent 40 unexpected vagina
pics to men on Bumble.This … didn’t work out the way she apparently expected it to:
Overall, I was surprised that I didn’t get my, “Gotcha!” moment. I’d
initially hoped the guys would see how invasive it is to receive such
intimate photos from a stranger. When I’m excited to get to know a guy,
his penis isn’t the first part of him that I want to know. But given
that men like to send dick pics, I suppose their enthusiasm for v-pics
makes sense.So, basically, women experience dick picks as a net negative, as an intimacy violation, while men experience v-pics as a huge positive, as validation and an indicator of interest.
This seems consistent with the above discussion, where it’s a pretty common male experience to basically never receive any sexual attention ever and thus respond really strongly positively to whatever scraps come their way (or to start trolling for attention – with the point of some of these dick pics apparently being to get any attention at all, no matter how hostile), while a common female experience seems to be more like being flooded with unwanted sexual attention and wanting a way to make it stop –
resulting in an absolutely massive inferential gap – with the result that if you’re on one side of the gap and try to describe your feelings and experiences to the people on the other side, whatever words you have will just fall on deaf ears because the feeling and experiences you describe are … not just unfamiliar, but outright alien, to the ones on the other side.
This alienness is … mutual.
For men, it feels like no men are sexy to women.
For women, it feels like all women are sexy to men.
It’s like one person dying of dehydration watching another one drown.
“It’s like one person dying of dehydration watching another one drown.”
the conversation has gotten longer, so i’m reblogging
… This is so cool. It actually makes sense.
but of course women are wary of just giving men compliments, because attention-starved men are likely to take it as a come-on. what a dilemma.
So what I’m getting from this…
Is that my idea of taking popular types of fiction and essentially ‘flipping the script’ so that there are sexy male characters as ‘damsel in distress’ types would actually be very good and help a lot of people become comfortable with their sexuality?it could well! i’m not the guy to answer this really, i’m queer and also i’ve always been pretty comfortable with being the one giving the compliments (and just asking for validation when i need it). but i do think there’s a place in the world for fiction where The Sexy One is male.
consider chris hemsworth in ghostbusters. that one’s a bit mean-spirited, with him being hilariously clueless, but you’ve got that dynamic where what he contributes is, he’s hot. that’s it. and i found it kind of a breath of fresh air, not because it was a fuck-you to sexist tropes, but because it’s never, ever enough for a guy to be attractive, but here it was, and that was fun to see.
i once thoughtlessly complimented a guy on his jacket, because he and his friend rounded the corner and suddenly i was confronted with an extremely handsome young man in a very fashionable black leather jacket, and i blurted out ‘whoah, nice jacket, you’re looking good!’ and the look on his face was just this explosion of surprise and delight– he actually kind of missed a step. the next minute i was like shit shit SHIT what if things get weird JEEZ but he and his friend were already walking past, and his friend just started laughing. kind of this ‘whoah, cool, what the hell’ laugh, and when i glanced back they’d both kind of lit up and were elbowing each other as they walked away. i was extremely relieved to have like dodged a bullet of ‘if you let a man know you are attracted to them at close range GOD KNOWS WHAT’S GONNA HAPPEN BUT IT’S GONNA BE OBNOXIOUS PROBABLY’ and then also pleased that i’d made that guy’s day. but also like. i guess now i’m realizing i probably made that guy’s decade…
i wish it was more common to compliment people– especially guys– in a casual way. but when you live as a woman you can spend a lot more time dodging men’s attention rather than soliciting it…
maybe male poledancing is like, the next big fad to cash in on? guys can enjoy getting hit on and girls can enjoy there being a specific space for that, that they, the girls, can leave afterwards.
(note: I have no romantic or sexualized experience myself, so I admit *some* of these points rely entirely on secondhand stuff and media)
One thing I think is not talked about very much is that straight men live pretty much desexualized lives if we’re not actually having sex at that moment, and then there’s not much room to be the object rather than subject.
As I’ve said before, we men don’t have clothing options for “dressing sexy” in masculine clothing (there is cross dressing but that is different). There’s no male equivalent to the short skirt or low cut top. There’s no male lingerie that isn’t seen as a joke.
Further, we just don’t get validation for our sexuality outside of a sexual partner. We are almost never complimented for our looks or sexiness from platonic friends like women are, especially same sex friends.
There really aren’t many straight male role models for raw aesthetic sexiness in mainstream culture (besides unnaturally muscled men). In fiction, male characters are almost never attractive for embodying sexiness but rather for doing things (saving the world, being extremely witty, being a genius, winning the tournament, etc.). Their sexiness is non-aesthetic and sometimes is in spite of their aesthetics.
Anecdotally, it seems like a lot of men aren’t even called physically hot and sexy by their own sexual partners, who themselves focus on personality. There’s not much room to fulfill the role of passive sexism object for you partner for many/most men.
I think it is telling that a lot of porn for men ignores the man’s personality and has a woman just throwing themselves at the man, overcome with lust.
Also there the fact that women seem to rarely approach men and some seem to often expect the man to do most of the sexual escalation, especially in the early stages.
We talk about women of color or women who are disabled being sexualized, but we don’t talk about how all straight men are desexualized and denied the ability to be sexualized object.
oh my god… that’s why they send dick pics
“witness me!”
There are occasional reddit threads about things like this: “guys who send unsolicited dick pics, why do you do it?”
The answer always seems to be some combination of slot machine mentality (“maybe this one will like it, and make the other 50 worthwhile”) and a desire for witness. Surprising numbers of people admit that it’s validation even if the reaction is negative, simply because they’re still being viewed in a totally sexual context.
At the very least that has obvious consequences for people trying to reduce dick pic sending. There’s some core of people who can’t possibly be reached with “it’s not attractive to women” because that was never their expectation.
More broadly, I think efforts to get (Western?) men to emphasize with objectification wildly underestimate the challenge they’re facing. It’s not just a sympathy shortage, it’s a totally unfamiliar feeling. Making things even harder, it’s a feeling a lot of men say they wish they could have.
The usual narrative on not (politely) complimenting the appearance of unknown women is “sure, it’s nice if it happens once, but think about how annoyed you’d be if it happened all the time”. Fine in general terms, but I think a lot of men don’t have any way to intuit the emotional difference between too-frequent compliments and being pestered with too much of something totally innocuous like requests for the date.
The comments on those articles are frequently from men saying they’ve literally never received a single compliment from a stranger on their appearance, and can’t imagine what it would be like. The ones who have are often talking about a single, years-old compliment they still cherish. That’s not a framework that supports more than a purely theoretical understanding of what’s it’s like to be valued for your appearance too heavily – or at all.
Obviously that’s not universal, any more than all women are catcalled, but it seems like a really serious communication failure to appeal to a sense of objectification that much of your audience has literally never felt, and desperately wants.
Reblogged because thefutureoneandall describes exactly why I have trouble empathizing with feminism columnists.
Can confirm, I’d take literally any compliment on anything at this point, and would cherish it.
one day we gotta get all the men and all the women to sit down together and hash this stuff out between them, how hard can it be.
This discussion kind of reminds me of a story that made the rounds about a year ago, where
a woman, after having gotten a bit tired with dick pics, decided to try to get her “revenge” of sorts, by sending unsolicited vagina pics to 40 random men:Let’s be honest: while I enjoy penises, I don’t necessarily want
unexpected visual boners intruding on my day. I wondered, “What would
guys do if I turned the tables and sent them an unexpected vagina pic?”
And so, in my own twist on revenge porn, I sent 40 unexpected vagina
pics to men on Bumble.This … didn’t work out the way she apparently expected it to:
Overall, I was surprised that I didn’t get my, “Gotcha!” moment. I’d
initially hoped the guys would see how invasive it is to receive such
intimate photos from a stranger. When I’m excited to get to know a guy,
his penis isn’t the first part of him that I want to know. But given
that men like to send dick pics, I suppose their enthusiasm for v-pics
makes sense.So, basically, women experience dick picks as a net negative, as an intimacy violation, while men experience v-pics as a huge positive, as validation and an indicator of interest.
This seems consistent with the above discussion, where it’s a pretty common male experience to basically never receive any sexual attention ever and thus respond really strongly positively to whatever scraps come their way (or to start trolling for attention – with the point of some of these dick pics apparently being to get any attention at all, no matter how hostile), while a common female experience seems to be more like being flooded with unwanted sexual attention and wanting a way to make it stop –
resulting in an absolutely massive inferential gap – with the result that if you’re on one side of the gap and try to describe your feelings and experiences to the people on the other side, whatever words you have will just fall on deaf ears because the feeling and experiences you describe are … not just unfamiliar, but outright alien, to the ones on the other side.
This alienness is … mutual.
For men, it feels like no men are sexy to women.
For women, it feels like all women are sexy to men.
It’s like one person dying of dehydration watching another one drown.
“It’s like one person dying of dehydration watching another one drown.”
the conversation has gotten longer, so i’m reblogging
… This is so cool. It actually makes sense.
Here’s the reason why your “POOR MEN!” comments on my “men don’t know how to do emotional labor and rely solely on their wives to do it for them,” post are GARBAGE. Like, shut upppppp.
Do we live in a society that socializes a lot of young men to not have the foundational tools they need for their personal and emotional wellbeing? YES. Does that suck? YES. Is everyone in society responsible for recreating, over and over again, toxic masculinity? YES.
But what all those comments completely ignore are the BENEFITS of men not being expected to do emotional labor. Men benefit GREATLY from this shit. ALL THE TIME.
They benefit from not having to do the incredibly exhausting legwork of emotionally caring for their children. Dad is the “fun one” and mom is who you go to talk through all your life shit with. Doing emotional labor for your children is beautiful work but it is honestly a 24/7 job and it is exhausting and intensive and requires a great deal of patience. I know a shit-ton of people my age (myself included) who had little to no emotional labor support growing up from their dads. That means their moms (and grandmas. And sisters. And aunts.) were doing the bulk of this labor.
(Also it’s pretty sad when a girl child in the family is expected to do the emotional labor of her siblings cause dad can’t get his head out of his ass to show up and listen for 5 minutes)
Men benefit from not having any expectations on them that they do any other kind of kinship work too. Like calling their moms on their mom’s birthday. Like writing christmas cards, inviting friends to dinner, scheduling healthcare visits for their kids (and sometimes even for themselves!), making sure dinner is on the table for a family dinner, getting presents for family birthdays, etc etc. Many men are completely oblivious of how their family actually functions, because they’ve never had to do kinship work like this in any real, substantive way.
When men are exempt from kinship work and emotional labor, they have a shitton of free time and energy on their hands to explore other activities, activities that their busy, emotionally taxed wives cannot explore. This is a huge benefit for men and it has a huge cost for women.
I honestly think that this is the cause of many straight relationship breakups/divorces, because men have all this time to pursue personal projects and women are fucking E X H A U S T E D and busy doing all the emotional labor, and men end up looking at their wives and being like “You’re boring now. All you think about/talk about is being a mom. I need a ~partner~. Someone with more interests.”
So before you’re like POOR MEN fucking recognize that POOR MEN benefit from not being expected to do emotional labor and that these POOR MEN are GROWNASS MEN who are capable of changing that up and learning but DON’T. They’re not children anymore. They can actually do this shit if they want to.
To be quite honest, if you’re one of those “I don’t owe you an explanation, use google” queers/sjw, I can’t help but wonder if you realize how fucking privileged you are.
How privileged do you have to be to be able to afford telling a potential ally (or at least less bigoted) to go fuck themselves when they ask you a question.
And there’s a H U G E difference between telling an obvious sealioner to crawl up their own ass and tearing down someone asking a genuine question.
Can they use google? Yes. But for whatever reason they’ve decided to ask you. Maybe its out of convenience, maybe they want your specific opinion/perspective, maybe they’re just too lazy or don’t really care enough to do their own research.
Either way, you are being presented the opportunity to teach someone something important, and you’re throwing that away. You’re telling them, and anyone who sees your comment, that you don’t actually care about changing anyone’s opinion on queer folk.
Whether you like it or not, aggression chases off allies. Because ‘open minded’ people become ‘non bigoted’ people become shitty allies become kinda ok allies and so on and so forth. And frankly, I’d rather have a shitty ally who’s support is conditional who can maybe learn to be less shitty, than a douche bag that’s decided to continue being a douchebag forever because some trans person couldn’t be fucked to decline politely.
You don’t have to educate every single person that asks you a question. But don’t shut them down and tell them to use google.
A simple “I’m not up for explaining it right now, maybe later/maybe someone else can explain it” will suffice.
“Go use google I don’t owe you shit 🙃🙃🙃” isn’t gonna get you anywhere and its such a shitty, privileged response.
If the other person isn’t be rude, its fucking childish to respond to them with that kind of attitude.
If you’re actively putting out posts about queerness and putting yourself in the public eye as a queer activist-
If you self identify. As a queer activist. And then refuse to offer education to cishets. You’re not an activist, you’re just an angry minority.
I’ve always felt this way but I so rarely see anyone talking about it.
I know no one “owes” anybody any answers or explanations, but if someone is genuinely asking, there’s no reason to be rude and dismissive. There are polite ways to decline to answer. They’re just trying to educate themselves, don’t be an ass.
Been thinking about this even more than usual lately. I totally get that there ARE people out there who actually have no interest in understanding others and all they want to do is wear you out—but I personally don’t see this as the motive and tactic of the average person, it’s more the work of a vocal minority.
Sorry if this is all over the place, guys.
There are so many people who exist outside of Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, etc. and there are those who spend very little time on said sites. Their questions may seem like acts of disrespect or rudeness, but think about it; you read about this stuff every day, most likely from people who share your beliefs and conviction. Not everyone is exposed to the same ideological rhetoric and at the same rate. Some people have the same passion and desire to help others, but their sources differ.
I am of the belief that the average person doesn’t lack empathy so far as to want to fuck over the world and a chunk of its inhabitants “just ‘cuz.” People may act selfishly, but most of them want others to be OK somehow. They’re not sadists. They’re not deliberately trying to cause harm for the mere sake of it—that would be cruel and evil. To assume that most of the world is senselessly evil, is just… No. Most people may be misguided, but not evil or unreasonable. (Many are jerks, but they’re not incapable of decency and may simply fail to see the real harm in what they say or do.) It’s just that these people don’t always agree how to best implement positive change. They even disagree on what is or isn’t positive. Good intentions don’t absolve a person of responsibility, nor do they erase impact, but I strongly believe they ought to be take into account.
When you talk to people, it’s important to see their humanity. It’s important to find some common ground. Hate typically stems from fear, so I implore you to learn what makes people afraid and assuage that fear with facts and compassion. I’m a Christian. When I see someone who’s afraid of Christianity so much that they hate it, I usually see where they’re coming from. I understand well that Christianity is and has been used to hurt and oppress others. I look past the anger of the person I’m addressing and see someone who, for example, abhors violence against LGBT people. Or someone who’s been terribly harmed by a religious family member, someone who opposes others being hurt and silenced the way they themselves were hurt and silenced. Well, I oppose that, too. There’s our common ground. The point is, what really is the source? Even people who say xenophobic things often have a well-intentioned goal, like “I want to protect my family.” I want to protect your family, too, and mine. Let me prove to you how immigration as a whole is not a threat to your family.
I want people to know where I’m coming from, and I wish to be understood. People seldom listen to those they deem unreasonable, and one most definitely comes across as unreasonable if one shuts down honest inquiry or ostracizes people for making mistakes—and when I say “mistakes,” I’m not talking about heinous crimes, I’m talking about insensitivity, jokes, repeating terms they’ve heard with little to no understanding of their real meaning or history, etc. Did you come out of the womb an informed member of society? Have you never said or done something, say, racist or sexist? Did you never have a phase in your life during which you thoughtlessly acted a certain way because you never stopped to think long and hard about how those actions could affect others or how they could be interpreted? Give people room to grow. Give yourself room to grow, too, because self-development and -improvement is something that ought never stop.
This might earn me some backlash, but…
I’m also of the belief that silenced ideas are not challenged ideas. You can’t get rid of an idea with a smoke bomb or megaphone or a riot. You can drive that idea underground with the threat of righteous violence, but you haven’t gotten rid of it. You can slap duct tape on someone’s mouth, but their ideas are alive and well in their heads. Harmful ideas ought to be challenged with facts, not censored without debate—maybe not 100% of the time and in all spaces, but definitely in places of education. Generally speaking, I honestly think speakers who have ideas one finds alarming, offensive, or controversial should be allowed to speak on college campuses in the form of a debate and/or Q&A. Don’t let those ideas slip away into the corners of the internet where they gain momentum unchallenged. Screaming is not an argument. Shut that shit down with research in places where people willingly come to learn. Universities are where people come to be exposed to ideas, even uncomfortable ones.
If an anti-feminist comes to speak, I honestly want to listen, not because I expect to agree, but because I want to arm myself with information. I’m not empowering the speaker, I’m empowering myself. I need to fully understand why that person thinks the way they do in order to refute their ideas. What are their sources? How do mine compare? I’m an independent woman. I don’t need other well-meaning feminists to tell me what I can or can’t handle, or what I should or shouldn’t expose myself to. I can think for myself. I have enough mental fortitude to be exposed to an opposing idea without completely losing myself. I don’t come back weaker, I come back stronger. I don’t need to be parented by feminism. And ultimately, my allegiance is not to any one particular ideology or movement, but to the truth, and I’ll go wherever that takes me. I’m not stupid, and I’m not a child. My brain is thirsty and I don’t need y’all censoring ideas left and right if they even slightly conflict with your own. How does merely shushing people up equip me to confront them later on? Because I WILL have to confront them later on.
Please know what you believe and why you believe it. Please don’t succumb to group mentality even if that group strives to do what they sincerely believe is good. I’ve seen it so many times where people can’t actually answer why they want something, they just repeat what they’ve been told and hope that it’s actually doing something positive. I’d argue that most of you guys have big, amazing hearts, but you can’t enact change with your emotions alone. Arm yourselves with facts (and understand that what you regard as “fact” may be considered debunked research or fiction compared to someone else’s “facts”). please expose yourselves to uncomfortable dissent from time to time, and please try not to treat the vast majority of people outside your groups as boogeymen. I think well-meaning people get so pumped up with passion in the heat of the moment—particularly when part of a crowd—that they react with disproportionate aggression.
I understand that debate or open exploration isn’t for everyone. If you’re a socially anxious person or the subject is too painful to discuss, there are other people in your movement who have the gifts of public speaking, good articulation, charisma, good mental health, etc. Share your thoughts with them in a way that is comfortable for you and let them engage with the others—please don’t pull them back because it’s “taboo” to have dialogue with “the enemy.” We’re all different, we all have different strengths and roles we can take on. Don’t let someone shame you for being quiet and/or nervous; you could very well be the emotional support vocal people need after a heated encounter.
I have a lot of feelings about this lol. Sorry for using this post as a launching point.
I love this.
Very much this. If you’re not willing to understand what other people believe, it’s ludicrous to expect them to make an effort to understand what you believe.
Girls who don’t lift up other girls confuse the fuck outta me
I just don’t have the upper body strength for it
Wait that’s not what you meant
Three things:
1. You gotta squat down and lift with your legs, so your upper body strength matters less. You would probably be surprised by how strong you actually are.
2. Use your “traditionally feminine” skills such as cooperation and consensus building to get that girl lifted. There is no shame in recruiting a third, or even a fourth girl to help you lift the first girl (and no shame in being a girl who requires a whole crew of girls to lift her).
3. Always get the consent of the girl being lifted. Some girls don’t like to be lifted and that’s okay.
there’s something magical about ugly women. women who broke the ruleset constantly imposed on us all, and instead of apologising for it, cracked a smile and carried on and blew people away anyway. women who looked in the mirror and saw something less than what the world told them to be, and did what they fucking well wanted to anyway
Cleopatra wasn’t beautiful. from what i gather, stories about her beauty were made up mostly to discredit her, but all evidence points to her being plain as day, but with the brains and the sheer unbridled force of an epic personality to pull of what she did, to be remembered like she is
Janis Joplin and Nina Simone and a dozen other female singers are still constantly mocked, even in their hallowed place in the halls of music history, for being ‘ugly’. do you think they gave a shit? it doesn’t mean your soul feels any less alive when you hear their music, when their voices hit your ears and the sound gets in your blood and makes you feel like you’re on fire
Carrie Fisher hated the way she looked. she loathed her lack of ‘classic’ beauty, picked herself apart constantly. she hated that she aged, she hated that she gained weight, but she decided in the end she didn’t care. and she was one of the most brilliant, hilarious, charming, and beloved women in recent history because the person she was underneath all the other incarnations of her stood larger than life
there’s a million other incredible women – scientists, activists, artists, poets, etc and on who completely blew apart the expectations of what women are supposed to be and do and want, in just about every era of our history. do you think more than a handful of them were truly beautiful in the way the world today quantifies it?
ugly used to make me feel angry and alone, and then i started listing names. now it makes me feel powerful.
and yet, “everybody’s beautiful” is what i see stamped everywhere right now. maybe, if you so badly need them to be. but if you do maybe that’s something you have to think about a bit more. how about “nobody has to be beautiful”
or even better, fuck beautiful. be amazing.
1.
“Ableist feminism is making reproductive rights activism all about birth control, abortion, and the right to *not* have children if you don’t want to, while writing off the fact that so many disabled people have to fight for the right to have kids, as if that’s not a reproductive rights issue, too.”
2.
“Ableist feminism is centering all their body positivity on “being healthy!!” when my body cannot be and will never be “"healthy”“ and i will always be ill.”
3.
“Ableist feminism is accusing people of being “bad/fake feminists” for not going to/participating in rallies, protests, and other events and ignoring how inaccessible these events can be.“
4. “Ableist feminism is criticizing people for not speaking up about misogyny and disregarding reasons why ND people may not be able to do so (such as lack of spoons, not being able to handle conflict/confrontation, difficulty with communication, etc).”
5.
“Ableist feminism is being outraged at the women who were sent to abusive asylums for being outspoken and such, because they “didn’t belong there,” while completely ignoring the institutional abuse of actual ND people.“
6. “Ableist feminism acts like autistic men are inherently more misogynistic than allistic men.”
7. “Ableist feminism is arguing that women’s concerns are valid because they’re not “crazy”
8.
“Ableist feminism is mocking people for “living in their parent’s basement”
9.
“Ableist feminism is no or poor accommodations for the disabled at feminist events.”
10.
“Ableist feminism is calling bigots ableist slurs.”
Let’s talk about ableism in mainstream feminism – submit your examples of ableist feminsim here.