Carroll County, Arkansas · Thursday, September 2, 2010
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Third Wave Feminism

Posted Thursday, June 25, 2009, at 12:37 PM

Sharon Sloan, who lives within spitting distance of the Kings River Bridge--where Woodstock meets Livestock, some wag suggested--dropped off a box of books the other day and considerably complicated my life as a bookseller. In the box was half a dozen books on German philosophy (in German), twenty books on artificial intelligence and "whither" computers, and another fifty books or so with such arcane titles as Scottish Crofters: A Historical Ethnography of a Celtic Village.

Several of the books were written by "feminist" writers. Born directly after World War II, I have been a witness to or participant in a singular amount of civic turmoil: the civil rights movement, the anti-war movement, the liberation of El Salvador, the homelessness movement, and on and on. Concurrently and simultaneously, the Women's Movement unfolded with all of this other jazz, but unlike many of the movements it has had legs, and has stuck around well beyond the initial flash point.

An unintended consequence of the women's movement has been that men have become even more infantile and more self-involved. Before you launch into argument, consider first please the United States Congress, the Democratic and Republican Parties, the corporatizing of Christianity, Islamic fundamentalism, professional sports, and the growing number of abandoned children and their mothers here in the US, and world-wide. If the women's movement has freed women to have abortions and jobs, it has also allowed a lot of men to believe that fatherhood and steady employment are lifestyle choices instead of obligations.

I was thinking about this as I priced and shelved Dr. Sloan's very dense (and unsalable) collection in my tiny--but now larger--"Women's Studies" section. Among the writers and or subjects already there are the Peabody Sisters, Jane Hull, Dorothy Day, and the usual transitional trinity of Friedan, Steinem, and Greer. I own up to having a bit of docu-trash by Judy Collins, Gail Sheehy, Susan Faludi, and a few other pop psychology types, but I also discovered a complete absence of material that is being called third wave feminism.

If I get this wave business correctly, first wave feminism was driven by women seeking the vote, and second wave feminism--where you and I come in--was (and is) focused on creating equal access to opportunity and ending legal sex discrimination. Third wave feminism is of course much more complicated, probably for its adherents, and definitely for booksellers. A review of the literature informs me that post-structuralism, womanism, libertarianism, postmodernism, transnationalism, and queer, critical and post-colonial theory are all central to third wave ideology. Added to the mix is something my daughter admiringly calls the Riot Grrl Movement--about which I am too scared to find out any more.

I don't know what all this stuff means, except possibly for "postmodernism" which I mostly associate with a book, play, idea, or value that you carry in a hand basket on the way to the boredom of hell. One of the few postmodern writers that I enjoy, John Barth, himself says that he tries to get to know the person creating or standing behind the postmodern matter at hand--and if he likes the person, well then the matter at hand becomes less important. In any case, it is all very complicated, particularly for the bookseller who "organizes" new material, sees what he has--and see what he lacks and doesn't quite understand but really (maybe?)ought to acquire.

What I certainly know is that Sharon Sloan--academic, computer scientist, artist, neighbor--is now at the Carroll County Literacy Council at 118 Church Street in Berryville. As you might expect, I think helping people learn how to read, and the promotion of reading in general, is among the most important work we can do as a community and as individuals. Please stop in and thank Dr. Sloan--and all our great Literacy Council volunteers.


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thanks for the kind words on behalf of all the literacy volunteers!

-- Posted by xkalibr on Mon, Jun 29, 2009, at 5:34 PM


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The Ubiquitous Pig
Daniel Krotz
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Ubiquitous is a word that means "everywhere." We all know that there are lots of pigs in the world. Some good pigs like Wilbur in Charlotte's Web...and some bad pigs too, like the pigs in Orwell's Animal Farm. I have a picture of a beautiful Yorkshire hog diving off a board into a pretty county pond. The pig is smiling. He is a good pig. Good pigs are everywhere. Happy, friendly, useful pigs. And then there are the bad pigs. Remember when you mother admonished you? "Don't be a pig!" she'd command. She was telling you not to be selfish, and to think of other people. Your mom (and my mom) hoped that we would consider the feelings and rights of other people. This blog is about good things and bad things: good and bad things happening in Carroll County, good and bad books, good and bad food. Thanks for taking a look.
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