Tuesday, April 28, 2009

blog # 9

Non-governmental Organizations:

I decided to choose the International Women's Health Coalition (IWHC). This wonderful organization's main mission is to promote and protect the sexual rights, reproductive rights, and health of all women - especially women in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, to create and develop health policies, programs, and funding. Women's health care is still, sadly, a troubling issue in Western society. The rights of women in Third World countries, however, deserves immediate attention and care. It is our social responsibility as humans, and especially fellow women, to help ensure the health care for women all around the world. The IWHC is working toward that exact cause. The IWHC is trying to help women gain the knowledge to make the right decisions in terms of their sexual and health rights as well as try to live a healthy sexual life without worries of rape, violence, discrimination, or disease. The IWHC is not only trying to redirect funding to better the health of women, but is also trying to change the cultural thinking of impoverished societies in a more positive light towards women. Since the IWHC's beginning in 1984, this organization has provided over $16.5 million in grants to women advocates. The IWHC advocates women everywhere to take political and social action for their rights. The IWHC has started and helped build 75 organizations in 10 different countries around the world. The IWHC also encourages these separate organizations to create alliances and work with one another. The issues that the IWHC focus on are access to safe and legal abortions, sexual rights and gender equality, and the effects of HIV/AIDs on women in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. The International Women's Health Coalition has received positive feedback and reviews from other various social organizations and should continue on with its excellent work and amazing advocacy.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Reading Gender

Lauren Best

4 / 12 / 09

Reading Gender

What a wonderful world! In today’s society the perfect life, a life without thinking, is easy with a number of readily available painkillers, beautiful appliances, and HD TV sets. These sentiments might seem right out of the post-war 50s America, yet they are all a part of an omnipresent oppressive force on modern women in Rosario Castellano’s groundbreaking play The Eternal Feminine. Castellano’s play presents a wide spectrum of over-the-top situations and stories that all contain a similar thread: the ideal woman. Who is she? What does she look like? How does she behave? This play tackles it all! The first scene in the play sets the stage for the rest with a great deal of social commentary. The salesman proudly showcases his new invention – a gadget so ideal that only a computer brain could make it! Poor Lupita who is soon to be married is chosen to sample this new dream simulating hair-dryer and goes through multiple, terrifying and enlightening nightmares that reflect a great deal of parody on the way women are “supposed to be”. The initial scene with the salesman, owner, hairdresser, and Lupita reflect not only the way society treats women and wants them to be but also reflects a growing laziness and lethargy in Western culture. As the salesman pitches his invention to the salon owner and hairdresser, he presents a number of happy, ideal dreams that each lucky woman can have with her new dream machine: “she dreams that she is the prettiest woman in the world; that all the men are falling in love with her; that all women envy her; that her husband got a raise in salary; that there’s no increase in the basic cost of living; that she finds an inexpensive and efficient maid; that she gets pregnant this month; that she doesn’t get pregnant this month; etc.” All of these so-called ideal dreams that are available to women soon turn into vicious nightmares, however, once they enter Lupita’s troubled subconscious. The reader soon finds out that none of these perfect dreams are quite as good as they seem. When Lupita first begins to dream, she sees herself with her husband, but instead of being sensitive and kind to her, he is rough with her sexually and complains at how much she does not obey him. This scene conveys the most primitive scenario for how women should be. Sadly males still often take the more dominant role due to social conditioning. In a scene that follows soon after, Lupita sees her mother soon after she becomes pregnant. Lupita’s mother forces her to eat sweets so that she will gain weight and strip herself of make-up, nice clothing, or anything that would make Lupita happy. Lupita’s mama tells her how her young Lupita will become just like herself. The mother tells her how she does not need to be happy or seek pleasure – she will find those things when her husband and children are happy. This scene continues to comment on the traditional roles of women, especially in 20th Century culture. Women were to be self-less and subservient, nothing more. All of the scenes that follow basically follow under this vein of what has oppressed women throughout the history of mankind. By writing this play, Castellano’s was able to point out so many flaws in history that have brought us to where we are now and hopefully will make more women acknowledge their own inner feminist.