• Viewing all posts tagged "feminism"

  • (via SoberInANightclub)
Atheist Barbie: She is soooo Computer Engineer Barbie’s girlfriend. I love it.

    (via SoberInANightclub)

    Atheist Barbie: She is soooo Computer Engineer Barbie’s girlfriend. I love it.

  • Citibank unsure how to dowdy up hot woman, decides to fire her instead.

    via Jezebel:

    Debrahlee Lorenzana says she was fired from Citibank because her beauty was “too distracting” for her male colleagues. Her story is a disturbing example of discrimination in a male-dominated workplace — but also of girl-on-girl crime.

    According to the source article in the Village Voice:

    She was told not to wear fitted business suits. She should wear makeup because she looked sickly without it. (She had purposefully stopped wearing makeup in hopes of attracting less attention.) Once, she recalls, she came in to work without having blow-dried her hair straight-it is naturally curly-and [branch manager Craig] Fisher told a female colleague to pass on a message that she shouldn’t come into work without straightening it.

    I’ve worked at more than one big investment bank, including Citigroup, and I’ve seen everything these articles discuss. From the girl on girl jealousy/hate, to the wardrobe policing of “pretty girls” differently than “office moms,” to the men who use the term “Office Hot” to describe the girls whom they’ll ogle inside the office, but would never give a second glance on the street… it’s all true.

    As far as I could ever tell, someone gets a reputation at some point (generally though no action of their own) and it just sticks… forever. Some women could walk in with pink hair and stripper heels (*cough*) and everyone would simply laugh and shake their heads. Other women take off their sweater the day the air conditioning breaks and can never get rid of the “slut” moniker. There’s never seemed to be rhyme nor reason behind it, unfortunately.

    When in doubt, wear suits and collared shirts. If they’ve got a problem with that, sue. It looks like that’s what she’s doing/did, so… Go get ‘em, girl.

  • Facebook.com/RaisingHomemakers

    (via awomansplace)

    Sidenote: The main website for RaisingHomemakers is … oh god I think I just threw up a little.

    So this link reminded me that in 1998/99, my “Home Ec” teacher was pushing hard for me to get into the “Future Homemakers of America” club because I can cook, and sew, and I know my way around a die-cutter. Apparently they host some sort of districts/states/nationals type of competition where young women (and a token boy, I’d guess) pit these skills against each other in a blood-soaked battle to the death… or something

    I was horrified. Though she assured me that “homemaker” in this sense just referrred to the “skill set” (OHTHATMAKESITBETTERTHANKS) I managed to avoid her for the rest of the year.

    According to the ‘pedia, it turns out that it was in 1999 that the FHA officially renamed itself to the “Future Family, Career, and Community Leaders of America.”But to me, they’ll always be that heartwarming group that tried to tell me that my natural affinity for arts and crafts meant I’d make a great mom.

    Fuck. Them.

  • (via brave-slut)
borninflames:

From photographer L. Weingarten’s “A Series of Questions”, depicting transgender, transsexual, and genderqueer people holding signs painted with the questions they have actually been asked by friends and strangers alike.
More photos at link above, and I urge you to click, because before I saw this work, I don’t think I’d ever *really* thought seriously about what it actually feels like to have your most private self questioned on a daily basis. The amazing thing is that, when you look at these photographs, the questions are being asked of you, and as a gender-normative person who’s never had to deal with this particular type of harassment, it really snaps into perfect focus the offense and outrage that these people must feel on a daily basis.
Thanks to Lipstick Feminists for the heads-up on this work.

    (via brave-slut)

    borninflames:

    From photographer L. Weingarten’s “A Series of Questions”, depicting transgender, transsexual, and genderqueer people holding signs painted with the questions they have actually been asked by friends and strangers alike.

    More photos at link above, and I urge you to click, because before I saw this work, I don’t think I’d ever *really* thought seriously about what it actually feels like to have your most private self questioned on a daily basis. The amazing thing is that, when you look at these photographs, the questions are being asked of you, and as a gender-normative person who’s never had to deal with this particular type of harassment, it really snaps into perfect focus the offense and outrage that these people must feel on a daily basis.

    Thanks to Lipstick Feminists for the heads-up on this work.

  • How to Appear Incompetent in One Easy Step

    Leslie Sobon’s blog post “Get a Geek in Five Easy Steps” was a maelstrom of fail. In an Engadget editorial piece, Laura June has done a great job of explaining why the advice is terrible:

    Its source:

    This piece is on an official AMD blog, and Leslie Sobon is writing in her capacity as the vice president of one of the company’s departments. As such, her attempt at lame Carrie Bradshaw-isms are out of place, unprofessional and an embarrassment to the company that she works for, even if there’s a standard “opinions expressed here” disclaimer attached to the blog.

    Its perception of women:

    Sobon’s advice is like any ladies’ magazine from the 1950’s, in that she assumes you have nothing in common with your prey (you are man hunting, are you not?), that you never will, and that that’s okay. In fact, changing everything about your actual self in favor of a new, improved, less truthy “nerdy” girl is the best way to go about catching one of these rare and beautiful creatures.

    Its perception of geeks:

    Sobon, who has worked in the “high tech” industry for most of her professional life (she put in eight years at Dell before joining AMD in 2006), seems to have only encountered a pop cultural stereotype of nerds, not actual human beings.

    Correct on all counts, yet the Engadget response barely scratches the surface of the reasons I was filled with enough rage to track the author down on twitter and give her more than 140 characters of my mind.

    Before jumping ahead, though, let’s tackle the idea that the piece was meant as “humorous,” “tongue-in-cheek,” or as a [poorly executed] “satire.”

    Exhibit A: Sobon’s July 2010 AMD blog post entitled “What Women Want”:

    There are a lot of mixed messages here. For example, women don’t like “pink” marketing, but also don’t buy “black” computers. We “don’t like buying PCs,” but account for 66% of the market. Unlike the “Get a Geek” article, she throws out a perfunctory nod to women who build their own computers, but notes that technical jargon can be detrimental to the buying experience.

    Moving past the lack of innovative thought or cohesive message, the “What Women Want” article indicates that Sobon truly believes that the average female PC shopper is a bastion of female stereotypes – relying on word of mouth rather than technical specifications, disregarding price for emotional connection, yearning for a luxury buying experience, eschewing in-depth knowledge of the product to be purchased, and caring more about form than function.

    For my dollar, she’s probably not wrong. Most women don’t run overclocked, water-cooled systems, work in science or technology based industry or know the difference between an FPS and an RPG. But guess what – most men don’t either.

    Sobon has fallen prey to the fallacy that the amalgamative line-of-best-fit woman she has created as a tool to sell the most widgets (she is, after all, trying to pitch AMD products at the end of the day) represents the majority of women in reality. She’s shoved aside all the diversity of women that don’t fit her model and written to a fictional audience that, should it actually exist, is unlikely to cull its dating tactics from the blog of a company that produces tiny things in sterile rooms.

    The map is not the territory.

    I could forgive Sobon this transgression if she were a lowly Marketing Department lackey, stuck churning out clip art laden PowerPoints all day. In fact, I could see a variety of these “What Women Want” points being used internally to jumpstart a brainstorming session for a new advertising campaign.  (Not that they should, but I’ve worked in product development, and trust me – the internal vision of the end consumer is rarely flattering.)

    But PowerPoint lackey she’s not. Leslie Sobon is the Corporate Vice President of Product Marketing for AMD. She should be the one to encounter an article like “Get a Geek” and stare slack-jawed at her monitor, wondering what kind of lack of oversight would allow something so amateurish to exist on a corporate sponsored blog.

    I’m not going to waste space bullet pointing the outdated and incredibly inaccurate assumptions that most women are computer illiterate temptresses who will date someone with whom they have little in common, so long as the rewards package is good enough … and that all geeks (who are all male in the first place) are poor dressers, uninterested in sports and are so hard up for female attention that they will become captivated with any woman who deigns to speak to them at a “TweetUp.” Rather, let’s take a look at the more insidious assumptions which perpetuate a system where my tweet positing the article’s sexism garners me replies such as “The article is definitely guilty of playing to gender roles, but sexist it is not.”

    <facepalm>

    Don’t worry, the same user takes the time to educate me about what sexism is:

    Sexism is the belief or attitude that one gender is inferior to, less competent, or less valuable than the other.

    Thanks for that. Again, I’m not going to belabor the many ways in which the article implies women are less likely to be competent users of technology and more likely to be ok with subjugating their interests to that of a male, while that male need not pander to hers, or even the axiomatic heteronormative perspective.

    Rather, there are more subtle turns of phrase that reinforce sexism specifically with relation to the geek community. As a femme woman who works in technology, an avid sci-fi gamer type, and dater of more than one “geeky” guy, this is the stuff that just chaps my ass:

    1. Implicit association between a Good Man and a Geek
      Some men are geeks. Some men are douchebags. Some men who are geeks are douchebags. Shocking!!! In fact, the historically anti-female (or female devoid, at best) stereotypical male geek environment has been the basis for some good articles about why geeks aren’t the answer to every girl’s relationship woes.
    2. Lack of any discussion about a male non-geek trying to get a female geek
      Some women are geeks. Some women aren’t very good at getting laid. Some women who are geeks aren’t very good at getting laid. Granted – this advice is just as terrible when the gender roles are reversed, but a nod to the possibility of trying to woo a female geek would have gone a long way to mitigating the fail.
    3. Assumption that a geeky guy could or would be useful in every broken-technology/stuff scenario
      Writing QA scripts for 10 hours a day does not magically imbue one with the ability to troubleshoot my wifi connection. Similarly, being a network administrator doesn’t magically imbue one with the ability or desire to dig up my yard and fix a broken sprinkler.
    4. Implication that women would rather secure access to specialized labor/skills via … let’s call it “sexual outsourcing”… than by learning to do things that are useful themselves, while men wander around aimlessly, waiting to be objectified for said labor/skills, devoid of any desire to see seen as complex people with emotional needs.
      The basic premise that geeks are useful because your gadgets break (which, uh, I thought women didn’t actually use in the first place) is as ridiculous as saying you get sick a lot, so date a doctor, or you have a lot of legal problems, so bag a lawyer. It’s a wonder any mechanics in New York ever get dates. So few women in the city own cars.
    5. A woman’s ultimate goal is to get married
      “Most geeks don’t wear pants. They wear jeans or shorts. Just get over it and wait for the ring to diversify his wardrobe.”   
      …There are no words.


    The bottom line is that Leslie Sobon’s writing is lazy and it reinforces gender and subculture stereotypes. Remembering that Sobon was writing for the least common denominator of a mythical female softens the blow somewhat, should she have been sixteen and posting to her tumblr blog. As an article directed at a general adult audience on the official blog of a publicly traded technology company, however, it is inexcusable.

  • In honor of the Senate shooting down the Paycheck Fairness Act, I&#8217;ve created this very special image.

    In honor of the Senate shooting down the Paycheck Fairness Act, I’ve created this very special image.

  • Women, always getting beaten. Metaphorically speaking.

    shitmystudentswrite:

    Feminism is an ocean. It’s large sea of ideals created a powerful current of changes in waves. The waves of feminism beat the status quo for women just as the ocean’s tide beats and erodes the ocean.

    (Fantastic tumblr. Check it out.)

  • (photo via tumblinfeminist)

Rep. Barbara Bollier, a Mission Hills Republican who supports  abortion rights, questioned whether women would buy abortion-only  policies long before they have crisis or unwanted pregnancies or are  rape victims.
During the House&#8217;s debate, Rep. Pete DeGraaf, a Mulvane Republican  who supports the bill, told her: &#8220;We do need to plan ahead, don&#8217;t we, in  life?&#8221;
Bollier asked him, &#8220;And so women need to plan ahead for issues that they have no control over with a pregnancy?&#8221;
DeGraaf drew groans of protest from some House members when he responded, &#8220;I have spare tire on my car.&#8221;
&#8220;I also have life insurance,&#8221; he added. &#8220;I have a lot of things that I plan ahead for.&#8221;

Kansas Rep Pete DeGraaf reminds you to plan ahead for rape!

    (photo via tumblinfeminist)

    Rep. Barbara Bollier, a Mission Hills Republican who supports abortion rights, questioned whether women would buy abortion-only policies long before they have crisis or unwanted pregnancies or are rape victims.

    During the House’s debate, Rep. Pete DeGraaf, a Mulvane Republican who supports the bill, told her: “We do need to plan ahead, don’t we, in life?”

    Bollier asked him, “And so women need to plan ahead for issues that they have no control over with a pregnancy?”

    DeGraaf drew groans of protest from some House members when he responded, “I have spare tire on my car.”

    “I also have life insurance,” he added. “I have a lot of things that I plan ahead for.”

    Kansas Rep Pete DeGraaf reminds you to plan ahead for rape!

  • sadtrombone.wav
Reading this made my nose get all scrunchy with disgust.
&#8230; and I generally like Doghouse Diaries, so now I feel dirty inside. Dislike.

    sadtrombone.wav

    Reading this made my nose get all scrunchy with disgust.

    … and I generally like Doghouse Diaries, so now I feel dirty inside. Dislike.

    (Source: theseanwilson)