Blogs
9b. The Uninformed
Submitted by Marilyn on Fri, 04/02/2010 - 09:38The Uninformed
The message of the backlash is that feminism is bad. But such is not the problem. The absence of feminism is the problem. Where some see feminism as a failure, it has been a verifiable, qualitative and quantitative success. A working knowledge of feminism and feminist history allows us to expand on our ability to see the truth of our own reality from all angles – intellectual, moral, psychological, emotional, political and philosophical – and to imagine ways to change our individual situations for the better.
9a. Conservatives
Submitted by Marilyn on Sun, 03/28/2010 - 14:05Conservatives
Conservative women resist the personal and political maturation that one develops as a feminist. This underdevelopment allows them to ignore the paradox of living modern, educated and financially independent lives (available as a result of women’s rights activism) while choosing to barricade themselves behind the traditional shield where males control everything, including their minds.
9. Resistance
Submitted by Marilyn on Mon, 03/22/2010 - 08:41Resistance
Not everyone likes women’s advancement toward equal power with men nor do they like the idea of doing what has to be done to move forward, except in their own little microcosm.
Resistance comes from people who want to control women and are angry because they can’t. The resistors are, namely, legions of men and their colluding women all around us: spouses, the “guys,” educators, employers, the entitled, powerbrokers, traditionalists, politicians; and most importantly, those who devote themselves almost entirely to women’s subordination – religiosos. This lot is particularly active in acting on their anger against women for liberating themselves from male dominance.
8a. GREAT EXPECTATIONS (cont'd.)
Submitted by Marilyn on Wed, 03/17/2010 - 15:13GREAT EXPECTATIONS (cont’d.)
So! The perfect world that the women’s liberation was supposed to deliver did not come to pass. Not because feminism is a failure, but because there is no one answer. Nothing can be all things to all people. The feminist paragon is an excuse for the naive and a bludgeon for the mouthpieces of the status quo. A childish fantasy for the first; a misogynistic barb for the second.
8. GREAT EXPECTATIONS
Submitted by Marilyn on Mon, 03/08/2010 - 15:278. GREAT EXPECTATIONS
Today, March 8th, is International Women’s Day (and its 100th anniversary) and millions will be celebrating women’s achievements and making the case for women's rights around the world. And I will continue with this blog and its feminist purposes.
What will the world of women’s equal power combined with the feminine principle look like?
7c. EVOLUTION: Pulling Away From The Herd
Submitted by Marilyn on Fri, 03/05/2010 - 13:107c. EVOLUTION: Pulling Away From The Herd
Evolution is a bold thing. It requires leaving the herd behind and developing into something new. And it’s dangerous. Those left behind don’t like to have their worldview undermined. And feminists certainly know something about that!
As feminists developed their ideas and acted on their capacity for self-expression, the risks involved in doing so became obvious. The reactions from the status quo were severe. Most prevalent were vilification, ostracization, hatred, resistance to their vision and the wish to eliminate feminist concepts altogether. Susan Faludi describes this in depth in her book, Backlash.
7b. Evolution (cont'd.)
Submitted by Marilyn on Thu, 02/25/2010 - 19:40Evolution (cont’d)
What feminist thought and activism achieved for women between its early rise and recent developments – and more so in the last 40 years – is now history. In spite of blathering from naysayers and the fearful, resistant and misogynistic, the evidence of change in society to improve women’s lot has been clearly established. Not only is feminist knowledge reliable, it is dynamic. Generations will continue to use this knowledge to improve their mental potency and position to negotiate the conflicts between women and men and subordinately-minded women.
7a. Evolution
Submitted by Marilyn on Mon, 02/15/2010 - 20:147a. Evolution
The evolution of women from submissive to sovereign individuals controlling their own lives is a response to the millennial pressure, tension and conflict caused by male domination. Initially, the emphasis of the women’s movement was to “remove women from men’s power and its abuses.” As we progressed and improved our faculty for developing thought and language that expressed what we needed and wanted, our objectives and goals increased in value. As we removed ourselves from the conditions of male dominance and created supportive environments in which we could be actors on our own behalf, the evolution of the definition of power also presented itself.
7. THE FEMINIST IMAGINATION: Prime Mover
Submitted by Marilyn on Sat, 02/13/2010 - 17:197. THE FEMINIST IMAGINATION: Prime Mover
For millennia, women accepted life as they knew it as a given. They had little or no independent models as reference through which to articulate their vision and establish their own narrative. Nor did they have the social and cultural wherewithal. Confronting entrenched beliefs was done in a vacuum and individual contemplation produced imaginings such as The Woman’s Bible – a rewrite of The Holy Bible by Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1895/1898) – criticizing biblical interpretation that denigrated women and women's role.
6. THE FEMININE PRINCIPLE
Submitted by Marilyn on Tue, 02/09/2010 - 08:586. THE FEMININE PRINCIPLE
Below is my definition of the feminine principle as it appears in my book, TALKING THE WALK, The Grassroots Language of Feminism © 2008.
1. Survival of the self; and the procreation and protection of life.
2. Fulfillment of human nature; development of all potential to its highest ability.
3. Embodiment and will of the principle.
