CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
It's Complicated: Feminists Write About the Misogynist Art We Loveed. Judy Berman and Niina Pollari
"Listening to the Sex Pistols, trying to figure out if 'Bodies' was really an antiabortion song, I discovered that it was something even worse. It was an outburst of loathing for human physicality, a loathing projected onto women because they are babies and have abortions and are 'a fucking bloody mess,'but finally recoiling against the singer himself: 'I'm not an animal!' he bellowed in useless protest, his own animal sounds giving him the lie. It was an outrageous song, yet I could not simply dismiss it with outrage. The extremity of its disgust forced me to admit that I was no stranger to such feelings -- though unlike Johnny Rotten I recognized that the disgust, not the body, was the enemy. And there lay the paradox: music that boldly and aggressively laid out what the singer wanted, loved, hated -- as good rock-and-roll did -- challenged me to do the same, and so, even when the content was antiwoman, antisexual, in a sense antihuman, the form encouraged my struggle for liberation. -- Ellen Willis, 1977
Feminists have never hesitated to dissect and attack art whose misogyny offends and repulses us. But what happens when we fall in love with the work of a musician, writer, or painter we see as anti-female? Do we rationalize our cognitive dissonance away, turn our back on the offending artist, or find a way to embrace the film or story that moves us while acknowledging what disturbs us about it? How does our attraction to misogynist art complicate our relationship to both the artist and to feminism itself?
It's Complicated: Feminists Write About the Misogynist Art We Love is project that seeks contributions by self-identified feminists. Essays of 1500-2000 words should analyze the writer's appreciation for an author, musician, artist, filmmaker, or other cultural figure -- of any gender -- who the writer also views as somehow misogynist. Glam rock, John Milton, Drake and Egon Schiele are among the topics that have already been approved, which should give a good idea of the project's breadth. As this anthology is intended for a general readership, academic papers will not be considered, and contributors should avoid field-specific jargon of all kinds. Proposals for non-essay contributions will also be considered.
If you are interested in contributing to the project, please email a short pitch no later than February 29, 2012 to itscomplicatedbook@gmail.com proposing a subject and briefly summarizing the content of your essay. We encourage writers of all genders, backgrounds and experience levels to submit ideas.
Gadfly: WIBC
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Every week, NUVO cartoonist Wayne Bertsch turns an eye towards the news
headlines for the subject of his 'Gadfly' comic. by Wayne Bertsch
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