Category Archives: Feminism

Feminism

The oh-so-compasssionate Catholic Church

A small step forward – Colombia’s first legal abortion (now allowed in cases of rape, incest, the mother’s life being in danger or severe malformation) has been performed. And you couldn’t think of a stronger case for the procedure – an 11-year-old incest victim.

The Catholic Church, however, has of course gone ballistic, threatening to excommunicate the doctors who performed the procedure. Because being humane, showing humanity, is of course well beyond its ken, and it no doubt fears the same sort of loss of control it has experienced in modern-day Ireland.

Feminism

From the mailbox

A simple billing: the first woman to bicycle around the world was a Jewish mother from Boston. And in what looks like a very thick wool skirt, and on a bicycle that I bet weighed a tonne.

Keeping to the sporting theme, a great idea: a scheme to provide girls in Ethiopia with running shoes, which should also help them stay in school and avoid early marriage.

Feminism History

The rest of the world really is another country

Having lived there for quite a while, I think that not much can surprise me about the cultural differences in attitudes to sex matters between West and East, but I’d never heard of having striptease at funerals before.

I interviewed the comic Tuo Xian who was one of the first organizers of strip shows in Taiwan. The performance of striptease at funerals, but also at real estate promotions and other occasion, started some 20 years ago and peaked during the mid-80s.

(From a discussion at H-Asia.)

Feminism Miscellaneous

A green field, a white sightscreen, and 500 runs

Apologies for the absence today, but I’ve been out playing cricket again – in what will be my last match of the season, which fitted in beautifully between London’s increasingly tropical-looking rainstorms.

And the groundsman – who was there to be congratulated, deserved it for delivering, despite the conditions, a grass pitch on which more than 500 runs were score between 1pm(ish) and 7pm (ish). That it all ended in a draw after that – well that’s cricket.

But then I came home and read this piece in the SMH about the shortage of sporting fields in Sydney – one “problem” apparently is that more women are demanding access to fields, so that there is less space for the me.

Which reminded me of the cricket fields on which I used to play in Sydney – which were barely deserving of that name. Probably the worst was one out in the shadow of the Kurnell Oil refinery at Botany Bay, which was grazed the rest of the week by horses. Indeed they had to be chased off the field before the game could begin. The chasers being followed, of course, by several women wielding shovels. Still, if you were unlucky enough to be fielding in the deeper reachers of say, deep midwicket, you were all too likely to find a patch of horse-shit that the shovellers had missed.

That was women’s second division, but I also spent a fair bit of my teens playing in the first division, which meant grass pitches, but on our home ground at north Sydney ridiculously short boundaries at each end of the pitch. So most of my time playing first division was spent standing at either very fine leg or very third man, desperately hoping to stop balls the keeper had missed from the bowler then considered the quickest woman bowler in the world.

I wonder if the women’s first division still plays on that ground? Sadly, I think ’tis highly likely.

And as for the lovely white sightscreens at each end of today’s pitch – well they would have been an unimaginable luxury.

Feminism

The MCPs are alive and well …

… and living in Australia. (Or at least some of them are.)

Here’s the ABC’s preview of the annual awards for male chauvinism and the SMH’s short summary of the winners.

One “winner” I know, Bill Heffernan, who in my time was a loud and brash conservative activist in the one-horse town of Junee.

The federal Liberal MP Bill Heffernan took out the political award for saying of the deputy federal Labor leader, Julia Gillard: “Anyone who chooses to remain deliberately barren …they’ve got no idea what life’s about.”

Although on scale of seriousness, the top award really should go to this one:

The lawyer Chrisovalantis Papadopoulos won the judicial category for saying a rape was only brief and “at the very bottom of the scale of seriousness”.

Tis said a book is in the offing. Somehow I doubt the standards have “improved” over the 14 years of the awards.

Feminism

The missing women

This month’s Le Monde Diplomatique has a roundup of the current state of sex discrimination against foetuses and young children. The story itself is behind a paywall, but the raw data is here, and frightening.

The worst figure is in Jiangxi and Guangdong provinces in China, where there are 138 baby boys born for every 100 girls.