[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

mangkunegaran:

One of several takes of “Groung” (“Crane”) released as Col E3503 and recorded by Zabella Panosian ca. April 1917. (Other takes are slightly lower in key and do not have the bird sounds.) Panosian was about 22 years old at the time and was the mother of a 6-year-old. She had lived in Boston for a period and later lived on 183rd St. in New York. Her total discography was ten songs recorded in a period of about 10 months.

(Source: canaryrecords)

3 months ago - 5

"Like" The Female Biography Project on Facebook!

In 1803 Mary Hays reinvented ‘female biography’,  including in her groundbreaking work actors, courtesans, warriors, and various scandalous women alongside the queens, martyrs, and virtuous women who had conventionally been included in women’s biographies.  Hays brought together and to life three hundred bustling, rebellious women in six volumes, making the best use of the print technology available to her to reach a female audience eager to be inspired and informed through the new genre of biography/autobiography. Pickering & Chatto will publish the Chawton House Library Edition of Female Biography as part of their “Memoirs of Women Writers Series”, Volumes 1-3 in 2013 and Volumes 4-6 in 2014.

Professor Gina Luria Walker, Associate Professor of Women’s Studies at New School University, has undertaken to give Hays and her “female biographies” the attention and recognition they merit.  Rather than simply annotating the text from a single scholar’s viewpoint, she has created a collaborative feminist effort in which scholars expert in the individual figures included in Female Biography will enrich Mary Hays’s pioneering six volumes. The project currently includes 125 scholars and 30 researchers representing 93 institutions in 14 countries and four continents.

 
If you would like information about how to join us in producing the Chawton House Library Edition of Female Biography, please contact: Margaret Staruszkiewicz, Academic Administrator, femalebiographyrproject2@gmail.com

7 months ago - 1

How Many Women Find Street Harassment Flattering?: While working at my job where I dress very professionally a man came...

Every day some men degrade themselves by degrading the women they come into contact with. Is it social pressure? A result of bullying, perhaps? Regardless of the reasons behind the “casual” abuse (if you will- consider that term), the consequences are dire: we live in a society where beauty is lusted after rather than loved. Disrespect for the feminine runs rampant. Here is one example of a story in which the key figures are blinded by a nasty thing called victim blaming.

howmanywomen:

While working at my job where I dress very professionally a man came up to my desk to process a transaction. While speaking with him I noticed he would not look me in the eye. Finally, after mumbling “I’m sorry but I have to” several times he worked up the “courage” to tell me my breasts looked…

7 months ago - 11

A taste of each tea-meal shared with various lovely people throughout this chilly, cozy month of September. A history-based feminist initiative, an interview, pour-your-own-chocolate, a girl’s day out (included fairy wings). It’s been sweeter than honey.

Consider this Fantastic Analogy

downlo:

A useful rape analogy

(Source: hausofkelsie)

8 months ago - 24468
“Find yourself a cup of tea; the teapot is behind you. Now tell me about hundreds of things.” ~Saki

“Find yourself a cup of tea; the teapot is behind you. Now tell me about hundreds of things.” ~Saki

Bread and water can so easily be toast and tea. ~

I am not sure who said this, but whomever they were, they must have seen the brightest of sides to things. And it is true.

One Perspective on Street Harassment

howmanywomen:

I don’t honestly have a story to tell, really. I’ve read this blog several times, and I’m disgusted at the things women have to face. I’ve never been a victim of harassment myself (thankfully), and I’m just horrified that it happens.

I just wanted to say that I brought up the subject of street…

10 months ago - 12
fotodiaria:

Teatime sipplicity (June 2011)

fotodiaria:

Teatime sipplicity (June 2011)

On Alpha Females

I am considering the concept of the alpha female. The alpha female seems to assume her role with the pretext that she is worthy of acceptance as one of the boys, by the “boys.” In a co-ed situation, she plays the role of the confident, edgy, and dark alpha: she is still a sex symbol, but with a tinge of dominant, somewhat dangerous energy. Simply put, she can transform, with tacit male approval, the form of a testosterone-pumped queen of the night, even in broad daylight. And, might I just add here… there is no wrong in that, per se.

Still, the circumstances morph into the following structure: the women around the alpha who remain as they began (moderately to “quite” or “very” femme) must assume their role beneath both this Alpha Her and the males in the group: they are frequently knocked to the sidelines, subject to the ever-escalating raunch of boy-humor and judgment. They must keep up, while pushing no buttons. They must be likable, but not as likable as the Alpha.

Imagine it, and from any angle, you can understand what discomfort may arise from the other women in the group. The women who remain unresponsive to the dominant behavior, coming from another woman (one who crossed the gender line and became all-the-sexier for it - and by what right?) develop a rigidity towards the alpha, her “kind” or “type.” It may sound dramatic, but the shoe fits - this is a “thinking-feeling” article, after all. I think the concept of the “woman wanting to be a man” works against feminism on various levels and makes community-building between women on an everyday level, in casual situations, almost impossible.

The “us” and “them” draw a line between women who assert themselves and those who do not feel it necessary to fight for a seat at the table, yet the concepts of the masculine versus feminine remain the main reason for this tension. In order to have community, we need a certain amount of sensitivity: why is masculine energy always considered premium over the feminine? Tonight I am faced with the idea that women can be misogynists, too. This behavior is ultimately self-destructive.