Not exact matches
«I was appointed six months ago and the more I have spoken
about feminism the more I have realized that fighting for women's rights has too often become synonymous with man - hating,» she
said.
«The mainstreaming of
feminism in a lot of ways came
about because those folks were finding one another» on social media and on feminist blogs, Zeisler
says.
The signature metaphors of
feminism say everything we need to know
about how happy liberation has been making these women: the suburban home as concentration camp, men as rapists, children as intolerable burdens, fetuses as parasites, and so on.
And it's fair to
say the same thing
about feminism.
If anyone were to
say something as vociferous,
say about the Black Lives Matter movement or
feminism imagine the outrage that would happen.
Admittedly, the Church is not alone in disliking
feminism, and yet it never ceases to astound me when someone, male or female,
says «I'm not a feminist...» For some people,
feminism is only
about promoting «sticking it to the man,» man - hate / female supremacy, burning bras, and «pro-abortion.»
Which reminds me of another conversion I read
about this week, that of ««Godfather of Hipsterdom» Gavin McInnes [who
says that]
Feminism makes women miserable» -LRB-[h / t Julie Ponzi] I confess that I am so unhip as to have never heard of him.)
The tagline for her blog
says «style, disability,
feminism... and finding small beauties in a big bad world» and she writes
about her love of beauty in nature and in style, and how that brings joy into her life as well as how it has helped her in her many personal struggles.
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë (1847) There's not much new to
say about this classic of 19th - century
feminism and gothic romance, except that age 12 is the perfect time to read it — followed by a lifetime of rereading it!
In it, Amy delivers a poignant speech
about «the cool girl,» and Flynn has
said that
feminism, for her, includes «the ability to have women who are bad characters.»
«It was important for me to loosen the assumption that people have
about [
feminism],» Doyle
said of her curatorial choice.
«There are some wonderful dialogues happening between works,» May
says, «such as the relationship between factuality and truthfulness in storytelling, the representation of the figure in painting, systematic oppression, and creative approaches to conversations
about feminism.»
«The first wave of
feminism was
about decoration and aesthetic,»
says Siegel, «'90s
feminism was
about social role play and sexuality.»
Also, I'd like to hear what you have to
say about how exactly Richard Prince is so abusive to
feminism in his «monotonous» collages at Gagosian.
For a lawyer who advanced the cause of women's rights — in court and in her life — that belief formed the basis of what Ginsburg
says feminism is all
about.