Skip to main content

Home/ Understanding and Stopping Violence Against Women/ Group items tagged Music

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Alyssa Colby

Man Up Campaign - A global campaign to activate youth to stop violence against women an... - 0 views

  •  
    This is a link to "Man Up" , a group dedicated to helping youth end violence against women and girls, it's slogan being that violence against women is everyone's issue, not just a women's issue. They give out grants to youth activists to start programs against domestic violence in their communities, and work through a number of mediums including sports, music, technology, and art.
  •  
    While I fully support any non-profit organization's attempt at gaining awareness and participation by female and male youth alike, I would also argue that I have seen better-designed and more informed websites to encourage participation for the cause to stop violence against women. The section with the definition of different types of violence was rather informative, but I wish the "Get Involved" section would have been more in depth and easy to navigate to links of promoted involvement.
emilie neuss

Kseniya Simonova: Sand Art - 0 views

  •  
    This might seem an odd choice but I decided to post this because I found it to be incredibly moving and emotional. Although it does not explicitly deal with violence against women, it is about war in the Ukraine and violence against all people (men, women, and children). Women do play a key role in the sand art though: mothers being abandoned by their soldier husbands, left to fend for themselves and their children, women growing old without knowledge of family and lovers who died, etc. This violence towards women seems to be more symbolic and emotional, rather than strictly physical. Relates to past readings like Bourdieu, Das, and perhaps Enloe.
  •  
    I am really glad that you chose to bookmark this video. I remembered you showing it to me a while ago and liking it, but watching again just now from a different angle, I feel as though I can see much more. This woman is obviously harboring some intense grief, whether it be just hers or that of her country as well. I love the way she used this form of artistic expression, coupled with emotion provoking music, because it told her history from a couple sitting comfortably on a street bench to a mother and child alienated from perhaps the same male figure on the other side of a window. This production obviously made a impact on the audience who most likely share her history of war, destruction, tears, violence, alienation, hopelessness, etc. Thank you for finding this.
Allegra Gigante Luft

YouTube - Christina Aguilera Grammy 2007 Its a Mans Mans Mans World - 0 views

  •  
    I would like to preface this by saying that I love James Brown and respect him as the Godfather of Soul and appreciate his work not only for it in itself, but for all of the artists whose work he influenced. I am glad that Christina Aguilera took the effort to honor him at the 2007 Grammy's, but am not sure why she picked "Its a Mans World" as the song to sing in his remembrance. I can admit that I like the song, but not the lyrics. I feel that this song is pertinent to our class because it shows that patriarchy is still the driving force behind our society. James Brown has produced so much work worthy of remembering, but this particular song makes me uncomfortable. It shouldn't be just a man's world, but everyone's world. I'm glad that he decided "it wouldn't be nothing, nothing without a woman or a girl," but I just don't think that is the right approach. I had a difficult time choosing between this song and Respect by Aretha Franklin because they are both great, but then I found Christina's version and thought it was worth mentioning.
  •  
    I must admit as well that I love this song and Christina Aguilera. With that being said, this song title captures the essence of our patriarchal society. James Brown was a brilliant musician and to be a true artist, you must observe the world you live and and deliver your emotional response. He did this by acknowleging the reality that we live in a society of male privilege. I would also like to add that this clip is another example of how the media helps to perpetuate our beliefs about women and is a tool to keep women subordinate to men.
emilie neuss

"Gone with the Wind" - 0 views

  •  
    Gone with the Wind, 1939, Victor Fleming, dir. Dox, Donnalee. 1996. "Constructions of Rape: Two American Musicals." Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, 17: 210-238. Retrieved April 12 2010. (http://www.jstor.org/stable.3346888). I felt it was important that I use Gone with the Wind in my paper, as it is one of the most highly cited films in relation to my topic (rape in film). The most cited aspect of the film is found within the scene in which Rhett Butler carries an angry and reluctant Scarlett O'Hara up the expansive staircase to her bedroom. The next scene the audience is shown is Scarlett awakening the morning after, seemingly happy. Many critics take issue with these scenes as they seem to promote the ideal that no means yes. Donnalee Dox touches on this idea in the opening to her article, "Constructions of Rape…" Dox mentions others, such as Tom Kuntz and Christina Hoff Sommers, who also debate over the subliminal messages found within these specific clips from the film. Dox notes the taboos in addressing this film as "many women continue to enjoy the sight of Rhett Butler carrying Scarlett O'Hara up the stairs in a fate undreamt of in feminist philosophy." If many women still enjoy this scene, it makes it difficult for other (perhaps more feministic) women to condemn this scene as a bad representation of rape and women. This article is helpful in addressing the multiple perspectives on reading rape in film, and will be useful in challenging my own thoughts regarding rape and film.
  •  
    Two sources here... but I assumed the JSTOR would be more important to add as the URL.
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page