Saturday, December 10, 2016

Is my body really MINE?

POST 4: The politics of Sex
Falestine Awawdeh 



       My body is no longer "MY BODY" anymore, it has become part of everyone's property and opportunity to question what I do with it, how I use it, and most importantly what body weight I should be in. It's not a day that goes by when I don't hear a female I know talk about their body around me and around others particularly children, which is one of the mistakes we as a community, society and country must be aware of. What we say and our actions affect children so much that were only going to continue policing women's body on to the next generation. It's not enough that we as women have to fight for abortion rights, equal pay and harassment at our work place. But to deal with  it on a level that has become political nation wide that lead us to have a sexist president named Donald Trump is incredibly hard to believe and more hurtful as a woman of a country who portrays themselves as being accepting, equal, fair and the ideal country every other country should follow.
   
    However our actions, laws and criticism against women say other wise. We was hours away from electing our first female President who was the first elected nominee woman and most qualified to be our next President. But of course society focused more on what she wore during her debates against trump, her attitude, body weight, health, physical appearance, and if her "emotions," because she is a female is capable to be a President and handle serious situations without putting her, "girly emotions," in the way. That was the focus on Hilary Clinton through out most of her campaign trail and when it came to trump it didn't matter if he was a racist, sexist, unfair, causing protest rallies, mocking the disabilities, lying, and more because he wasn't a politician. That was Americas undedicated women who mostly voted for trump and the rest of America believed was their main excuse to why they voted for him. Even when they were confronted about it by journalist they about trump being a sexist, they're response is simply this, "at least his not a politician or a liar."

                                           



                                 


    However its not only the fact that the trump supporters who stand behind a man like donald trump, but its their reasons for it despite the fact that he has been accused and blamed for sexually harassing females. Plus being caught speaking about women in a locker room full of men in a sexist way even his daughter was part of a sexist joke of his. Which he denied multiple times about doing such a thing, until evidence was leaked to the media. But even that wasn't enough because politicians don't want a female to be powerful, they don't want women to over ride them, they don't want women to make more money as them or equal to them. Its a mans world but it wont be nothing without a woman. These barriers, laws and registration makes absolutely no sense, I do not understand it or comprehend the idea that this country is able to control or try to control our bodies and what we do with it. Their is no outcome to this were just creating a wider spread of a divided country which we fought to regain back as one country during the civil war, when Abraham Lincoln was the President. 

    If we continue to allow this were only going to enforce more of a negative impact on women and young females especially now since social media has never been in such high levels of importance that no matter we go or what happens social media will be their to capture it. Additionally social media is another form of language and communication used not only for artistic things but a way to connect to others. Even the President, politicians, and other figures who represent their countries use social media as a platform for whatever reason it may be. Media can be many things and can create many negative things, but the fact is this without it without this platform we wouldn't be as connected to the world, alert about things that can impact us, things that can start positive rallies, protest and ideas. Media is necessary for a million reasons and more, we can not turn our backs on it or blame it for any negativity that comes with it because its just an app and a system that doesn't tell us humans what to with it. It just gives us a voice like never before and what we put is our responsibility not social media apps. 


Ted Talk: I am a girl

I am a girl.  - Aren’t I? I have long hair, I have eyes, I have a nose, I have a mouth. I wear clothes, I wear pants, maybe I wear a dress sometimes and wants to wear high heels. I wear glasses, but I don’t wear them because they make me look smart. Wait, but I’m Asian, so I have to be smart; maybe it doesn’t matter if I have my glasses or not. I put my hair down, and wear lipstick because that’s the alluring asset that lets me fit in with the media’s beauty standard. Speaking of which, I have to make sure I buy the lightest shade of foundation to get the perfect pearl white skin. I can’t wear hoodies because that would make me a tomboy, I can’t wear sneakers because that means I am not trying hard enough. I know how to drive I am probably a bad driver, and possibly because I am Asian? – Let’s think about all I just said for a moment. (pause)
            Yes, I am an Asian girl, or as media always calls us. We are never categorized as women. Now, don’t start telling me that girl and women are the same – they’re not. Would you ever call a grown man a boy? No, you refer them as guys or men, but when someone accidentally refers a man as a boy, everyone gets offended. However, when a woman gets called a girl, it all becomes somewhat of an over reaction. I was rewatching old Disney Shows the other day with my sister. We were watching Jessie on Halloween. When a character told Luke that these girls were scared to go to the Haunted House, Luke was offended to be a girl. I stared at the screen. Why is being called a girl so offensive? We’re human. We’re a person. We’re not weak, I kid you not. Some GIRLS are actually more courageous than other boys. Oh wait, I meant men.  Now, don’t get me wrong, not all people are sexist, or racist, but I was always under the impression that my identity was formed around the fact that I was a female, an ASIAN female. Just that some majority of the people are clueless about me, about the general Asian, clueless as in I don’t understand why you’re not “me”, or in my case why am I not white.
Maybe it’s because I am Asian. See, I look at the ads, and I see a white person here (points) here (point) and here (points) wait, there’s an Asian there. Whoops. (That was a joke by the way) I searched up Asian women in ads, and I barely found any.. Which makes me wonder, where are the rest of us? We’re people and we live in America, but why are we so underrepresented? The misrepresentation of women in Hollywood is already a known issue, but women, and women of color gets so stereotyped that it becomes frightening. What makes us different from others? When do we realize we are of a specific race?
            I was born in the United States but my parents brought me back to live in another country literally as soon as I was born. I flew back to the United States by myself when I was young. I was not welcomed with open arms like others would expect. Instead I roamed around the whole airport by myself looking for a person that I have never met by name. My relatives didn’t care much about me because I was a little girl that came from Hong Kong, so they immediately deemed me as a child who would be a shame to the whole family and wouldn’t be successful. My cousins despised and belittled me because they were allowed to – meaning, because I didn’t understand English they would purposely single me out. My cousins were all male, by the way. I was a girl who loved the sports they did and I always wanted to join them, but all I remember were the words, “You’re a girl who doesn’t speak English, you can’t play with us.” In their broken Chinese. At least they tried. I desperately wanted to fit in, I desperately wanted to show them I can do everything they can, but I couldn’t scrap the words out of my mouth. My parents weren’t in the US yet, and I desperately wanted someone to be there. There was no room for me, so I slept on the floor of my grandparent’s room. I didn’t sleep for days sometimes, all I did was cry to myself. But being of Asian American decent, I was expected to be quiet at home first and because I was a girl. Crying to sleep, sometimes I would wonder, why did my parents bring me here?” I thought this was a vocation. When the week was over, I just wanted to vent out, to speak out.. just to be free.
            But that’s not how it works. My cousins lived here since they were born. They had already adopted the culture, in fact they were only exposed to one culture, the media. What ever they see on TV, and whatever the misogynistic past generation has taught them, it was embedded in their heads. So because I was the perfect target, not knowing English at all, I was the one they hated. As an Asian woman living in America, wherever I go, whatever I do, I will always be criticized. I will always be “not good enough” or “I don’t belong here” Then, the stereotypes that they’ve “learned” over the years are thrown at me, like those of being an Asian female driver. Even then, I don’t know what it means. Did you just describe how I look by obviously physically seeing that I am in fact Asian and Female? I’m not offended, but I have to ask. “At what point would people grasp and apprehend the idea that race and sex issue are controversial?” The innocent, yet striking questions that still surround my identity continues forever. 
             When people ask me, “Where are you from?” I say, “America.” “No where are you really from?” “New York.” After that, people just walk away. Truth is though, I am American. I was born in America, I speak English pretty well with an accent not easily detected. I just lived in different countries when I was young. But my life is surrounded by people who keep reassuring me that I’m not American, and the fact that I don’t belong here. Little words that were supposedly said to put me in my place were words that I will forever remember. Mm, maybe it’s easier said this way. I had to understand that I was Asian because I already knew that I was a girl all my life. And because of this, I decided to ask 3 women of color that live in 3 different countries the same question: “When did you realize you were Asian?”
            My first friend from Hong Kong, 18, was so confused. She said “Why are you asking?” And I replied with “Just answer me.” And she responded, “I have always been a Hong Kong person. What answer were you expecting?” She was confused.  Living in Hong Kong basically all her life, she identified as a Hong Kong woman.
Go onto the second scenario, I asked my friend from Korea, 25, and becoming a lawyer Oh, woman of Power. How shocking. I’m guessing she might have a little bit more of the story. And I was right! I asked the same question. Her answer.. wasn’t exactly similar to my friend from Hong Kong, but rather, she knew she was Korean when she attended school. She said “Here in Korea, there were already some foreigners especially in my age around me.. so.. I didn’t really learn that I’m Korean, but rather I learned that I lived in Korea and there are other countries. They look different and they speak different. I don’t remember the exact moment I realized this, but I knew all of us were Korean.” So basically, she just accepted them as her friends and peers.
And in the last one, I asked my good friend the same question, 21, lives in America, and her answer as you see it “When I was 4 and capable of actual thought and comprehension the moment I came back to Peru from China after Peruvians called me Chinita.” was something that I was not too surprised to hear. The situation is similar, just the countries were different. We weren’t too accepted by our peers, by that I meant non-Asians, so I decided to become Americanized. Or as Chinese people call it ABC, American Born Chinese which comes off as an insult from older generations. However, the more I became “Americanized” the more popular I became. I was liked more, because my “personality”, the conformity of popular American norm, deviated from their expectations. I was confronted by a classmate saying that “Jessica, you’re so ghetto, that’s why I like you.” I looked confused. She noticed and she reassured me “Oh, haha it’s because all the Asians I know are quiet.” Either way, I was happy and I became more confident that I was accepted because I knew I was similar to the American norm.
            But, going back to the second photo. My friend said that she noticed that those around her, even though they looked different from her, those people were Korean because they LIVE in korea. Doesn’t the same concept apply here? We, Asian American females especially, get judged and criticized on. This is no longer a story, a list of questions, but rather just a jigsaw puzzle. Perhaps it may be history trying to crush us, but our memories from experiences are more important books, because what’s said in books about us are not our lives. Instead of realistic stories, we usually see the depiction of the false representation of an Asian American women, but a destructive one. Media has managed to paint a picture of a small percentage of Asian women, and make it represent an entire Continent. Or it takes the positive characteristics, like the fact that Asian women can be strong and visceral, but portray it in a negative way. For example, Tiger mom – the image of a strict cruel Asian mother who lacks room for depth and emotion just so their children could succeed. But, it cuts out all the heritage, roots, and struggles the mother goes through to reach acceptance in a different country.
            My mom always told me “They have eyes, they have a nose, they have a mouth. Why are you scared of them?” The questions still sticks now, even though I clearly could communicate with non-asians in the room. But I want to be loud because I can, not pressured by those around me saying I can’t. If I don’t stay loud, the misrepresentation and underrepresentation of Asian American women in media will stay silently known. It’s easy to say “It’s just a movie.” Or “It’s just a joke.” But, so much of art reflects on reality. If you consume media, the same stereotypes will just be repetitive. Slowly you would begin to believe those stereotypes are true, since you’ve been seeing it so many times. Ever stereotyped Asian American women representation pulls us back to the simplicity of our culture. And as a result, it just gives a false picture to those who don’t know any better. Then, it will make it difficult for those who need to find their identity and realize who they are. Asian Americans aren’t taught to be proud of who they are. If I stayed in America, I would have felt less proud to be Asian. And had I stayed in Asia, I would feel less proud to be American.
            Yet, the truth is I am Asian but not Asian enough to be accepted in Hong Kong or Korea. I am American, but not American enough for others to realize it. I am a woman, but people still call me a girl. I am not similar enough to be accepted and we’re not different enough for people to understand. But, it doesn’t matter, because I am Jessica and this is who I am.

            







I am interested in creating a TedTalk event! Maybe I can actually present this in the near future! 

Friday, December 9, 2016

Post 5: Marina Bychkova

        Marina Bychkova is a Russian-Canadian figurative artist has recently made it on my Facebook news feed for the dolls that she's been creating. Her artist statement explains why she loves creating dolls and doesn't outright state that she is a feminist, but I strongly believe that her works contribute to the conversation and her thought process behind the social aspects of her works makes her a feminist. She loves creating these intricate dolls because "it's such a multidisciplinary art form" and she would get bored if she were to only use one medium. She believes that the dolls have a "huge potential for exploring themes of social injustice" because her dolls illustrate many different realities of many women.

The image on the left is one of her pieces where she outright says that she believes women ought to have the right to choose what she wants to do with her own body. The image on the left depicts the life of a breast cancer survivor. Not only do her pieces illustrate the struggles of women, but all of her dolls vary in skin tone and hair color.

"Ebe"

The artist believes that a more accurate bodily representation of women on the dolls is the right thing to do, and likes to examine whether or not it causes an uproar. She says in a video interview:"nude dolls create a bigger impact than custom dolls because it makes us confront our sexuality and vulnerability that we all have. I like juxtaposing the nudity of the doll with the different taboo subjects in society, such a sexuality for example. A lot of dolls I've grew up with and still see are asexual, they have been cleansed of all sexuality, which i think is extremely wrong because it creates body issues for girls where there should be any body issues or shame, so i think naked girls have a lot of potential to examine our shame and our outrage at seeing naked dolls with full mature sexual organs and question why it disturbs us and why it's wrong or right, so that possibility, that dimension of the naked doll truly intrigues me." The fact that she wants to stir the pot, provoke the audience, and cause a conversation about the body parts she decided to accurately portray on dolls; along with the fact that she has used a doll to express her belief in women's rights makes her a feminist despite not out-rightly saying it.

I would imagine that her dolls would spark a lot of controversy, considering the sexualization of women's body parts in our society. "These sexual organs should be covered up unless it's for the male gaze, it shouldn't be a component in a doll because it's too 'mature' for girls to play with," many would think after seeing these dolls, but I applaud her for normalizing female body parts. They should not be viewed as men's sex toys but rather a component of women's bodies, and that's that. A comment I read under a shortened clip of the video interview that was posted on Facebook said:

which honestly just made me baffled. I, myself, am wondering whether or not she classifies herself as a feminist and if so, why hasn't she outspokenly stated it. After reading her artist statement, it is apparent that addressing women's rights isn't the utmost priority as she chooses to state that she likes using many different methods to create her works of art as the reason why she creates these dolls, So that may explain why she hasn't declared it loud and proud. As for the reason behind why she hasn't declared herself a feminist leads me to assume that she doesn't want to be negatively associated with the term, but this is exactly why we need more outspoken feminists and why she should stand up to be one: to redefine the social definition of what it means to be a feminist. 

Final Project- Redefining Society's Idea of Feminism via Memes

          The words Feminist, Feminism, and the like has had a negative connotation throughout the years and is associated with exaggerated sayings that are sometimes not even true.  In order for people to really understand what Feminism is, and for people to proudly state that they are a feminist, the social construct around it needs to be redefined and the idea of feminism needs to be corrected. The objective is to redefine the society's idea of feminism in a subtle way under the guise of humor. Overtime, these memes will condition people to have this kind of reaction towards sayings pertaining to feminism and the word feminism will no longer be such a "dirty" word. The use of memes would be a quick, accessible, and comical way to help with the cause. Many users on social media would see a reaction picture with a funny block of text on it and share it to their friends and followers and in turn, sometimes even make their own. There are many tools for one to create memes and the recent styles of memes have made it even easier to edit your own, as text is no long placed over the picture, but rather at the top or bottom white space; thus allowing anyone to crop out the picture itself or white out the white space and place their own text over it. Creating memes reacting to the conversation about feminism is easy and simplistic, and adds humor to the dethroning of the ideas feminism negatively connotes. I have created a page called Feministic on FacebookInstagram, and Twitter, which will be the outlet in which these memes will be shared.



Presentation

Bibliography:

Solon, Olivia. "Richard Dawkins on the Internet's Hijacking of the Word 'meme'" WIRED UK. N.p., 05 July 2016. Web. 09 Dec. 2016.

Bahuguna, Ankush. "11 Misconceptions About Feminism You Need To Stop Believing In." Www.mensxp.com. N.p., 25 Nov. 2014. Web. 9 Dec. 2016.

"Meme theory." Computer Desktop Encyclopedia. 1981-2015. The Computer Language Company Inc. 9 Dec. 2016 


Final Project

Lexington Leib
Professor Doris Caçoilo
Media 384

December 9, 2016

Final Project

For my final project for Women in Media I assembled two videos using a compilation of archival footage, home photos, and my own footage. Each piece has a unique perspective on the topics covered in this class. My favorite forms of art, whether they be films, poems, or paintings are emotionally honest, truthful, and speak from the heart of the artist. Through this approach, I made one video discussing the state of feminism in 2016 and the other is about my grandfather, a man who embodies the patriarchy.  

Year of the Thot is based on the idea that feminism in 2016 has become a dichotomy between the values we say we possess, and the reality of the willful participation in hyper sexualization. The focus is on explaining why the current wave of feminism is so rooted in sexuality and why that matters. The video serves also as a timeline that looks at the way advertising to women has progressed in the last 60 years, showing that things really haven't changed as much as we would like to think. 




He Burned Off His Fingerprints is a deeply honest look into the life of my Grandfather. the link to feminism in this piece is less obvious than in my previous video. My aim here is to illuminate the qualities of a person who was shaped by war and violence and the damage it inflicted on his family. His actions shaped the lives of his 4 children and his subsequent grand children. His legacy is an an unavoidable link between my life and my understanding of men, society, and family. 




Ultimately my goal moving forward is to continue making films that are honest and close to my heart. I think these kinds of values are what make people feel most connected to art and other people, and I strive in life to foster those connections. 

References
Berger, John, Sven Blomberg, Chris Fox, Michael Dibb, and Richard Hollis. Ways of Seeing. London, England: British Broadcasting Corportion, 1973. Print.

"Betty Friedan to Beyoncé: Today's Generation Embraces Feminism on Its Own Terms." The Washington Post. WP Company, n.d. Web. 09 Dec. 2016.

Hooks, Bell. The Will to Change: Men, Masculinity, and Love. New York: Washington Square, 2004. Print.

Lees, Paris. "There's a New Prudishness in Feminism and I Hate It | VICE | United States." VICE. N.p., 13 Nov. 2014. Web. 09 Dec. 2016.

Mooney, Jessie. "The Most Follow-Worthy Instagram Models of the Year (Thus Far)." GQ. N.p., 30 Sept. 2016. Web. 09 Dec. 2016.

Shulevitz, Judith. "How to Fix Feminism." The New York Times. The New York Times, 11 June 2016. Web. 09 Dec. 2016.

**All archival footage collated from Archive.org