Wednesday, 31 October 2012

The New Suffragettes: Should feminism be back on the agenda?

While some women may feel that feminism has become a dirty word, the organization UK Feminista has taken to the streets to demonstrate against the erosion of the hard won rights that have been won since "first-wave" feminism first gained ground over a hundred years ago. Helen Pankhurst, granddaughter of the legendary Emmeline Pankhurst, led the demonstration to Parliament. The demo is covered here by The Huffington Post:

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2012/10/24/suffragettes-storm-parliament-feminism_n_2008361.html

UK Feminista calls itself "a  movement of ordinary men and women campaigning for gender equality". Find out more here:

http://ukfeminista.org.uk/

And in case you don't know who Emmeline Pankhurst was, read here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/pankhurst_emmeline.shtml

The history of the original Suffragettes is summarised briefly here:
and here:
A fuller accoount can be found here:

While the Suffragettes campaigned long and hard, especially under Pankhurst's leadership after 1903, but before the First World War they had little success. However, Pankhurst herself along with many other women in factories and fields campaigned for the war effort and it was perhaps this that swung political opinion in their favour. Pankhurst is sometimes remembered for chaining herself to the railings of Downing Street, Buckingham Palace or to a statue in the lobby of the House of Commons (to prevent being hauled off by police before she finished speaking) but although these events happened and chaining was a Suffragette tactic she did not use it herself. She was, however, imprisoned for demonstrating - which deeply affected her. She is also less often mistaken for the tragic Suffragette who threw herself under the King's Horse at the Derby in 1913, but that was Emily Davison. She died shortly after women received equal voting rights with men, in 1928.

Julia Gillard's misogyny speech

You may have heard about the furore over Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard's robust response to a statement made by Leader of the Opposition Tony Abbott on sexism and misogyny. Abbott was accused of hypocrisy over the scandal that led to the forced resignation of Speaker of the House Peter Slipper, who had been sending lurid text messages to a colleague. The video had 2 million hits on YouTube, but was removed for copyrigth reasons at the request of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The full 15 minute speech is available however at the Sydney Morning Herald site:

and if you can't spare 15 minutes, a clip is available from the BBC:


On a similar theme, Sky TV is no stranger to sexism after the scandal that led to the sacking of Sky Sports pundit Andy Gray and the resignation of co-presenter Richard Keys in 2011 -


Keys and Gray are now Radio Presenters, but sadly don't appear to be much reconstructed

http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/blog/2012/mar/14/richard-keys-andy-gray-history

So it's perhapsnot surprising to find that an Australian Sky presenter of 25 years' experience, Tracey Spicer, finally exploded with a public letter to a fictional "Mr Misogynist" railing at the sexism she had experienced in her career (just before Gillard's speech, in fact) that also went viral. You can read it and hear Spicer interviewed here:

http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/and-heres-the-news-my-bums-got-nothing-to-do-with-the-story-20121025-28837.html


G.I. Jane again? Rape in the military wasn't just fiction

Back in the 1990s, there was outrage at the way in which Ridley Scott included what appeared to be a rape scene in G. I. Jane - the defence of the Master Chief being that this was what the enemy would do to female front-line combatants in order to manipulate their male counterparts into giving up information. The Tailhook scandal suggested that even in the absence of a threat from an imagined enemy, female military personnel may be at risk from unwanted sexual advances from their male colleagues, and particularly from senior officers. This year campaigner Naomi Klein has given this her attention and there has been some press coverage of the extent of cover-ups and intimidation of women who have accused other serving US military officers of rape, and Tuesday's Guardian reports a just-released documentary film on the issue The Invisible War and relates it to evidence from the UK. Prepare to be shocked.


More practically, the CIPD has surprising survey results on discrimination at work among HR specialists

and a link to an interesting podcast from 2011 on fairness at work.

http://www.cipd.co.uk/podcasts/_articles/_fairnessatwork.htm?utm_medium=email&utm_source=cipd&utm_campaign=cipdupdate&utm_content=311012_na_textlink_feature2.link3

Wednesday, 17 October 2012

The Post-men Man

Well, welcome back... I actively run this blog to support my Management and Gender course in the Spring Term, but I will less actively post throughout the year. Since my last post, late Spring and Summer were not only very busy but we lost four close friends and relatives including my mother, who was herself a remarkable gender role model. But having got through a very difficult period (another friend says it has something to do with Saturn) and settled into a new term, I  can at last get back to blogging again. Welcome particularly to those who have enrolled on the course for next term and are getting advance-oriented. This is a link I owe to Saku Mantere, on the "End of Man" proposition that has recently been aired (again).