here's some stuff i've been reading lately that i thought was worth sharing.  in each case, i'd strongly recommend that you click on the link and read the whole piece.
this on rihanna choosing to collaborate with chris brown, and related issues:
...much  of the rest of the world seems to have forgiven Chris Brown his  trespasses, if they ever held him accountable in the first place.  So  why is it the sole responsibility of Rihanna to withhold her forgiveness  and force his accountability?  Why should she be any more forceful than  a legal system that apparently felt that his domestic violence merited  no jail time?  Or a fan base that apparently feels his talent far  outweighs a little thing like beating his girlfriend?
[...]
In the wake of these recent instances scholars and critics have reinvigorated various long held discussions around the twin crises of black manhood and  black womanhood in the United States, both of which are crucial  considerations whose urgency needs to be sustained.  At the same time, I  think it is also important to consider the crisis of an American  consumer culture that only seems able to engage society on the level of  commodity without consequence. In this crisis American consumer citizens  can be confronted with Chris Brown’s brutality and see it as separate  from the talented pop star.
this piece by ruth desouza on her presentation to the "people of colour decolonistion hui" (note that there is a link to the full audio of her presentaion, also well worth listening to):
Using the example of maternity I talked about the ways in which heath  professionals draw on culturally and socially available repertoires of  care that can be less than helpful when imposed on women of colour. This  is because so often these repertoires are drawn on the basis of an  implicit ideal user who tends to be cis-woman, heterosexual, white,  middle class and one who takes up the ‘imperative of health’. That is  the ideal neoliberal consumer who makes herself an expert through her  consumption of self-help books and its acceptable accoutrements, who  takes responsibility by attending ante-natal classes and who labours  naturally with her loving and supportive partner present. She obeys the  edicts of the health professional and makes reasonable requests that  align with the dominant discourse of maternity as an empowering  experience (if you are “informed” and “take responsibility”).
the bloomberg piece that was in the news recently, that gives details of the appalling working conditions of workers in the fishing industry (quite a harrowing read):
Yusril was desperate for the promised monthly salary of $260, plus  bonuses, for unloading the fish. His young wife was eight months  pregnant, and he had put his name on a waiting list for this opportunity  nine months earlier. After taking a bus eight hours to Jakarta, he had  given the agent a $225 fee which he had borrowed from his  brother-in-law. Other fishermen had taken debts from loan sharks to  cover the fee, and a few had sold their possessions, such as livestock,  or land. The agent rushed him through signing the contracts, at least  one of which was in English, which Yusril could not understand.
The terms of the first contract, the “real” one, would later haunt  him. In it, IMS spelled out terms with no rights. In addition to the  agent’s commission, Yusril would surrender 30 percent of his salary,  which IMS would hold unless the work was completed. He would be paid  nothing for the first three months, and if the job was not completed to  the fishing company’s satisfaction, Yusril would be sent home and  charged over $1000 for the airfare. “Satisfactory” completion was left  vague. The contract only stated that Yusril would have to work whatever  hours the boat operators demanded.
and finally this piece from tiger beatdown on anger:
More than one person has complained in the past few weeks about my  anger. People who have said that I “rant” about issues like racism or  immigration but I do not offer advice on actions they can follow. They  are frustrated, they say. They say they wish I told them what to do.  Here is what you do: you find your moral imperative and you act. Ranting  is one of mine. What is yours? If your anger is only limited to reading  these words I string together and then wondering “oh but what can I  do?” then I am afraid to say, your anger is not powerful enough. The  kind of anger that does not lead you to, at least, google for more  information on the topic you just read and then at the very least  reflect on what you read and position yourself in relation to the topic  and how you could contribute, no matter in which small way to fix it, is  not anger. It might be upsetting because you have just been exposed in  your complicity with this system of inequalities we are all forced to  partake in. That might as well make you uncomfortable. But angry? No,  obviously not angry enough if all you have left is to complain because I  “rant”.
 
 
1 comment:
Great links, thank you, stargazer.
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