Monthly Archives: January 2009

Miscellaneous

Good news and bad news

Sorted for reading dependant on mood, starting with the good:

* A 14-year-old weightlifter has been recognised for her outstanding achievement. Let’s hope lots more women take up the sport.

*The atheist bus campaign has hit the big time.

* The Australian Medical Association is being bluntly realistic about the need for sex education.

Then the bad…

* Horrific accounts of forced marriage in Britain – and what is dreadfully noticeable is how almost all of the women who tell their stories here have sisters who didn’t escape.

* Ninety-nine per cent (99%!!!) of allegations of rape and sexual assault against London Metropolitan Police staff are dismissed. And guess who is doing the investigating?

Carnival of Feminists

Updating on the Carnival of Feminists

First and most importantly, my apologies for entirely failing to link to the very fine Carnival No 69, which went up before Christmas – when I was buried under a deluge of work. Must have been the medicinal brandy that made me forget it after that though.

Probably someone else has already pointed you that way, but if not, do go now!

And that segues neatly into Carnival No 70, which will be on Sheffield Fems on Wednesday – so now’s the time to get nominating.

I’m looking for future hosts – do drop me a line to natalieben AT gmail DOT com if you’re interested – don’t be shy, or I’ll probably come calling on you anyway….

Arts Books

Elsewhere…

I’ve been reading about the architecture and social history of St Pancras train station, which has given me something I’d never have predicted, interest in train sheds.

And writing about the wonderful Egyptian paintings of the tomb of Nebamun, soon to be back on display, of which I’ve had a sneak preview.

Women's history

How women are redrawn

Mary of Burgundy, the last Valois ruler of the state, wife of Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, chose to have herself depicted as a hunter and horsewoman, an active, powerful ruler, an only slightly feminised version (she’s sidesaddle) of the traditional knightly portrait of a duke holding a falcon.

There were a few images of her performing traditionally female acts of piety, but only a few. Her posthumous (she died at just 25) portraits, are, however, according to in “The Posthumous Image of Mary of Burgundy” by Ann Roberts (in Women and Portraits in Early Modern Europe, by Andrea Pearson, ed), in she becomes a traditional religious, pious, submissive female. (Maximilian was using her for his own propaganda purposes, he wanted her, and made her appear to hsitory “as a virtuous, passive bride, whose wealth he possesses to do with as he will”.)

How many women must have been rewritten such ways…

Politics

Biometrics, the great con…

Who knows why, since no one seems to believe in the scheme, but the British government is ploughing on with the ID card scheme – which is all built around biometrics – the “fool-proof, high-tech identity solution”. Well hah, hah, hah – this should be April 1.

For in Japan, a woman who had been deported used special tape to fool a fingerprint machine.

Miscellaneous

Weekend reading

* The Folger Shakespeare Library has an exhibition News Before Newspapers – about the really early days of the press. And if you can’t see the actual thing, there’s a pretty good online exhibition – hat-tip to Wynken de Worde.

* “Third-hand smoke” is dangerous – now I know why I instinctively recoil into the back corner of the lift when the smokers come in from their break. (Well yes, they do smell awful too.)

* But something nicer: traditional, fortified homes in China, made out of a packed mix of sand, earth, mud and pebbles bound together with glutinous rice and brown sugar”, some up to 600 years old, “tulou”, have made the World Heritage List, and if not yet safe are at least in line for preservation.

* An “ingenious new parasite” was found last year. It “makes the abdomens of infected ants swell and turn bright red. Birds mistake the ants for berries, gobble them up and spread the parasite’s eggs in their droppings.” (No it isn’t April 1, I checked – it was published in Systematic parasitology – although I can’t help feeling someone missed a trick there – the journal Nature surely would have loved it.)