quarta-feira, 21 de março de 2007

ai que giro!

pois...cheguei aos 100 visitantes...! Que Bonito :-)
E para desejar feliz Primavera a quem aqui chega, fiquem com uma imagem "quentinha" da ilha dos portugueses, uma ilha deserta em frente a Maputo, onde passei uma dia FABULOSO no Natal de 2005. Ai saudades....

quinta-feira, 15 de março de 2007

Por isto já não sou sócia da PETA ....


PeTA - Where Only Women Are Treated Like Meat

by Nikki Craft


Historically, sexual stereotyping, exploitation and objectification have harmed women. The women at PeTA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) have the right to use their bodies. Do they pose nude? No, they're fake nudes. Do they even portray liberating images of women and nudity? No. They work with Playboy Magazine where women are herded like cattle in limiting, stereotypical mass media presentations; or PeTA covers the body of the Go Go's cowering in shame behind well placed banners. These advertisement campaigns are not any expression of courage expressed by the Go Go's or by PeTA or any of their members, either. Sure PeTA ought to be able to portray sexual images, though we hope they'd do a better job of it; and when they place one of the harem of pimp Hugh Hefner (the Afghani/Saudi men's sexism has nothing on him) in the public domain to promote their organization they will have to take responsibility for how it will impact all women.

Imagine instead their ad agency hunts up a "contrarian" African Amerikan to get on his knees before a white man, shine his shoes while shuckin' n jivin' with an Amos/Andy grin to make some message about vegetarianism. Should we be duped into taking such an advertisement seriously? Should we be expected to take it as "liberating" because it's framed as "protest" yet upon looking deeper it's just jacking up racial stereotypes and white privilege? Would we be expected to, could we take PeTA seriously? Yet some insist we ought to when they are jacking up sexual stereotypes, male privilege and conservative politics.


terça-feira, 13 de março de 2007

Subvert the Dominant Pimpiarchy

óptimo artigo sobre o papel das mulheres no tradicional Hip-Hop da MTV

By Rachel Bell (versão completa em http://www.feministezine.com/feminist/fashion/Subverting-the-Pimp.html)

"Being a pimp is the epitome of cooldom. If you want to be somebody in this white world, to be the main man and have serious street cred, you've got to be a pimp. Or at least call yourself a pimp. This is the message from MTV. It's the message from hip-hop culture. It's a message that's been around for a while, but I'm pissed now because the media are letting it seep into our casual vocabulary without question.
"Nelly: Pop star, pimp or gangsta?" asks VIBE magazine this month. The wannabe gangsta rapper whose ubiquitous hit Country Grammar (Hot) sealed his status as a pop (super)star certainly likes to come across all bad boy and pimpy. His video for Tip Drill features scores of strippers lap-dancing for Nelly and his chums. We’ve seen this before but what made this video particularly charming is the chorus line, "It must be your ass cause it ain't your face'' and Nelly swiping his credit card down a dancer's arse crack. Nice.
According to VIBE, Nelly argues that the women in Tip Drill were paid workers who willingly participated in the video. I should hope so Nelly.
Many prostitutes are willing, paid participants but this does not make colluding in the degradation of women right. The male tendency to shift all responsibility onto the women involved speaks volumes about these men's attitudes to women.

To confirm his supreme pimpiness to the kids, Nelly got his own soft drink and called it Pimp Juice. He says that PIMP stands for Positive Intellectual Motivated Person. Hmm, let me think about whether I'll buy that? The thing is Nelly, I'm really not getting that intellectual vibe from your contribution to art. Please explain it to me.
A representative for Pimp Juice explained to VIBE that 'The meaning of Pimp has changed. To most people on the streets, if you say pimp, they wouldn't say it is someone who pimps out women. It's more like mojo, or your 'it' factor.' Ok, let's see. Nelly's videos tell us that he loves to lord it over scores of gyrating, stripping women. In his latest collaboration with Justin Timberlake, Work It, he and the 'teen sexgod' set themselves up as a pair of Hugh Heffners. They give Hugh the nod of respect by donning Hugh-alike silk robes, flank him on thrones in his playboy mansion while the camera hones in on tits, arses and the stripping playbunnies gyrating strangely on the snooker table. Nelly, your 'it' factor is wholly about being a pimp, a playboy and now, it appears, a bit of an old perv in a dressing gown.

If a twelve year old boy looks up to hip-hop 'artist' 50 Cent (who brags about being a pimp on Top of the Pops), drinks Nelly's Pimp Juice to get Nelly's 'it' factor, sees Ice T's video, How To Pimp Girls advertised on the street, if his only role models are artists such as Snoop Dogg and Ja Rule who tell him it's cool to disrespect women, if he watches rap videos that portray his sister, mother, girlfriend, future wife and future daughter as nothing more than gyrating body parts, what values will he develop?

If music videos are full of women who look and behave like porn stars, if every young famous female who is photographed has her mouth open ready to give head, if advertising continues to use young women's bodies to sell ANYTHING, if 'cool' celebs say porn is cool, then boys and girls evolving identities will be under pressure. Bombarded with these stereotypes of men and women, what messages are they absorbing? It will take a young mind of some strength not to conform.

Despite what Nelly's representative says, in the real world, on the streets of any city, 'pimp' still means what it says in the dictionary. But as the fantasy world of MTV and hip hop culture co-exists with the real world it also means many other things, too. In hip hop, and more recently pop culture, 'pimp' has become synonymous with 'bling'. In DBC Pierre's cult novel, Vernon God Little, the 15-year-old anti-hero Vernon pimps out his school friend, Ella. He knows only too well that, "pimps are already an accepted thing these days, check any TV-movie. Lovable even, some of them, with their leopard skin Cadillacs, and their purple Stetsons. Their bitches and all." (p134)

Nelly is the father of a little girl, who according to VIBE magazine is a 'baby-doll cute daughter'. I wonder what his aspirations are for her. I wonder what he would think if she decided to become a dancer and got her bottom 'swiped' by a man calling himself a pimp? So long as she was a 'paid worker who willingly participated' would he be well up for it?

Hundreds of thousands of girls and women, many just children as young as 13, are being forced into prostitution by traffickers every year. The US State Department believes the figure to be between 600,000 to 800,000 people. Demand is high all over Western Europe and men are raping trafficked children here in Britain.

Threats to kill their families, brutal beatings and rape keep them enslaved for years on end. Some of them are in legal and therefore 'acceptable' brothels in Amsterdam, most in criminal syndicates all over the world. Last year, The Guardian reported the harrowing story of a trafficked Albanian teenager who was forced into prostitution in Britain. For around three months she was made to work in a grimy Paddington brothel, enduring up to 16 hours of sex each day. "One night I had 26 customers," she recalled. "After work," the story depressingly revealed, "the pimps would rape her one by one, tie her down and use her naked belly to snort cocaine." I read this and felt a deep, deep hatred for the men who dare to treat another, more vulnerable human being in this way. I felt a deep fear for the future of all girls and women.
Last month, the Observer magazine's special report on human trafficking told more stories of children kidnapped from the villages of Albania and Moldova. Now another girl's hell has come to haunt me, too. She was an orphan who was abandoned by her boyfriend when she became pregnant. With the promise of work, she agreed to go to Moscow. There she was enslaved and forced to work beneath a railway bridge, for which her traffickers paid local police. Some 'clients' kept her for several days and brought their friends. One man kept her for three or four days in a basement and invited 20 men. When she objected, the pregnant girl was called a 'bitch'.

Do I make my point? "

António Ramos Rosa - Isto é que é Portugal



Uma notícia já do ano passado, com um quote fascinante do Ramos Rosa, na inauguração da Biblioteca com o seu nome, na Cova da Moura:

“Estou num lugar mágico de vida e sensibilidade. Isto é que é Portugal. Um lugar mestiço. Faz-me lembrar as mantas de retalhos que minha mãe fazia. A nossa sociedade é isto e não apenas aquele quotidiano das pessoas esmagadas e inexpressivas que vemos nos transportes públicos.A festa também faz parte da vida e estas pessoas estão vivas. Isto é vida. O humano é divino."

Retirado de http://redeciencia.educ.fc.ul.pt/moinho

e mais um mimo de ARR (quem quiser saber/sentir mais do AAR :retirado de http://www.triplov.com/poesia/ramos_rosa/index.htm )

Não posso adiar o amor para outro século
Não posso
Ainda que o grito sufoque na garganta
Ainda que o ódio estale e crepite e arda
Sob montanhas cinzentas
E montanhas cinzentas
Não posso adiar este abraço
Que é uma arma de dois gumes
Amor e ódio
Não posso adiar
Ainda que a noite pese séculos sobre as costas
E a aurora indecisa demore
Não posso adiar para outro século a minha vida
Nem o meu amor
Nem o meu grito de libertação
Não posso adiar o coração

Leituras


“O Longo Caminho das Mulheres – Feminismos 80 anos depois” percorre o feminismo português desde o seu despoletar, em 1920; e dá a conhecer as suas apologistas, integrando a actuação do movimento na História do nosso país.
Destaca as temáticas que os feminismos da viragem do século enfatizavam, designadamente as sexualidades, a luta pela despenalização do aborto, a violência exercida sobre as mulheres, os «estudos sobre as mulheres», a agência e o sujeito feminista, as mulheres nas esferas «pública» e o «privada», o “ciberfeminismo”, entre outras.
O livro é ainda recheado com a última entrevista concedida pela única mulher que desempenhou o cargo de primeiro-ministro em Portugal, Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo.
A autoria é de Lígia Amâncio, Manuela Tavares, Teresa Joaquim e Teresa Sousa de Almeida.


quinta-feira, 8 de março de 2007

Happy International Women's Day - Feliz Dia da Mulher !!


And so my fellow Women

Ask not what you can do for everyone else's hapiness

but what you can do

for you own :-)




quarta-feira, 7 de março de 2007

um óptimo site : One Angry Girl

Imagens que dão muita vontade de estampar em muitas t-shirts :-))





















Retirados de http://www.oneangrygirl.net/

terça-feira, 6 de março de 2007

Novo estudo da APA: Consequências da Sexualização da Mulher nos media - SEXUALIZATION OF GIRLS LINKED TO MENTAL HEALTH PROBLEMS IN GIRLS AND WOMEN



Pois, tal como falamos na nossa conferência na Benedita, a recente sexualização da mulher nos media e publicidade tem consequências, e não são poucas. Vejam este estudo da American Psychological Association.
Em cima, imagens do videoclip de Nelly " Tip Drill" (um clip de subir pela paredes que acaba com o dito Nelly a passar o cartão de crédito entre as nádegas de uma prestável senhora) e imagem publicitária da Sisley.



Artigo retirado de www.apa.com


SEXUALIZATION OF GIRLS IS LINKED TO COMMON MENTAL HEALTH PROBLEMS IN GIRLS AND WOMEN—EATING DISORDERS, LOW SELF-ESTEEM, AND DEPRESSION; AN APA TASK FORCE REPORTS
Psychologists call for replacing sexualized images of girls in media and advertising with positive ones
WASHINGTON, DC—A report of the American Psychological Association (APA) released today found evidence that the proliferation of sexualized images of girls and young women in advertising, merchandising, and media is harmful to girls’ self-image and healthy development.
To complete the report, the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls studied published research on the content and effects of virtually every form of media, including television, music videos, music lyrics, magazines, movies, video games and the Internet. They also examined recent advertising campaigns and merchandising of products aimed toward girls.
Sexualization was defined by the task force as occurring when a person’s value comes only from her/his sexual appeal or behavior, to the exclusion of other characteristics, and when a person is sexually objectified, e.g., made into a thing for another’s sexual use.
Examples of the sexualization of girls in all forms of media including visual media and other forms of media such as music lyrics abound. And, according to the report, have likely increased in number as “new media” have been created and access to media has become omnipresent.
“The consequences of the sexualization of girls in media today are very real and are likely to be a negative influence on girls’ healthy development,” says Eileen L. Zurbriggen, PhD, chair of the APA Task Force and associate professor of psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz.


Research evidence shows that the sexualization of girls negatively affects girls and young women across a variety of health domains:


Cognitive and Emotional Consequences: Sexualization and objectification undermine a person’s confidence in and comfort with her own body, leading to emotional and self-image problems, such as shame and anxiety.
Mental and Physical Health: Research links sexualization with three of the most common mental health problems diagnosed in girls and women—eating disorders, low self-esteem, and depression or depressed mood.
Sexual Development: Research suggests that the sexualization of girls has negative consequences on girls’ ability to develop a healthy sexual self-image.


“As a society, we need to replace all of these sexualized images with ones showing girls in positive settings—ones that show the uniqueness and competence of girls,” states Dr. Zurbriggen. “The goal should be to deliver messages to all adolescents—boys and girls—that lead to healthy sexual development.”
Full text of the Executive Summary, Report, and tips on “What Parents Can Do” are available at: http://www.apa.org/pi/wpo/sexualization.html