This blog has been terribly neglected lately, and the tiny readership I might have ever had, has probably disappeared elsewhere, and rightfully so. The reason for not updating lately is that me and husband are temporarily relocated to the other side of the earth - we are living in Hong Kong for half a year (yes, I know, that is very cool!). So with all the preparations and then coming here and trying to figure stuff out and all, yeah, not a lot of time and energy for blogging. I have been reading though, and there have been a lot of good stuff - and craziness - as usual. I don’t plan to make this a “look what cool/weird/funny/terrible things are happening to me in HK”-blog now, but I do have some changes in mind. I want to make it more pointed. More sharp. I have some ideas, we’ll see where it leads me. Anyway, I am back.
Author Archive
Jun
23
2008
Thoughts at the carnival (to be continued)Posted by: Jenny Penny in Blog carnivals, Feminism, Sex and sexualityMy post on what type of sex is feminist approved has been included at the 5th edition of the feminist carnival of sexual freedom and autonomy, hosted at Being Amber Rhea. Thanks for linking to me! There is a lot of good posts in the carnival - go read! For instance this by sunflower_p to which I can only say yes, nod nod.
A-freaking-men. (And I had so much more to say on this subject but it’s late and I’m going away early tomorrow morning so it will have to wait.) Happy midsummer everyone! Here’s a little reading for the weekend (sorry not a lot of links today). Amber Rhea writes about feminist choices.
Jun
19
2008
Reporting from occupied GazaPosted by: Jenny Penny in Human rights, Media, Middle East, Self-promotion: Jenny elsewhereSwedish readers, head on over to the Amnesty Press website and read this story about the situation in the occupied Gaza and about how it is reported in the media. Not because I wrote it, but because it is damn important.
Jun
19
2008
So, which sex acts get the feminist stamp of approval?Posted by: Jenny Penny in Feminism, Sex and sexualityAs you see not much have happened here lately. It’s not that there is a lack of blog worthy things, but I just haven’t mustered up the will to write something even remotely clever about them. Like last week, I really wanted to chime in on this discussion. Yeah, I’m one of those that think that whatever rocks you boat, go ahead and do it, as long as it is consensual and involves adults. And I have a huge problem with the certain kind of feminists who say that I can’t really enjoy doing X, and if I just examined more I would realize that x is damaging, degrading and that enjoying x means I am fucked up (no pun intended) and traumatized/abused/insert random “you must be a victim”-word here. (Addendum: enjoying x can also mean that you’re an evil evil patriarchy enabler and that you should hand over your holy womanhood membership card.) I agree to a certain point that the personal is political, yes, but I also wonder… How does what we do in the bedroom affect society as a whole? I mean, when the anti-gay people come with their “same-sex marriage will ruin heterosexual marriage” and “gay sex means the end of civilization” we laugh at them and point out that what other people does in the bedroom does not affect them in any way. Yeah you probably get where I stand on this and I didn’t intend for this to be so long, so here’s some other people who have good things to say:
and Belledame
Jun
09
2008
Torture leads to “trauma”Posted by: Jenny Penny in Crime, Europe, Human rights, Media, Stupidity, The "war on terrorism", USA
I wish him the best of luck - it’s absolutely appalling that you could be kidnapped and tortured “by mistake” and then receive no compensation what so ever.
Why the hell do they put scare quotes around the word traumatised? Of course he was traumatised, he was freaking kidnapped, taken to a ghost prison and tortured. And then finally after five months of hell the Central Intelligence Agency - what kind of intelligence do they operate on?! - realized they had the wrong guy. Dear BBC “editor”, I think you would be traumatised by that too. Lotta Fogde writes in today’s Dagens Nyheter about feminism with a starting point in the now failed Clinton presidential campaign. Her analysis is that Hillary failed to present feminism as freedom movement for both sexes. Now feminism has never been mainstream in the US, as it has in Sweden, where prominent male politicians a few years ago couldn’t wait to proclaim their adherence to the feminist cause. But not anymore. People are dropping the feminist label like a hot coal, with minister of finance Anders Borg the most noted exception, even though his version of feminism is more about the liberal notion of individual (economic) freedom than about gendered power structures. Also here, in what is often called the most equal country in the world, is feminism failing to present itself as a broad movement which benefits everyone. It is instead seen as an extremist standpoint; women’s issues are “special interest” and in the same box as other “minority problems”. As Lotta Fogde writes: “normal feminism” isn’t heard in the debate, and the word is associated with extremism and weirdos. Equality is debated, but it’s always construed as an individual issue rather than a systemic one. When studies for instance show that marriage means economic loss for women and economic gain for men, it’s always analyzed in terms of individual decisions rather than in broader, deeper structural terms. Which of course plays into the current political discourse where of “freedom of choice” and “individual responsibility” has replaced societal solidarity and collective solutions. But I have a hard time agreeing with Fogde’s conclusions and wishes. She calls for a yearly broadly encompassing feminist congress “in an era where almost every sport and every sexual orientation has its own galas”. More consensus, then. She also calls for a resurrection of non-Socialist feminism, which certainly seems rather absent (with the exception of said minister of finance, that is). But I can’t see how such a cozy, “let’s all come together and forget our differences”, vanilla-flavored feminism can be the magic formula which will make inequality fade away. When more and more feminist, certainly the young ones, see the need for broad intersectional analysis which doesn’t only take gender into account but also race, class, sexual orientation, bodily ability, and so on, then a lowest common denominator approach can’t be the answer. I may agree with the minister of finance that 1. women are subordinated in society and 2. this needs to change, but then the similarity in opinion probably ends. When we have emptied our champagne glasses and the fun feminist get together is over, we will walk our separate ways, politely agreeing to disagree over how that subordination should be ended.
Jun
05
2008
US negotiates permanent control over IraqPosted by: Jenny Penny in Middle East, Politics, The "war on terrorism", USA, War and militaryIn the light of the Condoleezza Rice interview discussed in this post, this becomes even more … no I’m at loss for words.
This is their desired end state!? Permanent occupation, more political sectarian violence, more money being spent on the occupation, more soldiers sent to Iraq (how many people do you need to man 50 bases?), more people killed on all sides? That is a victory? (Really, I’m not as surprised as it may seem. I knew, like all sane people, that the war wasn’t about peace and liberty and justice for all.)
Jun
02
2008
In that case, I think you might have abused their hospitality a little…Posted by: Jenny Penny in Media, Middle East, Politics, Stupidity, The "war on terrorism", USA, War and military, What did you just say?!?!Ok this is a bit late, but. As you might know, a big conference on Iraq was held in Stockholm last Thursday. Condoleezza Rice was there, and Dagens Nyheter scored an interview, which was overly polite and fawning - it ends with a question about her piano playing career. And in there, there’s this:
Yeah there are a load of stuff to bite into in that answer (about permanent bases for instance), but… The US are in Iraq by invitation of the Iraqi people to help them defend themselves against al-Qaida? Really? I thought you were there to find those WMDs? No wait, sorry, it was to remove Saddam Hussein. No wait, sorry, it was to bring peace and freedom. No wait, sorry… And that - the statement that the US are in Iraq by invitation from the Iraqis - got no follow up question. Nothing. What kind of a journalist makes stuff like that (and more) just pass by?! (yeah, I know the answer…)
May
29
2008
School events in church?Posted by: Jenny Penny in Education, Holidays and celebrations, Religion, SwedenWhy do this debate always seem to pop up around this time of the year? (For non-Swedish readers: the subject is whether the end-of-the-school-year celebration for our public schools should take place in a church or not. And not just any church, it’s always the Church of Sweden. Which was separated from the state eight years ago, but still holds a special position and has all kinds of influence, even though it legally should be considered as any other religious association.) I’m too tired to even repeat the obvious arguments as to why compulsory school activities should not take place in a religious context. Study visits and such is totally ok of course, but anything resembling worship is out. Many people seem to think that it is so important that their children go to church on their last day of school, even if they themselves probably haven’t set foot in a church since their aunt’s funeral or the mandatory once-a-year Christmas visit. If church attendance is so important to them, well then they should take their kids themselves and not expect the school to provide them with hymns and prayer. And then there are those who say that it isn’t about the religious message (if there is any); that it is the atmosphere and feeling that matters. Do you know what I, a pretty convinced atheist, think about using other people’s sacred rooms to get some kind of atmosphere and feeling and tell them to please keep that being in the sky out of it? I think that’s pretty damn disrespectful! Either you use the church with the priest and blessing and the whole deal and then you have overstepped the boundaries of the non-denominational and freedom of religion-adhering public school. Or you tell the minister to please skip the God-references and just use the church as a cosy little gathering place because “it is supposed to be that way” and then you disrespect the people for whom the church isn’t just any other building. Both is wrong. (Kind of like getting married in a church when you’re not religious, just because it’s “such a beautiful place”. One of the most beautiful buildings I’ve ever been in is the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem - a Muslim mosque. I wouldn’t dream about getting married there, and ask the imam to “please keep the Allah references to a minimum”. But I’ve heard people asking that of the Church of Sweden-minister officiating their wedding. Geez, how selfish is that?! But I digress.) So for the ones who think that going to church is really important for their kids: take them yourself! I’m sure it’s open when the non-religious, inclusive school celebration is over. And for the ones saying that a church is just like any other room, then moving the celebration elsewhere can’t be a big deal, right? PS. I don’t know where this so-called “tradition” of having the end of the school year ceremonies in church comes from - I went to school in the 80s and early 90s and we never went to a church for ours. Neither did my parents, born in the early 40s and 50s, I think. Actually I don’t think my grandmother did either. So it can’t be that all-encompassing and ancient as some “traditionalists” are making it out to be. |

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