Christmas Treat - A Holiday Film with Feminist Undertones

Behold my recommendation for your Christmas Day viewing pleasure...

A Holiday Film with Feminist Undertones...

BATMAN RETURNS.

At which point you might say, huh, what?

But what you might not know is that this film has Catwoman in it - and any film with Catwoman in it always has some kind of feminist undertone. Call it one of the few virtues of the comicbook industry, they love a heroine who has a feminist twist.



Of course its hardly the only such film with feminist undertones. There is also the Halle Berry "Catwoman" film - which tried so desperately to appeal to a feminist crowd it ended up being overdone and made the villain a beauty product heiress with diamond-hard skin.

Which is really rather lame.

And then to make matters worse it shows off a lot of skin - Which is one of the worst traits of the comicbook industry, their unrealistic flaunting of female skin.

As if women watching this film didn't know already that it was basically made for a male audience but they're trying to fool us with over the top mixed messages.



There is a long list of superheroines out there if movie producers want to make movies out of them... many of them are not well known, but that doesn't mean their stories aren't worth telling.

But sadly many of them would be showing a lot of busts and skin. I think that is one of the reasons why they keep failing to make a Wonder Woman film. Its because they know her character is a little two dimensional and they're trying to figure out a Batman Begins way of making the character come to life on the big screen - without it looking ridiculous.

Anyway, here is a long list of superheroines that could be made into films... if anyone ever steps up the plate and decides some of their stories are worthy.

My vote? I know She-Hulk will never be made, but I think BLACK CANARY would be a great film.


Mint Aizawa (Tokyo Mew Mew)
Momoko Akatsutsumi (Cartoon Network)
Alisha (Misfits)
Alexandra/Alex (Totally Spies)
Alice (Resident Evil series)
Amber (Eclipse Comics)
American Dream (Marvel Comics-MC2)
American Maid (The Tick)
Amethyst, Princess of Gemworld (DC Comics)
Andromeda (DC Comics)
Andromeda (Marvel Comics)
Angela (Image Comics)
Aquagirl (DC Comics)
Samus Aran, Metroid
Argent (DC Comics)
Arisia, the Green Lantern of Graxos IV (DC Comics)
Arrowette (DC Comics)
Artemis of Bana-Mighdall (DC Comics)
Atom Eve (Image)
Atomic Betty (television series title character)
Aurora (Marvel Comics)
Avengelyne (various)
B.Orchid (Killer Instinct)
Ballistic (Cyberforce member) (Top Cow)
Barb Wire
Barbarella (V-Magazine)
Batgirl (DC Comics)
Battle Angel Alita (Shueisha)
Batwoman (DC Comics)
Beautiful Dreamer (DC Comics)
Bella Donna (Marvel Comics)
Belphegor (DC Comics)
Big Barda (DC Comics)
Big Bertha (comics) (Marvel Comics)
The Bionic Woman (Ima)
Binary (Marvel Comics)
Vera Black (aka Sister Superior) (DC Comics)
Black Canary (DC Comics)
Black Cat (Harvey Comics)
Black Cat (Marvel Comics)
Black Cherry X (2000 AD)
Black Orchid (DC Comics)
Black Widow (Natasha Romanoff)
Black Widow (Timely Comics)
Blacklight (Marvel Comics-MC2)
Blink (Marvel Comics)
Blitzkrieg (Antarctic Press)
Bloom (Winx Club)
Blonde Phantom (Marvel Comics)
Blossom (Cartoon Network)
Bloodberry
Bluestreak (Marvel Comics-MC2)
Boodikka (Green Lantern Corps) (DC Comics)
Boom Boom (Marvel Comics)
Bounty (Marvel)
Brandy (Image Comics)
Bubbles (Cartoon Network)
Buff (Marvel Comics)
Bulleteer (DC Comics)
Bulletgirl (see Bulletman and Bulletgirl) (DC Comics)
Bumblebee (DC Comics)
Buttercup (Cartoon Network)
Burnout (Eclipse Comics)
Callisto (Marvel Comics)
Captain Confederacy (Marvel Comics)
Captain Marvel (Marvel Comics)
Captain Universe (Marvel Comics)
Lenore Castle (Powerline) (Marvel-Shadowline)
The Cat (Marvel Comics)
Cat Claw (Malibu comics)
Catwoman (DC comics)
Celsius (DC Comics)
Cerise (Marvel Comics)
Chance (Marvel Comics)
Chandika (comics)
Chase (DC Comics)
Abbey Chase (see Danger Girl)
Chastity (Chaos Comics)
Cheetara
Cherry
Choice (Marvel - Ultraverse)
Chun-Li (Street Fighter)
Cammy White (Street Fighter)
Cimarron (Eclipse comics)
Cinnamon (DC Comics)
Circuit Breaker (Transformers)
Clea (Marvel Comics)
Cleopatra (Astro City)
Clover (Totally Spies)
Clobber Girl (Simpsons)
Clobberella (Futurama)
Coagula (DC Comics)
Cobweb (America's Best Comics)
Colt (AC Comics)
Comet Queen (DC Comics, Legion of Super-Heroes)
Copycat (DC-Wildstorm)
Copycat (Marvel Comics)
Anya Corazon (Marvel Comics)
Crane (Bon Comics)
Crazy Jane (DC Comics)
Crimson Avenger III (DC Comics)
Crimson Curse (Marvel Comics-MC2)
Crimson Fox (DC Comics)
Crystal (Marvel Comics)
Cutey Honey (title character)
Cybergirl (title character)
Cybersix
Cyblade (Top Cow)
Cyclone (DC Comics)
Dagger (Marvel Comics)
Darkstar (Marvel Comics)
Darna (Mango Comics)
Dart (DC Comics)
Dart (Image-Highbrow Ent)
Dawn (Sirius Comics)
Dawnstar (DC Comics)
Dazzler (Marvel Comics)
Dead Girl (Marvel Comics)
Karolina Dean (Marvel Comics)
Deathcry (Marvel Comics)
Debrii (Marvel Comics)
Deep Blue (DC Comics)
Destiny (Marvel Comics)
Devi (Virgin Comics)
Diamond (Blink Comics)
Diamond Lil (Marvel Comics)
Diamondback (Marvel Comics)
Brittany Diggers (Antarctic)
Diva (DC-Wildstorm)
Doctor Light (DC Comics)
Doctor Midnight (DC Comics)
Doll Girl (DC Comics)
Dolphin (DC Comics)
Domino (Marvel Comics)
Domino Lady (Pulps)
Dove as Dawn Granger (DC Comics)
Dragona (Mars Ravelo's)
Dragonfly (AC Comics)
Dream Girl (DC Comics)
Duck-Girl (Bon Comics)
Dumb Bunny (DC Comics)
Dusk (Marvel Comics)
Dust (Marvel Comics)
Dyna Girl (Krofft)
Dynamite Girl (Antarctic Press)
Echo (Marvel Comics)
Elasti-Girl (DC Comics)
Elastigirl/Mrs.Incredible (The Incredibles)
Electra Woman (Krofft)
Elektra (Marvel Comics)
Empress (DC)
Energizer (from Power Pack) (Marvel)
The Engineer II (DC - Wildstorm)
Fairchild (DC/Wildstorm)
Faith (DC Comics)
Fallen Angel (DC Comics)
Fantomah
Fantomette (Collection Rose)
Fathom (one of the Elementals, Comico Comics)
Fathom (Aspen Comics)
Feral (Marvel)
Fever (DC Comics)
Fire (DC Comics)
Firebird (Marvel Comics)
Firestar (Marvel Comics)
Flaberella ( the simpsons)
Flamebird III-V (DC Comics)
Flash (Just Imagine...) (DC Comics)
Flash (Tangent) (DC Comics)
Fleur-de-Lis (DC Comics)
Flint (WS)
Flora (Winx Club)
Forerunner (DC Comics)
Pudding Fong (Tokyo Mew Mew)
Free Spirit (Marvel Comics)
Freefall (DC-Wildstorm)
Tara Fremont (AC comics)
Adrienne Frost (Marvel Comics)
Emma Frost (Marvel Comics)
Zakuro Fujiwara (Tokyo Mew Mew)
Fury I (DC Comics)
Fury II (DC Comics)
Gamora (Marvel Comics)
Ganymede (Marvel Comics)
Garganta (AC comics)
Ghost (Dark Horse Comics)
Glitter (Marvel - New Universe)
Glory (various)
Gloss (DC Comics)
Godiva (DC Comics)
Miyako Goutokuji (Cartoon Network)
Grace (DC Comics)
Graphics Girl (Amy Scutter)
Gravity Girl (Birdman and the Galaxy Trio)
Max Guevara (from live-action TV show Dark Angel)
Gypsy (DC Comics)
Green Lantern (DC Comics)
Green Arrow (DC Comics)
Halo (DC Comics)
Harbinger (DC Comics)
Hawk as Holly Granger and Sasha Martens (DC Comics)
Hawkeye (Kate Bishop) (Marvel Comics)
Hawkgirl (DC Comics)
Hawkwoman (DC Comics)
Molly Hayes (Marvel Comics)
Hellcat (Marvel Comics)
Satana Hellstrom (Marvel Comics)
Hepzibah (Marvel Comics)
Hit Girl (Kick-Ass)
Horridus (Image-Highbrow Ent)
Heather Hudson, formerly Sasquatch, Exiles member (Marvel Comics)
Huntara (Marvel Comics)
Huntress (DC Comics)
Ice (DC Comics)
Icemaiden (DC Comics)
Indigo (DC Comics)
Infragirl (Tomorrow Syndicate member) (Image Comics)
Insect Queen (DC Comics)
Invisible Woman (Marvel Comics)
Natasha Irons (DC Comics)
Isis (DC Comics)
Ichigo Momomomiya (Tokyo Mew Mew)
Jack Phantom (America's Best Comics)
Jade (DC)
Jann of the Jungle (Marvel Comics)
Jayna (DC Comics)
Jet (DC Comics)
Jet (Wildstorm)
Jem and the Holograms (Hasbro)
Jocasta (Marvel Comics)
Jolt (Marvel Comics)
Jessica Jones (aka Jewel and Knightress) (Marvel Comics)
Rhea Jones (aka Lodestone) (DC Comics)
Joystick (Marvel Comics)
Jubilee (Marvel Comics)
Judomaster III (DC Comics)
Jungle Girl (various)
Jarella (Huk)
Jennifer Kale (Marvel Comics)
Bette Kane (DC Comics)
Nova Kane (First)
Karatecha (Kiss Comics)
Karma (Marvel Comics)
Kasumi (aka Batgirl) (Cassandra Cain) (DC Comics)
Katana (DC Comics)
Kendra Young (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
Kelly (Misfits)
Laurel Kent (DC Comics)
Kid Flash (Iris West) (DC Comics)
Kinetix (DC Comics)
Kismet (Marvel Comics)
Misty Knight (Marvel Comics)
Knockout (DC Comics)
Kole (DC Comics)
KOS-MOS (Heroine of the Xenosaga series)
Kratha (Virgin Comiffcs)
Kristin (Comics Interview)
Krystala (ABS-CBN Television)
Kumori (Aftermath)
Kitty (Wolverine And The X-Men DVD Series)
Lady Blackhawk (DC Comics)
Lady Death (Chaos Comics)
Lady Luck The Spirit Section
Ladyhawk (Marvel Comic)
La Lunatica (Marvel Comics)
Lavagirl (Sharkboy and Lavagirl)
Layla (Winx Club)
Layla (Sky High)
Juniper Lee (The Life and Times of Juniper Lee)
Leeloo (The Fifth Element)
Faith Lehane (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
Liberty Belle (DC Comics)
Lightning Lass (a.k.a. Light Lass, Gossamer, Spark) (DC Comics)
Lightspeed (from Power Pack) (Marvel Comics)
Lime
Little Mermaid (DC Comics)
Looker (DC Comics)
Loria (see Blood Pack (comics) version) (DC Comics)
Lyja (aka Lazerfist and Ms. Fantastic) (Marvel Comics)(Marvel-MC2)
M (Marvel Comics)
Madame .44 (DC Comics)
Madame Mirage (Top Cow Productions)
Madame Xanadu (DC Comics)
The Magdalena (Top Cow Productions)
Magdalene (Marvel Comics)
Magik (Marvel Comics)
Magma (Marvel Comics)
Maiden Justice
Manhunter (Kate Spencer) (DC Comics)
Manitou Dawn (DC Comics)
Marionette (see Micronauts) (Marvel Comics)
Marrina (Marvel Comics)
Marrow (Marvel Comics)
Marvel Girl (Marvel Comics)
Mary Marvel (DC Comics)
Masada (see Youngblood) (various)
Matilda (Matilda from the Roald Dahl series)
Kaoru Matsubara (Cartoon Network)
Aspen Matthews (Aspen Comics)
Maxima (DC Comics)
Maximum Ride (novel series and manga)
Maya (DC Comics)
Medusa (Marvel Comics)
Meggan (Marvel Comics)
The Menagerie (DC Comics)
Mera (DC Comics)
Anna Mercury
Merry, Girl of 1000 Gimmicks (DC Comics)
Lynn Michaels (a.k.a. "Lady Punisher") (Marvel Comics)
Lettuce Midorikawa (Tokyo Mew Mew)
Mighty B
Nico Minoru (Marvel Comics)
Mirage (DC Comics)
Miss America (DC Comics)
Miss America (Marvel Comics)
Miss Fury
Miss Martian (DC Comics)
Miss Pell (Dexter's Laboratory)
Mockingbird (Marvel Comics)
Ichigo Momomiya (Tokyo Mew Mew)
Moondragon (Marvel Comics)
Musa (Winx Club)
Moonstar (Marvel Comics)
Moonstone (Marvel Comics)
Monstress (DC Comics)
Mother-One (see Wetworks) (DC-Wildstorm)
Motormouth (Marvel Comics)
Ms. Liberty (Antarctic Press)
Ms. Marvel (Carol Danvers) (see also Binary and Warbird) (Marvel Comics)
Ms. Marvel (Sharon Ventura) (see also She-Thing) (Marvel Comics)
Ms. Mystic (originally Pacific Comics, then Continuity Comics)
Ms. Victory
Namora (Marvel Comics)
Namorita (Marvel Comics)
Negative Woman (DC Comics)
Nelvana of the Northern Lights (Hillborough Studio)
Nemesis (Marvel Comics)
Nemesis II (DC Comics)
Neon Queen (Mystery Inc. member) (Image Comics)
Night Girl (DC Comics)
Nightcat (Marvel Comics)
Nightshade (DC Comics)
Nightstar (DC Comics)
Nightveil (AC comics)
Nikki (Marvel Comics)
Niobe (The Matrix)
Nocturne (Marvel Comics)
Angel O'Day (see Angel and the Ape) (DC Comics)
Scarlet O'Neil (Newspaper Strip)
Aleta Ogord (see also Starhawk) (Marvel Comics)
Onyx (DC Comics)
Oracle (DC Comics)
Oracle (The Matrix)
Owlwoman (DC Comics)
Pantha (DC Comics)
Violet Parr (The Incredibles)
Penance (Marvel Comics)
Phantom Girl a.k.a. Apparition (DC Comics)
Phantom Lady
Phoenix (Marvel Comics)
Photon (Marvel Comics)
Pilgrim (see Wetworks) (DC-Wildstorm)
Pink Ranger (Power Rangers)
Pixie (Marvel Comics)
Polaris (as Overdrive) (Marvel Comics)
Poison Ivy (from the comic series)
Kim Possible (from the self-titled cartoon series)
Power Girl (DC Comics)
Power Princess (Marvel Comics)
The Powerpuff Girls
Princess (Gatchaman; Battle of the Planets)
Princess Projectra a.k.a. Sensor (DC Comics)
Princess Kakyuu (Tokyopop)
Promethea (America's Best Comics)
Psylocke (Marvel Comics)
Psynch
Jenny Quantum (DC - Wildstorm)
Queen Hippolyta (DC Comics)
Queen of Swords
Jesse Quick (DC Comics)
Rad (AC comics)
Rainbow (Eclipse Comics)
Rainbow Brite (Hallmark comics)
Rainmaker (DC-Wildstorm)
Rampage (DC Comics)
Raptor (Marvel Comics-MC2)
Rapture (Image-Highbrow Ent)
Rapture (Transformers)
Raven (DC Comics)
Raven (Teen Titans)
Red Guardian (Marvel Comics)
Red Sonja (Marvel Comics)
Red Tornado (All-American Comics)
Rescue (Marvel Comics)
Revanche (Marvel Comics)
Cecilia Reyes (Marvel Comics)
Ellen Ripley (Alien series)
Riptide (see Youngblood version) (various)
Robin as Stephanie Brown or Carrie Kelly.
Rocket (DC Comics)
Rogue (Marvel Comics)
Ronin (Marvel Comics)
Roxy (Winx Club)
Rose and Thorn II (DC Comics)
Rose Tattoo (DC - Wildstorm)
Rouge the Bat (Sonic the Hedgehog)
Sabra (Marvel Comics)
Sage (Marvel Comics)
Sailor Jupiter (Tokyopop)
Sailor Mars (Tokyopop)
Sailor Mercury (Tokyopop)
Sailor Moon (Tokyopop)
Sailor Neptune (Tokyopop)
Sailor Pluto (Tokyopop)
Sailor Saturn (Tokyopop)
Sailor Uranus (Tokyopop)
Sailor Venus (Tokyopop)
Sailor Star Fighter (Tokyopop)
Sailor Star Healer (Tokyopop)
Sailor Star Maker (Tokyopop)
Sailor Chibi Moon (Tokyopop)
Sailor Quartet: Sailor Vesta, Sailor Pallas, Sailor Ceres, Sailor Juno (Tokyopop)
Sakura Kinomoto (Tokyopop)
Saturn Girl (DC Comics)
Savant (DC-Wildstorm)
Scarlet Witch (Marvel Comics)
Scorpion (Carmilla Black), (Marvel Comics)
Secret (DC Comics)
Amanda Sefton (Marvel Comics)
Selene (Underworld)
Sepulchre (Marvel Comics)
Sersi (Marvel Comics)
Shadow Hunter (Virgin Comics)
Shadow Lass a.k.a. Umbra (DC Comics)
Shadowcat (Marvel Comics)
Shakti (comics) (Raj Comics)
Shamrock (Marvel Comics)
Shanna the She Devil (Marvel Comics)
Violet Song jat Shariff (Ultraviolet)
She-Dragon (Image Comics-Highbrow Ent)
She-Hulk (Marvel Comics)
She-Hulk (Lyra) (Marvel Comics)
She-Ra She-Ra: Princess of Power
She-Thing (Marvel Comics)
She-Venom (Marvel Comics)
Sheena (Wags)
Liz Sherman (Dark Horse, Hellboy)
Shi (Crusade)
Shikari (DC Comics)
Shining Knight (Ystina) (DC Comics)
Shrinking Violet (DC Comics)
Sif (Marvel Comics)
Silhouette (Marvel Comics)
Silk Spectre (DC Comics)
Silver Fox (Marvel Comics)
Silver Sable (Marvel Comics)
Silver Scorpion
Silverclaw (Marvel Comics)
Samantha Simpson/Sam (Totally Spies)
Skids (Marvel Comics)
Skyrocket (DC Comics)
Snowbird (Marvel Comics)
Songbird (Marvel Comics)
Emma Sonnett (aka the 10th Muse) (various)
Jenny Sparks (DC - Wildstorm)
Sparx (see Blood Pack (comics) version) (DC Comics)
Speedy II (DC Comics)
Spellbinder (Harmony Concepts)
Spider Girl (DC Comics)
Spider-Girl (Marvel Comics-MC2)
Spider-Woman (Marvel Comics)
Dorothy Spinner (DC Comics)
Spitfire (Marvel Comics)
Spoiler (DC Comics)
Spy Smasher (Katarina Armstrong), (DC Comics)
Squirrel Girl (Marvel Comics)
Stacy X (Marvel Comics)
Star-Spangled Kid (DC Comics)
Stardust (AC comics)
Starfire (DC Comics)
Stella (Winx Club)
Stargirl (DC Comics)
Starwoman (Astro City)
Stature (Marvel Comics)
Stepford Cuckoos (Marvel Comics)
Stinger (Cassandra Lang) (Marvel Comics-MC2)
Storm (Marvel Comics)
Stripperella
Stunner (Marvel Comics)
Buffy Summers (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
Sun Girl (Marvel Comics)
Supergirl (DC Comics)
Supergran (TV series)
Superwoman (DC Comics)
Suprema (Awesome)
Surge (Marvel)
Swift (DC - Wildstorm)
Sydney Savage (see Danger Girl)
River Tam (Firefly/Serenity)
Tank Girl (published by Dark Horse Comics)
Tara (Marvel Comics)
Gwen Tennyson (Ben 10)
Tecna (Winx Club)
Terra (DC Comics, Teen Titans)
Thor Girl (Marvel Comics)
Thunder III (DC Comics)
Jonni Thunder (DC Comics)
Thundra (Marvel Comics)
Tigra (Marvel Comics)
Timeslip (Marvel Comics)
Titaness (Mansion Comics)
Topaz (Marvel Comics)
Traci 13 (DC Comics)
Triplicate Girl a.k.a. Duo Damsel, Triad (DC Comics)
Troia (DC Comics)
Donna Troy (DC Comics)
Tsunami (DC Comics)
Katma Tui a.k.a. Green Lantern of Sector 1417 (DC Comics)
Turbo (Marvel Comics)
The Untalkable
Ultrawoman
Ultraviolet
Valda the Iron Maiden (DC Comics)
Valkyrie (Marvel Comics)
Valkyrie (Alpha-Omega Comics)
Vampirella
Velocity (Top Cow: Cyberforce)
Venus (Marvel Comics)
Vigilante (Patricia Tryce) (DC Comics)
Vindicator (Marvel Comics)
Violet (The Incredibles)(Film)
Violet (J/C)
Virtuous Venus (Harmony Concepts)
Vixen (DC Comics)
Vogue (various)
Void (DC-Wildstorm)
Voodoo (DC-Wildstorm: WildCats)
Jakita Wagner (Dc-Wildstorm: Planetary)
Jenny "XJ-9" Wakeman (My Life as a Teenage Robot)
Wallflower (Marvel Comics)
The Wasp (Marvel Comics)
Web Woman (Filmation)
WhirlGirl (Web series title character)
The White Witch (DC Comics)
Wild Thing (Marvel Comics-MC2)
Wind Dancer (Marvel Comics)
Colleen Wing (Marvel Comics)
Winged Victory (Astro City)
W.I.T.C.H: Will Vandom, Irma Lair, Taranee Cook, Cornelia Hale and Hay Lin (Disney Italia)
Witchblade (Top Cow Productions)
Witchfire (DC Comics)
Witchfire (Marvel Comics)
Wolfsbane (Marvel Comics)
The Woman in Red (Standard Comics)
Wonder Girl (DC Comics)
Wonder Girl (Cassie Sandsmark) (DC Comics)
Wonder Tot (DC Comics)
Wonder Woman (DC Comics)
Wonder Woman (Just Imagine...) (DC Comics)
Word Girl (Television series title character)
X-23 (Marvel Comics)
XJ-9 - see Jenny "XJ-9" Wakeman
XS (DC Comics)
Yellow Ranger (Power Rangers)
Gertrude Yorkes (Marvel Comics)
Zatanna (DC Comics)
Zealot (DC-Wildstorm)

Feminist T-Shirts for Christmas

Looking for last minute Christmas gift ideas?

Get them a custom made feminist t-shirt!









If women took up arms to protect their rights...




"If women took up arms to defend their rights and freedom, the men in power would ban assault rifles so quickly your panties would fall off." - Suzanne MacNevin.


Feminist Quotes of the Day

"You can't stop me. If you push me down I will only come back stronger than ever." - Suzanne MacNevin.

"If every woman in the world carried a secret bottle of pepperspray on her there would be a lot less rapes." - Suzanne MacNevin.

"Exercising is a woman's tool for proving that she can do anything a man can physically do. Some women just don't know their own strength." - Suzanne MacNevin.

"We have to stand up to the bullies and rapists in the world. If we don't we are nothing more than sex slaves." - Suzanne MacNevin.

"You can't push me down because I push back." - Suzanne MacNevin.

"When in doubt remember that inside every woman there is a person who wants to be seen, heard, touched, and liberated." - Suzanne MacNevin.

"Never attribute to men the intelligence required to pull off a 'patriarchal conspiracy'. Its not a conspiracy that men are out to push women down. Its a travesty and purely the result of most men being pigs." - Suzanne MacNevin.

"Live a little. Have sex and enjoy life. But never forget that the joys of life must be fought by freedom fighters and that for 51% of the population those freedom fighters are called feminists." - Suzanne MacNevin.



Disturbing Video - 600 lb mother paid to eat

Below is a video of a 600 lb mother in the USA who was paid by men to make videos of her eating. The phenomenon is known as feeders and chubby chasers.

Eventually she reached a point where she was confined to a bed and couldn't walk any more, so she finally decided it was time to try and lose weight. So now she can walk again, but it will be a long and hard road for her to travel in America, a country which celebrates gluttony and "bigger is better".


In related news a friend of mine in Canada recently got his personal training certification from Elite Trainers. Congratulations!

And myself I am working on my weightlifting and yoga routine, trying to find new ways to jazz it up. (Maybe I should exercise while listening to jazz music???)

My point is for those seeking to lose weight and eat healthy, if you can find the motivation, then do it. Just do it and then stay motivated. You will live longer, be healthier, and be able to enjoy life more fully.

Because quite frankly being stuck in a bed or a wheelchair is something nobody should wish for.

Religious fanatics killing each other only serves to make the atheists happy



Religious fanatics killing each other only serves to make the atheists happy.

Confused?

Let me explain:

#1. Religious fanatics killing each other means there are less religious fanatics going around, spreading their fanaticism.

#2. Normal people see the idiocy of the situation and become disenfranchised with god and decide to become atheists.

Together these two factors only serve to swell the numbers of atheists. In recent years the number of people who identify themselves as "no religion" has risen to 16% world wide, surpassing Hinduism in popularity.

If religious wackos want to keep killing each other, serving as negative role models for the religious, it will only serve to boost the atheist and non-religious numbers.

Conclusions

If people adopted religious tolerance and pacifism, this wouldn't be a problem. We could all live peacefully and respect one another's beliefs.

However since mankind's resources (oil, water and food) are also at stake people are going to continue to use religion as both an excuse and as a weapon of war. Thus this guarantees that people will continue to have wars, and continue to use religion in such a foul way. This will doubtlessly continue to swell the numbers of atheists and non-religious people globally as religious people kill each other off and serve as negative role models for new generations.

So while I will continue to preach pacifism (and agnosticism: the belief that we don't really know if there is/isn't a god, the nature of that god, or even whether he cares about us) the atheist numbers will continue to grow until eventually atheism surpasses Islam (27%) and Christianity (33%). I would like to be hopeful that it would also swell the numbers of agnostics who are more willing to say "Meh, there might be a god, but even if there is, god certainly doesn't care about us anyway."

Food for thought for both the religious, the atheist and the agnostic... and also the war-monkeys and the pacifists.

:)

Maine and Maryland approve same-sex marriage by popular vote

The president of the USA is still on the job today, but that isn't what I want to talk about. There are also lots of other votes going on during an election day in the USA, including electing the Senate, the House of Representatives and lastly various laws that need to be approved in state by state votes.

For example:

Maine and Maryland has approved same-sex marriage by popular vote.

Maine and Maryland have become the seventh and eighth states to allow same-sex couples to marry. Some states also allow "civil unions" but it just isn't the same as being "married".

In another gay-rights victory, Minnesota voters defeated a proposed constitutional amendment that would banned same-sex marriage in the state. So that isn't happening, thankfully, which basically means that gay marriage is still legal in Minnesota.

Washington state also voted on a measure to legalize same-sex marriage, though results were not expected until later today.

The outcomes of the marriage votes could influence the U.S. Supreme Court, which will soon consider whether to take up cases challenging the law that denies federal recognition to same-sex marriages, which means the USA could end up allowing same-sex marriages on a federal level (which it already de facto does, because people can just go and get married in a state which allows gay marriages, and that marriage will be recognized when it comes time to pay federal taxes).

Below is a map I found and modified to represent the new changes thanks to last night's historic votes.

Thinking of selling something big...

I've been thinking about selling the Feminist eZine.

I know, I know... Its a huge website. 344 pages. And its been "my baby" for years now.

The problem is I'm running out of steam. I don't have time to work on it any more. My focus over time turned to the Feminist Truths blog and even that has now waned as I have turned my focus to my own website, suzannemacnevin.com... And then there is the Lilith eZine and Lilith News, which is a whole other story.

So here is my dilemma.

Should I keep struggling with the websites, trying to maintain and update them... or sell off one of them to someone who can truly handle it.

That I think is the real challenge. WHO to sell it to? Obviously it would have to be a fellow feminist. A feminist in need of a popular feminist website and the brand name that would come with owning the Feminist eZine.

And then there is the issue of price. How much value do you stick on a website like that? Well, just the pages and Google PageRank alone is apparently worth $3,850 according to one source I consulted.

But that is excluding "domain name value, brand value and value-added".

So what do I think the Feminist eZine is actually worth? $10,000.

But to be fair I am loathe to part with it. I think it might even break my heart to sell it. Its like I am selling off a kid to an orphanage and I want to make sure its a nice orphanage and they will do a good job with the website. So right now I am only just entertaining offers.

So if you want to make me an offer (I accept Email Interac) let me know and contact me using the email address above. I may not accept your offer, but I will at least entertain it and give it careful thought.

RADICAL WOMEN

The following is a guest post by Margaret Viggiani

Poor and criminalized: a feminist scholar exposes the welfare-to-prison pipeline

By Margaret Viggiani
Freedom Socialist newspaper, Vol. 33, No. 5, October-September 2012 www.socialism.com

Talking to Rebecca Castner, one is instantly drawn to her intensity. A Ph.D. graduate from Women Studies at the University of Washington, Castner has researched how poor mothers, in particular women of color, are criminalized by the welfare system. As a single mom who supported her family on low-wage jobs, Castner knows firsthand the trials of the women she studied.

The myth.

Ronald Reagan emblazoned the stereotype of the Welfare Queen — young, Black, with too many kids — onto the American consciousness. This inaccurate and racist portrayal helped pave the way for George H. W. Bush's and later Bill Clinton’s devastating revamping of the welfare system. Welfare “reform” has forced millions of women and children off TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) by imposing time limits, family caps and sanctions. Castner argues that Clinton’s policies not only drastically shrank social services but also resulted in massive expansion of the U.S. penal system.

According to the Census Bureau, the poverty rate among women in 2011 was 14.6 percent, or almost 18 million females. Rates of poverty were higher for women of color — 25 percent for Blacks and 23 percent for Latinas. One in five children live in poverty and the majority of poor children live in female-headed families.

Making poverty a crime.

Given that the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) is charged with both helping families and conducting criminal investigations against them, Castner believes the frequent downward spiral from welfare to prison is not mere coincidence.

In fact, she hypothesizes that asking for assistance puts the needy at risk of being criminalized. Welfare doesn’t provide enough to survive, leaving its recipients in desperation. Following the mind-boggling and intrusive rules is nearly impossible. Breaking the rules can lead to criminal charges.

Castner reached her conclusions by reviewing in depth 13 cases of welfare fraud from the 103 files provided by King County. The cases occurred between 2000 and 2005.

One of her subjects, Lisa Bandy (a pseudonym assigned by Castner), was a mother of four living in Renton, Wash. To adequately survive without additional assistance, a family of two in that town needed an income of $2,862. But Bandy only received $1,018 a month in assistance.

Unable to afford housing, Bandy and her four children moved at least seven times and endured stretches of homelessness over a 31-month period. To gain welfare benefits, Bandy completed over 22 pages of questions. She had to provide additional documents including her car title, wage and bank statements, birth certificates and proof of who fathered her children. This paperwork is more invasive than alleged criminals are subject to. Castner aptly calls it “getting booked” into welfare.

In 39 months, Bandy was subjected to 45 additional requests for verification, on top of the routine paperwork she was regularly submitting. Failure or inability to provide requested information caused her benefits to be withheld or denied. This happened time and again.

Crime and punishment.

When signing up for food stamps, a recipient is warned that those who knowingly break a rule can be prosecuted and fined up to $250,000, imprisoned up to 20 years, or both. As Castner puts it, “using food stamps may lead to life in prison.”

Comparing the high penalty for food stamp “fraud” with leniency toward bank CEOs who stole billions and nearly collapsed the economy, Castner observes that being poor is about the worst crime there is in the eyes of capitalism.

In 2001, Lisa Bandy was convicted of a felony — Theft in the First Degree — for inaccurately reporting the date she started working and her earnings. She was found guilty of defrauding the state of $8,112 over the course of 13 months. Her punishment: 240 hours of community service, 12 months of probation and restitution of over $8,500. In 2002, she was given another 12 months probation because she had not paid any of her financial obligation. After four years, her case was still open.

During Castner’s years of research, only two of the 13 cases she followed were closed. She calls it “indefinite servitude to the penal system.” Since the debt will not go away until it’s paid, each of these desperately poor mothers live under the threat of imprisonment for failure to make restitution.

It’s no surprise the system is also rife with racial disparity. The majority of those convicted of welfare fraud in Castner’s study were women of color. They received more felony convictions and spent more time in jail. In fact, two Black women convicted of “stealing” the least amount of money spent the most time in jail.

The real cost.

Washington state spent countless hours to prosecute the cases Castner followed. The court files averaged 108 pages. At least 183 attorneys were involved. Three State Patrol officers were assigned to stake out a woman’s house to see if the father of her children was spending the night. Dozens of DSHS personnel were subpoenaed to build the cases. Despite DSHS claims that only major offenders are prosecuted, two of Castner’s cases involved sums of less than $500.

The dehumanizing effects of the welfare bureaucracy shaped the system’s view of these women long before they got caught up in the criminal justice juggernaut. In the 1,400 pages of documents reviewed by Castner, not one word originated from the women themselves. She says they were invisible, removed from humanity and reduced to a series of numbers (height, weight, age), characteristics (ethnicity, hair color, eye color, tattoos) and the negative opinions of others. Their lives were reshaped and retold by a mountain of paperwork in which others spoke for and defined them. They were no longer people, but constructs of a hostile system.

Castner decries the enormous costs to the women, their children (the unseen victims), and to society. They suffered severe long-term financial repercussions and profound emotional, physical and mental tolls. It would have been far more productive and effective for society to assist them with childcare, shelter, food and other necessary essentials, than to lock them up.

Instead her subjects, as felons, found additional doors closed to them: they were denied voting rights and access to public housing, tuition aid, and future public benefits. They were ground deeper into poverty and further away from obtaining jobs that paid a livable wage.

Why would any system permit such an expensive, pointless waste of human potential? As capitalism struggles to stay afloat, it drives down the living standards of the entire working class. Millions of women and men of color are specially targeted by the “new” Jim Crow, which uses the prison-industrial complex and the welfare system to try to crush those who historically have been the most militant fighters for economic and social justice. History also shows, however, that resistance to injustice is a human instinct that cannot be crushed. The day of reckoning is not far off!

Send your comments to vig37@hotmail.com.

Rethinking the Elderly

You would think that in America they could afford to treat their elderly well, but apparently bailouts for young executives and their million dollar bonuses are more important.


Obama kept his promises


I don't see why people are complaining about Obama.

He promised to bring the troops back from Iraq. He did.

He promised to restore the American economy. He did.

He promised to get universal healthcare. He did.

What, we're supposed to be angry at a politician who actually keeps his promises?

Oh and if he didn't keep some of his smaller promises because they just weren't feasible, well, I'm sorry, your standards are freaking ridiculous. There has to be a degree of practicality. You keep the important promises and be pragmatic with the others.

I say 4 more years of having a President who keeps Promises.

And to be fair, even though I disliked Bush, he kept some of his promises too. Not all of them, evidently, but some of them. I may not like what he did, but I can still say that he at least kept promises or attempted to do so. It is possibly part of the reason why Bush won a second term as president: Because he kept some of his promises.

And really, isn't that all we expect from a leader? Pragmatism and some promise keeping?

Just my two cents.

Rethinking Sarah Palin

"People like Sarah Palin are two steps away from committing a Columbine-style massacre. They should not be placed in charge of America's nuclear arsenal."
- Suzanne MacNevin, British Feminist Writer.


Moscow releases 1 member of Pussy Riot


A Moscow appeals court on Wednesday unexpectedly freed one jailed member of punk band Pussy Riot, but upheld the two-year prison sentences for the two other women jailed for an irreverent protest against President Vladimir Putin.

All three women were convicted in August of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred, but the charge was trumped up by the Russian government because it was really aimed at the Russian president Vladimir Putin. The group's impromptu performance inside Moscow's main cathedral in February was political in nature and not an attack on religion.

The case has been condemned in the USA and Europe, where it has been seen as an illustration of Putin's intensifying crackdown on dissent after his return to the presidency after four years as prime minister.

The Moscow City Court ruled that Yekaterina Samutsevich's sentence should be suspended because she was thrown out of the cathedral by guards before she could remove her guitar from its case and take part in the performance.

"The punishment for an incomplete crime is much lighter than for a completed one," said Samutsevich's lawyer, Irina Khrunova. "She did not participate in the actions the court found constituted hooliganism."

Dressed in neon-coloured miniskirts and tights, with homemade balaclavas on their heads, the women performed a "punk prayer" asking Virgin Mary to save Russia from Putin as he headed into a March election that would hand him a third term.

"The idea of the protest was political, not religious," she said. "In this and in previous protests we acted against the current government of the president."

Rights groups were frustrated by the appeals court decision.

"To see these two women sent to a Russian penal colony for the crime of singing a song undercuts any claim that Putin and the Russian government have to democracy and freedom of expression," Suzanne Nossel, executive director of Amnesty International USA.

Tolokonnikova appealed to Russians for understanding:

"I don't consider myself guilty. But again I ask all those who are listening to me for the last time: I don't want people to be angry at me: Yes, I'm going to prison, but I don't want anyone to think that there is any hatred in me."

The court also refused the defence lawyers' request to take into consideration that Tolokonnikova and Alekhina both have a young child.

Reclaiming the word UPPITY

 I would like to take a moment to reclaim the word UPPITY.

There is nothing wrong with a man or woman being Uppity. It is a positive word. It means they are ambitious and doesn't want to be pushed down (into the gutters).

There is nothing wrong with a man being ambitious. There is nothing wrong with a woman being ambitious. Being Uppity is a good thing because it means you want to accomplish things.

Uppity people scaled Mount Everest.

Uppity people went to the moon.

Uppity people enter politics.

Uppity people cure diseases.

Uppity people become doctors, scientists, engineers and work to make the world a better place.

Uppity people can still make food in the kitchen when they choose to and raise kids if they want to. There is nothing holding them back because they're the type of people who see POSSIBILITIES instead of closed doors.

Being Uppity is Awesome.

So the next time you hear someone call another person Uppity, you should clap and congratulate the Uppity person on being called such a fine compliment.

We need to be encouraging people to be Uppity.

Uppity people will be the first colonize Mars and explore beyond our solar system. That isn't a bad thing. That is so freaking awesome you will be telling your grandchildren about the day it first happened, when a handful of Uppity people said "Lets do this!" and then they accomplished something amazing that all of mankind can share in.

Always remember: Be Uppity and you will Accomplish Amazing Things.

Pregnant Woman Decapitates Rapist

A friend of mine sent me this:

A pregnant rape victim in Turkey shot and decapitated her attacker then left his severed head in the square of her local village.

The woman, five months pregnant, is demanding authorities let her have an abortion even though she is way beyond the ten week limit allowed for terminations in Turkey. The woman even said she is prepared to die as long as she is allowed to have the abortion.

When police arrested her near to the severed head she said; 'That is the head of one who toyed with my honour.'

Womens' groups in Turkey have praised her as a heroine. It turned out that the woman, aged 26 and a mother-of-two, had been abused by her attacker for months before she took her revenge and was being blackmailed.

The rapist had taken nude photos of her and threatened to send them to her parents unless she continued sleeping with him.

She took a gun and shot him ten times, several times in his private parts, before cutting off his head and hurling it into the village square at Yalvac.

The man was also reportedly stabbed in the abdomen after he was shot.

"He kept saying that he would tell everyone about the rape," she said during her testimony. "My daughter will start school this year," she said, referring to one of her other daughters.

"Everyone would have insulted my children. Now no one can. I saved my honour," she added.
"They will now call children the kids of the women who saved her honor."

Now THAT is what I call "Pioneer Justice". If this had happened in the USA, in the mid-west, nobody would have faulted the woman for giving the rapist his 'just desserts'.

Ketchup on Ice Cream is a Matter of Taste

Feel free to share this. :)




"If someone asks you "Do you like ketchup on your ice cream?" and you say "No." are you basing that negative reaction on experience, morality or taste? You haven't tried ketchup on your ice cream, so you can't claim its a matter of experience. You don't have any moral reasons against someone else having ketchup on their ice cream, so it isn't morality. So it really comes down to taste. The same thing goes with homosexuality. Its a matter of taste. There is nothing immoral about it."
- Suzanne MacNevin

Topless Protester cuts down Cross in Kiev

On the day of sentencing for the feminist music band Pussy Riot, imprisoned for having a guerrilla concert on church property and demanding the Russian church stop supporting the dictatorship of Vladimir Putin, the women's group FEMEN decided to have its own show of solidarity...

By having a topless protester cutting down a cross with a chainsaw in the Russian city of Kiev.



FEMEN are demanding the church stop supporting the dictatorship of Vladimir Putin.

Meanwhile Putin and Putin supporters are passing new laws which inhibit free speech and allows the government to arrest dissidents.

FEMEN is actually an Ukrainian feminist group. They posted a video online showing a topless blond FEMEN protester wearing red shorts, with the words “Free Riot” scrawled across her chest and arms, cutting the cross with a chainsaw and then pulling it down using a rope pulled by two other activists, and then posing with her arms extended crucifix-style.

You can see the video and many other FEMEN videos at http://vimeo.com/user4967407

A lot of their videos utilize breast baring in an effort to get the attention of the media and have gained notoriety in both the Ukraine and other countries for their brazen acts.

“By this act, Femen is calling on all the healthy forces of our society to mercilessly cut out of our brains the rotten religious prejudices which dictatorships rely upon and which prevent the development of democracy and women’s freedom,” the activists are quoted as saying.

The activists warned Russian President (turned-dictator) Vladimir Putin and Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia that they would “turn the blade of our chainsaw” against those “responsible for the suffering of innocent women” if the Pussy Riot members are jailed.

Three Pussy Riot participants – Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, 22, Maria Alyokhina, 24, and Yekaterina Samutsevich, 30 – have been charged with hooliganism over their protest in Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Savior on February 26, during which they performed a musical “punk prayer” calling on the Virgin Mary to “drive Putin out.”

If it had been anyone else they were mocking they probably would have got a slap on the wrist. But because Putin is cracking down on dissidents the Russian government decided to send a message to protesters by jailing them.

The verdict in the controversial trial, which has been condemned by Russian and international rights groups, led to the Russian musicians ti being imprisoned for 2 years. A hefty sentence for a minor protest.

In December 2011, FEMEN activists staged a topless protest at the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour screaming "God Turn Tsar Out!" The protest followed parliamentary elections in Russia on December 4, which the opposition said were mared by mass fraud in favor of the pro-Kremlin United Russia party.

In July, a topless FEMEN activist attacked Patriarch Kirill during his visit to Ukraine. She ran up to the patriarch screaming "Get out" and tried to block his way as he was reportedly walking towards the press at Kiev Airport.

Hatpins as Self Defense Weapon for Women

"Really, Captain Jinks, I don't see why women should not bear arms as well as men."

"It isn't necessary. Every woman has two or three hatpins."


- Caption from a May 1900 cartoon from the newspaper "The Evening Democrat".

Between 1880 and 1910 many women in Western culture wore hats in public. It was considered immodest to NOT wear a hat in public. Due to the changing fashion styles of the time it became customary to have a 10 to 14 inch long hatpin which they could use to pin their hat into their hair bun.

However as women are often the subject of physical attacks by men, and certainly not about to take such attacks laying down, the hat pin quickly doubled as impromptu weapon with which they could defend themselves and others.

So much so that by 1910 some places were passing laws banning the use of hatpins.









Suzy's Oatmeal Cookies Recipe

Ingredients

* 2 cups sugar
* 1/2 cup butter
* 1/2 cup milk or chocolate milk
* 2 tbsp. peanut butter
* 1 tsp. vanilla
* 3 to 4 cups uncooked quick oats (1 minute is best)

1. Heat the sugar, butter, milk, and peanut butter in a pot until boiling and boil for 1 minute.
2. Remove from heat. Add vanilla and oats.
3. Use a wooden spoon to drop onto wax paper.
4. Wait until they harden and cool. Store in a cookie jar.
5. Remember to get really good at this recipe and give to grandkids.

Suzy's Cornbread Recipe

This is really just for my own personal record keeping. But feel free to enjoy!

Ingredients

* 1 cup all-purpose flour (or skip and use 2 cups cornmeal)
* 1 cup yellow cornmeal
* 2/3 cup white sugar
* 1 teaspoon salt
* 3 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
* 1 or 2 eggs (optional)
* 1 cup milk (or water)
* 1/3 cup vegetable oil

Mix dry ingredients first, then add wet ingredients, stir until mixed and bubbly.

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.

Use a non-stick cake pan, or grease it up with vegetable oil. (Or a 12 cup muffin tin.)

Bake for approx. 22 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the loaf comes out clean. For muffins the time is approx. 15 minutes.

Remove from oven (wear hot mitts!) and let cool for half an hour before consuming.

Thought Provoking Images








Corinthians 14:34-35

Just a reminder: The Bible was written by men, not "god".

Evidently if you're going to follow Christianity you need to cherry pick which rules actually make sense.

Kudos to the Bra Burning Feminists of Old!

Where would we be without the bra burners?

Originally it all started when a story by Lindsay van Gelder in the New York Post carried a headline "Bra Burners and Miss America". It drew an analogy between the feminist protest and Vietnam War protesters who burned their draft cards. In fact, there was no bra burning, nor did anyone take off her bra.

The phrase became headline material and was quickly associated with women who chose to go braless. Feminism and "bra-burning" then became linked in popular culture and Germaine Greer became a symbol for bra burning.

The first actual public bra-burning is documented, at a feminist rally in Lower Sproul Plaza in Berkeley, CA on June 2nd 1970, where a 38-C bra was ceremonially burned in a wastebasket with a fire extinguisher handy. Other events also occurred, but it wasn't as popular as people think.

So eventually they did start burning bras as a form of protest, but it was sort of a weird scenario where the phenomenon was talked about first and then later actually done.

Unfortunately anti-feminists have used "bra burning" and "braless" stereotypes as a way of attempting to trivialize the feminist movement.

"Bras are a ludicrous invention, but if you make bralessness a rule, you're just subjecting yourself to yet another repression." - Germaine Greer.

Wall Street, why are the slaveowners usually men?

Notice that they're all men?

It is an interesting bit of history that slavery has usually been controlled by greedy men.

Video Game Women

Sadly the male-dominated video game industry has no interest in making more realistic clothing for female characters.

The joys of waxing...

Yes, YES, I got it working!!!!

Today I finally got my new domain name working for my blog. (It took me 5 days!)

My advice for other people who get stuck with a stupid Google Apps account they didn't want and are trying to get their domain name working:

Follow these steps to make sure that you don`t have any Mapping for your domain name settings.

Login to Google Apps
Click Settings
Click Sites on the left side
Click Web Address Mapping
Delete any Mapping

Then sign into your blog select your custom domain for existing domain and then enter www.yourdomainname.com and then enter the captcha. If your settings on eNom are correct then everything should work properly.

And they did. Huzzah!

I hate Google Apps

So I tried to register a domain name for this blog and I got an error message.

So then I backed up, tried to redo the process and it said it couldn't do it because the domain name was being used and that I needed to login via Google Apps.

So then it said I needed a Google Apps account.

So I signed up for a Google Apps account and it automatically gave me a business account. Which I didn't want, so I removed it.

So then it automatically gave me an Educational account... which I apparently didn't qualify for so now my Google Apps account is in limbo.

I also changed the settings for my blog, checked the settings on Enom, and everything on the Blogger and Enom side of things is hunky dory and perfectly fine.

The problem is that Google Apps and Blogspot apparently both use the same server settings: ghs.google.com and the same IP addresses.

So Enom is operating correctly and going to the right place, but Google Apps is usurping the domain name and sending it in that direction instead of to Blogspot where I want it to be.

*serious freaking headache here*

So... how do I fix this? The Enom support guy says I everything done correctly on my side, the Blogspot website is likewise fine... but Google Apps is dug in like a tick. When I was going to the domain name it was auto-redirecting to a Google Apps page... (Right now it doesn't go anywhere, it just says it doesn't exist.)

The Enom guy also said I may need to wait 24-48 hours for things to start working... but at this point its already pretty obvious the whole attempt was botched because of Google errors.

Now I am thinking maybe I should start over and get a different domain name. And wait a year for the one I wanted to expire.

Kathrine Switzer - Historic Icon

It was a historic moment for female athletes.

In 1967, Kathrine Switzer entered and completed the Boston Marathon in 1967, five years before women were officially allowed to compete in it. She was the first woman to run the Boston marathon and was registered in the race. (The first unregistered person was Bobbi Gibb in 1966.) She registered, collected her numbers, put them on and started the race.

After realizing that a woman had somehow registered and was running, race organizer Jock Semple chased after Switzer shouting: "Get the hell out of my race and give me those numbers."

Switzer’s boyfriend and other male runners provided a protective shield during the entire marathon and she was able to outpace Semple. The photograph above was taken during the incident and made world headlines.

Her finishing time of approximately 4 hours and 20 minutes.

Kathrine later won the 1974 NYC marathon (women's category) with a time of 3:07:29.

Her personal best time for the marathon distance is 2:51:37, at Boston in 1975, where she took 2nd place.

She was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 2011 for creating a social revolution by empowering women around the world through running.

In 1997 Kathrine wrote Running and Walking for Women over 40. She released her memoir, Marathon Woman in April 2007 on the 40th anniversary of her first running the Boston Marathon.

Hello World!

Hello World!

This is my new blog.

I am starting it in an effort to promote my writing career.

Tada!

Feminist Book Reviews

To all my loyal readers...

Are you also a feminist writer in addition to reading feminist blogs?

Well here is your chance to get a free book review of your feminist book. Just send a PDF of your feminist book to suzannemacnevin@gmail.com and I will review it on Feminist Truths and post a copy of my review on Amazon if you so desire.

In the meantime I highly recommend the book "Introducing Postfeminism". If you visit the Amazon page you will find my review on there. :)

The Truth about British Female Fantasy Writers

What I find interesting about this topic is that when you delve into their books their female characters are often feminists in one form or another and their antagonists are often depicted as patriarchs...

One might even call it "feminist fantasy".

And this concept isn't limited to female fantasy authors either. Male writers such as George R. R. Martin and Charles Moffat have also had their characters described as feminist.

When you consider that being a writer used to be considered a male dominated field you also realize you'd have to be a bit more uppity to want to enter a career of writing, and with respect to fantasy writing, a field that is largely dominated by Conan the Barbarian-esque characters which are often rescuing damsels in distress instead of fighting alongside them.

There are literally hundreds of female fantasy authors out there (in many languages) and so to narrow the list down I am only including British fantasy authors in the following list. I recommend you check out a few of them the next time you are looking for a book to read.

21 Biographies of British Female Fantasy Writers

Catherine Banner (born 1989) is a British fantasy author, living in Cambridge, England. She gained international attention with her first book, The Eyes of a King, which she began writing when she was fourteen and still a school student. In October 2008 Banner began her studies in English literature at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge. She is currently writing a third part of her series The Last Descendants, The Heart at War. The sequel to The Eyes of a King, Voices in the Dark, was released on September 22, 2009. In 2012 will the series be completed.

Georgia Byng, (b. 6 September 1965), is a British author of children's books. She went to The Central School of Speech and Drama but gave up acting to write. Her first writing was in comic strip. Byng illustrated too. Her first published book was a comic strip story - The Sock Monsters. Byng's best known work is Molly Moon's Incredible Book of Hypnotism, about a girl who finds a book about hypnotism and learns how to hypnotise people. In the books that follow, Molly Moon's powers grow. In 'Molly Moon Stops the World' Moon learns how to stop time. In 'Molly Moon's Hypnotic Time Travel Adventure' Moon time travels to nineteenth century India. In 'Molly Moon, Micky Minus and the Mind Machine' Moon goes to the future and learns to mind read. In 'Molly Moon and The Morphing Mystery' Moon shape shifts.

Moyra Caldecott (June 1, 1927) is a British author of historical fiction, fantasy, science fiction and non-fiction. Her works include "Guardians of the Tall Stones" and The Egyptian Sequence. Moyra Caldecott was born in Pretoria, South Africa, and moved to London in 1951. She has degrees in English and Philosophy and an M.A. in English Literature. In 2000, Moyra Caldecott became one of the earliest proponents of commercial e-books, when she contracted with Mushroom eBooks to re-publish most of her titles in electronic formats.

Louise Cooper (29 May 1952 - 21 October 2009) was a British fantasy writer who lived in Cornwall with her husband, Cas Sandall. Cooper was born in Hertfordshire. She began writing stories when she was at school to entertain her friends. She continued to write and her first full-length novel was published at the age of twenty. She moved to London in 1975 and worked in publishing before becoming a full-time writer in 1977. She became a prolific writer of fantasy, renowned for her bestselling Time Master trilogy. She published more than eighty fantasy and supernatural novels, both for adults and children. Cooper gained a great deal of writing inspiration from the coast and scenery, and her other interests included music, folklore, cooking, gardening and "messing about on the beach". She was treasurer of her local Lifeboat station; she and her husband both sang with the shanty group Falmouth Shout. Cooper died aged 57 of a brain haemorrhage on 21 October 2009.

Maggie Furey was born in Northeast England, UK, in 1955. She is a qualified teacher but has also reviewed books on BBC Radio Newcastle, been an advisor in the Durham Reading Resources Centre and organized children's book fairs. She now lives in County Wicklow in Ireland. She is a well-known fantasy author, especially for the Artefacts of Power tetralogy, is centred around the lead character (and first novel namesake) Aurian, which were published as paperback originals in the United States.

Jane Gaskell is a British fantasy writer. Gaskell was born in 1941. She wrote her first novel Strange Evil, when she was 14. It was published two years later. In 1970 she received the Somerset Maugham Award for her novel A Sweet Sweet Summer (jointly with Piers Paul Read who received it for his Monk Dawson.) She later became a professional astrologer. Her Atlan saga is set in prehistoric South America and in the mythical world of Atlantis. The series is written from the point of view of its clumsy heroine Cija, except for the last book, which is narrated by her daughter Seka. China Miéville lists Strange Evil as one of the top 10 examples of weird fiction. John Clute called it "an astonishingly imaginative piece of fantasy by any standards."

Mary Rosalyn Gentle (born 29 March 1956) is a UK science fiction and fantasy author. Mary Gentle's first published novel was Hawk in Silver (1977), a young-adult fantasy. She came to prominence with the Orthe duology, which consists of Golden Witchbreed (1983) and Ancient Light (1987). The novels Rats and Gargoyles (1990), The Architecture of Desire (1991), and Left to His Own Devices (1994), together with several short stories, form a loosely linked series (collected in White Crow in 2003). As with Michael Moorcock's series about his anti-heroic Jerry Cornelius, Gentle's sequence retains some basic facts about her two protagonists Valentine (also known as the White Crow) and Casaubon while changing much else about them, including what world they inhabit. Several take place in an alternate-history version of 17th century and later England, where a form of Renaissance Hermetic magic has taken over the role of science. Another, Left To His Own Devices, takes place in a cyberpunk-tinged version of our own near future. The sequence is informed by historically existing ideas about esotericism and alchemy and is rife with obscure allusions to real history and literature. Grunts! (1992) is a grand guignol parody of mass-market high fantasy novels, with orcs as heroes, murderous halflings, and racist elves. Her novel Ash: A Secret History (published in four volumes in the US) was a long science fantasy epic that won the Sidewise Award for Alternate History in 2000. Gentle has since published Ilario, set in the same timeline.

Geraldine Harris (born 1951), aka Geraldine Harris Pinch, is an author (of both fiction and non-fiction) and Egyptologist. She is a member of the Faculty of Oriental Studies at the University of Oxford. Her works include the Seven Citadels quartet and numerous information text books about Egypt.

Rosemary Jeanne Harris (born 1923, London) is a British writer of fiction for children. Harris attended school in Weymouth, and then studied at the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, the Chelsea School of Art and the Courtauld Institute. She served in the British Red Cross Nursing Auxiliary Westminster Division during World War II, and has worked as a picture restorer, a reader for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and a children's book reviewer for The Times from 1970 to 1973. She won the Carnegie Medal in 1968 for The Moon in the Cloud. This book was the first in a trilogy set in ancient Egypt. The subsequent books were The Shadow on the Sun and The Bright and Morning Star. The book was also the basis for a 1978 episode of the BBC series Jackanory. Other books dealt with topics as diverse as terrorism, magic and futuristic totalitarianism.

Mary Hoffman is a best-selling British author and critic, born in 1945. Mary Hoffman won a scholarship to James Allen’s Girls’ School in Dulwich, which she describes as “an exercise in punctuation in itself.” From there she went to the University of Cambridge to study English at Newnham College and then spent two years studying Linguistics at University College London. Since 1998 she has been an Honorary Fellow of the Library Association in 1998 for her work with children and schools. She worked at the Open University for nearly five years, contributing to courses for teachers on reading, language and children’s literature. For eighteen years she was Reading Consultant to BBC Schools TV’s Look and Read series and wrote the teaching scripts. She has been a freelance, self-employed professional writer and journalist since the mid-90s. She has been nominated for the post of Children's Laureate, 2011–2013.

Roz Kaveney (born 9 July 1949) is a British writer whose work includes both fiction and non-fiction, poetry, and editing. She was educated at Pembroke College, Oxford. On her website Roz says: "I was reared Catholic but got over it, was born male but got over it, stopped sleeping with boys about the time I stopped being one and am much happier than I was when I was younger." She is working on a memoir. Roz was a core member of the Midnight Rose collective. She is perhaps best known for her critical works about pop culture. Her review of Little, Big was appended to the 2002 Harper Perennial reprint of the novel. Kaveney is a regular contributor to The Independent, The Guardian and Times Literary Supplement. She appeared as one of the numerous commentators in the BBC television documentary (May 2008) about the idea of parallel worlds as used in science fiction. She is also a founding member of Feminists Against Censorship; a former deputy chair of Liberty; and a transgender rights activist .

Elizabeth Kay, born July 9, 1949 in London, is an English writer. She is the author of The Divide trilogy, a series of children's fantasy novels, originally published by Chicken House Press, then picked up by Scholastic Books. Before going to art school she attended Nonsuch High School for girls in Cheam. Then went to art school and in her mid-twenties started writing radio plays, which were broadcast on BBC Radio 4. She also wrote stories which were published in newspapers and magazines and broadcast on Capital Radio in London. Kay has an MA (Distinction) in Creative Writing from Bath Spa University, and has taught both Creative Writing and Art for a number of years. She has illustrated several books and produced nearly all the artwork for her own website. An avid wildlife enthusiast, she has travelled extensively to places as diverse as the Ivory Coast, Borneo, Iceland and India. She has won several awards, including the Cardiff International Poetry Competition for a sestina "Pond Life" and the Canongate Prize for her short story "Cassie". A chapbook of poetry, The Spririt Collection, was published in 2000. The Divide, her first book for children, was published in 2003. She was a keynote speaker at Accio 2005, the Harry Potter conference, and spoke at a children's book conference in Ukraine in 2007. She has appeared at other literary events, including the Cheltenham and Edinburgh festivals. She has had three shorter books for children published by Barrington Stoke. Fury, in 2008, Hunted in 2009 and Lost in the Desert in 2011. The Tree Devil, for reluctant readers, was published in 2010 by Eprint. A novella for adults, Missing Link, was published in October 2009.

Tanith Lee (born 19 September 1947(1947-09-19)) is a British writer of science fiction, horror and fantasy. She is the author of over 70 novels and 250 short stories, a children's picture book (Animal Castle) and many poems. She also wrote two episodes of BBC science fiction series Blake's 7. She was the first woman to win the British Fantasy Award best novel award (also known as the August Derleth Award), for her book Death's Master (1980). She also writes under the pseudonym Esther Garber

Geraldine McCaughrean (pronounced "Muh-cork-run") (born 6 June 1951) is a British children's novelist. The youngest of three children, McCaughrean studied teaching but did not like it, and found her true vocation in writing. She claims that what makes her love writing is the desire to escape from an unsatisfactory world. Her motto is: do not write about what you know, write about what you want to know.

Joanne "Jo" Rowling, (born 31 July 1965), better known as J. K. Rowling, is a British novelist, best known as the author of the Harry Potter fantasy series. The Potter books have gained worldwide attention, won multiple awards, sold more than 400 million copies to become the best-selling book series in history and been the basis for a popular series of films, in which Rowling had overall approval on the scripts as well as maintaining creative control by serving as a producer on the final instalment. Rowling conceived the idea for the series on a train trip from Manchester to London in 1990. Rowling has led a "rags to riches" life story, in which she progressed from living on social security to multi-millionaire status within five years. As of March 2011, when its latest world billionaires list was published, Forbes estimated Rowling's net worth to be US$1 billion. The 2008 Sunday Times Rich List estimated Rowling's fortune at £560 million ($798 million), ranking her as the twelfth richest woman in the United Kingdom. Forbes ranked Rowling as the forty-eighth most powerful celebrity of 2007, and Time magazine named her as a runner-up for its 2007 Person of the Year, noting the social, moral, and political inspiration she has given her fans. In October 2010, J. K. Rowling was named 'Most Influential Woman in Britain' by leading magazine editors. She has become a notable philanthropist, supporting such charities as Comic Relief, One Parent Families, Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great Britain, and Lumos (formerly the Children's High Level Group). On 12 April 2012, Rowling announced that her new adult novel The Casual Vacancy would be published in the UK by Little, Brown & Company on 27 September 2012.

Jessica Rydill is a British fantasy author from the West Country. She was born in 1959. She studied at King's College, Cambridge and the College of Law, working as a solicitor for 13 years. Her travels have provided some of the inspiration for her writing. She was a founder member of the Write Fantastic writers' group together with authors including Juliet E. McKenna and Sarah Ash. Her interests include collecting Asian ball-jointed dolls, Sasha dolls, myth, and East European music. Her short story My Brother Jonathan was short-listed for the Ian St James award in 1999 and she appears in The New Writer magazine Roll of Honour. Her first novel Children of the Shaman was published by Orbit in 2001, and was short-listed for the Locus magazine best first novel in 2002. A sequel, The Glass Mountain, appeared in October 2002. A short story, The Anniversary, was published in an anthology printed by NewCon Press in 2010 to celebrate the fifth anniversary of The Write Fantastic. In 2006, Rydill married Stephen Saunders, a writer and designer. Her sister Sarah Ash, author of the Tears of Artamon trilogy, is also a fantasy novelist.

Jan Siegel is a pseudonym of Amanda Hemingway (born 1955 in London, England). She is a British author of fantasy novels, best known for the Fern Capel series.

Dr. Alison Louise Spedding (born 22 January 1962) is a British anthropologist and fantasy author. Spedding studied Archaeology and Anthropology and later Philosophy at King's College, Cambridge, receiving her BA degree in 1982. She received a PhD from the London School of Economics in 1989. She wrote a trilogy of fantasy novels, set approximately in the time of Alexander the Great. In the novels, Alexander dies, and the female protagonist, Aleizon Ailix Ayndra, goes on to fulfil Alexander's destiny. In 1989, Spedding moved to Bolivia and lectured at San Andres University in La Paz. While there she published the academic work Wachu Wachu. Cultivo de coca e identitad en los Yungas de la Paz (1994) and Kausachun-Coca (2004). She is the author of three novels in Spanish: Manuel y Fortunato. Una picaresca andina (1997), El viento de la cordillera (2001), and the sci-fi, anarcho-feminist novel De cuando en cuando Saturnina (2004). She is also the author of a book of short stories, El tiempo, la distancia, otros amantes (1994) and the play Un gato en el tejar, the latter published under the pseudoym Alicia Céspedes Ballet. In Bolivia she became an outspoken critic of the government's policy of cracking down on peasant coca farmers. In 1998, she was arrested on drug charges, having been found with 2 kg of cannabis in her possession. Although she claimed the cannabis was for personal use, she received a 10 year sentence for trafficking. Academics widely considered the arrest was politically motivated and campaigned for her release. She was released in 2000 on payment of a surety.

Mitzi Szereto is an author, blogger, and web TV entrepreneur. She has written novels and short stories, edited fiction and non-fiction anthologies, has her own blog "Errant Ramblings: Mitzi Szereto's Weblog", and is the creator/presenter of "Mitzi TV," a Web TV channel that covers the quirky side of London, England. Her published books to date have been focused on erotic literature, multi-genre fiction, and fiction and non-fiction anthologies. She has also written under the name M. S. Valentine. She makes a cameo appearance portraying herself in the British mockumentary Lint the Movie. Szereto was born in the United States, but lives in the United Kingdom and has UK Citizenship. She holds erotic writing workshops in the UK and Europe. She appears at book and literature festivals, and gives talks on such topics as social media, women's publishing, and erotic writing. She has performed readings of her work in Europe and the United States.

Freda Warrington is a British author, known for her epic fantasy, vampire and supernatural novels. Four of her novels (Dark Cathedral, Pagan Moon, Dracula the Undead, and The Amber Citadel) have been nominated for the British Fantasy Society's Best Novel award. Dracula the Undead won the Dracula Society's 1997 Children of the Night Award. Her novel, Elfland, won the Romantic Times Reviewers' Choice Award in the Fantasy Novel category for 2009. Warrington has also seen numerous short stories published in anthologies and magazines. Born in Leicester, Warrington grew up in Leicestershire. After completing high school, she trained at the Loughborough College of Art and Design and afterward held a job at the Medical Illustration Department of Leicester Royal Infirmary. She eventually moved to full-time writing, pursuing a love she had had since childhood. In addition to her writing, Warrington works part-time in the Charnwood Forest. Some of her books are set in Leicestershire, such as the recent Aetherial Tales series, depicting the lives, loves and adventures of magical people living hidden in this region, passing for - and sharing many cultural traits with - ordinary English people.

Jane Welch (born 1964) is a writer of fantasy short stories and novels. Jane Welch was born in Derbyshire. After school she worked as a bookseller before going for five years to Soldeu, Andorra in the Pyrenees as a ski teacher. Jane Welch wrote three consecutive Trilogies. The second (The Book of Önd) plays 3 years after the first (Runespell Trilogy) with nearly the same protagonists. The last (The Book of Man) is around 15 years later and is also about the next generation.

Old Feminist Truths Posts - Back Up Copies

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