T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
878.1 | Deeds speak as loud as words.
| DELNI::POETIC::PEGGY | Justice and License | Thu Nov 30 1989 11:11 | 13 |
|
This concept is one of the first that I agreed with - that
may be because I see my life as non-segmented. So everything
in a reflection of who I am and what I am.
_peggy
(-)
|
The inner self and the outer self
should not be in conflict with each other.
|
878.2 | | CUPCSG::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Wed Dec 27 1989 09:01 | 11 |
| I thought it meant that there is (perhaps) no such thing as a
"merely personal" action, but that all personal actions have political
consequences. Likewise, that many personal problems (such as child
care) require political solutions and that women need to realize that
finding a personal solution (to child care) does not *really* solve
the problem.
Note: "Political" here might better be defined as "social" or, at
least, "supra-personal!"
Nancy
|
878.3 | are women personal or political? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Jan 18 1990 12:54 | 33 |
| This is from Robin Morgan's book The Demon Lover, about one of her
experiences in the male-dominated leftist movements in the 60s. To me it
says a lot about sexist as compared with racist attitudes, how matters
involving women were (and may still be) seen as "personal" while matters
involving racial equality were seen as "political":
"I am one of seven women--three of us white--in the office of CORE (the
Congress of Racial Equality); at a joint meeting with SNCC (the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee). More than twenty men, black and white,
are present, running the meeting. Three civil-rights workers--one black man
and two white men--have disappeared in Mississippi, and the groups have met
over this crisis....Meanwhile, the FBI, local police, and the National
Guard have been dredging lakes and rivers in search of the bodies. During
the search, the mutilated parts of an estimated seventeen different human
bodies are found. All of us in the New York office are in a state of shock.
As word filters in about the difficulty of identifying mutilated bodies
long decomposed, we also learn that all but one of the unidentified bodies
are female. A male CORE leader mutters, in a state of fury, "There's been a
whole goddamned lynching we never even *knew* about. There's been some
brother disappeared who never even got *reported.*
"My brain goes spinning. Have I heard correctly? Did he mean what I think
he meant? If so, is it my racism showing itself in that I am appalled?
Finally, I hazard a tentative question. Why *one* lynching? What about the
sixteen unidentified female bodies? What about--
"Absolute silence. The men in the room, black and white, stare at me. The
women in the room, black and white, stare at the floor. Then the answer
comes, in a tone of impatience, as if I were politically retarded. "Those
were obviously *sex* murders. Those weren't *political*."
"I fall silent."
|
878.4 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | Ultimately, it's an Analog World. | Fri Jan 19 1990 12:54 | 19 |
|
re: 878.3 (Dorian Kottler)
Good question: -< are women [looked upon as] personal or political? >-
re: the 14 dead women vs 1 dead man
> "Those were obviously *sex* murders. Those weren't *political*."
Scary.
> ..sexist as compared with racist attitudes, how matters involving
> women were (and may still be) seen as "personal" while matters
> involving racial equality were seen as "political":
Why is it like that?
nancy b.
|
878.5 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | Ultimately, it's an Analog World. | Mon Jan 22 1990 10:38 | 25 |
|
re: .3 (Dorian Kottler)
> To me it says a lot about sexist as compared with racist attitudes,
I'm not sure what this means, but...
From last Saturday's Boston Glob:
"After black leaders and health officials expressed outrage that
the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. was about to launch a new cigarette
brand targeted at blacks, the company announced yesterday that
it is *cancelling* a marketing test." {referencing "Uptown" a new
menthol cigarette which had been scheduled for test marketing}
I recall reading how women's groups have similarly lobbied the
tobacco industry concerning advertising specifically targeted
at women. It appears that they have had little or no effect on
changing the industry's advertising or products (which, if the
number of teenage girls I see smoking is any indication, is highly
successful).
nancy b.
|
878.6 | Have you come a long way, baby ... ? | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Jan 22 1990 11:13 | 16 |
| In re: .5 nancy b.
I had a similiar reaction to the "Uptown" story, nancy. I remember when
Virginia Slims came out, imagining the ad agency's thought processes.
Wow! Thank God for a _little_ woman's lib, since it has broken the
link "feminine = "shouldn't smoke". We can now pitch to the
feminINE feminIST (the only kind anyone would want to know). We'll
caracature the likable "slightly liberated" woman, just as is done
on the other side with the Marlboro Man.
I can't off hand remember when Virginia Slims was introduced. When I
saw the reaction to Uptime, I wondered if the Virginia Slims campaign
would be tolerated today, if freshly introduced. I don't know the
answer.
- Bruce
|
878.7 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | RRRRRRRRR! | Mon Jan 22 1990 11:22 | 11 |
| >It appears that they have had little or no effect on
> changing the industry's advertising or products (which, if the
> number of teenage girls I see smoking is any indication, is highly
> successful).
I don't think the number of teenage (girls or boys) that smoke is very closely
related to advertising. I think it has alot more to do with peer pressure and
incidental advertising (ie, you see Rob Lowe etc smoking in a feature film and
think he looks "cool.")
The Doctah
|