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Planet Earth

 

Ahmadinejad

 

Global Rebellion

 

Insomniac

 

Compulsive Acts

 

Artichoke to Za'atar

 

Gandhi

 

Pocket China Atlas

 

Brass Diva

 

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The Veil: Women Writers on Its History, Lore, and Politics

10772 Jennifer Heath is the author of eight books, an activist, curator and editor of The Veil: Women Writers on Its History, Lore, and Politics (UC Press, May 2008). In her book and the blog below, Jennifer explores the meaning and mystery of veils worn by women and men across the globe. You can also check out the book's website here.

Please Note:  Embedded at the end of the blog is a silent, loop video called AmbiVEILant by Tania Kamal-Eldin  

By Jennifer Heath

In Turkey and France, it is outlawed. In Iran and Saudi Arabia, it is mandated.

The veil is deeply polarizing, a locus for the struggle between Islam and the West and between contemporary and traditional interpretations of Islam.

Yet veiling – of women, of men, and of sacred places and objects – has existed in countless cultures and religions for centuries. Perhaps it began when humans watched eclipses and observed the periodic shedding of animals’ outer bodily layer (feathers, skin, fur or horn, even pupas). Veils and veiling are found in the oldest myths, in folklore and fairytale and in the arts. The veil itself is mystery, even as it is the shroud that guards the mystery. As much as the veil is fabric or a garment, it is also a concept. Veils are the ethers beyond consciousness, the hidden hundredth name of god, the final passage into death, even the biblical apocalypse – the lifting of god’s veil to signal the “end times.”

I grew up in heavily Roman Catholic and later in Muslim countries, where veiling was common. In those days – as Egyptian feminist Huda Shaarawi observed in an earlier decade – a rural Italian or Greek woman looked not much different from, say, a rural Egyptian woman. How and why have we politicized customs so ancient their origins and meanings cannot necessarily be traced and certainly can’t be “blamed” on any group or event? When I say “we,” I do indeed mean all of us, East and West. We all collude in turning women’s bodies into battlegrounds – nowadays signified by the veil.

For The Veil: Women Writers on Its History, Lore, and Politics, I assembled twenty writers and scholars – Kecia Ali, Michelle Auerbach, Sarah C. Bell, Barbara Goldman Carrel, Eve Grubin, Roxanne Kamayani Gupta, Jana M. Hawley, Jasbir Jain, Mohja Kahf, Desiree Koslin, Laurene Lafontain, Shireen Malik, Maliha Masood, Marjane Satrapi, Aisha Shaheed, Rita Stephan, Pamela K. Taylor, Ashraf Zahedi, Dinah Zeiger and Sherifa Zuhur – to engage received wisdom about the veil, to explore its multiple histories and layered sacred, sensual, and socio-political truths in memory- and research-based chapters that speak to the veil throughout human imagination. These marvelous contributors, who represent a wide range of societies, religions, ages, location, races, and accomplishments, examine the veil in its myriad guises; they elucidate, criticize, and/or praise the practice.

The overriding concern expressed in these chapters is the exploitation of the veil for political agendas. Across time, veiling and unveiling have been forced upon women. Demonization seems especially virulent today with respect to the Muslim veil, perceived by the West as a challenge to modernity and secular enlightenment and even as a terrorist threat, while among some Muslims, it has become a symbol of solidarity and resistance.

But today’s ideological battles are merely subterfuge, distraction hindering feminist progress and blinding us to the increasing feminization of poverty. Conflicts over covering actually veil the realities we must face -- and fix -- of women’s disadvantages, which feed a destructive spiral of impoverishment, population growth, and environmental degradation worldwide.

Meanwhile, veiling is a woman’s – or a man’s – right to choose.


AmbiVEILant by Tania Kamal-Eldin

Audio Interview with Gayle Greene, author of Insomniac

10466 In the latest installment of NPR's Talk of the Nation, author Gayle Greene offers insight into the condition, while elaborating on her book, Insomniac (UC Press, March 2008), in this audio interview. Additionally, you can read more about Gayle and the disorder, including tips and shared experiences on her website, Sleep Starved.

From a Whisper to a Scream: Breaking the Silence of Mexico's Zona Galactica

10526Patty Kelly provides a voice for the women of the Zona Galactica, a legal brothel in Chiapas, Mexico. These women work hard in a government-sanctioned industry, but are often treated with disrespect, scorn, and indifference, eroding their dignity and chipping away at their dreams. In Lydia's Open Door, Kelly explores this experience and brings it to life through conversations with the women. She writes as an advocate and listens as a friend, enhancing the women's personal stories with economic and historical background.

"This exceptional book makes several key contributions to the field and shows how freedom and anxiety, and the market and morality, tensely coexist in the business of sex. . . . Kelly's analysis is conveyed through vivid portraits of the lives of sex workers, showing that the women involved are neither victims nor heroines but something else: actors caught between agency and constraint."–Roger N. Lancaster, author of The Trouble with Nature

"In this tour de force of feminist anthropology, Patty Kelly gives her heart to the remarkable women who toil in the bawdy sweatshops of the Zona Galactica, a 'reformed' red-light district in the Chiapas capital of Tuxtla Gutiérrez. In fact, as Kelly shows, it is just the ultimate low-wage industrial district."–Mike Davis, author of Planet of Slums and In Praise of Barbarians

"The clarity of Kelly's perspective is neither apologetic, nor presumptive (as is usually the case); her focus is always on the political context of these women's lives. Patty Kelly writes like a poet and novelist, so much so that this work begs to be a movie."–Carol Leigh, a.k.a. "Scarlot Harlot," author of Unrepentant Whore

Special Issue of Sexuality Research & Social Policy

SrspWe are very pleased to announce the publication of Volume 4, Issue 2 of Sexuality Research and Social Policy: Journal of NSRC (SRSP). Guest editor Michael W. Ross opens this special issue with his introduction, "Situating Sexuality Electronically: The Internet and Sexual Expression."

The special issue articles include Allen B. Thomas, Michael W. Ross, and Karol Kaye Harris's "Coming Out Online: Interpretations of Young Men's Stories," a report on a qualitative study that examined how young gay men experience the coming-out process by participating in Internet chat rooms; Amir Rosenmann and Marilyn P. Safir's "Gay Identity Nonendorsement and the Role of Dissociative Characteristics in a Culturally Diverse Online Sample of Men Who Have Sex With Men," a look at the role of dissociations in sexual identity dynamics for men who use the Internet to seek sex with men; and much more.

Click here for a complete table of contents.
Click here for more on SRSP.

New Research on Sexuality and Disability Featured in Special Issue of Sexuality Research and Social Policy: Journal of NSRC

SrspMarch 21, 2007 -- "Critical Research and Policy Debates in Disability and Sexuality Studies" is the title of the new special issue of Sexuality Research and Social Policy: Journal of the NSRC (SRSP) made available exclusively online at http://www.SexualityResearch.net. This special issue of the journal, guest edited by Russell Shuttleworth, covers a range of topics concerning sexuality and disability including the psychological perspectives on disabled LGBT persons' physical sexual expression; the sexual expression of LGBT people with intellectual disabilities and how staff supports them; the relationship between disability and alternative sexual expression; and the sociopolitical dimensions of the consideration of sexuality and disability. For our policy section in this issue, Diane di Mauro and Carole Joffe have contributed an article focusing on the Religious Right's impact on sexuality policy since the 1970s. In a final original article, Mark McClelland and Seunghyun Yoo use the Japanese practice of Yaoi to examine current legislation of child pornography.


"For the past thirty years, and especially during the first six years of the George W. Bush presidency, the Religious Right has had a significant and disturbing impact on sexuality-related policy in the United States," stated Carole Joffee, co-author of the policy article entitled "The Religious Right and the Reshaping of Sexuality Policies: An Examination of Reproductive Rights and Sexuality Education." "In the field of sexuality education, 'abstinence only' educators have offered teenagers false and misleading information, putting these young people at unnecessary risk. The Religious Right's anti-abortion campaign has escalated to a war on contraception itself, leading to cutbacks in family planning services -- and ironically, to a greater need for abortion among those who are dependent on publicly funded contraception."

The Missing Feminist Revolution in Sociology

social problemsTwenty years ago a landmark sociology paper was published in Social Problems, the official journal of the Society for the Study of Social Problems. Judith Stacey and Barrie Thorne's The Missing Feminist Revolution in Sociology quickly became a touchstone for debate about the lack of representation of feminists and the feminist point of view in the discipline. To celebrate the publication anniversary, Social Problems Volume 53, Issue 4 features a symposium examining the challenges presented by the original paper. The symposium includes essays by leading feminist scholars and individual essays by Stacey and Thorne. "Who would have thought that Social Problems would be staging a 20th anniversary celebration to commemorate its original bold publication of our collective musings on feminism's impact on the disciplines? Who could have imagined that so many fine feminist minds would still want to bring such surprising, creative gifts to the gathering? We feel honored and awed by the symposium." -Judith Stacey & Barrie Thorne.

For a limited time you can read Christine Williams article "Still Missing? Comments on the Twentieth Anniversary of The Missing Feminist Revolution in Sociology for free here. For more information about Social Problems, please visit the UC Press Journals and Digital Publishing Website. For more information about the Society for the Study of Social Problems, please visit their website.

The Rise of the Women of Wine

10134_1Ann B. Matasar and her book Women of Wine: The Rise of Women in the Global Wine Industry are getting attention from a variety of sources these days. Women of Wine, which explores women's increasingly influential role in this traditionally male-dominated niche, was featured in the November 5 issue of the New York Times Style Magazine. The illustrated article, written by Christine Muhlke, highlights a handful of female winemakers at the top of their game.

Several weeks ago, Matasar appeared at a tasting and book-signing event at the swanky San Francisco wine bar VinoVenue. Owned by two women, Mary Lynn Slattery and Nancy Rowland, the venue is famous for its innovative tasting card, which acts like a debit card, and which you insert into wine tasting stations for "tastes."

Women of Wine was also recently reviewed in The World of Fine Wine, Sante: The Magazine for Restaurant Professionals, and Library Journal.

Pioneering Trends in Sexuality Research

SrspThe newest trends in sexuality research are highlighted in the new issue of the National Sexuality Research Center's online peer-reviewed journal, Sexuality Research and Social Policy: Journal of the NSRC (SRSP). The special issue, entitled New Trends in Sexuality Research: Contributions from Fellows in the Sexuality Research Fellowship Program, commemorates the end of a ten-year Sexuality Research Fellowship Program, funded by the Ford Foundation, and contains articles written by some of the program's participants. Guest editor Diane di Mauro, who guided the fellowship program since its inception in 1995, chose a range of articles to reflect the future of sexuality research in America.

"The articles appearing in this issue represent the work of a new generation of scholars who address the complexity and contextual nature of human sexuality. Their work signifies a tremendous accomplishment that has considerably strengthened the field of sexuality research in the United States. This includes a more useful dissemination of research that can inform policy decisions regarding important social and sexual health issues," said di Mauro.

Also featured in this issue is "Emotional Scripts of Sex Panics" written by Janice M. Irvine, a professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Massachusetts, whose latest book is Talk About Sex: Battle Over Sex Education in the United States. Dr. Irvine poses the compelling argument that local sex panics over sex education in the schools are not spontaneous eruptions of community outrage, but instead are political events carefully scripted by the right wing to reinforce a conservative sexual morality. For more information on this special issue please visit the National Sexuality Research Council website.

Doping: Old News Is New Again

10077Lance Armstrong. Floyd Landis. Barry Bonds. Just as one doping scandal begins to cool, it seems another one emerges to inflame the headlines. And it’s not just a boys’ club: the still-bubbling story of Marion Jones’s alleged steroid use has garnered the most international attention to female athletes’ doping since the controversy over the 1976 East German Olympic team.

What is happening in the sports world that drugs are becoming so ubiquitous? Is it spectators’ demand for extreme entertainment? The pressure for athletes to prove they’re worth their extravagant salaries? Or is it that—although using testosterone as a performance enhancer has been a staple of athletic prowess for some time—doping’s constant presence is only now being brought to light because of the scientific arms race between hard-to-detect new performance enhancers and clever new ways of testing for them?

10563As University of California Press authors John Hoberman (Testosterone Dreams) and Christopher Thompson (Tour de France) know, steroid use in sports is actually old news. Testosterone has been synthesized in labs and touted as a miracle elixir since the 1930s, and Hoberman claims that the current doping “epidemic” has actually been spreading since the 1960s.

What does the future hold? Home runs every at-bat, or a return to more wholesome sport? That depends on the fans. Thompson points out that, in 1978, when the East German scandal was still on sports fans' minds and the Tour de France’s greatest doping drama to date was about to unfold, only 53 percent of fans said they “would cease to respect and admire a great champion convicted of doping.” One has to do only a quick scan of the public, adorned with Barry Bonds jerseys and yellow Livestrong bracelets, to guess the results of such a poll today.