Category Archives: Feminism

Arts Feminism

From the inbox

A new feminist e-journal, FemTAP: A Journal of Feminist Theory and Praxis. From the table of contents:

Ime A. S. Kerlee Theory and Praxis: An Introduction
Nancy A. Naples Feminist Activism and Activist Scholarship in the 21st Century
Ann Millett Disarming Venus: Disability and the Re-Vision of Art History
Tao Valentine Receiving Love: Black Women’s Writing, Theory, and Experience
Alison Bartlett Dear Regina: Formative Conversations About Feminist Writing
Lena McQuade Transforming Tradition: Bat Mitzvah as Jewish Feminist Theory and Praxis

Feminism History

Remember, they weren’t the good old days

This almost defies comment:

Soon after, Einstein collapsed from the strain of work and moved into a flat adjoining Elsa’s, where she could care for him. Mileva finally agreed to a divorce in 1918, leaving the way open for Einstein and Elsa to marry, but once again by the time the wedding was imminent the physicist’s focus had already moved on. This time his roving eye had alighted rather too close to home on Elsa’s daughter, Ilse, then 20.
Einstein then made an extraordinary proposition: he would marry either Elsa, 44, or Ilse and he left it to them to decide which of them it would be. The problem was that Ilse was in love with Einstein’s friend Nikolai, to whom she confided: “Yesterday, suddenly the question was raised about whether A(lbert) wished to marry Mama or me . . . Albert himself is refusing to take any decision, he is prepared to marry either Mama or me. I know that A(lbert) loves me very much, perhaps more than any other man ever will, he also told me so himself yesterday.”
At 40, Einstein was impressed by the the “stunning youthfulness” of his young sort of stepdaughter but after much discussion, Ilse delivered her judgment: she did love Albert but only “as a father”. So Einstein married her mother.

From a piece in The Times about Einstein’s love life, a very long piece. Of what interest? Prurient I suppose (yes, I was reading it), but also rather interesting in revealing societal mores – so much for the alleged “morality” of the era.

Feminism

Got a woman’s story to tell?

Mary Turner is collecting accounts of women’s lives over at Her Stories.

Feminism Science

Sanity on the cervical cancer vaccine

Not surprised but still pleased to read that British parents are having a wholly sane reaction to the possibility of young teens being given the cervical cancer vaccine.

Two vaccines, most effective in girls between 10 and the early teens, are expected to be licensed for girls and young women in Britain within 12 months. Although immunising girls before they are sexually active may prove controversial, parents surveyed for the government are said to be “very positive”, with mothers more interested in details than fathers.

Feminism

One father’s rights issue I do agree with

This story illustrates another legal barbarity (see below), but also that some sanity has finally prevailed. Here a baby born on June 30 was technically left stateless because his parents were unmarried. From July 1, however, the father’s status as a parent is recognised.

Under Section 9 of the Nationality Immigration and Asylum Act 2002, which came into force this month, children born to unmarried parents can take their nationality from their father.
Mr Poole said: “You don’t have to get permission to be in any EU country any more, but all the old laws to do with your child’s nationality still applied until now.
“Fathers had no status or rights unless they were husbands too, so it’s good they have changed the law, but they should take consideration of people like Leo who have already been caught out. It’s outrageous.”

The next step must surely be to make this retrospective. I know some people affected by this, and they might be forced at some stage, against their principles, to marry, which is ludicrous. There surely must be the possibility of a human rights case in this.

Feminism

Legal barbarities

In Pakistan, women previously denied bail are being allowed it after a small legal change by President Musharraf. Not much, but any small advance in changing repressive laws should be appaluded.

Seventy women awaiting trials on charges such as murder and adultery have been released on bail from jails in eastern Pakistan after President Pervez Musharraf amended a law to give them the right to bail – a right previously denied to women in Pakistan.
Mr Musharraf amended the controversial Hudood Ordinance last Friday to allow women awaiting trial on charges of adultery and other crimes to qualify for bail. The women were freed in the past two days from jails in various cities in the eastern Punjab province, provincial prisons chief Sarfaraz Mufti said.

No explanation is given as to why women specifically should be denied bail, but one can guess. Whereas I recall celebrated cases of rape and murder of women by men in Pakistan where the men have been walking around free.

No such signs of civilisation in the US, however, where a mother who was obviously acutely mentally ill is for the second time on trial for murder for killing her five children. The first jury convicted her of capital murder but that was overturned on a technicality.

Her lawyers say she suffered from severe postpartum psychosis and did not know it was wrong to kill seven-year-old Noah, five-year-old John, three-year-old Paul, two-year-old Luke and six-month-old Mary.
Prosecutors say Yates knew her actions were wrong because she waited until her husband left for work to drown the children in the tub and then made an emergency phone call, and later told a detective that she was a bad mother and wanted to be punished….
Saeed acknowledged that if someone is psychotic, discontinuing an anti-psychotic medicine could make the person’s condition worse.