Official Shrub.com Blog
Home Log in   About Us Discussion Rules
April 11, 2007
Introduction [Women and Violence, Part 1]
by @ 10:50 pm

This is a bit of an experiment.

This quarter I’m taking a Women Studies course titled “Women and Violence.” The final project for this class is open to creative interpretation, and so I’m attempting to bring together my academic feminism with my online feminism by using blogging as a part of that project. Over the next eight weeks, until the final week of the quarter, I’ll be making weekly posts on the topic of women and violence. Each post will (hopefully) be inspired by the readings or discussions from class. They will be posted both here and on my LiveJournal, and can be accessed through this link.

The course itself approaches gendered violence as a continuum of behaviors that affect women, from the private to the public, the individual to the institutional, the legally prohibited to the socially permissible. This includes the most commonly discussed forms of gendered violence, such as rape and domestic violence; and also forms of violence such as war, abuse by prisons and other institutions, and indirect violence by the media. My series of posts will cover any of these topics, depending on what strikes me, or perhaps what is most relevant to the feminist blogosphere at the time.

If this all sounds kind of vague to you all, that’s on purpose. I’m actually not sure how these next eight weeks will go, or what kind of writing I will do. I’m hoping to let the writing come organically out of influences from the course and online, so I’m not putting any limitations on this series for now.

Speaking of influences - while I always welcome responses from readers, I invite them even more heartily for this project. Comments or criticism - even if you don’t have anything to add beyond, “I agree with you/Commenter A!” - please do make your voice heard. Part of the reason I’m using a blog format is so I can examine the responses I get, and how other people might connect to what I’m writing.

  [link]
Filed under Abuse, rape, and domestic violence; Feminism; Women and Violence

13 Responses to “Introduction [Women and Violence, Part 1]”

  1. Luke says:

    is it prof ginorio?! I hope it is because she does a really, really terrific job with that course.


  2. SunlessNick says:

    I don’t any comment, just a wish of good luck.


  3. Sara says:

    Wish I could make blogging part of a classroom project :p I will attempt to live vicariously through yours instead!


  4. rslux says:

    This might sound bad, but in a way, it’s nice that the whole Kathy Sierra controversy is a recent event; it’s one issue to look at as you work on the project.


  5. Sigel Phoenix says:

    Thanks for the well wishes, everyone.

    Luke: It is indeed Professor Ginorio, and she is indeed terrific. She also brought up Hollaback as one of her noteworthy past examples of final projects. :D


  6. Official Shrub.com Blog » Blog Archive » Denying responsibility for sexism [Women and Violence, Part 2] says:

    […] [This is part of my series on Women and Violence, which I am writing as a project for a Women Studies course I’m taking. For an explanation and information on my intentions with this series, please see the introduction.] […]


  7. Andy says:

    Does this course focus only on women as victims of gendered violence or will it also address women as aggressors?


  8. Sigel Phoenix says:

    The course includes some analysis of women’s use of violence, but since women are disproportionately the targets of violence, and the societal imbalance of power favors men who commit violence against women, the majority of the analysis is on women as victims of violence.


  9. Official Shrub.com Blog » Blog Archive » Discursive patterns regarding sexual violence [Women and Violence, Part 3] says:

    […] [This is part of my series on Women and Violence, which I am writing as a project for a Women Studies course I’m taking. For an explanation and information on my intentions with this series, please see the introduction.] […]


  10. Official Shrub.com Blog » Blog Archive » Tradition and the obscuring of gender violence [Women and Violence, Part 4] says:

    […] [This is part of my series on Women and Violence, which I am writing as a project for a Women Studies course I’m taking. For an explanation and information on my intentions with this series, please see the introduction.] […]


  11. Official Shrub.com Blog » Blog Archive » The violence beneath ‘beauty’ [Women and Violence, Part 5] says:

    […] [This is part of my series on Women and Violence, which I am writing as a project for a Women Studies course I’m taking. For an explanation and information on my intentions with this series, please see the introduction.] […]


  12. Official Shrub.com Blog » Blog Archive » Obligatory FGC post [Women and Violence, Part 6] says:

    […] [This is part of my series on Women and Violence, which I am writing as a project for a Women Studies course I’m taking. For an explanation and information on my intentions with this series, please see the introduction.] […]


  13. Official Shrub.com Blog » Blog Archive » Policing women through violence [Women and Violence, Part 7] says:

    […] [This is part of my series on Women and Violence, which I am writing as a project for a Women Studies course I’m taking. For an explanation and information on my intentions with this series, please see the introduction.] […]


Leave a Reply

Before posting a comment, you must read this blog's discussion rules. By posting here, you agree to abide by the rules listed. If you do not, your comment will most likely not be published. Trolling, flaming, and personal attacks will do nothing but get you banned.

  • Blog Carnivals

  • Blog Vanity

  • Childfree Feminists

  • Community Blogs

  • Contributors' Sites

  • Culture Blogs

  • Dear Privileged Groups:

  • Feminism 101

  • Feminism 303

  • Feminist Gamers

  • Feminist Groups

  • Feminist Men

  • Feminist Parents

  • Feminists of Colour

  • Feminists on Sexuality

  • Gaming Geekery

  • Geeky Feminists

  • Geeky Resources

  • Health Products

  • LJ Communities

  • More Feminists

  • Online News & Journals

  • Other Groups

  • Personal is Political Blogs

  • Political Feminists

  • Pop-culture Blogs

  • Privilege 101

  • Privilege Checklists

  • Queer Activist Blogs

  • Queer Feminists

  • Race Relations 101

  • Racial Activist Blogs

  • Reproductive Rights

  • Resources

  • Science and Technology Blogs

  • Services

  • Tag-team Feminism

  • Technology Groups

  • Transgender Resources

  • Unclassified Blogs

  • Useful Plugins

  • WordPress

  • All original content Official Shrub.com Blog is copyrighted by Shrub.com; any other material used with permission or according to fair use remains the sole property of the owner. Please contact the the site administrator for further details regarding acceptable use policy.

    Contents and Graphics Copyrighted © Andrea Rubenstein
    Efficient Recently Commented Posts plugin © Michael Moore.
    Official Shrub.com Blog is proudly powered by WordPress.

    Shrub.com Logo © 2004, Andrea Rubenstein
    About
    Shrub.com's official blog is a space for our members to share their opinions on politics, culture, feminism, video games, and whatever else interests them.
    Recent Comments
    Categories
  • All
  • Carnivals, Blog Against -ism Days, etc. (49)
  • Censorship (2)
  • Childfree Issues (9)
  • Companies Behaving Badly (22)
  • Discrimination (9)
  • Features (1)
  • Feminism (228)
  • Gender essentialism (70)
  • Just plain cool (1)
  • Link Blogging (22)
  • Multiculturalism (26)
  • Personal (62)
  • Politics (69)
  • Popular Culture (189)
  • Privilege (62)
  • Queer Issues (27)
  • Religion (12)
  • Science (27)
  • Series (38)
  • Sex, sexuality, and sexual politics (64)
  • Shrub.com Related (63)
  • Technology (18)
  • Teh Funnay (16)
  • The Evil -ism's (110)
  • Blog Search
    Archives
    TTLB Ecosystem
    RSS Feeds
    Valid XHTML
    Other
    Valid XHTML
    XFN
    Boycott Staforce

    StatCounter