Category Archives: Feminism

Little known heroes of American history, #37592

On August 18, 1920, the Tennessee legislature engaged in a fierce debate over the Anthony Amendment, which would give women the right to vote. Thirty-five other states had ratified the amendment, and if Tennessee followed suit, it would be enshrined … Continue reading

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Sigh. You would think that people would have better things to do with their time. I am referring to the flap over at Live Journal about the use of breastfeeding pictures as default icons. I was thinking it was an … Continue reading

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March 8 is International Women’s Day. Therefore, it is also Blog Against Sexism Day. (Who decides these things, anyway?) I have already written about feminism when I wrote about the death of Betty Friedan. And there are a great many … Continue reading

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Love and marriage…

I spent the last weekend at a niece’s wedding. This particular niece reminds me of Bubbles, the Powerpuff Girl: blonde hair, blue-eyed, pretty, and with superpowers — she has a mind like a steel trap, one bachelors’ in math, another … Continue reading

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‘Night, Sister.

On Saturday, Betty Friedan died. She was 85. It is hard to overestimate the impact she had on the nation’s psyche. She destroyed some of the myths we held about who we were: all to the good, as those myths … Continue reading

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