the_future_modernes: a yellow train making a turn on a bridge (Default)
[personal profile] the_future_modernes
Black ballet: Pointe break

Ballet is typically a white upper-class pursuit, right? Hannah Pool on a company trying to change all that…

Cira Robinson started "pancaking" her ballet shoes when she was 18: "I use foundation. The colour is Caribbean coffee – it's basic cheap make-up, but it works. Pointe shoes come only in the traditional pink, unless they're red for a show. It would look strange if there was a pink shoe at the end of a brown leg, so it helps with the line. My pointe shoes are brown because my skin is brown."

Robinson is one of eight dancers with Ballet Black, the company started in 2001 by Cassa Pancho with a mission to "provide dancers and students of black and Asian descent with inspiring opportunities in classical ballet". Of Trinidadian and British parentage, Pancho studied classical ballet at the Royal Academy. "All through ballet school I was really aware of the lack of black people around me," she says. "So for my dissertation I thought I would interview black women working in ballet and see what they had to say – but I couldn't find a single black woman working in ballet, and that really stunned me. When I graduated, I decided, very naively, to do something about it myself."

Cira Robinson, 24

Black ballet: Cira Robinson MORE


Oh my GOD! I LOVE watching dance, although ballet squicks me a little bit because I read very realistic dance fics and now I can't get over how much pain it takes to look so graceful. But I didn't really know how much I needed to see this until I did. Oh my LORD, look at this woman. Look at the other women, and the men. And read the rest of the story. I just can't, I feel so happy now!!!!
the_future_modernes: a yellow train making a turn on a bridge (Default)
[personal profile] the_future_modernes
Things That Feminism Could Do Better

Feminism should realign itself with social justice and avoid reducing all questions of women's lives to issues of sexuality and sexual behavior.

July 9, 2010 |




Editor's Note: Nina Power is a British philosopher and feminist, who published a must-read book, One-Dimensional Woman, out now from Zero Books. Power's brand of feminism stands apart because, as she has been known to say, we've had the "c"-word wrong all along. Indeed, capitalism is behind most of the issues facing women today. (Her book nods at Herbert Marcuse's 1964 One-Dimensional Man, which detailed the delusive freedoms of the capitalist system.) Power's book is a fascinating read, as she tackles subjects ranging from the farcical feminism of Sarah Palin to the usurping of feminism -- packaged as "women's liberation" -- to validate the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Power is witty, biting and thoughtful in her analysis, and a departure from mainstream feminist thinkers today.* O rly?

I should start by saying that this list should in no way be seen as an attack on anyone actively involved in feminist politics, or on the history of the women’s liberation movement. The fruits of feminism reflect the most successful and long-term social revolution that human history has ever seen -- this should never be forgotten. The list is simply a set of personal reflections on some current dimensions of the struggle, and could equally well be applied to women in general, as opposed to just those who identify themselves as feminists.

1. Feminism should realign itself with movements committed to social justice, and reclaim its ties to other progressive movements, such as the gay rights movement and campaigns for racial equality.
Feminism has sometimes allowed itself to become distracted by debates about essentialism (particularly in Britain), leading to ugly attempts to exclude trans-women from feminist debates, for example. Feminism needs to have a strategic and inclusive definition of "femaleness," which avoids compounding the oppression heaped on those who are already more likely to be the victims of violence and discrimination.

2. At the same time, the word ‘feminism’ itself (and the battles it wages) should become much clearer and stronger.
In an age in which Sarah Palin can describe herself as a feminist, despite passing anti-abortion legislation, the word needs to be reclaimed by the left and placed firmly back among broader questions of class, exploitation and oppression.

3. Feminism should not be misled by the successes of individual women at the top of their professions (politicians, CEOs, etc.).
Better than thinking of these women as "tokens," though, we would do well to see them as (sometimes) being "decoys" (as described by Zillah Eisenstein in Sexual Decoys). Which is to say, simply because they are women and successful, the success (and therefore end) of feminism is frequently announced by the media, and their noxious politics are ignored (think of Margaret Thatcher). Feminism would do well to remember how the struggle for real equality and fair income can sometimes be disguised by the purported success of the odd individual woman.

4. Feminism should be concerned with all women everywhere, and be careful not to focus on the experience of small groups of women in the West. Issues such as immigrant labor (which frequently revolves around childcare and housework for other families) often involve women from other parts of the world leaving behind their own families, and the misery that this entails. The issues affecting women in richer parts of the world may sometimes obscure the struggles against oppression, violence and economic exploitation taking place in poorer countries. Western feminism must not cut itself off from the rest of the world: there are many groups working and fighting for grassroots feminist activism around the world -- feminists everywhere should see themselves as part of the same global struggle, whilst nevertheless paying attention to the differences that exist in different parts of the world as part of this shared struggle.

5. Feminism should be wary of believing the fight has been won.
Keeping up the pressure on those who would roll back the achievements of the women’s movement (abortion rights, workplace legislation against discrimination, etc.) is a matter of urgency and perpetual vigilance. In Italy, for example, female pay has dropped to 40 percent less than a man’s pay for the same work; at the same time 46 percent of women there are unemployed. Berlusconi’s TV stations spew out endless game-shows featuring scantily clad young women pretending to be stupid. Things can always get worse: the point is to stop them before they do.

Read more... )
the_future_modernes: a yellow train making a turn on a bridge (Default)
[personal profile] the_future_modernes
The Listening Post - The UK election's TV twist


?On The Listening Post this week, how 90 minutes of TV airtime turned the British vote into a three-horse race. Plus, how the murder of one controversial politician opened up a race debate in the South African media.



Anybody in Britain? What do you think about the analysis here? Frankly I think they are too optimistic about the breaking power of the journalists because of the debates. Is it journalists who are asking the questions? If so, consider the choreographed, journalistically-managed nonsense that passed for debate in the US election.
the_future_modernes: a yellow train making a turn on a bridge (Default)
[personal profile] the_future_modernes
Slovakia proposes taking Roma children from their parents and putting them in boarding schools


Some 10 per cent of Slovakia's population are of Roma ethnicity - most are illiterate and live in poverty in the far east of the country.

To combat the problem, the country's government has suggested a radical proposal - that Roma children be sent to boarding schools in an attempt to integrate them into Slovak society.

The plan has already been condemned as illegal by human rights groups and the European union. Yet many in Slovakia see it as an essential measure to improve Roma standards of life.

Al Jazeera's Laurence Lee reports from Rankovce.



I was not very happy with the way this was reported either, I mean really? No mention of why exactly the Roma are poor and isolated from the general society? No examination of the harms that forced assimilation can enact on children and the minority group's culture? So here's a bit more context:


Roma Women sterilized against their death 30 mins Long but very worth it
Slovakia's Roma population has always had a difficult life. Regarded as culturally inferior, they are discriminated against at all levels. Now evidence suggests they are being sterilized against their will. Ingrid Ginova was just 16 when doctors sterilized her without her knowledge. When she publicized her plight, police threatened to imprison her. Her story gives added weight to a new report stating that Romany women have been sterilized for decades without their consent.

Produced by SBS/Dateline
Distributed by Journeyman Pictures


So we got segregated schools, segregated healthcare (one day a week for Roma women, the rest for the white Slovakian, segregated facilities), job discrimination, Roma are different and inferior and OH GOD THEY WILL OUTBREED US ALL!!!!! and on and on and on... and now we've got boarding schools!! Yeah I see where this is going. and it ain't ANYWHERE good. But the best that Al Jazeera English can do is make it look like the Slovakian have been so helpful to the Roma , for 1000 years, no less! I am so disappointed, they usually do better.

Roma Rights - Slovakia


And: Slovakia's separation barrier to keep out Roma



A bit on Roma history


and from Amnesty Int'l Slovakia: Roma Children Still Lose Out: Segregation persists in Slovak schools despite new law - Campaign Digest

Oh Canada!

Oct. 6th, 2009 08:42 am
the_future_modernes: a yellow train making a turn on a bridge (Default)
[personal profile] the_future_modernes
[personal profile] stoneself

So, first there was this:Expecting (swine) flu assistance, reserves get body bags from Ottawa

Aboriginal leaders said they were outraged and confused when dozens of body bags were delivered to remote Manitoba reserves after native communities demanded federal resources to fight a second wave of the H1N1 flu outbreak.

Chiefs interpreted the grim shipments as a dire prediction of what Ottawa expects will happen during this flu season to natives, who were hardest hit by swine flu in the spring.

MORE






And now, we find this:Alcohol worries kept hand sanitizer from flu-hit reserves
OTTAWA -- Federal officials spent days debating whether to send hand sanitizers to First Nations communities struggling with swine flu outbreaks because of their alcohol content, a Senate committee heard Tuesday.MORE


yeah.
the_future_modernes: a yellow train making a turn on a bridge (Default)
[personal profile] the_future_modernes
Lagos' youngest governor transforms the megacity- 22 Feb 09
People & Power - Italy's other religion - 14 Feb 09
The arrival of more than 1.5 million Muslims in the last four decades has made Islam Italy's second religion. People & Power investigates religious prejudice in the the predominantly Catholic country.


People & Power - The Secret State - Sept 6, 2008 - Part 1


People&Power reports from Transnistria, a criminal state only Russia recognizes.


People & Power - The Secret State - Sept 6 - Part 2

Profile

Discussion of All Things Political

January 2013

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728 293031  

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags