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Buy Your Ticket Today for the NYC Women's Empowerment Summit

The first annual NYC Women’s Empowerment Summit will be held from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm on July 16th, 2011 at Bennett Media Studios (723 Washington Street, New York NY 10014).  “The NYC Women’s Empowerment Summit is a one-day conference designed for all women, young and old, to meet and share best practices, stories of success, and experiences both personal and professional. The goal of the summit is to create new bridges and a wider awareness of political, social and economic causes, in order to help other women reach their full potential in life.”

The summit will be featuring an impressive panel of sixteen successful women in the workplace, including philanthropists, actresses, models, and more; this year’s headlining speaker is Vivica A. Fox, actress and television producer.  For more information about the speakers, make sure to check out this website.

Tickets for the event cost 45 dollars and include all of the event activities, including catered lunch; all proceeds will be donated to the Make-a-Wish Foundation.  Tickets are selling quickly, so !

Upcoming online event from our partner, The Women’s Mosaic

“TWM’S WORLD OF WELLNESS 2011 Virtual Health Fair:

Exploring Diverse Ways to Become a Happier, Healthier YOU!”

TWM’s World of Wellness month promotes the many diverse ways women can take care of themselves by exploring both unique and traditional ways of creating an optimal lifestyle,cultivating healthy habits and treating disease and illness.

The World of Wellness Virtual Health Fair is a great opportunity to learn more about physical, emotional, and mental well being.   There will be many different individuals sharing valuable information and resources relating to exercise, health, nutrition, and illness; sponsors include professional organizers, personal coaches, and more.  The best part: you can access this all online!

It’s not too late to sponsor this event. With an expected target audience of approximately 5000 people of all genders, this is a great opportunity to gain exposure in the NYC community.  Each week, more sponsors will be added and alerts will be sent to all participants.  For more information about the event and/or sponsorship, email info@thewomensmosaic.org.

Slutwalk NYC’s First Organizing Meeting – This Wednesday!

Wednesday, June 29 · 7:00pm – 9:00pm

Puck Building, 4th Floor
295 Lafayette St (at Houston)
Manhattan, New York

For far too many women, sexual harassment, victim blaming and assault are every day fixtures of life in a sexist society.

Internationally women are taking a stand and saying enough is enough! SlutWalks are being organized in cities from Toronto, to Boston, to New Delhi…and it is coming here to New York on August 20th. Lets show the world that New Yorkers will fight for a zero tolerance policy on sexual assault.

Join us this Wednesday for an initial general planning meeting to promote outreach and prepare for the Slutwalk march on August 20. We’ll be organizing all summer around governmental assaults on reproductive rights and access to healthcare, the Dominique Strauss-Kahn trial, the NY police rape acquittals, and sexual violence and gender discrimination on all levels.

Come to this meeting if you are sick and tired of the attacks on women’s lives and ready to fight back!

MAKE IT KNOWN THAT THOSE WHO EXPERIENCE SEXUAL ASSAULT ARE NEVER THE ONES AT FAULT!

For more info, contact FightSexismNYC@gmail.com

Urgent: Sign Petition by Monday Demanding the NYPD Take Rape Seriously & Rally on Tuesday!

Found guilty of official misconduct but acquitted rape, ex-cops Moreno & Mata made 3 unauthorized return trips to a woman’s apartment and even placed a fake 911 call to buy themselves more time inside the residence of the helpless person they had been called to protect. Moreno, while denying the rape allegation, actually testified he got into this semi-conscious woman’s bed while she was wearing nothing but a bra.

This outrageous conduct was a clear betrayal of the officers’ duty to protect this member of the public. Their misconduct leaves NYC women forced to wonder whether a police officer called in a moment of need will be a protector or a predator.

Let Sentencing Judge Know How You Feel: Sign a petition (which will be hand delivered to Justice Gregory Carro)

Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 9am – Wear White!
Foley Square – 4,5,6,N,R train to Brooklyn Bridge/City Hall. J,Z to Chambers St.

For more info & to RSVP: Contact:  Connect the Dots, a coalition comprised of CONNECT, Crime Victims Treatment Center, Feministing, National Organization for Women (NOW-NYC), The Healing Center, New York City Alliance Against Sexual Assault and Service Women’s Action Network (SWAN). We are a diverse NYC based coalition of advocates and organizations working to prevent violence and sexual assault in our city and promote women’s health and rights. Along with NYC Council members, activists and survivors, we are coming together to “connect the dots” between the sentencing of Officers Moreno and Mata, and the larger issue of Violence Against Women!

RSVP on Facebook now!

If you have any questions, concerns, or comments, email NYC Connect the Dots!

“Friendly Fire” – A Slam Poem In Honor of Pride by Cristina Dominguez

Those nearest
and dearest
don’t hear
or see us
at times
because they can
remain blinded
by their own lives.

My home is your home;
what’s mine is yours
what’s yours is mine:
Yours is mine
watch me turn a blind eye
watch me lie
“We are equal”

They see us as
exaggerating radicals
making battles
where peace prevails
shattering their perspective
by making concrete
their advantage point,
the connection between
their heteronormativity
and our lived inequity

Can I ask you a question?
I don’t understand
Who’s the man?
How can I brand you?
so I can see
so we can be
“We are the same”

Delegitimizing
minimizing
the detainment of our
deviation,
how live and let live
isn’t live and let thrive
we’ll survive

So sex
…yes that’s next
how do you?
There isn’t a
penis present
so here it is
narrowing
and entering
into you
“We are the same”

This phallocentric tendency
isn’t just diminishing me
but their own
female,
free-of-male
sexuality.
Only his
Erect flesh
Makes the act correct?
I guess…

Why are you offended?
This can be men-did.
We can work this out
into a peace
and ease that will
please this
place of power
I can judge you from

Look I’m so evolved
and so involved
and invested,
and molesting your
intimate life.
I’m open-minded
I, don’t
mind
my minor mistakes,
give me a break
“We are the same”

Interrogating and
negating
isn’t creating,
isn’t nurturing
my future.
Stereotypes
grow ripe
in the light
of your assumptions.
Seeds from the quick,
cheap, consumption
of my life.
But in that
surviving act,
perhaps
we are the same

"How I Learned to Speak Turkish" Film Screening: June 28th

How I Learned to Speak Turkish will be having a rare NYC screening June 28th as part of “Where Less Is More,” an evening of shorts presented by New York Women in Film.

The films are about pigeon racing, immigrants in Greece, a aPakistani-American kite-flying competition, a psychiatric patient’s recovery, a Jewish immigrant’s journey to West Virginia, and a Margaret Cho tribute! .

There will be a Q&A following the screening, and an after-party with cash bar and complimentary food.

SCREENING INFO

Tuesday, June 28, 2011 at 7:00 PM
Anthology Film Archives [32 East Second Avenue, New York]
Tickets $6 – $9 (can be or purchased at box office)
After party: Dempsey’s Pub, 61 2nd Avenue

ABOUT THE FILM

Winner – Atlanta Film Festival Jury Prize – Best Documentary Short
Using a witty first-person documentary style, the story begins as the filmmaker Therese Shechter travels to Turkey to interview young Turkish women for a documentary on feminism. Instead, she becomes fascinated with Turkish men. And they, in turn, are fascinated with her. The film is a twisted and entertaining travelogue that asks important questions about identity, sexuality and the nature of female power. And it’s all true.

CAN’T MAKE THE SCREENING?

  • Download the whole film from IndiePix for the low arkadaş price of $7.95 or
  • Watch the trailer plus bonus clips of Hakan and the dancing fools of Cafe Vazgal.
  • For film updates, Turkish news, and future screenings –  follow on Facebook and Twitter.

[Taken from e-mail newsletter and modified for this blog post]

“Diealysis” by Cristina Dominguez

maybe it is that I can’t weave or sew
hands wave in circles to fashion our futures
thread embedded in feelings I don’t know
again, the Lady in red in need of sutures

on the corners when we seek company
the familiar pattern and needles wait
cheap tapestry touted as luxury
leaves me unable to fathom my fate

my arm she-handled ,“You have good veins”
“Worthless” my pulse whispered under the tie
and slowly she drew out that which remained
“It’s fine”–but an exhale, a reflex lie

Matted love knots bind and clot my heart
Bleed me of misery, donate my art

“Why I am a Feminist Today” – Looking for Submissions!

Hi there!

Aside from managing this blog, I also have my own personal tumblr where I post regularly about current events, social justice movements, and feminist & queer issues.  I am starting a new feature called “Why I am a Feminist Today” and would love to receive submissions from the Paradigm Shift NYC community!  Here is an excerpt from the description of my project:

I have attended two lectures with Jessica Valenti, both of which have been incredibly amazing (and worth the 2 hour drive each way).  My favorite part of hearing her speak is the way she is able to stress the importance of feminism today.  In a feature she called, “Why I am a Feminist This Week,” she shared examples of marketing campaigns, coverage of current events, and quotes from influential politicians, all which worked to remind the audience of the prevalence of sexism in society.  Her lectures have inspired me to start my own similar feature here on Tumblr, where I post examples of how and why feminism is still relevant/necessary/unbelievably important.

Every day, I am reminded of reasons why I am a feminist.  Whenever I encounter one of these news stories or blog posts, I will share them here on Tumblr.  If I have particularly noteworthy conversations with friends or family, I will write about them.  In doing this, I hope to show how and why feminism matters (SO MUCH) today.

These posts will not be limited to issues that only affect cis-gendered women, as feminism is a movement that advocates for the equality of all people.  In these posts, I will address issues of inequality that affect individuals because of race, class, gender, sexual orientation, ability, education, age, and more.

I am official exhausted by the amount of anti-feminist backlash that I encounter on a daily basis, whether in commentary on mainstream news, posts on tumblr, conversations with friends and family, listening to the radio, looking at advertisements, etc.  To claim that feminism is no longer relevant or that feminism is only necessary in specific countries around the world is absolutely outrageous.  Yes, the feminist movement has been responsible for countless social, political, and economic advancements for millions of people around the world.  However, the work of the feminist movement is nowhere near complete.

I just finished up my first post; in it, I did a summary of the issues I covered on my blog today.  I hope to do these types of posts a few times a week and would love any additional input!

You should also check back here on the PS blog regularly, as I hope to share these posts on this site too!

“Female Sexual Pleasure, or Lack Thereof, in Pop Culture” – A Guest Post by Julia Bond

My first boyfriend and I were breathless from making out for about an hour and a half. I’m not exaggerating here; I don’t know how we survived those marathon make out sessions. For the first time in our relationship, his hand started wandering south towards my underwear. He smiled at me, and I smiled a crazy, hormone-addled smile back at him. As his hand reached the top of my Fruit of the Loom waistband, he whispered into my ear, “What should I do?” It was a beautiful moment.

And I, of course, ruined it immediately by making a vaguely constipated face and incredulously snorting “Wait, what?” into his mouth. I was seventeen at the time and “sexually active” in that I had made my boyfriend orgasm more than once, but I honestly had no idea that I could have an orgasm myself. It’s not that anyone had ever said that I couldn’t; it’s just that I’d never heard of it, and given my nerdy proclivity for research, it seemed impossible that I could be ignorant of something that important. I’d seen American Pie and I understood the mechanics of giving an (admittedly shoddy) blow job. I should have had some inkling as to my own sexual possibilities, but I didn’t. How did that happen?

I know that I’m on the later end of the curve in terms of sexual awareness and that many women figure their clitorises out at an early age and have far more interesting childhoods than I did, but at the same time, I don’t believe that my ignorance of my own sexuality is that aberrant. As women, we grow up with a relative dearth of honest information about our own sexuality. In this culture of dick jokes and viral videos like “Jizz in my Pants,” how is female sexuality still being left so far behind?

In a completely unscientific perusal of online magazines, I found what I believe to be a clue. If you look at the top headlines in the most popular magazines for women (Cosmo, Glamour and the like), they typically read along these lines: “25 Surprising Things that Turn Men On,” “Naughty Oral Tricks to Try Tonight” or “Bad Girl Sex Tips.” If you check out the top headlines in Men’s Health, they are things like, “15 Surprising Reasons She’ll Have Sex with You.” This is not to say that magazines for men don’t publish information about pleasing women or that women’s magazines don’t publish articles about female pleasure – because they do – but the predominant themes seem to be:

“Here’s how to get her to sleep with you” for men and “Here’s how to make sure he enjoys it” for women.

It’s fascinating to me that women’s magazines focus so much on performance tips for women when the reality of the situation is that, no offense to guys, it’s generally easier for men to achieve orgasm during sex than women. The male equipment, so to speak, is designed to orgasm quickly and efficiently to propagate the species. The female orgasm, on the other hand, has no scientifically substantiated purpose. Plus, in many cases, it involves the clitoris, an organ that is in no way necessary for penetrative sex. Sure, I bet it’s cool when you bust out one of these “Sexpert Approved!” moves during a blow job, but let’s be honest: it’s like whipped cream on a piece of pie. The whipped cream is a nice touch, but it’s not like you wouldn’t enjoy the pie without it. More beneficial articles for women would be “How to help your partner get you off,” “How to tell if your difficulties with orgasm are truly a problem” or “Tips for incorporating sex into a busy schedule.” This is information that women can use to improve their own sexual experiences. I have many friends who haven’t had orgasms or struggle to have them with a partner. Women’s magazines are missing an opportunity to empower women to learn about their own bodies when they focus primarily on how to please a (specifically male) partner. Ironically, this sexual empowerment would undoubtedly improve the experience for partners as well, while simultaneously saving the cash that might otherwise have been spent on the French maid costume and stilettos that he’s “secretly always been into.”

To me, this discrepancy represents the persistence of an age-old misconception that female sexuality is comparable to male sexuality and can therefore be constrained within a penetrative sex-centric model of sex. This attitude was the entire basis of the medical phenomenon of “hysteria,” which was actually a medically recognized diagnosis for female sexuality until the 1950’s. Physicians used to believe that women who were unsatisfied with the purely penetrative sex within their marriages (read: most women) were ill with “hysteria,” and, as a treatment, they used vibrators to induce orgasm to relieve them. (I’m not even kidding – for an amazing account of the history of the vibrator, check out The Technology of Orgasm by Rachel Maines). Physicians couldn’t understand that female sexuality is actually quite distinct from male sexuality and that the mere act of thrusting isn’t enough for many women. Though I’m happy to say that this perception has changed, and that doctors are no longer allowed to use vibrators on their patients, a tendency to discuss female sexuality from within the context of heterosexual sex persists in today’s media and makes it challenging to bring up the complexities of female sexual pleasure. If you are thinking of sex from the perspective of male sexuality, the female orgasm doesn’t really matter that much. This is a real shame since most people who sleep with women feel very strongly that their partner’s sexual pleasure is actually a large part of their own.

This is not to say that female sexual pleasure is being ignored. The booming sex toy industry is a testament to the fact that women can, and very much want to, have orgasms. The women’s magazines I was picking on earlier write reviews of some vibrators and run articles about how and where to buy them. While I am glad that women are being encouraged to explore their own sexuality, I think that pop culture’s representations of vibrators can sometimes be detrimental to the overall goal of accepting female sexuality. There is a culture, made popular by shows like Sex and the City, that venerates the image of the take-no-prisoners single woman, who can’t find a good man but is more than capable of (literally) taking her sexual pleasure into her own hands by investing $130 in a vibrator. These women use vibrators to replace men and to fill the void that their crushing loneliness leaves in their lives (how many times have we all heard jokes about women being in a “long term relationship” with their vibrator? OMG this rabbit-shaped piece of vibrating silicone is totally exactly what I want in life!). To me this seems like another pidgenholing of women’s sexuality: that we can take full ownership if it – when we’re single.

Pop culture has two distinctly “acceptable” versions of female sexuality: one in which a lonely single woman invests in technology in order to get hers, and one in which women in relationships totally blow his mind! But what about the reality for most women, which is wanting to get hers within the context of a relationship (while of course simultaneously pleasing her partner?). And this is where I fear the information about female sexuality in mainstream culture falls short; this is what we censor out. A prime example of this is the controversial initial NC-17 rating of the film Blue Valentine (which was successfully appealed and changed to “R”). The rationale behind the NC-17 rating seemed to be that an emotional sex scene in which Ryan Gosling’s character went down on Michelle Williams’ character was “too emotional and realistic.” It’s not as though oral sex on women doesn’t make it past the rating council (Black Swan, anyone? Although I wonder if to the movie rating council the fact that it was being performed by a woman made it less “realistic.” That’s a whole other issue.) but I can’t imagine an oral sex scene in which a woman went down on a man being censored for being “too realistic.” In fact, movies can very clearly imply oral sex on a man and still walk away with a PG-13 rating (The Social Network being a recent example).

Movies are not by any means the be-all end-all of culture, but they are a convenient lens through which to examine of how society portrays and feels about female sexuality. Oral sex performed on women is contentious because it doesn’t fit into either of the accepted paradigms for female sexuality: pleasing men or saying “forget it – I don’t need ‘em!” and pleasing themselves. The role of female pleasure within a sexual relationship is complicated. It typically requires some extra attention and effort. For most women, it is not the same as penetrative intercourse the way it is for men. I think it gets simplified in a way that can be detrimental to the women growing up surrounded by these messages. They learn about tips and tricks for his pleasure, then when they’re older they learn what a vibrator is and the role it’s supposed to play while they wait for Mr. Right, but they are left in the dark in terms of how to get their sexual needs filled (or, in fact, what those sexual needs might be) within a sexual relationship.

While there’s no “curing” society of its lopsided views of sexuality, I think it’s important to keep the messages we see regarding sexuality in mind. With the rise of the Internet, more and more women are going to be learning about their own sexuality from mainstream media. It would be great if healthy female sexual pleasure (including oral sex for women) eventually achieved the same validity within culture that men’s sexual pleasure enjoys. Until that day, however, I think I’ll just say “Forget all of ‘em!” and buy myself a vibrator.

Julia Bond is a sex-positive blogger who describes herself as “a comedian/neuroscientist/beer nerd who’s dedicated to making accurate and helpful information about female sexuality more readily available to women.”  Check out her posts on “It’s Not That Weird” for more amazing commentary on important issues relating to feminism and sexuality.

“Virginity Checks” Performed on Women During the Egyptian Revolution

Earlier this morning, I saw this article from CNN on the virginity checks which were performed on Egyptian women in Tahrir Square during the revolutionary protests which occurred just a few months ago.  Shortly thereafter, Amnesty International put out a report, claiming that “female demonstrators were beaten, given electric shocks, strip-searched, threatened with prostitution charges and forced to submit to virginity checks.”  According to an Egyptian general, who has asked the media to keep his identity a secret, the women were selected for testing to ensure that the women could not “claim they had been raped by Egyptian officials.”  According to his logic, if the women were not virgins prior to the testing, they could not be raped during the protests.

There are so many problems with this, I am not even sure where to begin.

First and foremost, the fetishization of women’s virginity is occurring all around the world.  The obsession with female sexual purity and the negative connotations associated with women that choose to explore and express their sexuality is truly astonishing.  This fixation is often linked with cultural and/or religious ideas about gender, which then manifest themselves in nearly every aspect of our daily lives.  In Egypt, cultural ideologies about gender are deeply embedded in traditions and actions; for example, a 2008 report from the World Health Organization states that approximately ninety percent of women and girls in Egypt have undergone female genital cutting, a procedure that is inextricably linked to ideas about female sexuality.  Female genital cutting is just one way that elders attempt to control the sexuality of young girls; through the removal of part, or all, of the clitoris, this procedure makes it so that women are not able to fully experience sexual pleasure.  Although this example might seem extreme to some, there are plenty more examples that come to mind: virginity pledges, purity balls, tee shirts with messages about being “tight like spandex” that are sold to pre-teen girls across the United States, the importance of being a virgin until marriage, etc.

Requiring a woman to share personal details about her sexuality with government officials is a violation of her right to privacy.  Information about one’s own sex life should not be subject to sanctioning by the state nor should it be used to manipulate an individual’s credibility.

Also, the definition of virginity being used in these checks is unclear.  I am assuming the officials meant virginity in the heteronormative context, meaning that a woman was not a virgin if she had engaged in penile-vaginal intercourse with a cis-gendered male.  Assuming that a woman that has “lost her virginity” is not able to be raped is an explicit act of victim-blaming that shifts responsibility and accountability away from perpetrators.  Any individual can be raped, regardless of their sexual orientation, gender, sex, sexual history, religion, etc.  The arguments being made by this anonymous government official are factually incorrect and morally reprehensible.

With news flowing around the world via the internet, it has become clear that government officials, police officers, and soldiers have sexually assaulted civilians during periods of revolution; one recent example is the rape of nearly 300 women by Qaddafi’s militiamen in Libya.  As history shows, rape is often used as a tactic during wartime by soldiers, police officers, etc.  By raping civilians, these members of the local and national authority are able to exert control and reinforce their dominant position, while simultaneously reinforcing patriarchal, misogynistic attitudes towards women.  Therefore, it becomes clear that these virginity checks were being used as a measure to protect the Egyptian officials, not the Egyptian women.

For now, I will wait to see what more information becomes available in the coming weeks.  I hope to see more pressure coming from human rights organizations, national governments, and supranational institutions, as this is a complete violation of the rights of these women and must not be tolerated.

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