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"racism" Articles & Blogs:

Worst A.P. U.S. History Project Ever Involves Wearing K.K.K. Outfits to School Cafeteria
A Georgia teacher with simply terrible judgment is experiencing quite a bit of backlash after she allowed students to wear Ku Klux Klan robes in a high-school cafeteria. It was a lesson about racism, and how destructive it is, obviously. “You cannot dis...[Read on]
UN Delegates Walk Out After Ahmadinejad's Anti-Israeli Speech
Western diplomats walked out of a UN summit on racism after Mahmoud Ahmadinejad described Israel as a criminal stateMahmoud Ahmadinejad | Today 10:50 am Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad inspired a protest at the United Nations this morning by blast...[Read on]
How Kick-Ass Would A Harriet Tubman Barbie Be?
Multi-media artist, Pierre Bennu, has released the second piece in a three-series installment of commercials for a hypothetical  "Black Moses Barbie" toy. The commercials are an extremely clever and funny tribute to the legacy of Harriet Tubman and o...[Read on]
The Supreme Court and Redefining Racism
The past few weeks have seen important news related to race and the Supreme Court. In the June 29 Ricci v. DeStefano decision the court ruled in favor of white firefighters in New Haven who claimed they were subjected to racial discrimination when the res...[Read on]
African National Congress: "Such comments can only serve to portray women as being weak"
Seldom have I seen a rejoinder as plain-spoken and incisive as the ANC's to accusations that women's 800-meter world champion Caster Semenya is not a woman. I could not find or conjure up a better title for this post. Caster Semenya earned a gold medal i...[Read on]
Mad Men, brought to you by women
Betty Draper takes aim at stereotypes, thanks to Mad Men's women writers If you're anything like me, you can barely contain your excitement that season 3 of Mad Men begins on Sunday. It took me awhile to get around to watching the show (I didn't bother t...[Read on]
Jennifer Aniston is not destructive to our society
A big Friday fuck you to Bill O’Reilly for calling Jennifer Aniston destructive to our society and diminishing the role of dads when making comments in promotion of her new film The Switch. The film is about a woman who decides to get pregnant with a...[Read on]
Ethnicity and Gender in the Coverage of Sotomayor
Embedded video from CNN Video It's been interesting to catch up to the Sotomayor coverage this morning. I really like this clip from CNN, which features Erica Gonzalez, the opinion page editor for El Diario/la Prensa, the third largest Spanish-language d...[Read on]
Q&A;: Sarah Silverman: "'Penis' and 'Vagina' Should Be Equal Comedically, but They're Not"
Like a cheerier version of Jeremy Renner’s demolitions expert in The Hurt Locker, Sarah Silverman is the kind of comedian who loves nothing better than venturing into the treacherous topics of race, sex, and religion to nimbly navigate some potentia...[Read on]
The Syvia Chronicles: 30 Years of Graphic Misbehavior from Reagan to Obama by Nicole Hollander
I have been a big fan of Nicole Hollander’s for some time.  Her Sylvia cartoons appear in 30 newspapers across the country including The Boston Globe, Houston Chronicle (online) The San Francisco Examiner, and she is represented by the Tribune Media ...[Read on]
Molly Haskell’s Feminist Take on Gone with the Wind
Molly Haskell is the shit when it comes to writing about women’s films with a feminist perspective.  There is no one better.  Her book From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies is one of the best books about women in film and it...[Read on]
Sotomayor is not meaner, just femaler
Serious props to NPR's Nina Totenberg today. Rather than simply reporting about "concerns over Sotomayor's temperament" or allegations that she's a "bully," Totenberg actually compared audio clips of questions asked by Sotomayor and those asked by her mal...[Read on]
Interview with Sandra Laing - Real life subject of Skin
Sandra Laing and Sophie Okonedo Skin is the heartbreaking true story of Sandra Laing (played by Sophie Okonedo) as a woman with black skin born to white parents in apartheid S. Africa.  She is a white girl who looked black.  As a young girl she  rea...[Read on]
Support Women Veterans
This is an issue that's become increasingly dear to my heart, as I've gotten to know a couple of amazing women veterans and read more about their experiences. There is no question that women vets have special needs at this time, especially as the epidemic...[Read on]
Interview with Beadie Finzi, Director of Only When I Dance
Only When I Dance is a documentary of two young Brazilian dancers — Isabella and Irlan — and how they try and pursue their dreams of becoming professional dancers.  It is by no means a rosy look at the dance world.  It shows how hard, and at times...[Read on]
Casi Divas- Interview with Director Issa Lopez
Casi Divas tells the story of four very different women vying in a contest to become the next big telenovela star.  It is a story infused with dreams of changing your life and desires for celebrity and success but if you think it is all gloss you will mi...[Read on]
Mississippi River Project: Darkness in Vicksburg
It was a rainy and gray weekend, and I spent most of it at Poverty Point Reservoir State Park, doing some much needed housekeeping (my computer was misbehaving, laundry needed doing) at this quite wonderful spot that has free wifi and laundry and good s...[Read on]
Making waves: Brazil’s surf sensation Maya Gabeira inspires girls
A Brazilian is emerging as one of the world’s top big wave surfers – and she’s a woman. Maya Gabeira’s skills and bravery have made her a female pioneer of daredevil tactics in a male-dominated sport. Pretty Tough, indeed. Gabeira first took to a...[Read on]
Lifting the Veil: A Look at the Burqa
Two weeks ago, French President Nicolas Sarkozy officially announced his party’s plans to implement a ban on the burqa in France. The burqa, a head-to-toe garment that covers the face and is worn by some Muslim women around the world, is a perennial top...[Read on]
Ten Memoirs By Unforgettable Women
“Everyone has at least one good book in them.” The memoir, especially in recent years, has often proved this adage true. When all else fails, writers usually turn to their personal lives for inspiring material that will get the ink flowing. The foll...[Read on]
Precious, my Precious: Black Female Citizenship, Complexity, and the Politics of Unrelenting Survival
[Editor's Note] I haven't seen Precious yet, but I have read about it endlessly and already cried just reading reviews. One of the most powerful interpretations I have read so far on Precious comes from my good friend, colleague and mentor Malkia Cyril fr...[Read on]
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