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Christina Olivares has a pretty fabulous post over at Cypher&Syllable titled “On Boxing,” in which she takes us through an afternoon as a novice boxer. Her post got me thinking about my class on girlpower just this past semester, and how I would go on these tangents about how boxing, like many other contact sports, fundamentally affects women and girls’ relationship to their bodies, and how transformative that can be. Such activities change one’s relationship to one’s body because it makes more opportunities for being experience the self as a subject rather than as an object, as able to make and take blows– rather than only subjected to blows.

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African American Political Pundit has an excellent survey of some of the takes on the Obama Girl video, which I’m sure you’ve probably seen by now (it’s after the jump, if you haven’t).

What do you think?

Fun and irreverent take on being young and down with the Obama campaign? Or sinister shadow of the Harold-Fordism Obama should expect throughout his campaign?

[6/20/07: Jack and Jill Politics has a nice update, here.]

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7.26.07

Click here for the latest Genarlow Wilson updates at $3.60.

20 July, 2007 @ 11a

  • Release of tape in teen sex case may violate child-porn law (CNN)
  • Charges sought against McDade
  • Prosecutor Under Fire in Teen Sex Case (AJC)
  • Have you seen this, about the tape being leaked/released to members of the public?

    Release of Ga. Teen Sex Tape Draws Fire (NYT)

    How could they have not protected the girls involved in this incident? What is going on in Georgia?:

    Senator: Release of Wilson sex video should be investigated (AJC)

    Following is some important background:

    You can read the full story here at CNN, or here at the New York Times. And here is a CBS news story from last year, which more detail, if you are unfamiliar with the case.

    After the jump, a timeline of stories on the Genarlow Wilson case.

    You might also find this article, “The Harsh Wages of Sin: Why Genarlow Wilson is Languishing in Prison.” It’s written by Sherry F. Colb, a professor of law at Rutgers.

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    I caught this over at Jack and Jill Politics. It looks like the Hilary Clinton campaign has released a video of the poet Maya Angelou officially endorsing Clinton’s candidacy. (It’s after the jump.)

    The video is so interesting, as it uses Angelou’s blackness to authenticate Clinton’s femininity, and by some kind of metaphysical extension, her integrity as a candidate. Mainly consisting of images voiced over by Angelou, Read the rest of this entry »

    Angelina Jolie in A Mighty Heart; also Daniel Pearl and Mariane Pearl.I started this post thinking it would be about some of the brouhaha (or is this more of a hullabaloo?) about Angelina Jolie portraying Mariane Pearl in A Mighty Heart. Beauty as Power has a nice post on the choice as a race issue. The post also includes some background and interview material from Defamer, People, and msNBC, whose various responses to Jolie playing a women of African descent range from accusations of her doing “blackface,” (msNBC) to the suggestion that she has only donned “bronzer and a wig” (Defamer) and also Cinematical). Read the rest of this entry »

    Jordin Sparks and Blake Lewis on American IdolA whiff of insanity, which I caught from Robyn over at Fat Feminism:

    Earlier this week, FoxNews ran a segment on which Ramin Setoodeh, a Newsweek correspondent, and MeMe Roth, a representative from the National Action Against Obesity (NAAO) debated whether “the full-figured teenage Idol Jordin” is physically fit to be an American Idol. (The video is after the jump.)

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    I didn’t want my students from Racial Passing to feel left out of the end of semester postings. We’ve just finished reading Percival Everett’s Erasure, so here is one for you– from Gawker, by way of Racialicious: “Blacks Terrorize Harvard Students”:

    Last weekend, on the bucolic Quad at Harvard University–typically, the site of a casual game of Ultimate, or perhaps an afternoon reading of some Shakespearean sonnets before English class-an unusual and, to some, frightening scene was played out. There were people throwing things! And running! And jumping! And most scary of all, every single one of them was black. So the Harvard students watching from their dormitory windows, growing increasingly agitated at the sights below, did what any normal, white Harvard student would do when they saw a large, seemingly unruly group of black people: They called the cops! Read the rest of this entry »

    I just caught this link over at Racialicious, and followed it over to The Louisana Weekly, where Charreah Jackson has an article titled “Education equals higher chance of abuse for black women.” In the article, Jackson cites this quite startling statistic, that black women with college degrees are “145 times more likely to suffer sexual, domestic or other abuse than those who did not finish high school, according to a recent study.” It continues:

    One reason offered for the major increase of the likelihood of college-educated Black women being abused sexually, among others, is the backlash theory. It states that as women become more successful outside of the home, men become abusive due to resentment of their move outside of the traditional roles of women.

    The article is quite interesting, and also talks a bit more about how the statistics were collected, as well as also discussing how part of the problem is linked to ways in which abuse is not discussable in many black households. Check it out!

    I know it isn’t about me, but I have nontheless decided that Quentin Tarantino is trying to wear me out. Oh wait, it’s not just me, Angry Asian Man is tired too! It is about Tarantino’s self-indulgence, and I am becoming less and less sure what to make of it.

    I am only thinking of Tarantino at all because, while dinking around to prepare for Kill Bill, I came across scans at AMPHA of Tarantino’s photo spread in the latest issue of GQ. As you can see, the pictures Read the rest of this entry »

    Here’s a new twist on some of our conversations on identity and performance, from Ben Westhoff, over at the Village Voice. It’s a story on Victor Varnado, who is an African American with albinism. He works as actor, and is also a stand-up comedian.

    In his decision-making about which opportunities to take, he must confront the question many artists, particularly artists from marginalized backgrounds, often face: where is the limit between wanting to be known as an “artist of x,” and knowing that some of your success as an artist might also hinge on your deployment of your racial, sexual, melaninal specificity?

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