- Fresh sexual assault charges levied against Kevin Spacey (CBC News)
- Amid sexual assault allegations, Netflix suspends production of Spacey's House of Cards indefinitely (Deadline)
- NPR Chief Editor on leave after sexual harassment charges arise (Los Angeles Times)
- Woman, who previously accused Peyton Manning of assault, revives her charges (New York Daily News)
- Actor Jeremy Piven accused of assaulting a woman on the set of Entourage (HuffPost)
- Here are the most offensive excuses we've heard from men accused of sexual harassment and assault (Chicago Tribune)
Tuesday, October 31, 2017
Gender News 10.31 (Harvey Weisnstein Fallout Edition)
Sunday, October 29, 2017
M1W11: 10.30-11.2
"Was it hard?" I ask. "Letting go?"
"Not as hard as holding on to something that wasn't real."
"Not as hard as holding on to something that wasn't real."
—Lisa Schroeder, I Heart You, You Haunt Me
Week 11: 10.30-11.2
Read: Peruse online editions of New York Times, Chicago
Sun-Times, Los Angeles Times, Houston Chronicle, Boston Globe, as well as
Salon, DailyBeast, HuffPost, Vox, and Slate for hot-button articles
related to gender and sexuality
Class: Presentations
Upcoming:
Week 12: 11.6-9
Class: Presentations; PowerPoint—“Writing in the Public Discourse: Dos and Don’ts”
Due: SHORT ANSWER RESPONSES
Saturday, October 28, 2017
Short Answer Responses: Short Stories about Sex and Gender
Choose FIVE of the following eight questions to answer:
- Which character’s view of love and relationships is most askew? Why?
- Which of the stories features the couple with the “healthiest” relationship? Likewise, which couple the “unhealthiest” relationship?
- What does “A Jury of Her Peers” illustrate about the differences in how men and women problem solve?
- Which female character most actively challenges her gender’s norms? Which male character does?
- Which story is most optimistic about men and women overcoming their differences to understand one another? Which story is the pessimistic?
- Of the family relationships presented in these stories, which is the most heartbreaking?
- Which character did you root for the most?
- In “Brokeback Mountain,” Proulx’s sympathies clearly lie with Ennis and Jack, but what about their spouses? What price did the men’s wives pay for their husbands’ relationship?
Guidelines:
- All responses should be no more than 10 sentences—open each response with your thesis, then follow with sentences than lean more heavily on evidence than commentary (See example below)
- Be very specific—quote extensively to support your thesis
- Clearly indicate which question you are answering, though questions do not have to be presented in order
- As is traditional in writing about fiction, write in the present tense
- All titles should be in title case and inside quotation marks
- All stories can be found in the Dropbox section to the right of this post
Short Answer Example:
In this example, a short answer response is given to a questions about teenagers in the 1950s.
Question-
What was 1950s America’s reaction to the rise of teenager culture in that decade?
America reacted to the rise of 1950s teenager culture largely with fear and contempt. The terror teenagers evoked in adults is most evident in the strict school rules put in place in the late 50s. For example, it was then that strict curfews—designed to keep kids off the streets and out of trouble—were more heavily enforced. As Rasmussen points out, “older Americans feared that their youth were going to plunge into lives of sex and crime, so they put in place several regulations to keep them housed, safe from outside temptations.” This was also the period when frightening educational films were shown to kids to “scare them straight” (Kline). These films, like The Bloody Road and Fred the Drunk, graphically warned kids about everything from reckless driving to the perils of underage drinking. Additionally, many older Americans felt that youth were an entitled generation; they felt that kids were becoming increasingly spoiled and, thus, deserved harsher punishments to keep them in line. Hollywood happily reinforced this view with portrayals of lazy young Americans, who felt they were owed an easy upbringing. In these films, teenage characters were often harshly punished for not having the same values as their parents. Perez illustrates this point in his examination of The Father Figure, a 1958 film in which a know-it-all boy meets a grim death in nature by not listening to his dad’s advice about the elements.
Short answer, numbered and annotated-
- America reacted to the rise of 1950s teenager culture largely with fear and resentment. [A THESIS WHICH CLEARLY AND DEFINITIVELY ANSWERS THE PROMPT]
- The terror teenagers evoked in adults is most evident in the strict school rules put in place in the late 50s. [BEGINS TO ANSWER THE FIRST PART OF THE THESIS: FEAR]
- For example, it was then that strict curfews—designed to keep kids off the streets and out of trouble—were more heavily enforced. [OFFERS A CLEAR EXAMPLE: CURFEWS]
- As Jane Rasmussen points out, “older Americans feared that their youth were going to plunge into lives of sex and crime, so they put in place several regulations to keep them housed, safe from outside temptations.” [EVIDENCE FROM TEXT TO SUPPORT THE “FEAR” PART OF THE THESIS]
- This was also the period when frightening educational films were shown to kids to “scare them straight” (Kline). [ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF AMERICANS’ FEAR: GRAPHIC EDUCATIONAL FILMS]
- These films, like The Bloody Road and Fred the Drunk, graphically warned kids about everything from reckless driving to the perils of underage drinking. [PROVIDES SPECIFIC EXAMPLES OF GRAPHIC EDUCATIONAL FILMS]
- Additionally, many older Americans felt that youth were an entitled generation; they felt that kids were becoming increasingly spoiled and. [TRANSITIONS INTO SECOND PART OF THESIS: RESENTMENT; SETS UP THE VIEW THAT OLDER AMERICANS RESENTED WHAT THEY PERCEIVED WAS TEENAGERS' INCREASING PRIDE AND SENSE OF ENTITLEMENT]
- Hollywood happily reinforced this view with portrayals of lazy teenagers, who felt they were owed an easy upbringing. [ILLUSTRATES HOW HOLLYWOOD FED THIS RESENTMENT]
- In these films, teenage characters were often harshly punished for not having the same values as their parents. [HIGHLIGHTS HOW HOLLYWOOD TYPICALLY ACHIEVED THIS]
- Ian Perez illustrates this point in his examination of The Father Figure, a 1958 film in which a privileged, know-it-all boy meets a grim death in the wilderness by not listening to his dad’s advice about the elements. [CLOSES WITH A SPECIFIC EXAMPLE—FROM THE TEXT—OF HOW TEENAGERS WERE JUSTIFIABLY PUNISHED FOR THEIR PRIDE AND SENSE OF ENTITLEMENT]
Required:
- MLA Style
Due: Wed 11.8/Thu 11.9
Tuesday, October 24, 2017
Gender News 10.24
- Are Matt Damon and Ben Affleck mishandling their connection to the Harvey Weinstein scandal? (Salon)
- Playboy chooses its first transgender Playmate (CNN)
- Here are 16 of the most popular gay dads on Instagram (NewNowNext)
- Family Research Council leader: Men harass women because trans people are allowed in the military (Salon)
- Singer Sam Smith comes out as non-binary (People)
- Here is how parents can teach their kids about sexual harassment (Star)
Friday, October 20, 2017
M1W10: 10.23-26
“The mouth is made for communication,
and nothing is more articulate than a kiss.”
and nothing is more articulate than a kiss.”
―Jarod Kintz, It Occurred to Me
Week 10: 10.23-26
Read: DB—Short Story Pack 2: “A Jury of Her Peers” by Susan Glaspell, “Brokeback Mountain” by Annie Proux, “This Blessed House” by Jhumpa Lahiri, “Reunion” by John Cheever
Class: Reading discussion; Presentations
Read: DB—Short Story Pack 2: “A Jury of Her Peers” by Susan Glaspell, “Brokeback Mountain” by Annie Proux, “This Blessed House” by Jhumpa Lahiri, “Reunion” by John Cheever
Class: Reading discussion; Presentations
Upcoming:
Week 11: 10.30-11.2
Read: Peruse online editions of New York Times, Chicago
Sun-Times, Los Angeles Times, Houston Chronicle, Boston Globe, as well as
Salon, Slate, DailyBeast, HuffPost, Vox, and Slate for hot-button articles
related to gender and sexuality
Class: Presentations
Due: EDITORIAL (ANNOTATED)
Tuesday, October 17, 2017
Gender News 10.17
- What to make of Casey Affleck in the midst of the Harvey Wientein scandal (San Jose Mercury News)
- A former Apprentice contestant, who alleges sexual misconduct, files a subpoena for "all documents concerning any woman who asserted that Donald J. Trump touched her inappropriately" (CNN)
- Five Utah teen girls under investigation from school officials for video in which they yelled racial epithets (Buzzfeed)
- Comedian makes film about the invisibility of Asian men in pron (HuffPo)
- Why teenage boys don't identify as feminists (Mashable)
- Cleveland State University reeling from anti-gay posters (Buzzfeed)
Sunday, October 15, 2017
M1W9: 10.16-19
“Like a compass needle that points north,
a man's accusing finger always finds a woman.
Always.”
―Khaled Hosseini,
A Thousand Splendid Suns
Week 9: 10.16-19
Read:
DB—Short Story Pack 1: “Hills Like White Elephants” by Ernest
Hemingway, “The Way Up to Heaven” by Roald Dahl, “What We Talk about
When We Talk about Love” by Raymond Carver, “Boys and Girls” by Alice
Munro
Class: Reading discussion; Presentations
Due: JOURNAL 3Upcoming:
Week 10: 10.23-26
Read: DB—Short Story Pack 2: “A Jury of Her Peers” by Susan Glaspell, “Brokeback Mountain” by Annie Proux, “This Blessed House” by Jhumpa Lahiri, “Reunion” by John Cheever
Class: EDITORIAL; Reading discussion; Presentations
Friday, October 13, 2017
Journal 3: This is How We Do It—Sex Education Here and Abroad
Speaking to a United Nations AIDS conference in 1994, then-US Surgeon General Dr. Jocelyn Elders suggested that masturbation was "part of human sexuality, and perhaps it should be taught." After a quick public outcry, she was fired by President Clinton. Over 20 years later, masturbation is only one of many topics that remain taboo in the sex education classes of America. Today, fights rage over everything from abstinence-only programs to the presence of contraceptives on campuses; even the mere mentions of abortion and homosexuality are hotly debated. While some Americans favor sex education based on current sexual health information, others insist on abstinence-based approaches—if at all. Thus, sex education here varies widely from state to state, even county to county. But what of the rest of the world? What are some of the approaches countries are taking to teach (or not teach) their citizens about sexual health? What issues are other countries tackling that aren't mentioned in the American national dialogue. Finally, what, if anything, should we adopt from other countries?
- "Sex Education" (Last Week with John Oliver)
- "Swedish Sex Education has Time for Games and Mature Debate" (Guardian)
- "Sex Ed Outside The U.S. Teaches Kids About Masturbation, Consent, and Orgasms—and It's Working (MTV News)
- "These are the States With the Worst Sex Ed" (Vice)
- "Maybe We Should Outsource Our Sex Education to Mexico" (AlterNet)
- "Seven Problems with the State of Sex Ed in America Today, and How We Can Make it Better" (Bustle)
Required:
- MLA Style
- 2 pages in length
- Works cited page
Due: Wed 10.19/Thu 10.20
Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Gender News 10.11
- Major Hollywood shakeup as revelations about legendary film mogul Harvey Weinstein's extensive history of sexual harassment surface (New Yorker)
- ALSO: Now everyone's asking—who knew what and when? And who kept quiet?
- It's science: New study says women are geared toward kindness, while men look first to selfishness (Vice)
- Swedish model receives death threats after posting a photo of herself with hairy legs on Instagram (Independent)
- New photo series spotlights how women live with a lack of male boundaries everyday (Good)
- New french law: Photoshopped images to comes with a warning (Daily Telegraph)
Sunday, October 8, 2017
M1W8: 10.9-12
“Dress shabbily and they remember the dress;
dress impeccably and they remember the woman.”
―Coco Chanel
Week 8: 10.9-12
Class: Reading
discussion; Presentations
Note: Mon and Tue are men-only classes; Wed and Thu are women-only classes (w/guest lecturer TBA)
Upcoming:
Week 9: 10.16-19
Read: DB—Short Story Pack 1: “Hills Like White Elephants” by Ernest Hemingway, “The Way Up to Heaven” by Roald Dahl, “What We Talk about When We Talk about Love” by Raymond Carver, “Boys and Girls” by Alice Munro
Class: Reading discussion; Presentations
Due: JOURNAL 3
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