Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
History of Feminism
Related: About this forumLaurie Penny’s In-Your-Face Feminism
When reigning pop queen Beyoncé Knowles stood, with the unshakeable self-assurance of a warrior, in front of a boldly lit, capital-lettered declaration of FEMINIST at the MTV Video Music Awards last month, the media responded with something approximating rapture. The zeitgeist is irrefutably feminist: its name literally in bright lights, wrote Jessica Valenti at The Guardian, while Amanda Marcotte at Slate argued that the singer had put paid to the idea that feminists are just ugly wannabes who hate men and children. The New Republics Rebecca Traister called the performance one of the most powerful pop-culture messages of [her] lifetime.
The moment marked a crest in the current wave of popularity and recognition feminism has been enjoying in popular culture recently. Young celebrities from Lorde to Miley Cyrus to Taylor Swift have been eagerly claiming the label, while old school media like Cosmopolitan and Playboy have given themselves feminist makeovers. Beyoncés performance just made it official. Feminism is cool now: no longer the refuge of, as conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh once put it, women who had been excluded by the mainstream of society, but front and center of the mainstream itselfcelebrated by queen bees, and Queen Beys.
The resurgence of the womens movement over the past decade has been a product of two opposite but interrelated impulses. The first has been the explosion of feminist discussion in the blogosphere and on social media, which has sparked lively conversations around issues such as racial inequality, transgender rights, and the cultural factors that contribute to sexual assault. The second has been a concerted attempt to destigmatize feminism and make it more palatable, as exemplified by twin campaigns last year by UK womens magazine Elle and New York-based media platform Vitamin W to rebrand feminism.
At first glance, these two developments seem starkly divided: one niche, complex and devoted to the development of new ideas, and the other populist and unthreatening, designed to appeal to the broadest audience possible. But they have more in common than you might think. It was the eruption of feminist conversation online that informed commercial publishers that there was money to be made from talking about gender. And the desire to popularize the womens movement has been as much a motivator for parts of the feminist blogosphere as the development of a new set of feminist ethics.
The moment marked a crest in the current wave of popularity and recognition feminism has been enjoying in popular culture recently. Young celebrities from Lorde to Miley Cyrus to Taylor Swift have been eagerly claiming the label, while old school media like Cosmopolitan and Playboy have given themselves feminist makeovers. Beyoncés performance just made it official. Feminism is cool now: no longer the refuge of, as conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh once put it, women who had been excluded by the mainstream of society, but front and center of the mainstream itselfcelebrated by queen bees, and Queen Beys.
The resurgence of the womens movement over the past decade has been a product of two opposite but interrelated impulses. The first has been the explosion of feminist discussion in the blogosphere and on social media, which has sparked lively conversations around issues such as racial inequality, transgender rights, and the cultural factors that contribute to sexual assault. The second has been a concerted attempt to destigmatize feminism and make it more palatable, as exemplified by twin campaigns last year by UK womens magazine Elle and New York-based media platform Vitamin W to rebrand feminism.
At first glance, these two developments seem starkly divided: one niche, complex and devoted to the development of new ideas, and the other populist and unthreatening, designed to appeal to the broadest audience possible. But they have more in common than you might think. It was the eruption of feminist conversation online that informed commercial publishers that there was money to be made from talking about gender. And the desire to popularize the womens movement has been as much a motivator for parts of the feminist blogosphere as the development of a new set of feminist ethics.
http://news.yahoo.com/laurie-penny-face-feminism-040000726--politics.html
4 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Laurie Penny’s In-Your-Face Feminism (Original Post)
ismnotwasm
Sep 2014
OP
Tuesday Afternoon
(56,912 posts)1. LOL @ The Truth in This Sentence =
" ... the explosion of feminist discussion in the blogosphere and on social media, which has sparked lively conversations around issues such as racial inequality, transgender rights, and the cultural factors that contribute to sexual assault."
freshwest
(53,661 posts)2. Hope it will hit here soon. The HOF is really onto something big! n/t
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)3. refusing to accept the roles that have been laid out for you.
this really pisses people, but especially men, off. lol
gonna go back to the reading.
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)4. i think you just grow up. this...
But this girl power feminism always felt hollow to me. It was only when I began to think about how gender influenced our everyday experiences, and saw things I had thought were personal to me put into political context, that feminism suddenly became relevant and interesting. I wasnt drawn to feminism because people had told me it was cool; I was drawn to it because it helped me make sense of my life.