Sentences with phrase «talking about feminism»

For years, Buffy The Vampire Slayer and Firefly creator Joss Whedon was hailed as a geek - friendly icon of feminist ideals, an illusion that finally came crashing down in the wake of a brutal blog post from his ex-wife Kai Cole last year in which she accused him of being a hypocrite for talking about feminism while...
You may think, «Hey, we aren't talking about feminism here!
«As we forge ahead with the #MeToo movement, it's crucial to respect the ways past and future generations talk about feminism,» Jerkins wrote.
I think about that old accusation of a Jezebel spirit when people talk about feminism or women in the church or whatever - term - you - want - to - call - it - now.
PFAFF: From the early 1970s, there was a lot of talk about feminism.
Earlier this month, Emily Grossman, a science broadcaster and science researcher, talked about feminism, trolls, and what happened to her after her televised debate with Milo Yiannopoulos over Nobel scientist Tim Hunt's assertion that women in laboratories «fall in love with you and when you criticise them, they cry.»

Not exact matches

Instead, I started listening to feminists talk about what feminism meant to them.
Stanford student and author Kiley Roache comes to Kepler's to talk about her debut novel, Frat Girl, that centers around fraternity life, feminism, and finding your own truth.
This week on Mom Talk Radio, Loryn Brantz, author of Feminist Baby, shares what it is like writing about feminism and body image.
Each week Amanda Laird, Registered Holistic Nutritionist, has casual conversations with guests about the health and wellness topics we're not supposed to talk about: menstruation, fertility, pregnancy, childbirth, menopause, birth control, sexuality, mental health, hormonal health and reproductive health, through the lenses of feminism and body politics.
This week I'm talking to Laura from Inside My Mind XO, a journal - style blog where she talks about anything from movie reviews, to feminism, to mental health and so on.
Oxford, England About Blog Thoroughly Modern Millennial is a no - nonsense outpost talking popular culture, diversity, feminism, and politics with a dash of lifestyle, cruelty free beauty, and creative writing — all with a generous heap of personal opinions.
For all the hand - wringing these days over whether a film fits a reductive notion of feminism, Magic Mike XXL's enthusiastic endorsement of sex and, as importantly, talking about one's sexual desires seems altogether rarer in American film.
Here is a new interview of Saoirse at the Toronto Film Festival and she talks about «Brooklyn», feminism and working in New York.
In the meantime, this group will continue to grow a community talking about gender, race, intersectional feminism, disability studies, social justice, and whatever else floats our collective boats.
The experience of talking with Lemieux in her studio about these and other notable works, both finished and in - process, made me very appreciative of her eccentric and enigmatic wit, conceptual feminism, meticulous craftsmanship, and reverence for art history.
On the occasion of it's final week, Art Matters» newest board member and co-curator of the exhibition Rujeko Hockley talks with longtime board member Lowery Sims, the influential curator who started her career during the time period of the exhibition - about curating, feminism and revolution.
Kathy Sheridan talks to Alice Maher and Koyo Kouoh about art, feminism and EVA International, broadcast on 16 April 2016.
In these essays, Kelly poses vital questions about the practice of making and talking about art, and argues for an art criticism that stems from psychoanalysis, feminism, and semiotics.
Artist Penny Slinger, a radical to the core, has talked about how frustrating she found 1970s feminism — her peers trying to take for themselves the recognition they hadn't had, rather than rethinking success and power altogether.
Only two years earlier, Wilson had opened the alternative art space Franklin Furnace where I met her for a talk about identities, feminisms, collaborations — and aging.
She has talked about how heavily her work is rooted in feminism and its impact on the visual arts, primarily in its questioning of conventions of practice and interpretation.
Black has talked about how heavily her work is rooted in feminism and its impact on the visual arts, primarily in its questioning of conventions of practice and interpretation.
On the occasion of her solo project at VITRINE (28 April — 18 June 2017), Marcelle Joseph talks to Cooper about hypercapitalism, feminism and the digital body.
The project, again, was to talk about what kind of feminism was needed today.
JS: I wanted to talk about your involvement with feminism — you describe growing up in a matriarchal family structure.
In a combination lecture and demonstration, join Pyramid Atlantic and the Brentwood Arts Exchange for a talk about printmaking and its role in feminism and social justice.
I talk about my upcoming exhibition at Littlejohn Contemporary and the subtle way feminism plays a role in my work.
They talk about wide range of subjects including feminist debates around pornography and sex work, University of Chicago's recent statement on safe spaces, freedom of speech and political correctness, cyber sex - work, Bedford Vs. Canada case, and the common grounds between radical feminism and the religious far - right.
They talk about wide range of subjects including feminist debates around pornography and sex work, University of Chicago's recent statement on safe spaces, freedom of speech and political correctness, cyber sex - work, Bedford [v] Canada case, and the common grounds between radical feminism and the religious far - right.»
Oxford, England About Blog Thoroughly Modern Millennial is a no - nonsense outpost talking popular culture, diversity, feminism, and politics with a dash of lifestyle, cruelty free beauty, and creative writing — all with a generous heap of personal opinions.
Amanda Laird is a holistic nutritionist, wellness advocate and host of The Heavy Flow Podcast, a show about the health and wellness topics we're not supposed to talk about: menstruation, fertility, pregnancy, childbirth, menopause, birth control, sexuality, mental health, hormonal health and reproductive health, through the lenses of feminism and body politics.
Amanda Laird is a holistic nutritionist, wellness advocate and host of The Heavy Flow Podcast, a show about the health and wellness topics we're not supposed to talk about: menstruation, fertility, pregnancy, childbirth, menopause, birth control, sexuality, mental health, hormonal health and reproductive health, through the lenses of feminism and body politics.
My mother, in particular, talked openly to me about civil rights for people of color (as well as native people of this country, who my mother felt very passionately about... but that's a whole other article), her objections to the war in Vietnam, feminism and her participation in marches in support of these social movements.
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