SUM 5 – Jordan Keesler http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org academic. organizer. activist. Thu, 21 Feb 2019 19:06:16 +0000 en hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.1.1 144595304 Contemporary Feminist Approaches to Ending Sex Oppression http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/contemporary-feminist-approaches-to-ending-sex-oppression/ Wed, 07 Nov 2018 15:08:52 +0000 http://hkeesler.agnesscott.org/?p=653 Within contemporary feminist theory, five main approaches exist in ending sex oppression: sameness, difference, dominance, postmodernism, and politics of identity. In this essay, I seek to define these approaches, provide variations within them, and the strengths and weakness present. To conclude, I will provide my own insight to what I consider the most compelling approach.

Sameness

A sameness feminist argument can be distilled to a formula where X and Y are two groups that are the same in all relevant ways in that they share the same characteristic C. Y gets some treatment T in virtue of C; therefore, X should get T, too (Hackett). Within this approach, feminists utilize different shared characteristics and/or different, but equal, treatments in virtue of C.

For example, Sojourner Truth utilizes a sameness argument where men are X and women are Y. She claims their shared characteristic, C, is that men and women are equal in strength since she is as “strong as any man” (113). Men, in virtue of C, are able to vote. Truth argues, as a result, that since men and women are equally strong, women should be able to vote as men are. On the other hand, Susan Schechter uses a sameness argument based on the shared characteristic, C, being victims of violence. X, in this case, is victims of domestic violence and Y is victims of other crimes. Y’s perpetrators receive punishment while X’s do not. Schechter utilizes this argument to promote equal punishment for perpetrators of domestic violence against women. Additionally, Kimberlé Crenshaw uses a sameness argument where X is white women who are victims of violence and Y is women of color who are victims of domestic violence. As both are victims of violence, Crenshaw argues that victims of color should also receive access to resources, including multiple language options and shelters near them, that help them just as white victims. However, Crenshaw differs from previous utilizations of sameness as she advocates that the treatment victims of color receive should not be identical to the treatment white victims receive. She argues that the treatment they receive should be specific to their needs as people of color, just as the treatment white victims receive is specific to their needs.

While sameness arguments fit into a formula, the shared characteristic C can be anything as long as one group is receiving treatment T because of that characteristic and the other group is not; Truth uses strength as the shared characteristic, while Crenshaw uses being victims of crime. Furthermore, sameness arguments do not always argue for identical treatment such as Schecter does, but can advocate for different but equal treatment that is attentive to specific needs of a community as presented by Crenshaw. This acknowledges the need for equal treatment of groups X and Y, yet it also acknowledges that equal treatment for X and Y may be administered differently to address the different social locations of those groups. A strength of this approach is  it both addresses individuals and systems in that groups, and X and Y can be two people or dominant and subordinate groups. However, a weakness lies in valuing the dominant group’s associated qualities, such as women being measured according to their “correspondence with man” and their “equality judged by our (women’s) proximity to his measure” (Mackinnon qtd. in Hackett, 245).

Difference

Feminist difference arguments address valuing women’s proximity to men, and argue that the “solution to ending sex oppression is to revalue the feminine” (Hackett, 95). Difference feminists believe that sex oppression is a result of society failing to value femininity (Hackett, 95). Within this approach, authors such as Vandana Shiva utilize a difference argument. Shiva stresses that women are different from men as women are conservationists of biodiversity. Men, on the other hand, promote “monocultures, uniformity and homogeneity” through capitalism. Since women’s work typically falls “invisible” in a world defined by men’s ideas of production and consumption, Shiva revalues how women’s work is centralized in the completion of multiple tasks, their contributions to conserving biodiversity, and subsequently, “balance and harmony” (238). Despite this difference between men and women’s views of agriculture, Shiva clarifies that this difference is not due to sex. Shiva steers away from essentialism, or the assignment of a trait to one’s sex for the sole fact that one is that sex. She acknowledges that this difference is a result of how “labour and expertise has been defined in nature” despite this difference being grounded in influences of “culture and scientific practises” (240).

However, other types of different arguments equate difference not to social construction but essentialism. This gynocentric argument “argues for the superiority of the values embodied in traditionally female experience and rejects the values it finds in traditionally male dominated institutions” (Young qtd. in Hackett 174). Chittister presents this kind of difference argument in “Calling the Power of Women.” In light of the war in Iraq, Chittister argues that women are invisible victims of war where they must take their place at the negotiating table and assume roles that allow them to forge peace due to their inherent spiritual responsibilities of life-giving (36-37, 75). She makes this claim based on the belief that womanhood inherently entails having a connection to faith which allows women to best promote and maintaining peace (37). As a result, she is revaluing peace and its connection to divinity for women, which is associated as lesser than, to be a source of power for women in anti-war activism.

These types of arguments tend to promote collectivity and pride, but when people expect a sameness argument, people can be put off when they expect an argument based on a shared quality as opposed to acknowledging differences. Additionally, difference arguments such as Shiva’s are critiqued for accepting differences constructed by patriarchy to be revalued which do not address the subordination of women. The argument simply values what “women are or have been allowed to become” (MacKinnon qtd. in Hackett 245).

Dominance

In response to sameness and difference arguments, dominance feminist arguments believe that how men and women are the same or different is irrelevant (Hackett, 96). Rather, they diagnose and critique the systemic relations of dominance and subordination. It does not ask how differences arise, but identifies the solution to sex oppression as the eradication of subordination. Dominance arguments address the root of the issue and what is enabling and upholding subordination. Sandra Lee Bartkey diagnoses the root of sex oppression residing within the construction of femininity. For Bartkey, disciplinary practices, or the ways we police ourselves and others to conform to certain practices, through which the “feminine body-subject” is constructed are a result of femininity (Bartky qtd. in Hackett 283). Due to femininity, women’s physical bodies are shaped by ideas of size, posture, movement, and gestures which labels them as women and therefore subordinate. bell hooks, on the other hand, sees sexuality as the root of sex oppression. Since heterosexual women have not unlearned the eroticism “that constructs desire in such a way that many of us can only respond erotically to male behavior that has already been coded as masculine within the sexist framework” they are upholding sexism (hooks qtd. in Hackett 335). hooks sees sexuality and desire as a key component to upholding sex oppression.

These two authors demonstrate a key variation in a dominance approach, what is viewed as the key component to sex oppression that needs to end. A strength in this approach is that it focuses on the material impacts on people’s lives as it seeks to diagnose the very root of an issue. However, in comparison to sameness, which offers a very specific solution of changing language or equal rights, dominance does not tend to offer a solution. It simply states to stop doing the very thing that is upholding sex oppression.

Postmodernism

Contrary to the previous argumentative styles, postmodernists do not believe there is a “single, universal analysis of what sex oppression consists of” and that sex oppression must be examined in context historically, socially, and culturally (Hackett 338). In practice, this means that “unitary notions of woman” are replaced with “plural and complexly constructed conceptions of social identity ” (Fraser qtd. in Hackett 351). To do this, postmodernists analyze discourse, or the “ideas, images and practices” that are associated with a “particular topic, social activity, or institutional site in society,” to discern how “power operates through ideas and representations” (Stuart Hall qtd. in Hesse-Biber 265).

This deconstruction of language complicates the notion of woman and its usefulness while acknowledging how power resides within that category. Judith Butler applies postmodernism to sex/gender in her essay “Gender Trouble.” Butler begins with exploring the category “women” as the subject of feminism, questioning “what it is that constitutes, or ought to constitute, the category of women” (353). The categorization of “women,” for Butler, raises political concerns of who is included in the category if the goal is liberatory. This seems contradictory to Butler, as inclusion and exclusion are imperialist and anti-liberatory practices. Consequently, this argument centers discourse as it explores the link between language and power.

Other authors see postmodernism beyond a philosophical standpoint and view it as a way to engage in political change. Stuart Hall uses parody to exaggerate racist stereotypes to note how these stereotypes are made up. This can be tricky, however, if people fail to understand the satire because it can end up reinforcing the stereotypes. Sharon Marcus, on the other hand, uses postmodernism to intervene in the language of rape. She analyzes the discourse of rape laws to point out the language used itself frames women as inherently rapable (Marcus qtd. in Hackett 371). She seeks to flip the script of rape by rewriting rape through “displacing the emphasis on what the script promotes-male violence against women- and putting into place what the rape script stultifies and excludes-women’s will, agency, and capacity for violence” (Marcus qtd. in Hackett 375). Here, Marcus provides a way to deconstruct language that oppresses women.

Overall, a strength of postmodernism is the goal of their movement. They seek to shift their “foundations from identity to one of functions of oppression” that allows coalitions to form and dissolve around issues. This allows identity to be a result of “contesting those oppressions, rather than a precondition for involvement”. In other words, identity becomes an effect of political activism instead of a cause that is “fluid, rather than fixed” able to change with time (Wilchens 86).

As a result, postmodernists are critical of gatekeeping, or defining who is part of an identity group and who is not, which has undermined activism in the past. However, postmodernism is critiqued by politics of identity for undermining feminist goals as it tends to remove a sense of community within feminism because it deconstructs identity groups (Frost qtd. in Hesse-Biber 51). Without a sense of what is a collective experience, feminists struggle to grasp how to move toward collective social and cultural change. Women of color are especially critical of this as it is easy to reject identity when one has always had one (Shantelle Donelly). bell hooks explores this in “Postmodern Blackness” where she states that “any critic exploring the radical potential of postmodernism as it relates to racial difference and racial domination would need to consider the implications of a critique of identity for oppressed groups” (365). Yet, hooks sees a powerful connection between others and Black folk who would now share “a sense of deep alienation, despair, uncertainty, loss of a sense of grounding even if it is not informed by shared circumstance” where they is space for “new and varied forms of bonding” (368).

Politics of Identity

Another approach skeptical of a universal understanding of sex oppression is politics of identity. Rooted in activism, politics of identity feminists generate their arguments from shared social identities opposed to shared values or party affiliations. They argue that “members of subordinated groups have a distinctive experience of injustice that is a valuable resource for challenging their marginalization and for establishing greater self-determination” (Hackett, 339). The Combahee River Collective sees identity politics as a site of “potentially the most radical politics” formed from “a healthy love” for themselves. This is a direct result of the collective seeing politics formed from one’s own identity opposed to “working to end somebody else’s oppression” as the best approach to tackling specific issues of their community as no other movement has considered their “specific oppression as a priority” (Combahee River Collective Hackett 414). Additionally, Chandra Mohanty can be read as defending identity politics for claiming that the most “disenfranchised communities of women” are more likely to envision justice as they have the “most inclusive viewing of systemic power” (Mohanty 232). It is in this identity that Mohanty sees a potential in “demystifying capitalism and for envisioning transborder” justice (Mohanty 250).

Mohanty’s understanding of identity politics is similar to the Combahee River Collective’s as both see value in the perspective that results from a particular social location. While Mohanty describes this as the standpoint of  “poor indigenous and Third World/South women,” the Collective sees this position as Black, lesbian women (Mohanty 232, Combahee 414). Mohanty argues the epistemic privilege of Third World women serves as a framework for coalitional work that reads “up the ladder of privilege,” while the Collective argues that if Black women were free then everyone would be free (Mohanty 231, Combahee 415). In other words, the Collective believes that not everyone should utilize identity politics whereas Mohanty believes that thinking from the space of marginalized groups provides us with an understanding of how to advocate for a more just and fair world (Mohanty 231).

A strength in this approach is the solidarity that can emerge from identity politics of shared experiences, but when identity politics are implemented, the boundaries of the identity being mobilized are inevitably policed. Postmodernists push back on the gatekeeping that occurs in politics of identity. Furthermore, who is allowed to be a part of an identity can be limiting such as who is “Black enough”, or “woman enough”, or “lesbian enough” to join the Combahee River Collective.

Moving Forward: The Most Compelling Approach

In looking at all five of these approaches, to pick one as the best approach would fail to capture the potential of the rest of the approaches for being the most compelling in a particular social, cultural, and historical context. To analyze how these arguments hold potential in different contexts, I will examine two examples where they could be implemented.

First, in the case of a woman being fired for taking too much time off work after the birth of her child and suing her company, the most compelling argumentative approach would be sameness and difference. In a court of law, equality is a “matter of treating likes alike and unlikes unlike” (MacKinnon qtd. in Hackett 244). Thus, a sameness approach is needed to gain legal protection. In this case, X are men and Y are women, where they share the same characteristic of humanity, C. Men in virtue of C get subtreament, T, of being able to take off work when a medical procedure or event occurs and women do not. Since women and men both share humanity, women should be able to take off work for a medical procedure or event, in this case birthing a child. However, sameness, in this case, is not enough. A difference argument could provide a revaluing of women’s reproductive capability, which has been considered subordinate, to promote pride in motherhood and a culture that allows women to take off work for delivery. The other approaches, in this case, are not as compelling. Dominance, in this case, does not help this woman in a legal context as she is not trying to end sex oppression overall. A postmodern approach would not be as compelling because she is not seeking to change the script around pregnancy or the stereotypes. Finally, politics of identity is not particularly compelling because she is seeking individual repercussions; however, if this was a class action lawsuit mobilizing from motherhood would be a strong approach.

For my next example of when Donald Trump banned the word “transgender” from CDC’s communications, a postmodernist and dominance approach would prove most compelling. In this case, instead of trying to be successfully persuasive in an argument, an analysis of the discourse would be most useful. Analyzing the images, ideas, and practices around trans people in the specific institution of the CDC is a particularly postmodern task where rewriting how we discuss trans patients is crucial in providing adequate and quality care. This approach would lend itself well with a dominance approach as well as it looks at how power operates through the representations of trans people. Diagnosing transphobia in the federal government would serve as a foundation for future activism work in mobilizing trans rights and justice. The other approaches, in this case, are not as compelling due to the context of this issue. Sameness would prove useful in a court case or legal argument if one was trying to show the shared humanity of trans folk with cisgender folk. A difference approach would be useful in trying to curate pride of trans folk who had been psychologically disenfranchised by the Trump administration’s decision. Finally, an identity politics approach could be implemented if trans folk wanted to act collectively in response, but they would have to define if this included not only trans men and women but also non-binary, gender non-conforming, agender, and genderqueer folk. This could become troublesome as trans folk would have to define who is “trans enough.”

In conclusion, the approaches taken need be attentive to their audience if they are trying to have a convincing argument or analysis. The audience will shape the method of approach alongside the end goal. Advocacy work entails different goals than analysis. Providing support for victims of trauma and uplifting them would not be achieved by analyzing the language in legislation. In all, every approach proves compelling depending on the historical, social, and cultural context.

Works Cited

Hackett, Elizabeth, and Sally Haslanger. Theorizing Feminisms. Oxford University Press, 2006.

 

(May 2018)

]]>
653
This is What Feminism Looks Like: Visions of Solidarity through Postmodern Identity Politics http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/this-is-what-feminism-looks-like-visions-of-solidarity-through-postmodern-identity-politics/ Wed, 07 Nov 2018 14:59:14 +0000 http://hkeesler.agnesscott.org/?p=649 Feminist postmodernism, rooted in theory, and politics of identity, rooted in social activism, have critiqued each other heavily. While both seek to understand and end oppression, they approach that task through different methodologies.

Postmodernists do not believe there is a “single, universal analysis of what sex oppression consists of” and that sex oppression must be examined in context historically, socially, and culturally (Hackett 338)*. In practice, this means that unitary notions of identity are replaced with “plural and complexly constructed conceptions of social identity ” (Fraser qtd. in Hackett 351). To do this, postmodernists analyze discourse, or the “ideas, images and practices” that are associated with a “particular topic, social activity, or institutional site in society,” to discern how “power operates through ideas and representations” (Stuart Hall qtd. in Hesse-Biber 265). This deconstruction of language complicates the notion of identity and its usefulness while acknowledging how power resides within those categories. Overall, a strength of postmodernism is its overall goal. They seek to shift their “foundations from identity to one of the functions of oppression” that allows coalitions to form and dissolve around issues. This allows identity to be a result of “contesting those oppressions, rather than a precondition for involvement”. In other words, identity becomes an effect of political activism instead of a cause that is “fluid, rather than fixed” able to change with time (Wilchens 86).

Outside of language, in a world where our identities have physical and material implications, identities are often a source for mobilizing against oppression. Rooted in activism, politics of identity feminists generate their arguments from shared social identities opposed to shared values or party affiliations. They argue that “members of subordinated groups have a distinctive experience of injustice that is a valuable resource for challenging their marginalization and for establishing greater self-determination” (Hackett, 339). A strength in this approach is the solidarity that can emerge from the identity politics of shared experiences.

As a result of their opposing approaches, postmodernism and identity politics are often seen opposition to one another. For postmodernists gatekeeping, or defining who is part of an identity group and who is not, is contradictory to liberation movements. Instead of liberating the identity one is fighting for, identity politics are “ fixing and stabilizing” identity “more firmly than before” (Wilchens 83). In turn, this creates normativities. Normatives are statements that “make claims about how things ought to be, or how they in general are” (Shotwell 141). However, postmodernism is critiqued by politics of identity for undermining feminist goals as it tends to remove a sense of community within feminism because it deconstructs identity groups (Frost qtd. in Hesse-Biber 51). Without a sense of what is a collective experience, feminists struggle to grasp how to move toward collective social and cultural change. As a result, envisioning unity across difference is often a speculative project for feminists; yet, authors like Alexis Shotwell, Sara Ahmed, and Chandra Mohanty, theorize open normativities of ethics, feminism, and Third World women to offer visions solidarity.

In this paper, I will explore Shotwell’s concept of open normativities as a form of postmodern identity politics. Next, I will analyze how Shotwell’s uses open normativies in her book Against Purity (2016) to advocate for an ethics that uses “practices of open normativies to pursue visions and practices hospitable for worlds to come, to determine what deserves a future” (Shotwell 163). I will then apply the concept of open normativities to Sara Ahmed’s understanding of feminism and womanhood in Living a Feminist Life (2017) and to Chandra Talpade Mohanty’s conception of Third World women in Feminism Without Borders: Decolonizing Theory, Practicing Solidarity (2003). Then, I will analyze how viewing ethics, womanhood and feminism, and Third World women through the lens of open normativities enables us to think through a postmodern identity politic providing a roadmap for collective action and solidarity.

Alexis Shotwell, advocates for an ethical and political response that refutes purity politics which believes that a return to before harm is possible in her book, Against Purity: Living Ethically in Compromised Times. While Shotwell does not explicitly identify as a postmodern feminist, her critique of normativities lends itself well to the ideas of postmodernism. Shotwell addresses norms as “constrictive and restrictive” forces that limit “the range of subjectivities one might inhabit of sexuality and gender” (Shotwell 142). This postmodern critique of the gatekeeping that occurs when boundaries of normal and not normal are defined is important for Shotwell; however, Shotwell is careful to not throw away normativies completely (Shotwell 144). Attentive to how normativities, in the context of oppression, force people to conform to whiteness, able-bodiedness, wealth, and/or straightness Shotwell concurs with the claims queer and postmodern theorists that normativities tend to be harmful. However, she is critical of how queer and postmodern theorists have predominantly made normativity “synonymous with ‘bad,’” and argues we need normanitivies. If we toss normativities completely, how do queers and feminists talk about the norms they want to make (Shotwell 143)? Conceptually, normativies are “the process by which people claim that a given way of being is good or beautiful, or to be endorsed,” where there can be any number of ways of being (Shotwell 143). Shotwell sees a clear distinction between supporting a way of being and forcing people to live that way as conceptually normativies are nonrestrictive. In turn, Shotwell advocates for open normativities in order “for finding our bearings even in the process of working to change the world” (Shotwell 154).  

Open normativities offer an alternative to how we understand normativities now. Simply, open normativities name “those normativities that prioritize flourishing and tend toward proliferation, not merely replacing one norm with another” (Shotwell 155). Flourishing, in this sense, is the goal of open normativities. In the context of oppression, normativities contribute to death and degradation when people fall outside of the current norms, but open normativies recognize and push limits that broaden participation in a normative resulting in liberation and flourishing. As lives become welcomed into normativies they move closer to the norm and consequently farther from death. Here, Shotwell offers a code of ethics in an attempt to address how to resist oppression by promoting flourishing. Acting morally, in her definition, is “holding in view how one’s actions open or close down the possibilities for others to unfurl their possibilities…” because our freedom is entangled and created in conjunction with other’s freedom (Shotwell 131). This code of ethics, as a result, is only successful in collaboration, as our freedom and, in turn, our flourishing- is dependent on other’s ability to be free and flourish.

Additionally, she is also is critical of the boundaries set within norms she calls for in her ethics. How we define groups, in this case, and who is allowed to flourish and have a future, must be critically examined. This code of ethics through the lens of open normativities, for Shotwell, does not have to mean completely new ways of being for flourishing to occur. Recognizing that we exist in a world with material implications, open normativities allows for ways of being, identities that have been suppressed, to exist as a way to promote flourishing. Our ways of being can reference marginalized traditions that are subordinate to current dominant and oppressive norms making room for them to exist and thrive (Shotwell 160). As a result, mobilizing around marginalized identities is still an option within open normativities as long as it is attentive to gatekeeping.

Beyond ethics, Shotwell’s claims that within almost any writing on sex and/or gender-based oppression and resistance will tend to be references to normativities (Shotwell 143). “To be queer and feminist,” to Shotwell, “is to resist norms” that are oppressive (Shotwell 143). Sara Ahmed, feminist scholar and activist, offers a look into this feminist resistance against norms in her book Living a Feminist Life. In her text, Ahmed views feminism as a work in progress where becoming “a feminist is to stay a student” (Ahmed 11). Part of feminism being a work in progress has been defining the normativity of women that feminism advocates for. Ahmed argues against the current normativity of women included within feminism. In order to do this, Ahmed acknowledges that throughout the history of feminism, Black and lesbian women had to “insist on being women before they became part of the feminist conversation” (Ahmed 234). Ahmed uses this example of how feminism historically was extremely white and heterosexual to propel her next argument for the inclusion of trans women. She claims, “Trans women have to insist on being women” so often in the face of violence, that for her, an anti-trans stance is to be anti-feminist (Ahmed 234). Ahmed supports her claim by stating it a “feminist project” to create worlds that dismantle the worlds that support “gender fatalism (boys will be boys, girls with be girls)” (Ahmed 234). Worlds of gender fatalism are deadly, not only in determining how cisgender women are supposed to be, but also for how trans women are supposed to exist or not exist.

Ahmed’s concept of women included in feminism presented is a form of an open normativity. Reflecting on how feminism has opened or closed down possibilities, Ahmed advocates for trans womanhood to be a valid way of being included in feminism (Shotwell 131). Noting the violence trans women face, Ahmed brings them into the conversation to promote their survival and flourishing. Importantly, she does not advocate that everyone has to live their life as trans, but simply notes it is a supported way of being. Here, Ahmed has made the space of womanhood in feminist more open and inclusive while also still working from a place of identity politics. Ahmed’s identity politics acknowledges that “if gender norms operate to create a narrow idea of how” women should be-white, small, not labored, delicate- then those who “who understand themselves as women, who sign up to being women, will be deemed not women” (Ahmed 234). For Ahmed, if feminism is not open to multiple ways of being a woman then women cannot mobilize.

However, Sara Ahmed is not the only feminist using forms of open normativities in her feminism. Chandra Mohanty in her book, Feminism Without Borders: Decolonizing Theory, Practicing Solidarity, argues for a decolonization of the construction of Third World women by Western feminists to promote for “women of different communities and identities to build coalitions and solidarity across borders” (Mohanty 226). According to Mohanty, the term “Third World” refers not only to “geographical location and sociohistorical conjunctures” but also includes “minority peoples or people of color in the United States” (Mohanty 44). Establishing this identity group is crucial for Mohanty’s claims about who holds epistemic privilege for visions of justice and decolonization. In this sense, Mohanty can be read as arguing for identity politics due to her defending that the most “disenfranchised communities of women” are more likely to envision justice as they have the “most inclusive viewing of systemic power” (Mohanty 232). It is in this identity that Mohanty sees a potential in “demystifying capitalism and for envisioning transborder” justice (Mohanty 250). This social positionality serves as a resource for these women to mobilize against the experiences of injustice. By including women of color from affluent and/or Western nations in her definition of Third World women, Mohanty is opening space to recognize the difference of inequality that exists within this identity (Mohanty 116).

As a result, while Mohanty does not use the term open normativities, she is engaging in this concept by making room for women who often are lumped into the category of Western women who have their struggles erased in a global context. Hesitant to make her language static, Mohanty is critical of her own language choices in advocating for this identity. For her, our language is still imprecise and inadequate where she can only use what best captures what she is trying to say (Mohanty 225). Mohanty demonstrates this by revisiting her language choice of Third World versus First World women from her first chapter, to looking at using words such as One-Third and Two-Thirds World or North/South in her last chapter. This hesitancy shows that this category is fluid and able to change to make room for others as open normativities do. Notedly, Mohanty notes this should not be confused with “universal sisterhood” which “erases material and ideological power differences within and among groups of women” (Mohanty 116). In this identity, attentiveness to difference is key for Mohanty as she is concerned with the material, historical, and political power with this group.

By seeing Mohanty’s definition of Third World women, Ahmed’s visions of womanhood in feminism, and Shotwell’s code of ethics through the lens of open normativities it enables us to think through a postmodern identity politic providing us roadmap for collective action and solidarity in today’s world. Fluid and ever-changing, Mohanty’s identity of Third world women through the lens of open normativities creates room for marginalized identities from around the globe to unite. Aware of shifting language and understanding, but also to material implications, Mohanty draws on both postmodernism and identity politics to advocate for her goals. Her postmodern identity politics guides us to understand the collectivity of a group while also noticing the differences of power, history, and politics that exist simultaneously.  

In Ahmed’s visions of womanhood in feminism, she too is attentive to language and how it has been a barrier for those who are included in feminism. Who has been considered “woman enough” has been a defining factor in the subject of feminist advocacy and for Ahmed we cannot stop at including Black and lesbian women. She insists on the inclusion of trans womanhood as a womanhood that should be valued in feminism. This attentiveness to the gatekeeping that has occurred lends itself to postmodern identity politics as Ahmed acknowledges how if we define woman narrowly then people who identify or are deemed women will not be considered women. For Ahmed, this is crucial in the future of mobilizing for feminists causes collectively.

Ethically, Shotwell addresses how gatekeeping can act as a way to push people into the margins, to mark their way of life as non-normative and thus closer to death. This postmodern critique of identity politics, however, does not cause Shotwell to completely reject identity. Identity itself is entangled for Shotwell with others’ identities which are situated in a world of normativities. By “finding our bearings” in identity, particularly open normative identities, Shotwell believes we can engage in the “process of working to change the world” (Shotwell 154). Inspired by Robert McRuer, Shotwell calls for a politic that “acknowledges the complex and contradictory histories of our various movements, drawing on and learning from those histories rather than transcending them” (McRuer qtd. in Shotwell 171). Rather than foregoing identity completely, her attentiveness to material implications of oppression allows for mobilization around identity as a way to promote flourishing while also being attentive to how language shapes that flourishing in this postmodern identity politics.  

In retrospect, while all three authors’ different arguments can be seen through the lens of open normativities they all are promoting visions of solidarity. Mohanty gives us transnational solidarity based on the “recognition of common interests” of decolonizing work where we can aim to move from “essentialist notions of Third World feminists struggles” (Mohanty 7). Ahmed’s call for feminist solidarity where “we keep each other up” and “loosen the requirements to be in a world” makes “room for others to be” (Ahmed 232). Additionally, Shotwell offers us a praxis that is situated in the present, but is working toward speculative futures of recognizing and mobilizing around our own interdependence-socially, materially, and biologically- which co-constitutes our freedoms (Shotwell 172). In turn, these authors give us roadmaps of how to manifest unification in a world that has become divided by race, political parties, borders, gender, and class. Perhaps it is here, in the open normativies of identity that political action will unite those who often are seen in opposition.

Notes

*Note, postmodernism does not apply solely to ending sex oppression, it can be any type of oppression. This quote just happened to use the example of sex oppression.

(May 2018)

Works Cited

Ahmed, Sara. Living a Feminist Life. Duke University Press, 2017.

Hackett, Elizabeth, and Sally Haslanger. Theorizing Feminisms. Oxford University Press, 2006.

Mohanty, Chandra Talpade. Feminism Without Borders Decolonizing Theory, Practicing

     Solidarity. Duke University Press, 2003.

Shotwell, Alexis. Against Purity: Living Ethically in Compromised Times. University of

    Minnesota Press, 2016.

Wilchins, Riki Anne. Read My Lips: Sexual Subversion and the End of Gender. Firebrand Books,

    1997.

 

]]>
649
Remembrance, Mourning, and Commemoration: The Power of Lemonade http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/remembrance-mourning-and-commemoration-the-power-of-lemonade/ http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/remembrance-mourning-and-commemoration-the-power-of-lemonade/#respond Wed, 28 Mar 2018 01:29:06 +0000 http://hkeesler.agnesscott.org/?p=352      Humans have created a culture of memorializing their own through physical markers varying from stacks of stones to elaborate granite tombstones labeled with names, dates, and religious affiliation; however, with the rise of the internet, memorial culture has shifted to include “cyber-gravesites” where people can leave messages on websites dedicated to those who have passed. These sites, both physical and virtual, serve as a place to mourn. Yet for the deaths of those whose passing is controversial and impactful on a national level, such as Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, and Eric Garner, a gravesite is not enough. Their deaths were felt and continue to be felt across the United States wherein 2017 alone, nine hundred seventeen people have been shot and killed by police¹ (Police Shootings 2017 Database). Despite gaining national attention, neither these men nor the pattern of systematic targeting black men face from police have a national monument for people to gather in community, yet a new form of community is forming around music videos such as Beyoncé’s visual album, Lemonade. Making its debut April twenty-third of 2016 when Parkwood Entertainment² and Columbia Records released it via Tidal³. Through the hour and five minutes of the complete album, Beyoncé depicts her journey of coming to terms with her husband’s infidelity. The album is characterized by its use of black women and children in conveying the feelings of the artist in regards to the violence black people face. As a result, this aggregative work manages to act as a memorial through humanizing the experiences of those who are subjected to state violence, acknowledging the survivors of the deceased, and creation of a space of public mourning and collective trauma.

     Foremost, Beyoncé manages to construct an experience that is “just so black”, as stated by Johnetta Elzie, curator of the Ferguson Protester Newsletter and organizer, manifesting a story of those impacted by state violence (Hudson). Stylistically, one can begin to see black culture through hairstyles which include natural hair, Bantu knots, box braids, Ghana braids, Havana twists, and cornrows. Additionally, lyrics such as “I like my baby heir with baby hair and afros. I like my negro nose with Jackson Five nostrils.” from “Formation” assert pride in “features that are so different from the European standards of beauty” (Griffiths). Coupled with archival footage from her own childhood, Beyoncé highlights the experiences of black children in what a voiceover claims as the “hood”. Forty-three minutes into the film the section “Resurrection” begins and last for the course of three and half minutes. In this time frame, a series of black women and girls are shown in historically southern belle style clothing in a garden in the background. A female voiceover plays and states, “Something is missing. I’ve never seen this in my life… They take our men, huh?” and the camera pans to a group of black girls and women. The voice-over goes on to say, “So how are we supposed to lead our children to the future? What do we do?” (Beyoncé). Following this, the song “Forward” begins and features the mothers of those who lost their sons to police brutality: Gwen Carr, Eric Garner’s mother; Lesley McSpadden, Michael Brown’s mother; and Sybrina Fulton, Trayvon Martin’s mother. These images empathize that those lost to police brutality have experiences beyond the footage of their deaths seen on cell phone cameras and body cameras. Humanization in the form of this album occurs in a manner described by Adrian Parr, an Australian philosopher, as “coded and given a fixed use” as the experiences expressed are relatable to those in the black community (17).* Consequently, those lost are socially alive and individualized through their own culture.

     Secondly, through this album, the artist acknowledges the survivors of the deceased, a crucial element of memorialization. In studies completed by Roberts and Vidal (2000) and de Vries and Rutherford (2004), they acknowledge that “most memorials mentioned survivors” and that memorials “support continuing bonds between the living and the dead” (Graham 39). Additionally, “‘almost all memorial sites contain a picture of the deceased’” as stated by Tony Walter, one of the only professors of death studies (Graham 48). Explicitly, Beyoncé manages this by the footage at minute marker 44:28 where she introduces black women holding the photographs of men lost to systematic violence. She partners these images with dark backgrounds and wilted flowers at minute marker 44:33 and finishes with the footage of Michael Brown’s mother crying a single tear at minute marker 44:57 (Beyoncé). These images show the grief of those left behind physically and symbolically with the wilt of the flowers and dark imagery. This collective trauma faced by these women inherently positions them together. This video is “supportive of both the process of remembering someone has gone and being with someone as a continuing presence.” as people who are watching online can formulate their own memories (Graham 40, Parr 15).

     Furthermore, memorials are used to recall tragedy and offer a place of mourning. In Beyoncé’s song “Formation,” the scene shown at minute marker 1:00:15 features her atop a New Orleans police car that is submerged underwater. By minute marker 1:00:58, a young black boy is pictured in front of a line of white policemen in riot gear were when he lifts his hands up they follow suit. The camera then pans to a wall graffitied with the phrase, “Stop shooting us” (Beyoncé). While this footage does not memorialize any specific people as seen with the images previously mentioned, it highlights that those who are lost to state violence such police brutality and the lack of governmental response to Hurricane Katrina are gone, but their existence was important because the institutions that perpetuated their deaths still exist. (Graham 49). Using platforms such as YouTube and Tidal where Beyoncé has a minimum of 13,236,698 subscribers, she has created space for interactions between complete strangers whether this is through comments on the album, reaction videos, or sharing the video on other social media (BeyoncéVEVO). Beyoncé furthers this space even further by premiering the film on HBO (Home Box Office) drawing 787,000 viewers drawing out 696,000 tweets the night it debuted (Murdoch). These interactions allow for community formation and healing through shared lived experiences.

     Overall, Lemonade as a visual album goes beyond a music video. The weight of this album is effective due to the historical context of its release. Black Lives Matter as an organization had already gained traction, embedding the memories of those impacted by violence and associated them with particular places, images, and institutions. Beyoncé takes what some may have forgotten but still hits heavy for the black and brown bodies that face systematic oppression daily and applied it to film. She creates a space for black people to mourn and hold pride in their culture through her album. Arguably, one may question why to memorialize the death of these people, to begin with, yet as Sigmund Freud claims the effect of trauma, once pushed out of consciousness, goes away (Parr 20). It has become an inspiration for activism, a place of mourning, and a symbol of remembrance. Remembering the horrors of the experiences faced by communities of color through film extends our ability to commemorate a person, manifesting a new way to bring a community together. 

(December 2017)


¹ This number varies by organization reporting and their methodology with Mapping Police Violence reporting 1,049 deaths by police in 2017. 
² Parkwood Entertainment is owned by Beyoncé.
³Tidal is a music and video streaming platform owned by Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter, Beyoncé’s husband.
* Admittedly, I as a white writer can speak on this specifically. 

Work Cited

Beyoncé. Lemonade, listen.tidal.com/.

BeyoncéVEVO. “Beyoncé – Formation.” YouTube, YouTube, 9 Dec. 2016,

     www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDZJPJV__bQ.

Elzie, Johnetta. “Johnetta Elzie.” The Huffington Post, TheHuffingtonPost.com,

     www.huffingtonpost.com/author/johnetta-elzie.

Graham, Connor, et al. “Gravesites and Websites: A Comparison of Memorialisation.” Visual

     Studies, vol. 30, no. 1, Mar. 2015, p. 37. EBSCOhost, doi:10.1080/1472586X.2015.996395.

Griffiths, Kadeen. “This Is What Beyoncé’s ‘Lemonade’ Meant To Me As A Black Woman, &

     This Is Why It Needed To Win Album Of The Year.” Bustle, Bustle, 11 Sept. 2017, www.bustle.com/p/this-is-what-   

      Beyoncés-lemonade-meant-to-me-as-a-black-woman-this-is-why-it-needed-to-win-album-of-the-year-37653.

Hudson, Jerome. “Black Lives Matter Co-Founder Praises Beyoncé’s ‘Lemonade’: ‘It’s Just So

     Black’.” Breitbart, Breitbart News Network, 24 Apr. 2016, www.breitbart.com/big-hollywood/2016/04/24/black-lives-   

     matter-co-founder-praises-Beyoncés-lemonade/.

Murdoch, Cassie, and Kaitlyn Kelly. “’Jurassic World’ Pulled More Viewers Than Beyonce’s

‘Lemonade’.” Vocativ, Vocativ, 27 Apr. 2016, www.vocativ.com/313517/beyonces-lemonade-posts-disappointing-       

     ratings/index.html.

“Police shootings 2017 database.” The Washington Post, WP Company,

     www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/national/police-shootings-2017/.

]]>
http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/remembrance-mourning-and-commemoration-the-power-of-lemonade/feed/ 0 352
Coming Out: LGBTQ Representation in Beer Advertisement http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/coming-out-lgbtq-representation-in-beer-advertisement/ http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/coming-out-lgbtq-representation-in-beer-advertisement/#respond Wed, 28 Mar 2018 01:14:39 +0000 http://hkeesler.agnesscott.org/?p=346      Durkin (2013)

The last seven years have marked many victories for LGBTQ people in regards to media visibility, presumably as a result of shifting public opinion and openness seen through changes in policy such as the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell in 2011 and the passage of marriage equality in 2015. One case of this shifting public opinion is in Bud Light advertisements. In an early 2010’s Bud Light static advertisement, the company breaks traditional imagery of beer advertising that features women in revealing clothes, sports, and U.S. nationalism. Instead, two assumingly white men are featured in a half embrace holding a Bud Light beer. In the copy it states:

LET’S HEAD OUT.

Be who you are. Drink what you like. And turn any time into a great time with the just-right taste of Bud Light.

IT’S THE SURE SIGN OF A GOOD TIME.

HERE WE GO (Durkin).

     Despite efforts to reach a broader audience and capitalize on the buying power of LGBTQ people, Bud Light encodes a message that is decoded as the only way to have a “good time” as gay men is to drink perpetuating the social invisibility of LGBTQ people and justification of further discrimination.  

    Analyzing body language in conjunction with the text, one can discern that a “good time” is sexual in nature. The two men are positioned in the foreground in close proximity in a half embrace with soft smirks on their faces with only faint figures in the dark background. To further the sexual innuendo, Bud Light couples the image with phrases such as “Be who you are” and “Let’s head out” bringing clarity that this couple is, in fact, homosexual in nature. By telling the audience to live authentically they tackle a truth many queer people face in regards to not coming out, solidifying their intended audience; however, this advertisement goes beyond a sense of empowerment. The phrase, “Let’s head out” can be decoded as going out to the bar to meet people, but in relation to the prowling nature of the men it insinuates leaving to have sex; consequently, this acts to solidify the audience’s understanding of the sexual nature of this advertisement.

     Despite the visibility of two presumably gay men engaging in an insinuated sexual activity, it does more harm than good to LGBTQ community. As discussed in Sexual Identities and the Media by Wendy Hilton-Morrow and Kathleen Battles, “media representation is often a vital source of self-recognition and identity formation” (77). Placing queer representation through drinking and sexual conduct in this ad pushes the notion that LGBTQ people cannot enjoy themselves sexually without drinking as Bud Light can “turn any time into a great time”. This further eliminates queer visibility as the lack of representation signifies that the people who do engage with the advertisement may be presented with their first interaction with this minority group (Hilton-Marrow, 78-79). If this image was the only representation queer or straight people saw the message it teaches states that being gay is only fun when one is drinking. This present another set of complicated issues as alcohol consumption inhibits reasoning capabilities and often times means people cannot properly consent. These implications justify continued discrimination and internalized homophobia of LGBTQ people as their sexual life is seen as not pleasant, consensual, or is predatory in nature.

    Moreover, what might have been a progressive advertisement for beer companies and the United States at large, proper representation falls short. The “respectable” white gay men of an average build are depicted as masculine in regards to their gender identity, which eliminates the vast diversity of the LGBTQ community. These men are the quintessential image of “straight passing” and largely could avoid active discrimination in the public sphere if they choose to not be out. Additionally, queer people exist across all racial and ethnic backgrounds, yet the ones presented are understood to be white and assumingly middle class as they can afford to be at a bar. In retrospect, this ad’s intended audience at first seems to target the LGBTQ community at large, but through a closer analysis, it shows the limited racial, gender, and class dynamics.  

     Overall, advertisements such as these generalize the experiences of queer folk shifting the heterosexual perception of the LGBTQ experiences and reinforcing internalized homophobia. While queer visibility promotes inclusion, the implied sexual dissatisfaction as a result of sobriety in the context of this ad contributes to already oppressive and self-loathing realities many queer youth face. Additionally, limited racial representation contributes to homophobia within communities of color along with the perception that queer folk has affluence in regards to class. Being who you are should not be commodified to who is presented consuming an alcoholic beverage regardless if it is two homosexual men or women wearing a limited amount of clothing.

(October, 2017)

 

 

Works Cited

Durkin, Daniel. “Durkin – Concepts Spring 2013.” Queer Imagery in Advertising, 13 Feb. 2013,

     durkinconcepts.blogspot.com/2013/02/queer-imagery-in-advertising.html.

Hilton-Morrow, Wendy, and Kathleen Battles. Sexual identities and the Media: An Introduction.

     Routledge, 2015.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

]]>
http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/coming-out-lgbtq-representation-in-beer-advertisement/feed/ 0 346
Epidemiological Profile: Undernutrition http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/environmental-science/environmental-justice/epidemiological-profile-undernutrition/ http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/environmental-science/environmental-justice/epidemiological-profile-undernutrition/#respond Wed, 28 Mar 2018 00:59:14 +0000 http://hkeesler.agnesscott.org/?p=335  The “What”

The World Food Programme reports that one in nine people will go to bed hungry every night (Zero Hunger). Out of this population, undernutrition will affect some of their lives greatly. Usually, more often times than not, we imagine this does not affect Americans, but in all actuality incidence rates, undernutrition is still too high on U.S. soil. Feeding America reports that “13.1 million children lived in food-insecure households in 2015” and over twenty percent of the population of children affected by food insecurity lived in Mississippi and New Mexico (Child Hunger Facts). Interestingly, New Mexico has a large number of Native American reservations with living conditions “‘comparable to Third World” where they are “23 percent more likely to be food insecure” compared to the rest of the United States’ fifteen percent (Native American Living Conditions on Reservations – Native American Aid; Gordan, Odde; Map of Indian Reservations in the Continental US). While food insecurity does not always equate to undernutrition, the lack of access to food is a sufficient cause of undernutrition.

So what exactly is undernutrition? Undernutrition is the result of a lack of food intake which leads to being underweight relative to age, stunting, or being wasted. The immediate cause of undernutrition is the lack of food, but prior disease such as parasites or HIV can augment the speed of undernutrition. The effect of being deprived of nutrients weakens linings of the stomach and respiratory systems and development of the fetus if pregnant. Consequently, this results in a lack of ability to fight infections, mental development, and lactation. In turn, children or women who are pregnant or may become pregnant are impacted the most (Burgess, Louis; What is Undernutrition?).

  1. Economic, Social, and Psychological Burdens

What are the costs of undernutrition and why should we care? Undernutrition plays a within social and psychological interactions. At an early age, nutrition is a vital aspect of growth and development and as they develop, if they lack nutrients it can, in turn, affect how they are viewed socially in life. The top micronutrients for development and growth are “iron, vitamin A, iodine, and folate” which leads to the development of the immune system, thyroid gland, and hemoglobin. An absence of vitamin A can lead to blindness or susceptibility to measles or malaria. Lack of iron or iodine can lead to the thyroid, which controls growth and metabolism, and the red blood cells to improperly function leading to developmental delays. For example, if a child survives into adulthood their lack of nutrients will affect their ability to perform as those “who are deficient in iodine and essential micronutrients have on average 13 fewer IQ points than those who are iodine-sufficient” (What is the role of nutrition; Nutrition Overview).

While this may not equate to every case of undernutrition leading to mental retardation or learning disabilities, it is shown that “bullying persists in our schools today especially for students with disabilities” which leads one to conclude that undernutrition effects start long before one reaches adulthood socially and psychologically (U.S. Department of Education). Consequently, students who do make it to school that are affected by undernutrition typically start later, perform poorly, or drop out of school. Clearly, this presents a problem when America’s workforce is taking a direction toward higher education when more than “30 percent of  U.S. adults 25 and older had at least a bachelor’s degree” which has increased by 4.2 percent from 1998 to 2011 (United States Census Bureau). This is even more troubling when looking at Native American populations were “among those 25 and older, 23 percent have less than a high school diploma” and only “46 percent have some postsecondary education” the overall in the U.S only “14 percent” have less than a high school diploma and “57 percent” have some postsecondary education (Gordon, Oddo).

Education, in turn, plays a vital role in the economic sanctions of undernutrition. The World Bank asserts that “schooling is associated with higher individual earnings” which “for an economy, education can increase the human capital in the labor force, which increases labor productivity and thus leads to a higher equilibrium level of output” resulting in more technological advances for an economy (Hanuskek, Wößmann). All in all, undernutrition not only affects an individual’s development it affects their future household income and their input to their local economy. Through impacting local economies those affected by undernutrition are in turn also affecting national and global economies.

III. Epidemiological Profile

Morbidity

    1. Number of Cases Before 2008 (Black)
      1. “More than a third of child deaths and more than 10% of total global disease to maternal and child undernutrition”
      2. “relative risk for morbidity associated with zinc deficiency is 1·09 (95% CI 1·01–1·18) for diarrhea, 1·25 (1·09–1·43) for pneumonia, and 1·56 (1·29–1·89) for malaria” after being diagnosed with undernutrition or malnutrition.
      3. Ages “1–59 months the relative risk is estimated to be 1·27 (0·96–1·63) for diarrhea, 1·18 (0·90–1·54) for pneumonia, and 1·11 (0·94–1·30) for malaria” after being diagnosed with undernutrition or malnutrition.
      4. DALYs (Black)
        1. While I could not find a specific value for the US population or Native American populations it is argued that “stunting, severe wasting, and intrauterine growth restriction together were responsible for 2.2 million deaths and 21% of global childhood DALYs” while 0.2% resulted from iron and iodine and “44 million DALYs (10% of DALYs in children younger than 5)”

Mortality (Black)

  1. Number of deaths from Undernutrition Complications
      1. Iron and Iodine Deficiencies-115,000 deaths globally  
      2. Suboptimal breastfeeding- 1.4 million child deaths globally
    1. Case fatality rates
      1. Estimated 449,000 deaths in children attributed to severe wasting and the implied case fatality is 2%, but actual numbers are unknown and are assumed to be decreasing.

Person Trends (Black; CDC; Gordon, Oddo; The Characteristics of Native American WIC Participants, On and Off Reservations )

  1. Note that while there are no specific studies to be found on direct rates of undernutrition in America or specifically Native American populations, there were studies on rates of education and location of populations along with deficiencies in nutrients for the following graphs.

  1. Place Trends (Black; Key Statistics & Graphics.)

Those with children are more affected by food insecurity and access to food as seen in the graphs below

  1. Time Trends (CDC; Key Statistics & Graphics.)


(Spring 2017)

Works Cited

Black, Robert E., Lindsay H. Allen, Zulfiqar A. Bhutta, Laura E. Caulfield, Mercedes De Onis,

    Majid Ezzati, Colin Mathers, and Juan Rivera. Maternal and child undernutrition: global and

    regional exposures and health consequences. Rep. no. 1. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg

    School of Public Health, 17 Jan. 2008. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

Burgess, Ann, and Danga, Louis. “Undernutrition in Adults and Children: causes, consequences

     and what we can do.” SSMJ. South Sudan Medical Journal, 2010. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

CDC’s Second Nutrition Report: A comprehensive biochemical assessment of the

     nutrition status of the U.S. population. Rep. no. 2. CDC, 27 Mar. 2012. Web. 17 Feb.

     2017.

“Child Hunger Facts.” Feeding America. Feeding America, n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

Gordon, Anne, and Oddo, Vanessa. “Addressing Child Hunger and Obesity in Indian Country:

     Report to Congress .” Indian Country. USDA, 12 Jan. 2012. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

     <https://www.fns.usda.gov/sites/default/files/IndianCountry.pdf >.

Hanuskek, Eric A., and Wößmann,  Ludger. Education Quality and Economic Growth.

     Washington, DC: The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank, 2007. Education               Quality and Economic Growth. The World Bank, 2007. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

“Key Statistics & Graphics.” USDA ERS – Key Statistics & Graphics. USDA, 11 Oct. 2016. Web.

     01 Mar. 2017.

“Map of Indian Reservations in the Continental US.” National Parks Service. U.S. Department of

     the Interior, n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

“Native American Living Conditions on Reservations – Native American Aid.” Native American

     Living Conditions on Reservations – Native American Aid. Partnership With Native

     Americans, 2015. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

Roser, Max. “Hunger and Undernourishment.” Our World In Data. Our World In Data, 2016.

     Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

“The Characteristics of Native American WIC Participants, On and Off Reservations.” Nutrition

     Assistance Program Report Series The Office of Analysis, Nutrition and Evaluation. USDA, May 2002. Web. 1 Mar.             2017.

United States of America. United States Census Bureau. Public Information. Bachelor’s Degree

     Attainment Tops 30 Percent for the First Time, Census Bureau Reports. By Robert

Bernstein. United States Census Bureau, 23 Feb. 2012. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

United States of America. U.S. Department of Education. Press. Bullying of Students with

     Disabilities Addressed in Guidance to America’s Schools. U.S. Department of Education, 21 Oct. 2014. Web. 17 Feb.         2017.

“Nutrition Overview.” Nutrition Overview. The World Bank, 31 Mar. 2016. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

“What is the role of nutrition?” UNICEF. Https://www.unicef.org/nutrition/index_role.html, 26

     May 2012. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

“What is Undernutrition?” UNICEF – Progress for Children – What is undernutrition?UNICEF, 4

     May 2006. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

“Zero Hunger.” World Food Programme. World Food Programme, 2017. Web. 17 Feb. 2017.

]]>
http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/environmental-science/environmental-justice/epidemiological-profile-undernutrition/feed/ 0 335
Energy Justice in Chattanooga, Tennessee http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/energy-justice-in-chattanooga-tennessee/ http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/energy-justice-in-chattanooga-tennessee/#respond Tue, 27 Mar 2018 23:17:49 +0000 http://hkeesler.agnesscott.org/?p=304 Energy in the State of Tennessee

As a result of the TVA Act 1933, which aimed to manage flood control of the Tennessee River and promote agricultural development of the Tennessee Valley, Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) was created. Since its creation, TVA has strived to maintain three E’s of its company: energy, environment, and economic development. In regards to energy, TVA seeks to provide safe, clean, reliable, and affordable power. In regards to the environment, TVA aims to be stewards of the valley including flood control and recreation while economically investing in jobs for the region and keeping power bills low.

Throughout the Tennessee Valley, TVA acts as the producer of energy that powers the electricity used in homes, businesses, and other items in our daily lives through a series of hydroelectric dams, storage pump facilities, coal plants, and nuclear plants. This energy then goes through a system of local power companies that distribute power to the consumer. These local power companies vary throughout the region based on rural or municipal areas.

 

 

Energy Justice in Chattanooga

In a recent survey, ranking cities by their job availability and growth, Chattanooga ranked second only being bypassed by Nashville for the state of Tennessee. Growth within the city has been credited to Volkswagen, who “brought on about 1,000 employees” within the last year raising their total employee count to three thousand four hundred fifty.  The Scenic City ranked forty-third nationally in regards to their job market which takes into account “employment opportunities, growth, and outlook” (Pare). Last year, the city added five thousand nine hundred fifty jobs with an employment rate growing by two and a half percent (Flessner). While Chattanooga has prospered, this prosperity has not been shared across all residents in regards to housing.

Chattanooga residents within four key neighborhoods have experienced a decrease in affordable housing. These neighborhoods-Highland Park/Ridgedale, East Chattanooga, East Lake, and Alton Park- disproportionately host households that are paying more than thirty percent of their monthly income on housing costs which includes utilities. Eighteen percent of these low-income households are paying more than fifty percent of their income on housing. To put into perspective, the average income of these communities is twenty-three thousand two hundred eighty-seven dollars with approximately eleven thousand six hundred forty-three dollars going toward housing expenses. Consequently, this means that some families in these communities are spending upward of nine hundred seventy dollars per month on housing costs. In context, the median income of Chattanooga is thirty-six thousand six hundred eighty-three dollars which makes their rent affordability at nine hundred ninety-two dollars.

Beyond affordable housing, these communities additionally face an energy burden. In the winter months, these neighborhoods use forty-three percent more energy per square foot than the average household in Chattanooga. This energy burden is exacerbated by the type of homes residents are living in. Sixty-seven percent of households in Chattanooga were built before 1980 leaving them vulnerable to leaks and older building practices, yet these homes are eligible for existing weatherization programs. Households, however, often lack the upfront capital and/or knowledge regarding upgrade programs, investments, and basic home maintenance. This is especially difficult for aging in place homeowners.

In retrospect though, homeowners only account for approximately forty percent of the lowest income zip codes in Chattanooga. The vast majority of this population consists of renters which curate a wide range of challenges. As a renter, there exists a split incentive within energy efficiency investments between the renter and the landlord. The landlord does not pay the utility bill so there is no incentive for them to invest in cost-saving actions; additionally, for absentee landlords, they lack effective mechanisms to ensure basic necessities of a home are in working order such as the mechanical systems and hot water heaters. With limited legal actions existing for tenants along with most effective programs geared toward homeowners, renters often fall to the wayside. Despite this a large number of renters require some aid regarding housing cost,  with twenty-five percent of renters, three thousand two hundred thirty-four residents, severely burdened with fifty percent of their income going to housing and two thousand eight hundred thirty-two moderately burdened by paying between thirty and fifty percent of their monthly income toward housing. 

(July 18, 2017)

 

Works Cited

Bridging the Gap: Affordable Housing and Workforce Development Strategies. Rep. Washington,

    DC: National Resource Network, 2016. Print.

Flessner, Dave. “Consumers, businesses expect another year of growth in Chattanooga in 2017.”

     Timesfreepress.com. Times Free Press, 1 Jan. 2017. Web. 22 June 2017.

Pare, Mike. “Chattanooga among top Tennessee cities for jobs, survey says.” Timesfreepress.com.

     Times Free Press, 22 June 2017. Web. 22 June 2017.

 

 

 

]]>
http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/energy-justice-in-chattanooga-tennessee/feed/ 0 304
Have You or Your Loved Ones Been Affected? http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/have-you-or-your-loved-ones-been-affected/ http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/have-you-or-your-loved-ones-been-affected/#respond Fri, 09 Mar 2018 16:05:24 +0000 http://hkeesler.agnesscott.org/?p=300       We have all heard the classic class-action lawsuit commercial starting with, “have you or your loved ones been affected by” followed by a long range of exposures and symptoms. Soon, those phrases may become more of reality for those living near multiple bodies of water. As a result, Thursday, February second 2017 should be noted by all Chattanoogans. On this day, six-hundred miles away, Congress voted to overturn the Stream Protection Rule, which sought to tighten regulations to “ensure that land disturbed by mining operations” would be restored to a state “capable of supporting the uses that it was capable of supporting” before operations began (Geuss, Regulations.gov). This congressional action should strike fear within the Chattanooga community and here is why.

     Chattanooga carries a heavy history involving coal dumping, starting with the Chattanooga Creek, just west of downtown. Companies such as Tennessee Products, Chattanooga Coke and Chemical, Riley Tar, and Southern Wood Piedmont filled the creek with “millions of pounds with coal tar” before environmental legislation existed. By 1995, the EPA listed the creek as a national priority and had already sectioned off part of the creek to prevent public access as it flows through “low-income and minority” communities. Short-term cleaning occurred in 1998 and seven years later a long-term clean-up was established to remove sediment and place it in a landfill (Site Information for Tennessee Products). A time frame of five years cost the federal government twenty-five million dollars and taxpayers “several million dollars” which still did not completely solve the problem (Sohn).

     What is the relationship between the Chattanooga Creek and the Stream Protection Rule? It is evident throughout Chattanooga’s history that the lack of environmental legislation has been costly. If the fact that your taxes could be going to something else, such as education or infrastructure instead of cleaning up after a huge company, does not bother you enough then consider the cost on life when polluting a creek goes beyond the life within it. It negatively impacts communities and their health, but if you are still thinking, “I do not live next to the creek,” or “I am not sick,” then take a moment. To this day, the Tennessee government states that fish should not be eaten out of the creek and contact with the water of the Chattanooga Creek itself should be avoided due to chlordane and PCBs, but what are these chemicals and why do they matter (United States of America)? Both chlordane and PCB, polychlorinated biphenyls, are man-made chemicals which cause damage to nervous, digestive, immune, reproductive, and endocrine systems (Learn about Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs), Substance Portal-Chlordane).

     More often than not, these chemicals result in cancer. Exposure to these chemicals through build up in the fatty tissues of fish or being in the creek affects at risk populations such as women who may become pregnant, those who are pregnant, elderly, and children (Contaminants in Fish). With the creek flowing through low socioeconomic areas, this presents the question of how do those who are most impacted afford treatment if exposed? Not including health insurance premiums, medication and chemotherapy for cancer can range from ten to thirty thousand per month (Glover). Additionally, with Chattanooga having one of the “fastest rates of ‘gentrification’” minorities are being moved at an alarming rate to areas such as those around the Chattanooga Creek (Walton). With the overturning of the Stream Protection Rule, Chattanoogans lose protection over the nine bodies of water alone within the Chattanooga limits (City Of Chattanooga). If dumping is not carefully regulated soon every Chattanoogan will feel it’s devastating effects through its exposure to chemicals along with costs on human life and medical expenses.

     So, how can we keep the Scenic City, scenic? Here are four things one can do now and in the long term. First, call, email, and speak to our representatives. Our elected officials work for us and depend on our votes. Congressional representatives and senators can be found here along with their contact information. Tennessee state representatives and senators can be found here. A collective group of tips for making the most out of your call can be found here. Second, find a local organization working toward environmental justice. Groups like Green Spaces work toward education and advocacy for advancing the “sustainability of living, working, and building in Chattanooga” (What We Do). They are looking for volunteers and do outreach education to Chattanooga’s low-income areas and if volunteering is not your thing, they are always willing to receive donations. Are you a social butterfly? Take to the streets with the next election to canvas for a candidate that supports environmental protection laws. Last, but most important, vote. Through each vote we have the opportunity to voice our opinion to our government and more often times than not, we also speak for those who cannot vote including our future generations, our children, and those who cannot make it out to vote due to lack of access to transportation or voting laws. Chattanooga is in the hands of those who act. How will you choose to?

March 20, 2017

Works Cited

“City Of Chattanooga.” City Of Chattanooga. City of Chattanooga, n.d. Web. 06 Feb. 2017.

“Contaminants in Fish.” Contaminants in Fish – TN.Gov. Tennessee Department of Environmental and  

Conservation, n.d. Web. 02 Feb. 2017.

Geuss, Megan. “Relaxing coal pollution, methane flaring rules: This week in Congress.” Ars Technica.

Ars Technica , 02 Feb. 2017. Web. 06 Feb. 2017.

Glover, Lacie. “Oncologists Worry About Rising Costs of Cancer Treatment.” U.S. News Health Care.  

U.S. News, 1 July 2015. Web. 4 Feb. 2017.

“Learn about Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs).” EPA. Environmental Protection Agency, 15 Sept. 2016

Web. 04 Feb. 2017.

“Regulations.gov.” Regulations.gov. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 20 Dec. 2016. Web. 06

Feb. 2017.

“Site Information for Tennessee Products.” EPA. Environmental Protection Agency, 20 Feb. 2014.

Web. 06 Feb. 2017.

<https://cumulis.epa.gov/supercpad/cursites/dsp_ssppSiteData1.cfm?id=0403765>.

Sohn, Pam. “Chattanooga Creek still threatened.” Timesfreepress.com. Times Free Press, 12 Nov. 2010

Web. 03 Feb. 2017.

“Substance Portal-Chlordane.” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Centers for Disease

Control and Prevention, 21 Jan. 2015. Web. 04 Feb. 2017.

United States of America. Food and Drug Administration and Environmental Protection Agency.

Technical Information on Development of Fish Consumption Advice . By Amy D. Kyle, Emily Oken, and

Andrew E. Smith. N.p.: n.p., 2016. Print.

Walton, Judy. “Census data notes racial shifts in Chattanooga neighborhoods.” Timesfreepress.com.

 

]]>
http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/have-you-or-your-loved-ones-been-affected/feed/ 0 300
The Power and Pitfalls of Ecofeminism: Revisiting the Past http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/the-power-and-pitfalls-of-ecofeminism-revisiting-the-past/ http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/the-power-and-pitfalls-of-ecofeminism-revisiting-the-past/#respond Sun, 17 Dec 2017 04:19:12 +0000 http://hkeesler.agnesscott.org/?p=273      April 22nd, 2017, the forty-fifth president of the United States tweeted his commitment “to keeping our air and water clean,” yet America faces a daunting future regarding environmental policy as the current administration seeks to cut spending of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by thirty-one percent (@realDonaldTrump, Tabuchi). Within these budget cuts, Americans face the possibility of elimination of superfunds, jobs, grants, and protection programs. Unfortunately, this is not the first step back in America’s acknowledgment of climate policy, but it is evident that a new model of resistance is necessary to manifest continual change in policy. Historically, movements of resistance have risen such as conservation, ecofeminism, and environmental justice. Within the conservation movement, critiques highlighting the failure to acknowledge race and class led to the rise of environmental justice (Mock). Environmental justice, in response, has manifested as a movement with a “multi-issue focus”. This movement has been “multi-ethnic and multi-racial” in composition, encompassing a “multi-national scope” attentive to the “social needs of human populations” while “challenging capitalist growth” (Pellow and Brulle 3, 16). Arising around the same time period in the 1970’s, ecofeminism sought to connect the domination of women and nature through the tenant that patriarchy associates women with the natural and physical, and men with the cultural and the mind (Warren 328). This logic proves that the feminization of nature is yet another form of oppression that interlocks with sexism, classism, and heterosexism. This attention to the oppression of nature is the key difference between ecofeminism and the environmental justice movement. Today’s political climate stresses the urgency of action, yet current environmental justice efforts exclude a crucial aspect to dismantle root oppressions. Despite ecofeminist pitfalls, such as essentialism and trans exclusion, the incorporation of ecofeminist ideas such as attention to faith as a form of motivation, intra and interspecies interconnectedness, and a nondualistic worldview provides a new approach. This approach, combined with current environmental justice efforts, allows for individualism under an unified goal of climate and environmental justice opening opportunities for people to participate in the movement.

Critiques

     If such a coalition is to be formed it must be careful to avoid the tenets of ecofeminism that ultimately led to its demise: universalism and essentialism. To understand these tenets one must first understand the primary types of ecofeminism: socialist and cultural. Notably, both of these facets of ecofeminism address the means of enacting social change, yet their means of doing so differ. Socialist ecofeminists use the destruction of nature as a result of capitalism to show how economic systems are environmentally destructive (Carlassare 92). Socialist ecofeminists argue that materialism is the force behind positive change within society (Carlassare 93). On the other hand, cultural ecofeminism focuses on manifesting change through “changes in culture and consciousness” which can be attributed to the creation of myths and language to reclaim women’s history and spirituality (Carlassare 95).

     As a result of the core values of ecofeminism, it has been critiqued for culturally appropriating indigenous cultures, essentializing and universalizing womanhood. By “reclaiming” indigenous people’s cultures through faith, myths and language, the homogeneous, white ecofeminist movement further suppressed and erased native cultures. Thus, by associating people of color with nature ecofeminism essentialized race. This “racial essentialism” romanticizes brown skin by associating it with “‘indigenous’ spiritualities” (Sturgeon 264). Consequently, ecofeminists utilized the parts of others’ cultures without including them into the conservation eliminating the voices of those of color and generalizing people of color’s opinions.

     Outside of race, cultural ecofeminists have been heavily critiqued for their use of essentialism where they embrace stereotypes associated with women through biological determinism. These stereotypes perpetuate that women are inherently intuitive, caring, nurturing, and emotional (Carlassare 95). Socialist ecofeminism contributes to this as well as it values “reproduction over production, both as a category of analysis and as a social and economic goal” (Carlassare 93). As a result, these stereotypes have alienated a wide variety of people including those who are not cisgendered women, those who fall outside the gender binary, women who do not hold these personality traits, and those whose anatomy is incapable of reproduction.

     Furthermore, those who do not fit neatly into the gender binary’s normative behaviors or expressions of gender are further excluded from the reclamation of women’s spirituality as their foundations are built on interconnectedness. Restoration of their spirituality, to ecofeminists, is “listening to the natural rhythms”, the worship of nature and fertility, and their inherent ability to menstruate. Consequently, ecofeminists see their reconnection with nature as connecting back to the “nurturing” and the internal way of being (Goddess Remembered 1989). Universalizing women to being nurturing, fertile, and connected to the Earth and each other erases the rich diversity of what womanhood is. Additionally, this is limiting to their own practice by reducing it to women who fit this particular mold. Interestingly enough, these self-proclaimed feminists further ideas of biological determinism through their essentialization of themselves to be inherently nurturing.

Attention to Faith

     These pitfalls ultimately led ecofeminism to decline in popularity after the 1970’s; however, before one can explore how the ecofeminist model provides a means to revolutionize current movements, one must understand another aspect which pushed ecofeminism away from mainstream feminism: faith. Often, ecofeminism is associated with earth-based spirituality as it seeks change through “personal transformation and changes in consciousness” (Carlassare 90). This association has been primary evidence by feminist academics of how essentializing and apolitical ecofeminism was, but this critique fails to address how faith informs individuals’ political actions (Gaard 39). Starhawk, a major contributor to the cultural ecofeminist movement, argues in her essay, “Feminists, Earth-based Spirituality and Ecofeminism” that “Earth-based spirituality influences ecofeminism by informing its values” (Starhawk 175). She presents three aspects of Earth-based spiritual practices that “can resurge in new cycles of political momentum” which includes immanence, interconnection, and compassion. These values “shift our definition of power,” “furnish the basis for our political understandings,” and help us “develop alliances with those whose interests and issues parallel ours” (Starhawk 177-181). Starhawk calls for coalition politics to not only complete “short-term bandages” but to also “support long-term recovery” so that there can be a political agenda enlightened by all issues (Starhawk 181). Through Starhawk’s work it is evident that faith plays a major role in why people take political action.  

 

     Understanding how exactly earth-based spirituality influences individuals provides the model that will change mainstream movements today. Paganism, a collection of non-Christian faiths that are collectively unified through their connection to the Earth and values for balance, reverence for life, and interconnectedness, was a major faith followed by ecofeminists. Centered around a goddess, many used their beliefs to support their activism. In a 2012 study, completed by Gwendolyn Reece, out of three thousand three hundred eighteen self-identified pagan respondents, fifty-five percent claimed that social justice work was a part of their spiritual practice. On the same note, forty-seven percent identified that political activism was a part of their faith (Reece 45-46). More important to note is the fact that each individual that responded manifests their political action in a different way, but they do it as a result of similarly held beliefs.

    The rich history of Paganism has led to multiple divisions among practitioners. Major sects of Paganism today include Wicca, Druidry, and Hellenism which inherently hold similar morals, but uphold them in various ways. Similarly, Ecofeminism contains a vast array of different influences due to the variety of earth-based practices that influence its means to best effect social change; however, ecofeminists are innately striving to dismantle oppression and end environmental destruction (Carlassare 89, 95). Reece’s data demonstrates this connection between paganism and political actions, more importantly, it demonstrates empirically that even among groups of extreme diversity within their own faiths that they are unified overall in their core beliefs. This attention to faith brought forth by ecofeminism provides a model for current environmental efforts to acknowledge that individuals have different motivations and beliefs, but collectively are fighting for the same goal.

Interconnectedness

Additionally, ecofeminism’s values of interconnectedness provides a means for the longevity of a movement by providing a form of analysis that is attentive to the interrelationships of oppression. Stemming from paganism, interconnectedness is the “ability to feel with and identify with others-human beings, natural cycles and processes, animals, and plants” (Starhawk 178). Interconnectedness, presented by Starhawk, a major cultural ecofeminist, is the foundation which fuels political understanding, but those who are in power seek to prevent us from seeing these connections (179-180). Once one sees the interconnectedness of the world one can see that political issues are not insuperable but are actually a connected in a web (Starhawk 179). This value of ecofeminism provides a lense for us to see our focuses may divide us “from those who might be our allies” if we “other” those who are different from us (Starhawk 180).

Understanding that we are all connected, through means of oppression or culture, presents us with an approach that can seek to tackle the interlocking web of domination. Consequently, interconnectedness can bring forth compassion. Once one understands our inherent connectedness through mutual oppression, we can begin to see the “multifaceted views of the world” and see problems “in their true complexity” (Starhawk 180). The awareness created by understanding the relationship between people, plants, animals, and nature contributes to our understanding of our individual actions affect those not directly in front of us. This model allows for collaboration that expands past individuals and allows them to form relationships that are stronger on a local, national, and global level. If we can understand how individual actions, in turn, affect those beyond us and can mobilize around this concept, the current environmental movement will be able to communicate its demands of protecting those disproportionately impacted who have the least say more effectively to elicit change.

Agential Earth and Nondualism

     This mobilization must also be attentive to the idea that the Earth has agency to fully understand that if we continue to disregard this idea, we further the logic of domination. Ecofeminists hold a nondualistic worldview which is the way “of conceptually organizing the world in binary, disjunctive terms, wherein each side of the dualism is “seen as exclusive (rather than inclusive) and oppositional (rather than complimentary), and where higher value or superiority is attributed to one disjunct (or, side of the dualism) than the other” (Gaard 115-116). Ecofeminists understand this notion and believe that the superiority of self is a result of viewing the differences between the self and others (Gaard 116). Consequently, due to seeing oneself as intertwined with the Earth, Ecofeminists believe that if one believes that they are “at odds” with nature or if one is trying to exploit it for its resources then they see only the differences with nature and not their shared connections furthering the domination over the natural world (Starhawk 178).

     Seeing the Earth with agency acknowledges our “ability to create dysfunctional relationships with the earth, with our ecological community, and with each other” by acknowledging that the earth continues on with or without humans (Ruether 147). If we continue to ignore this facet then the current environmental movement continues to use its privilege of intelligence. This privilege is one that allows humans to “alienate and dominate the world without concern for the welfare of all other forms of life” (Ruether 147-148). To begin to understand this privilege however we must first address how we subject other humans as lesser before we can restore value to nature. We equate marginalized people with nature such as people of color, women, and people of developing countries through dualistic thinking. While the environmental justice movement seeks to dismantle the oppression affecting marginalized people it fails to acknowledge the earth as one of those subjects. We must acknowledge the earth as an oppressed figure or we do nothing to acknowledge our dualistic thinking as we then choose a living being to be lesser.

Conclusion

     Overall, the falling out of ecofeminism due to essentialism, universalism, and appropriation have been justly critiqued; however, revisiting ecofeminism to understand how nondualism, interconnectedness, and the incorporation of faith within a movement can enhance the current environmental justice movement to aid in its longevity, inclusion, and effectiveness. Moving forward, current environmental groups must incorporate an ecofeminist line of thinking to bring forth change. The environmental justice movement must go beyond seeking justice just for human beings, but for the earth as well or it is hypocritical to say it is working to support the “social needs of human populations” (Pellow and Brulle 3). Humans are inherently tied to the ecological systems and processes of the earth.

     To help further understanding of an agential earth, the environmental justice movement must see our lives interconnected within and outside our species. Our actions affect more than just the human race. This value will protect the longevity of the movement as it allows us to understand who our allies are and that political issues are not separate from each other. This allows for collective organizing and support at the local, national, and global levels.

     In turn, however, while a national platform is a powerful unifier, it does not change the lives of those affected directly at an individual level. By creating a movement with a uniform identity that allows for the expression of individual’s beliefs and practices manifests a truly intersectional approach as it provides a platform for those from all intersections of identity to participate in whatever means they are capable. Acknowledging the different motivations such as faith within the environmental movement consequently will allow for a larger understanding that faith is not apolitical. Faith informs the thoughts and actions of many individuals and as environmental activists acknowledge this they can rally people from what motivates them best. This is not to say the environmental activism movement must be religious, but it must acknowledge that faith as a motivation to be attentive to individual communities.

     Ecofeminism, a model of the past, ultimately demonstrates key values that the environmental justice movement needs to take on to progress with support effectively over time. Climate change is not going to reverse itself or be fixed; yet, we must come together to combat the social stratifications that will occur as a result. Social, economic, and policy changes cannot occur without an overwhelming congregation of people tackling the issue of the future of the environment. Revisiting and applying parts ecofeminism to today holds the key to the future of activism.

(Spring 2017)

Works Cited

@realDonaldTrump. “I am committed to keeping our air and water clean but always remember that

economic growth enhances environmental protection. Jobs matter!.” Twitter, 22 April 2017, 5:49 p.m.,  https://mobile.twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/855901315305795584.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/10/climate/trump-epa-budget-cuts.html

https://www.marchforscience.com/mission-and-vision

 

BabyradfemTV. “NFB Women and Spirituality series Part 1: Goddess Remembered.” Online video

clip. Youtube. Youtube. 9 June 2016. Web. 6 April 2017.

 

Bullard, Robert D. The Quest for Environmental Justice Human Rights and the Politics of

Pollution. 1st ed. San Francisco: Sierra Club, 2005. Print.

 

Carlassare, Elizabeth. “Socialist and Cultural Ecofeminism: Allies in Resistance.” Ethics and the

Environment 5.1 (2000): 89-106. JSTOR. Web. 22 Mar. 2017.

 

Gaard, Greta. “Ecofeminism Revisited: Rejecting Essentialism and Re-Placing Species in a

Material Feminist Environmentalism.” Feminist Formations 23.2 (2011): 26-53. Web. 26 Apr. 2017.

 

Gaard, Greta. “Toward a Queer Ecofeminism.” Hypatia 12.1 (1997): 114-37. Web. 10 May 2017.

Mock, Brenti. “Mainstream Green Is Still Too White.” Color Lines. Color Lines, 2 Apr. 2013.

Web. 26 Apr. 2017.

 

Monroe, Douglas. The 21 lessons of Merlyn: A Study in Druid Magic and Lore. St. Paul, MN.:

Llewellyn Publications, 2004. Print.

 

Pellow, David N., and Robert J. Brulle. Power, Justice, and the Environment A Critical Appraisal

of the Environmental Justice Movement. Cambridge, MA: MIT, 2005. Print.

 

Reece, Gwendolyn. “Prevalence and Importance of Contemporary Pagan Practices.” The

Pomegranate, vol. 16, no. 1, 2014, pp. 35-54. EBSCOhost, doi:10.1558/pome.v16i1.20231.

 

Starhawk. “Feminists, Earth-based Spirituality and Ecofeminism .” Healing the Wounds: The

Promise of Ecofeminism . Ed. Judith Plant. Philadelphia: New Society Publishers , 1989. 174-85. Print.

 

Sturgeon, Noël. “Ecofeminist Appropriations and Transnational Environmentalism.”

Identities 6.2-3 (1999): 255-79. Web. 10 May 2017.

 

Tabuchi, Hiroko. “What’s at Stake in Trump’s Proposed E.P.A. Cuts.” The New York Times. The

New York Times, 10 Apr. 2017. Web. 26 Apr. 2017.

 

Warren, Karen J. The Power and the Promise of Ecological Feminism. 3rd ed. Vol. 12. N.p.: n.p.,

  1. Print. Environmental Ethics.

 

]]>
http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/womens-studies/the-power-and-pitfalls-of-ecofeminism-revisiting-the-past/feed/ 0 273
Mistletoe and Society http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/environmental-science/mistletoe-and-society/ http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/environmental-science/mistletoe-and-society/#respond Wed, 29 Nov 2017 04:22:29 +0000 http://hkeesler.agnesscott.org/?p=173 Throughout time humans have found meaning in plants and used them to aid them spiritually and physically. Mistletoe does not fall short of this claim. In Pagan faiths, specifically the denomination of Druidry, mistletoe is found to be sacred. Paganism is understood to be a collection of non-Christian faiths that are collectively unified through their connection to the Earth and values for balance, reverence for life, and interconnectedness (Monroe). As an oral tradition, Druidry is hard to find textually; however, the first records available date back to Europe twenty-five thousand years ago. More recently, in Plinius Secundus’ Pliny Natural History, originally published in seventy-seven AD, he especially states “we also must not omit the respect shown to this plant…The Druids… hold nothing more sacred than mistletoe and a tree on which it is growing, provided it is a hard-oak.” (549).

This traditional aspect has now come to be a key aspect of the Christian holiday Christmas through colonialism and assimilation. As Christianity spread throughout the Celtic world, the societal traits of Druidry assimilated into a Christian model. While this time period served as a means of evangelism and the execution of those who did not convert it played a vital role in actually preserving Druidic traditions through recording stories. Consequently, these stories have manifested in our current lives as seen with the tradition of kissing under the mistletoe at Christmas time (Carr-Gomm). Historically, mistletoe holds a meaning of fertility as it is an evergreen and is found in bare trees, thus pagans would use it in ceremonies on the “sixth day of the moon” in a drink mixture to bring prosperity and fertility to their barren livestock (“A Brief History”, Secundus). In a Christian context, this is the origin of kissing underneath the mistletoe for luck. Neo-Druids have not left their roots behind reclaiming this aspect of faith by often decorating their altars and homes and giving it as a gift for others seeking to start families or for those they wish prosperity upon.

Outside of faith practices, mistletoe has seen a rise in recent years around its medicinal properties in cancer treatments. Primarily, clinical trials only exist in Europe and have been used to target cancer fatigue which manifests as a side effect of not only cancer itself but its treatments as well. In a small study of twenty-six randomized controlled (RCT) and ten controlled trials, twenty-two out of the twenty-six RCTs breast cancer patients that were receiving chemotherapy reported that mistletoe therapy improved their quality of life. Researchers reviewed their results using “random-effects meta-analysis” and found out of thirteen of the controlled studies where nine of them were randomized the estimated “short-term standardized mean effect of 0.56 (95% confidence interval, 0.41–0.71; p < 0.0001)” proving to be statistically significant. Conversiatally, the methods of this study were deemed poor and continued research is needed to understand the true impact of mistletoe therapy before it makes headway in America (Evans, 134-136)

Works Cited

“A Brief History of Druidry.” Order of Bards and Druids, Order of the Bards, Ovates, and Druids, 17 Nov. 2012,

     www.druidry.org/druid-way/what-druidry/brief-history-druidry.

Carr-Gomm, Philip. What Do Druids Believe? Granta Books, 2006.

Evans, Maggie, et al. “Cancer Patients’ Experiences of Using Mistletoe ( Viscum Album): A Qualitative Systematic

Review and Synthesis.” Journal of Alternative & Complementary Medicine, vol. 22, no. 2, Feb. 2016, p. 134.

EBSCOhost, doi:10.1089/acm.2015.0194.

Secundus, Plinius. Pliny Natural History: with an English Translation. Translated by H. Rackham, vol. 9, Heinemann,

1945.

Monroe, Douglas. The 21 lessons of Merlyn: A Study in Druid Magic and Lore. St. Paul, MN.: Llewellyn Publications,

2004. Print.

(December 2017)

]]>
http://jkeesler.agnesscott.org/environmental-science/mistletoe-and-society/feed/ 0 173