Thursday, September 25, 2014

#GIRLBOSS Lessons from Chapter 1

Introduction to #GIRLBOSS 

Because I am interested in fashion, I quickly picked up Sophia Amoruso's book #GIRLBOSS when it came out in the early summer.  For those who don't know, Amoruso is the founder/creative director/CEO of the online fashion retailer Nasty Gal--- a site where I have shopped a lot.  I definitely dig Nasty Gal's vibe which encourages its customers to show some attitude, be themselves, and take risks.  It is sort of a more curated, more punk, more sexy, less cutesy ModCloth.

In #GIRLBOSS, Amoruso tells us her life story and how she came to be where she is in her business and career, while at the same time encouraging her readers to become #GIRLBOSSes themselves and giving her advice as to how to do this.

I read #GIRLBOSS rather hastily and uncritically while flying from Philadelphia to LA and back.  When I got to the end of the book my impression of it was that (1) it was an easy read, (2) a lot of it was the sort of fun, positive, inspirational guff that one usually finds in such books, and (3) there were a bunch of points and practical, straight-talking suggestions that she made that I thought were really great . . . only I couldn't 100% remember what they were.

So over the next few weeks, I am going to quickly re-read the book, chapter by chapter (11 chapters total), to rediscover the pearls of wisdom Amoruso has to offer, and share them with you.

Chapter 1: So You Want to Be a #GIRLBOSS?

On Role Models:

"Not too long ago, someone told me that I had an obligation to take Nasty Gal as far as I could because I'm a role model for girls who want to do cool stuff with their own lives.  I'm still not sure how to feel about that, because for most of my life I didn't even believe in the concept of role models.  I don't want to be put on a pedestal.  Anyway, I'm way to ADD to stay up there: I'd rather be making messes, and making history while I'm at it.  I don't want you to look up, #GIRLBOSS, because all that looking up can keep you down.  There energy you'll expend focusing on someone else's life is better spent working on your own." (13) emphasis is mine
The idea of role models has fascinated me since I was a teenager.  I love to find people I admire and emulate and obsess over their lives.  I think being able to find great role models and understand why you want them as models for your life is really important, integral to development, and natural for the social animals we are.  Much social science research exists on the subject;  much of the debate around getting more female characters and more diverse female characters into our television, films, books, etc. revolves around the idea of role models.  If she can see it, she can be it, right?

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Mattress Piece/ Carry That Weight

            These past couple months have been filled with discussions about women’s rights, especially after the release of the Ray Rice video and countless private photos of female celebrities.  While many have been railing against the NFL’s treatment of the situation and their overall domestic violence policy, a similar discussion has been quietly simmering in our college campuses.  Earlier this May, the Department of Education (DOE) published a list of 55 colleges and universities under federal investigation for misconduct in their sexual violence and harassment cases.  Institutions are of varied location and reputation, from Harvard University to the University of Virginia to Knox College in Illinois. In my opinion, investigations must have been severely mishandled to attract attention of the DOE.  This federal investigation is highlighting the misconduct of reports that were actually filed; there is no way to accurately measure the severity and frequency of assault that occurs as a total at a particular institution.  However, The Washington Post provides a great table of data regarding reported forcible sex offences between 2010-2012, calculating the number of offences per 1,000 students. Knox College, which I have never heard of before, appears again with 3.50 offenses reported per 1,000 students in 2012.   Do keep in mind that the process of reporting may be more/less difficult depending on the institution, thus drawing accurate conclusions from these data is quite complicated.
            Although Columbia University is not one of the 55 institutions listed by the DOE earlier, 23 students have filed related a federal complaint in April stating that the University “discouraged students from reporting sexual assault, failed to adequately discipline perpetrators, and retaliated against rape survivors and student activists for speaking out.” One student, Emma Sulkowicz, has been attracting attention due to her bravery, tenacity, and self-expression.  Since the start of her senior year this fall, Emma has been carrying her mattress with her everywhere she goes.  Emma says she will be able to forgo the mattress once her alleged rapist is removed from campus.  In a step of great bravery and significance, Emma has transformed her protest into her Senior Thesis entitled Mattress Piece/Carry That Weight.  Watch her describe her project below. [Please note that two additional students have filed reports against this same student.]


            By the rules of her piece, Emma is not allowed to ask for help to carry the mattress, but she is more than welcome to accept help when it is offered.  This community involvement has spread to what are now entitled “Collective Carries” and on-campus protests.  Last week a protest was held, including the presence of numerous mattress and roughly 50 individuals sharing their stories.  Emma indicates that for the most part, she has not needed to carry her mattress solo.  However, I am sure her experience has not been entirely positive.  It only took me a quick glance at the comment sections of relevant articles for me to feel disheartened. 
In total, I feel Emma’s work is an astounding piece, a complete inversion of Hester Prynne’s scarlet letter.  She is incorporating her experience, her expression, and her emotions into a potent non-violent demonstration.  As this op-ed writer noted, the collective carries “dramatically transform part of her performance art into a collaborative protest  (feel free to brave this comments section).”  Finally, Emma’s piece is a fantastic visual representation of metaphor.  As she explained in her video, objects of the bedroom, especially the bed, signify privacy and security.  How do we feel when we are forced into someone’s private space? How do victims feel when someone else forces themselves into the victim’s private space? The physical weight and awkwardness of the mattress reflects the pain and weight carried every day by those struggling with traumatic events.  The collective carries indicate how much easier the experience can be when there is community support. 
This piece is fantastic.  While I hope she will be able to put the mattress down soon, I look forward to more news and discussion that will serve to amplify its powerful message and community involvement.  Even if you are not geographically located near enough to help Emma carry that weight, the piece still challenges you find ways to carry that weight for those nearby who you know need the help.


Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Watch Out! You might be wearing the rainforest.

I am passionate about environmentalism and climate change.  I was reading an article on one of my go-to eco-news sites and learned that I might be wearing materials made from pulped forests (with a heavy dose of toxic sludge).

I am a fashion enthusiast, but I was not happy to learn that my styling could be contributing to deforestation, the destruction of important ecosystems and indigenous lands, and the proliferation of toxic chemicals in our environment.

How exactly is it possible to be wearing trees?  Apparently, the combination of pulped wood and

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Food, Family, and Feminism

My summer reading list this year included several books about food, in particular Year of No Sugar: A Memoir by Eve Schaub and Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life by Barbara Kingsolver (and family).  Both books were about the families’ attempts to do something “extreme” with their eating habits over the course of a year.  Schaub’s book describes the family’s struggle to eliminate added sugar from their diet.  Kingsolver’s follows the family’s quest to eat only locally grown food in season. 

I read them mostly for my interest in health and sustainability, but they left my feminist brain confused and conflicted about a seemingly straightforward topic: cooking.  Since both books are at least nominally about food, they included a lot of material about cooking.   Both authors were very much in favor of cooking, spent a fair chunk of their time doing it, and were encouraging others to do the same.

But wait! my brain kept saying.  Wasn’t the point of feminism to get women out of the kitchen?  Should we really be saddling ourselves with the cooking chores again?  What’s next?  Wouldn’t feminists scream at this?

Let me take a step back and say that both women freely chose to undertake these food experiments.  Given their interests, education, work flexibility, etc. they were in the position to make this choice for themselves.  No one was pressuring them to cook or telling them to stay home because that was all they were good for.

However, I do think there are broader feminist issues here.

While both women freely chose to undertake their yearlong food experiments, both expressed a feeling that in the broader scheme of things, they did not have a choice.  They believed they were poisoning their families, ruining the planet, and/or eliminating their children’s prospects for a healthy and prosperous future.  Saying no to the food experiments did not seem like an option.

What does this have to do with feminism. Well Kingsolver stopped me in my tracks when justifying her time in the kitchen.  I am paraphrasing, but she basically said:

We (professional women) got our educations and joined the workforce with the implicit promise that society would help us take care of our families.  The schools would make sure our kids learned what they needed to know.  The food industry would provide nutritious, responsible food requiring limited preparation.  New products and technologies would keep us safe, healthy, and clean.  They lied.

She could go out and maximize her earning potential, but to her, the bargain was not worth it.  She would rather make sure her family was healthy and that she was leaving the planet in better state for her children to live in when she was gone.  Similarly, Schaub was dismayed by the amount of sugar her 1st grader was getting in school and by the sugar hiding in her emergency chicken with pasta and cream sauce meal from the grocery store freezer isle.

My feminist point?  I have two.

Point 1: Society promises a mother everything but on closer inspection, she gets very little in return.  We no longer resign women to the kitchen as their rightful place in a patriarchal society, at least not explicitly.  But do we actually give them a choice?  This gets back to a point I made in my More Work for Mother: Part 2 post.  In that discussion, I concluded that
“internet access has placed the burden of research on the consumer.  Whereas once you paid a travel agent to book your flights, now you spend several hours researching and comparing prices.  The variety of products available also means you spend a lot more time researching the perfect backpack for your child or the best rice cooker.  All this research time seems like an added burden on working mothers that we take for granted.”
All this leads us to feminist goals regarding social support for women's empowerment.  Obvious examples include affordable childcare or flexible work schedules, but maybe feminists should expand their thinking to include basic things like education reform, food safety, and sustainable agriculture.  Yes, moms can drive markets, but they deserve to be astrophysicists or chief operating officers rather than the country’s unpaid food inspectors or agricultural watchdogs. 

Point 2:  Cooking itself is not the enemy.  This might be obvious, but I missed this point and maybe other feminists do too.  I grew up in an environment where cooking was a chore and food was either a haven for allergens or a problem for the latest diet fad.  I never ended up with an unhealthy relationship with food, but only recently did I realized that cooking can have its own rewards.  

Cooking can be an exciting and creative process as well as a way to make delicious AND amazingly healthy food.  This is part of Kingsolver’s argument in favor of home cooking.  In addition, besides the obvious health benefits, she lays out a range of other family benefits: time together in the kitchen sharing stories, making memories, experimenting, and learning new skills; setting up a designated family meal time; interacting with the past through family recipes or foods that remind you of Thanksgiving with Grandma; taking time from a crazy schedule for some quiet and reflective time.

Obviously all these wonderful things don’t happen every day.  Sometimes cooking IS a chore and we want to make sure mom is not the one stuck with it all the time.  But in these books, especially Kingsolver’s, cooking is family work.  Dad makes the bread daily and plows up the garden.  The children look up recipes, work in the garden, help with the cooking, or even run the family’s egg business.  Everyone works, everyone learns, everyone benefits.  As a result, bringing a feminist view to cooking can be very rewarding for everyone in the family, not just the women.

So there you go . . . food can equal feminism.