Friday, January 20, 2012

Women's History Month: Call for Papers, Presentations, Performances

Colleagues and students:

This March as part of our Women’s History Month celebration, the Women’s Studies Committee wishes to honor the accomplishments of women activists around the world and throughout history. Recently Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Leymah Gbowee of Liberia along with Tawakkol Karman of Yemen were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their non-violent work to bring justice and peace to their societies.  Originally chartered as the “State Normal and Industrial School for Women at Radford,” our university is rooted in the same historical movement for women’s full participation in society that has impelled women like Gbowee, Sirleaf, and Karman to transform their worlds.


We would like to invite proposals from all faculty, staff members, and students for activities to be scheduled as part of our March Women’s History Month events.  We encourage proposals dealing with women’s activism in global societies, but we welcome any and all proposals. Our theme this year picks up on the Women’s Studies Program motto:  Know Your History / Know Yourself:  Build the Future.  

We welcome work in any discipline that engages questions involving any aspect of women’s lives, women’s history, women’s accomplishments, women and the arts, women and the sciences, women and business, women and society, women and the transformative work to change society.  If you would like to plan an event, present a paper, organize a panel of several speakers (including other faculty members or students), offer a creative performance, organize a reading or discussion group, or join the Women’s History Month planning committee, please complete the proposal form and send to mpbaker@radford.edu.

DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS:  January 31, 2012
PROPOSAL FORM

1.         NAME OF PRESENTER(S):
2.         PRESENTER’S DEPARTMENT:
3.         TYPE OF PRESENTATION AND TITLE:
4.         TIME REQUIRED FOR PRESENTATION:
5.         LIST OF POSSIBLE DAYS OF WEEK AND TIMES FOR PRESENTATION.  (WE WILL SCHEDULE AND NOTIFY YOU)
6.         TECHNOLOGY NEEDS FOR PRESENTATION

Sincerely,

Moira P. Baker
Professor of English
Director of Women’s Studies Program
mpbaker@radford.edu

Happy 2012!

I’m not incredibly good with dates, but based on some emails I’ve received recently and dates I actually know, some feminist milestones this year include: Ms. Magazine and Title IX turn forty.


Alice Walker’s novel The Color Purple turns thirty, Toni Morrison’s novel Beloved is twenty-five, and it’s been twenty years since Rebecca Walker declared herself the third wave.



Know one of the many milestones I’ve missed?  Please, share in the comments below J

Monday, January 16, 2012

Lepore's Birthright

Recently, The New Yorker ran an article by Jill Lepore, Birthright, about Planned Parenthood. The first birth control clinic in the United States opened in 1916 in Brooklyn, not too far from where the Brooklyn Planned Parenthood stands today. There are now almost eight hundred clinics in the U.S. operating under the eighty-two Planned Parenthood affiliates. The clinic in Brooklyn is one of four Planned Parenthood clinics in New York City. In the last year, the Brooklyn clinic saw seventeen thousand patients.

Planned Parenthood stays in the political cross-hairs year after year. Planned Parenthood has faced an argument in the 2012 campaign that abortion constitutes 90% of their work. In actuality, Planned Parenthood reports that less than 3% of their work is performing abortions. Planned Parenthood provides healthcare to women in a wide variety of situations with a wide variety of needs.

It is interesting to note that Margaret Sanger opened the first clinic in 1916 and, in 1920, women were given the right to vote. We have since moved on from human rights to person-hood rights.

Today, college students have access to a wide variety of contraceptive options through health services. Others have Planned Parenthood or their doctor. When Sanger began nursing the women living on the Lower East Side, the women were poor and immigrants. They begged Sanger for information about birth control. Imagine pregnancy after pregnancy, completely out of your control. In 1912, Sanger began writing and distributing information about contraception. Sanger conceived the term “birth control” in 1914. She wrote essays that were censored, she was indicted and forced to flee the country, returned, and, opened a clinic. Sanger was arrested, along with her sister, Ethel Byrne and Fania Mindell, the receptionist. The clinic was shut down. Sanger and Byrne were sentenced to 30 days.

The American Birth Control League was founded by Sanger in 1921. Lepore continues with more of Sanger’s life, her battles and achievements.

Lepore interviewed Cecile Richards, the current Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) president. Her life has been shaped by an incredible number of democratic turns, her life entwined in fighting for justice; she has been involved in a number of important events at the age of fifty-four.

Lepore goes on to talk about Planned Parenthood today and where it is headed. With the multitudes Planned Parenthood serves nationwide, therehttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif is no doubt that it is very necessary and there is no doubt that there will continue to be raging debates long into 2012 and beyond.

♀ To read Jill Lepore’s article, Birthright, go to:
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/11/14/111114fa_fact_lepore?currentPage=all

♀ To listen to Jill Lepore talk about her article, go here:
http://www.newyorker.com/online/2011/11/14/111114on_audio_lepore

♀ For more about the history of Planned Parenthood, read this:
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/newsdesk/2011/11/planned-parenthood.html

♀ To listen to the NPR story, “How Birth Control and Abortion Became Politicized” click here:
http://www.npr.org/2011/11/09/142097521/how-birth-control-and-abortion-became-politicized

♀ For information from PBS about Margaret Sanger read this:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/pill/peopleevents/p_sanger.html

♀ To watch the PBS movie, The Pill, go here:
http://encore.radford.edu/iii/encore/record/C__Rb1767743__Sthe+pill__P0%2C2__Orightresult__X5?lang=eng&suite=cobalt (Streamihttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifng, access provided by Radford University’s McConnell Library)

♀ For more information about Cecile Richards, go here:
http://www.plannedparenthood.org/about-us/national-leadership/cecile-richards-4676.htm

♀ For more information about women in history, look here:
http://nwhp.org/resourcecenter/biographycenter.php