Not All Who Wonder Are Lost

dialling-footnoterphone:

kataroo:

Happy International Women’s Day!

SISTER SUFFRAGETTE!

dialling-footnoterphone:

kataroo:

Happy International Women’s Day!

SISTER SUFFRAGETTE!

sexxxisbeautiful:

Asking For It: 6%

It is estimated that only 6% of rapes and sexual assaults are actually reported, which is a frightfully low number. I have started a new project aiming to explore the reasons behind this, which started from the #ididnotreport hashtag on twitter - where survivors or rape/sexual abuse tell of their numerous reasons why they didn’t report it to anyone. This is the first series of images - numerous things that victims are told time and time again whenever they do actually report their abuse to someone - be it a friend, parent, family member, stranger or the authorities. We live in a society of rape culture where the victim is almost constantly blamed - told that they drank too much, wore too little, were out too late by themselves, flirted too much, are too “slutty”, are too “frigid”, are making a big deal out of “nothing”, the rapist was their partner so it obviously wasn’t rape because you can’t be raped by someone you’re in a relationship with. The things that victims constantly get told by the media, the people they know, rape “jokes”, songs, the authorities…they are painted on them so that they can never forget. To remind them that it is all “their fault” - if they hadn’t gone there/drank alcohol/wore that skirt/flirted etc, it wouldn’t have happened. Obviously.
 

I intend to expand on this series of photographs in the near future, and there is a lot more to come from this project, this is only the very starting point. My aim is to bring the idea of rape culture, slut-shaming, and victim-blaming to the attention of more people. To try and examine why 94% of rapes/assaults/abuse are never reported to the police, and to try and make that number decrease.

Linzi Clark

“Should the female die, the male will change sex rather than find another female, and then pair up with a single male clown fish. In this case, the absence of the female is the triggering factor in the male’s change.

On an interesting side note, this is the same type of fish seen in the Pixar movie Finding Nemo. In it, a love-struck clown fish’s wife dies and he is left to raise a child, Nemo, alone. In reality, Nemo’s father would have changed sex so that he might reproduce again with another unpaired male.”

evolutionfaq.com (via shizaminelli)

Regardless of biology, animated animal characters are almost always male. This trope (animal gender bender) is one of the best pervasive examples of male-centric media I can think of. 

(via superherojuice)

(Source: ragnaroktopus)

nevver:

We are Devo!
“Why at this late date are we still reinforcing the idea that women are modest and fragile and in need of gender-specific accommodations? Lowder seems to suggest that the arrival of James Deen’s mild-enough flavor of porn is some sort of victory for women. As I see it, the only thing necessarily lady-friendly about soft-core scenes is that they come with less stigma than the real stuff. Watching this vanilla variety of porn might feel, for some, like less of a betrayal of one’s feminist values — because the sex depicted is a little gentler, not quite as rapey as what you might expect of, say, a typical S&M scene — but there is nothing at all feminist, or psychologically healthy, about limiting the expression of a woman’s sexuality.”
from the excellent article: Porn for Ladies: The Subtle Sexism of Assessing Female-Friendly Smut. (via theatlantic)
“I know older men in comedy who can barely feed and clean themselves, and they still work. The women, though, they’re all ‘crazy.’ I have a suspicion — and hear me out, because this is a rough one — that the definition of “crazy” in show business is a woman who keeps talking even after no one wants to fuck her anymore.”
Tina Fey (via killerdressedinpilgrimsclothing)
itsnotovertonight:

A slide from anthropology class that I found quite powerful.

itsnotovertonight:

A slide from anthropology class that I found quite powerful.



thefrisky:

This Is The Sausagefest Currently Testifying About Women’s Access To Affordable Birth Control - The Frisky

Here’s a picture of the witness table at the House Oversight and  Government Reform Committee, which is discussing access to contraception  and comprehensive healthcare. Let’s play a quick game of “Count the  uteruses,” shall we? Oh, right, there are none. At least there’s a  second panel coming up, which will include … wait for it … four more  men. Said Rep. Carolyn Maloney before walking out of the hearing in  protest: “I look at this panel, and I don’t see one single individual  representing the tens of millions of women across the country who want  and need insurance coverage for basic preventative health care services,  including family planning. Where are the women?”
That’s a really excellent question. [Think Progress; Huffington Post; Maddow Blog]

thefrisky:

This Is The Sausagefest Currently Testifying About Women’s Access To Affordable Birth Control - The Frisky

Here’s a picture of the witness table at the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which is discussing access to contraception and comprehensive healthcare. Let’s play a quick game of “Count the uteruses,” shall we? Oh, right, there are none. At least there’s a second panel coming up, which will include … wait for it … four more men. Said Rep. Carolyn Maloney before walking out of the hearing in protest: “I look at this panel, and I don’t see one single individual representing the tens of millions of women across the country who want and need insurance coverage for basic preventative health care services, including family planning. Where are the women?”

That’s a really excellent question. [Think ProgressHuffington PostMaddow Blog]

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