Showing posts with label international women's day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label international women's day. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 March 2012

International Women's Day - a visual tribute (3)

Final few pictures of women being cool to mark International Women's Day.

OK, being a Muse (history in this case) is a bit ideologically suspect, but it's a great image. From the philology department at Vilnius University, Lithuania

My union comrades fighting the good fight

European Championships, women's foil wheelchair competition

European Championships, women's sabre

International Women's Day - a visual tribute (2)

Every woman I know has a residual horror of Girl's World

A bust of Hilda Ogden, terror of Coronation Street

Determined public sector women

Scottish Junior Women's Foil team

Domestic servant propaganda, 1920s

Banner from the Suffrage Atelier design studio, currently at the People's History Museum in Manchester

Anti-suffrage poster at the People's History Museum

1968 Paris Revolutionary poster

International Women's Day - a visual tribute (1)

Seeing as it's International Women's Day and I know lots and lots of admirable women - as colleagues, comrades, students and through my sporting life, I thought I'd share some of my photographs of cool women doing stuff.

One of my more outgoing colleagues

A protester on a march for jobs

Teenage militant

Not sure how that lemon got there

Her brother wanted me to take their picture. She reluctantly agreed after weighing the possibility of my being 'a paedo'. But she kept her guard up.

Sheer determination

Leah King - rising star of England and GB fencing

Francesca Summers (Eng women's foil) in full flight

Gloriously clichéd 1950s painting of a nurse.

Thursday, 10 March 2011

Tories not taking International Women's Day entirely seriously

The House of Commons is having a debate to mark International Women's Day. For the Labour Party: Rushanara Ali. Definitely of the female persuasion and quite an impressive individual.
For the government: Mr Stephen O'Brien. Genitals definitely on the outside of the abdomen.

Well, it is washing day round at Tory HQ.

Tuesday, 8 March 2011

Happy International Women's Day

I hope you do something relevant to celebrate IWD and mourn the continuing need for it. In my mind today are the women of Saudi Arabia - basically highly-educated prisoners - and my students. Being a humanities lecturer, most of my English literature classes are overwhelmingly female, though my media/cultural studies classes are more balanced.

Despite the demographics of English courses, relatively few women become lecturers - though the proportion is higher in The Hegemon, I think. Is this to do with the economics and working lives of men and women? Or is it connected to the performative aspects of lecturing and researching? Are women conditioned against this kind of intellectual leadership? Certainly 100 years ago the theory was that women were creatures of biology while men were the intellectuals and strivers - an idea achieved by strenuously ignoring the work of a huge range of female authors, composers and scientists.

So here's my hero of the day: Ada Lovelace (1815-1852): the daughter of Byron and Anne Isabella Milbanke. Ada was the world's first computer programmer, writing the software for Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine. Unfortunately, the machine was never built.

Happily though, Ada and Charles became geek crimefighting steampunk heroes. At least, in this version…