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Bring home the bacon and fry it in the pan

Laura Milot

Issue date: 11/16/07 Section: Forum
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"I don't paint pictures with my period blood, if that's what you mean," said senior Beth Belle-Isle when asked if she was a feminist. Pause and reflect on that statement.

I am a feminist and I do not paint with my period blood for three reasons. One, I am artistically challenged. Two, it is somewhat grotesque and three, not all feminists do that. However, the stereotype is that they do. The word and the movement have far too many negative conations and stereotypes. Feminism is actually a positive movement.

Before you start twitching, let me explain. I believe in the universal idea of equality among all men and women. I believe that we should celebrate womanhood, that the double standards should be burned, and that the image of both men and women should no longer be Ken and Barbie. I believe in the Lifetime Channel but most of all, I believe in myself as woman. I am a feminist.

Fact is that you are a feminist too. Feminism is the active belief in women's rights and interests. If you have a viewpoint on the role of women in society, then you are a feminist. Even the most seemingly non-feminist notion that women belong in the kitchen is a form of feminism called romantic feminism.

However, either most people think that they have to have an extremely radical voice to be a feminist or they fear that if feminism comes up in conversation that some crazy lesbian is going to karate chop kick them in the face and force them to the dark side. The word 'feminism' is usually paralleled with lesbianism; however, this is simply not the case.

In fact, a vast majority of the founding mothers of feminism, back in 1848, were married women advocating access to the patriarchal world, i.e. voting rights. In 1919, women were granted voting privileges in the United States but feminism did not stop there.

The second wave of feminism took place primarily in the 1960s, 70s, and 80s. They advocated to for equality in society, i.e. equal pay, equal standards, reproductive rights, etc. The classic idea" "I can do anything you can do only better," was coined as a feminist slogan, an ideology. Out of this wave many feminists spoke out against the marginalization of women in a strictly patricidal society.
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