person:rebecca solnit

  • Rebecca Solnit : « Réduire les femmes au silence a toujours été la stratégie en vigueur »
    https://www.nouveau-magazine-litteraire.com/idees/reduire-les-femmes-au-silence-strategie-en-vigueur

     ?

    Jugez-vous toujours le terme « mansplaining » (ou « mecsplication » en français) imparfait ? Vous regrettiez, à l’époque, qu’il essentialise un défaut masculin.

    Aujourd’hui, il me plaît. J’avais des réserves mais, il y a plusieurs années, une jeune femme m’a confié que jusqu’à l’apparition de ce mot, ces expériences vécues ne pouvaient pas être nommées, empêchant ainsi le lien avec des tendances plus vastes et des courants plus souterrains. Le terme est donc très utile et souvent utilisé en anglais. J’aimerais que la blogueuse qui l’a inventé en réponse à mon essai se l’approprie car, à l’origine, il ne vient pas de moi…

    En quoi la répartition de la parole est-elle genrée ?

    Des études ont démontré que les femmes sont plus souvent interrompues – même à la Cour suprême ! Le statut et le respect dont bénéficient traditionnellement les hommes se manifestent par la place que prennent leur parole et l’écoute suscitée. Mais cela évolue puisque les femmes accèdent à des postes à responsabilités et que de plus en plus de personnes sont prêtes à les écouter – même si, paradoxalement, les femmes sont aussi éduquées à se discréditer les unes les autres.

    Spéciale dédicace aux Seenthisien·nes (@intempestive et @simplicissimus, au moins) qui avaient contribué à la traduction du titre dans une autre version.

    [infokiosques.net] - Quand les hommes m’expliquent
    https://infokiosques.net/spip.php?article1501

    Oui, des personnes des deux sexes surgissent lors d’événements publics pour disserter sur des choses qui n’ont rien à voir ou des théories complotistes mais cette pure confiance en soi agressive de parfaits ignorants est, dans mon expérience, genrée. Les hommes m’expliquent, à moi et à d’autres femmes, qu’ils sachent ou non de quoi ils parlent. Certains hommes.

    • Ils sont nombreux mais se résument globalement à : « N’écoutez pas cette personne, ne la croyez pas, ne laissez pas ses mots avoir de conséquences. » Ce qui sous-entend que la femme serait folle, qu’elle se fait des idées, qu’elle a tout inventé (voire, selon Freud, qu’elle aurait aimé que cela arrive). Les femmes seraient donc toujours trop (ou pas assez !) émotives. Les victimes doivent même faire très attention à leur « performance » lors des procès, sinon leur témoignage pourrait être perçu comme l’expression d’une rancune pour blesser un homme, là se trouve la formule magique qui permet de détourner l’attention du délit commis par un homme – par exemple, un viol – pour se concentrer sur les conséquences dramatiques que ce crime aura pour lui. Comme si la victime, et non pas le système judiciaire (ou l’accusé), était responsable des conséquences.

      Réduire au silence et ignorer les femmes a toujours été la stratégie en vigueur, c’est d’ailleurs ainsi que Harvey Weinstein a pu s’en prendre à 109 femmes sans aucune conséquence, tout comme (ndlr : le comédien) Bill Cosby, qui aurait agressé et drogué des femmes pendant une cinquante d’années. Ces femmes ont été raillées, voire punies pour avoir élevé la voix. Aux États-Unis, 70 % des femmes qui se plaignent de harcèlement sexuel au travail subissent d’ailleurs des représailles. Cela encourage les femmes à se taire tout en permettant à la violence sexiste de perdurer.

    • Désolée le curieux, tu peux te garder tes remarques anti-féministe super bien argumentées à coups de memes. Tu ne feras pas de vieux os sur Seenthis, c’est pas le genre d’endroits où le trolling sexiste est apprécié.

      Et oui, @simplicissimus, la discussion a disparu mais son souvenir demeure ;-).

      Encore une ressource autour de ce chouette texte.
      http://blog.ecologie-politique.eu/post/Quand-les-hommes-m-expliquent

  • City of Women - The New Yorker

    https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/city-of-women

    Juste parce que je viens de rencontrer la cartographe #Moly_Roy qui a eu l’idée de cette carte et qui l’a mise en scène, et que la carte est super.

    What if the New York City subway map paid homage to some of the city’s great women? (Hover over the map to magnify.) Cartography by Molly Roy, from “Nonstop Metropolis,” by Rebecca Solnit and Joshua Jelly-Schapiro. Subway Route Symbols ® Metropolitan Transportation Authority

    “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World” is a song James Brown recorded in a New York City stu­dio in 1966, and, whether you like it or not, you can make the case that he’s right. Walking down the city streets, young women get harassed in ways that tell them that this is not their world, their city, their street; that their freedom of movement and association is liable to be undermined at any time; and that a lot of strangers expect obedience and attention from them. “Smile,” a man orders you, and that’s a concise way to say that he owns you; he’s the boss; you do as you’re told; your face is there to serve his life, not express your own. He’s someone; you’re no one.

    #visibilité_des_femmes #new_york

  • Queens has more languages than anywhere in the world — here’s where they’re found
    http://www.businessinsider.fr/us/queens-languages-map-2017-2

    There are as many as 800 languages spoken in New York City, and nowhere in the world has more than Queens, according to the Endangered Language Alliance (ELA).

    You can see many of the languages in the map above, which is featured in “Nonstop Metropolis: A New York City Atlas” by Rebecca Solnit and Joshua Jelly-Schapiro. The map was created by Molly Roy with help from the ELA, and also shows libraries, museums, and other linguistic centers.

    “The capital of linguistic diversity, not just for the five boroughs, but for the human species, is Queens,” Solnit and Jelly-Schapiro write.

  • What Makes a City: A Highly Subjective, Idiosyncratic New York Atlas - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/09/books/review/nonstop-metropolis-rebecca-solnit-joshua-jelly-schapiro.html

    Déjà signalé ici, mais recension intéressante pointée par Thomas Deltombe.

    NONSTOP METROPOLIS
    A New York City Atlas
    Edited by Rebecca Solnit and Joshua Jelly-Schapiro
    Illustrated. 224 pp. University of California Press. Cloth, $49.95; paper, $29.95.

    “Cities have the capability of providing something for everybody,” Jane Jacobs wrote, “only because, and only when, they are created by everybody.” As demonstrated by “Nonstop Metropolis: A New York City Atlas,” that’s both the reward and the challenge of trying to capture an urban soul, whatever the medium. This is the final volume in an ambitious and imaginative trilogy of city atlases edited by Rebecca Solnit, this time with the assistance of Joshua Jelly-Schapiro. As in “Infinite City,” an exploration of San Francisco, and the New Orleans-focused “Unfathomable City,” the work intersperses 26 beautifully rendered maps with essays that attempt to grapple with New York as it is, was and imagines itself to be.

    #atlas #new_york #cartographie

  • You Are Here: Creative Cartography Mapping the Soul of #New_York

    You Are Here: Creative Cartography Mapping the Soul of New York

    “Each of us is an atlas of sorts, already knowing how to navigate some portion of the world,” wrote Rebecca Solnit in her imaginative remapping of New York’s untold stories, “containing innumerable versions of place as experience and desire and fear, as route and landmark and memory.” But as fascinating as it is to imagine the world’s greatest metropolis remapped according to its unheralded dimensions, New York’s multitude of parallel realities is itself bountiful fodder for the artistic imagination and has inspired centuries of fanciful cartographic interpretations.

    Exploring this lacuna between physical reality and the interpretive imagination is a very different kind of atlas — You Are Here: NYC: Mapping the Soul of the City (public library), envisioned and edited by Katharine Harmon. This localized follow-up to Harmon’s wonderful 2004 atlas of “personal geographies and other maps of the imagination” presents two hundred wildly diverse maps of the city, alongside original essays exploring the most iconic of them. There are historical treasures like the first geological maps of Manhattan, masterworks of art like Paula Scher’s obsessively detailed typographic maps, and conceptually daring pieces like artist Liz Scranton’s honeycomb shaped after the landforms of the NYC subway map. What emerges is a layered inquiry into the relationship between self and space, the plurality of perspectives aimed at the same place, and the myriad ways in which we orient ourselves to the landscape against which we live out our lives.


    https://www.brainpickings.org/2016/11/30/you-are-here-nyc-mapping-the-soul-of-the-city
    #cartographie #visualisation #art
    via @reka (twitter)

  • Rebecca Solnit’s ’Nonstop Metropolis’ Maps New York City - CityLab

    http://www.citylab.com/navigator/2016/10/rebecca-solnit-nonstop-metropolis/504356

    http://www.ucpress.edu/book.php?isbn=9780520285958

    Good maps shed light, but all maps reduce. They take some infinitely varied piece of terrain, shaped by constant encounters with natural history and human hands, and narrow it to a few features, limited further by space and time. For all their dimensions, maps can never wholly represent a place—especially not when they purport to.

    Rebecca Solnit and Joshua Jelly-Schapiro’s new anthology of maps and essays, Nonstop Metropolis: A New York City Atlas, is defiantly subjective cartography. Its thesis—that a city’s geography can never be wholly accounted for, confined, or normalized—is supported by 26 maps of enthralling variety. Here there be ball courts and brownstones, radical feminists and authoritarian planners, 19th-century banks and 21st-century kids’ parties, archipelagos of immigrant homelands, Jewish and Jerseyan influencers, churning commutes, and the entire city’s waste. With dozens of contributors, this kaleidoscopic tour of America’s largest urban palimpsest pans a multitude of perspectives. “Each of us is an atlas of sorts, already knowing how to navigate some portion of the world, containing innumerable versions of place as experience and desire and fear, as route and landmark and memory,” writes Solnit in her introduction. “So a city and its citizens constitute a living library.”

    #cartographie #new_york

  • Invisible

    Invisible: Covert Operations and Classified Landscapes is Trevor Paglen’s long-awaited first photographic monograph. Social scientist, artist, writer, and provocateur, Paglen has been exploring the secret activities of the U.S. military and intelligence agencies—the “black world”—for the last eight years, publishing, speaking, and making astonishing photographs.

    As an artist, Paglen is interested in the idea of photography as truth-telling, but his mysterious, compelling pictures often stop short of traditional ideas of documentation. Showcasing the artwork of an important emerging talent, Invisible speaks to the multidisciplinary practices employed by many of today’s most interesting contemporary artists. The book highlights the array of tactics used by Paglen to depict both what can and cannot be seen.

    Rebecca Solnit, noted author on culture and photography, contributes a searing essay that traces this history of clandestine military activity on the American landscape.


    http://aperture.org/shop/books/invisible-trevor-paglen

    #invisibilité #paysage #photographie #Trevor_Paglen #livre
    cc @albertocampiphoto @reka

  • Mapping and Its Discontents:

    Introduction, keynote by Denis Wood - YouTube

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aYLzPyy2LlE


    Introduction, keynote by Denis Wood

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eoTGD0c7kDY


    Katharine Harmon, Rebecca Solnit, Dana Cuff

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSr-gv1j2jY


    Zephyr Frank, Eve Blau, Diane Favro

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIYvXLybvtY


    Robin Grossinger, Laura Kurgan, and Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris

    #cartographie #discontent_cartography #cartographie_mécontente #cartographie_insatisfaite peut-être un nouveau concept, une nouvelle approche ... :)

  • Incorporation de caractère sexuel à un comportement ou à un produit | Entre les lignes entre les mots
    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2015/12/11/incorporation-de-caractere-sexuel-a-un-comport

    Les auteures parlent, entre autres, de la publicité, de l’incorporation du besoin d’affirmation, de « formation identitaire centrée sur l’image et la vulnérabilité », de savoir faire sexualisé précoce, de sous-culture de sexe, de situation de dépendance et d’effacement, de culture du rêve, d’insatisfaction par rapport à son corps, de dynamique identitaire, de vêtements aguichants et dénudants, de consommation compulsive, du factice, de double standard dans le domaine de la sexualité…

    Elles analysent cette « logique économique de mise en marché », la sexualisation des filles, l’action publicitaire consistant « à donner un caractère sexuel à un produit ou à un comportement qui n’en possède pas en soi », la construction de besoins présentés comme vitaux…

    J’ai particulièrement apprécié les paragraphes sur la réduction de la personne à l’image qu’elle projette, la valorisation grâce à des moyens superficiels, les paradoxes (« être soi-même, une mode en soi », « le « style sportif » sans l’activité physique », « des produits pour être « naturelle » »), la recherche d’approbation…

    Les auteures dénoncent l’éducation, non pour soi et pour ses besoins, mais pour le service d’autrui ; l’apprentissage du prendre soin de soi, de son corps pour plaire ; la construction d’« identité » à l’extérieur de soi…

    Elles soulignent des éléments de la construction sociale de la féminité, la soumission inculquée, l’idée martelée d’une « différence irréductible entre les deux groupes de sexe », le renversement inventé de la domination dans la presse pour jeunes filles (les garçons seraient les victimes ! et il faudrait que les filles préservent et s’effacent devant leur « masculinité »)…

    Sans oublier qu’il est important d’analyser les forces sociales et économiques, leurs contradictions, « derrière des actes en apparence personnels et choisis librement ».

    #lolita #éducation #féminisme #genre #filles

    • It is a fact universally acknowledged that a woman in possession of an opinion must be in want of a correction. Well, actually, no it isn’t, but who doesn’t love riffing on Jane Austen? The answer is: lots of people, because we’re all different and some of us haven’t even read Pride and Prejudicedozens of times, but the main point is that I’ve been performing interesting experiments in proffering my opinions and finding that some of the men out there respond on the grounds that my opinion is wrong, while theirs is right because they are convinced that their opinion is a fact, while mine is a delusion. Sometimes they also seem to think that they are in charge, of me as well of facts.

      It isn’t a fact universally acknowledged that a person who mistakes his opinions for facts may also mistake himself for God. This can happen if he’s been insufficiently exposed to the fact that there are also other people who have other experiences, and that they too were created equal, with certain inalienable rights, and that consciousness thing that is so interesting and troubling is also going on inside their heads. This is a problem straight white men suffer from especially, because the western world has held up a mirror to them for so long—and turns compliant women into mirrors reflecting them back twice life size, Virginia Woolf noted. The rest of us get used to the transgendering and cross-racializing of our identities as we invest in protagonists like Ishmael or Dirty Harry or Holden Caulfield. But straight white men don’t, so much. I coined a term a while ago, privelobliviousness, to try to describe the way that being the advantaged one, the represented one, often means being the one who doesn’t need to be aware and, often, isn’t. Which is a form of loss in its own way.

      So much of feminism has been women speaking up about hitherto unacknowledged experiences, and so much of antifeminism has been men telling them these things don’t happen. “You were not just raped,” your rapist may say, and then if you persist there may be death threats, because killing people is the easy way to be the only voice in the room. Non-white people get much the same rubbish about how there isn’t racism and they don’t get treated differently and race doesn’t affect any of us, because who knows better than white people who are trying to silence people of color? And queer people too, but we all know all of that already, or should if we are paying attention.

      This paying attention is the foundational act of empathy, of listening, of seeing, of imagining experiences other than one’s own, of getting out of the boundaries of one’s own experience. There’s a currently popular argument that books help us feel empathy, but if they do so they do it by helping us imagine that we are people we are not. Or to go deeper within ourselves, to be more aware of what it means to be heartbroken, or ill, or six, or ninety-six, or completely lost. Not just versions of our self rendered awesome and eternally justified and always right, living in a world in which other people only exist to help reinforce our magnificence, though those kinds of books and comic books and movies exist in abundance and cater to the male imagination. Which is a reminder that literature and art can also help us fail at empathy if it sequesters us in the Boring Old Fortress of Magnificent Me.

      This is why I had a nice time last month picking on a very male literary canon lined up by Esquire as “80 Books Every Man Should Read,” 79 of them by men. It seemed to encourage this narrowness of experience and I was arguing not that everyone should read books by ladies—though shifting the balance matters—but that maybe the whole point of reading is to be able to explore and also transcend your gender (and race and class and nationality and moment in history and age and ability) and experience being others. Saying this upset some men. Many among that curious gender are easy to upset, and when they are upset they don’t know it (see: privelobliviousness). They just think you’re wrong and sometimes also evil.

      There has been a lot said this year about college students—meaning female college students, black students, trans students—and how they’re hypersensitive and demanding that others be censored. That’s why The Atlantic, a strange publication that veers from progressive to regressive and back again like a weighty pendulum recently did a piece on “The Coddling of the American Mind.” It tells us that, “Jerry Seinfeld and Bill Maher have publicly condemned the oversensitivity of college students, saying too many of them can’t take a joke,” with the invocation of these two white guys as definitive authorities.

      But seriously, you know who can’t take a joke? White guys. Not if it implicates them and their universe, and when you see the rage, the pettiness, the meltdowns and fountains of male tears of fury, you’re seeing people who really expected to get their own way and be told they’re wonderful all through the days. And here, just for the record, let me clarify that I’m not saying that all of them can’t take it. Many white men—among whom I count many friends (and, naturally, family members nearly as pale as I)—have a sense of humor, that talent for seeing the gap between what things are supposed to be and what they are and for seeing beyond the limits of their own position. Some have deep empathy and insight and write as well as the rest of us. Some are champions of human rights.

      But there are also those other ones, and they do pop up and demand coddling. A group of black college students doesn’t like something and they ask for something different in a fairly civil way and they’re accused of needing coddling as though it’s needing nuclear arms. A group of white male gamers doesn’t like what a woman cultural critic says about misogyny in gaming and they spend a year or so persecuting her with an unending torrent of rape threats, death threats, bomb threats, doxxing, and eventually a threat of a massacre that cites Marc LePine, the Montreal misogynist who murdered 14 women in 1989, as a role model. I’m speaking, of course, about the case of Anita Sarkeesian and Gamergate. You could call those guys coddled. We should. And seriously, did they feel they were owed a world in which everyone thought everything they did and liked and made was awesome or just remained silent? Maybe, because they had it for a long time.

      I sort of kicked the hornets’ nest the other day, by expressing feminist opinions about books. It all came down to Lolita. “Some of my favorite novels are disparaged in a fairly shallow way. To read Lolita and ‘identify’ with one of the characters is to entirely misunderstand Nabokov,” one commenter informed me, which made me wonder if there’s a book called Reading Lolita in Patriarchy. The popular argument that novels are good because they inculcate empathy assumes that we identify with characters, and no one gets told they’re wrong for identifying with Gilgamesh or even Elizabeth Bennett. It’s just when you identify with Lolita you’re clarifying that this is a book about a white man serially raping a child over a period of years. Should you read Lolita and strenuously avoid noticing that this is the plot and these are the characters? Should the narrative have no relationship to your own experience? This man thinks so, which is probably his way of saying that I made him uncomfortable.

      All I had actually said was that, just as I had identified with a character who’s dismissively treated in On the Road, so I’d identified with Lolita. I read many Nabokov novels back in the day, but a novel centered around the serial rape of a kidnapped child, back when I was near that child’s age was a little reminder how hostile the world, or rather the men in it, could be. Which is not a pleasure.

      The omnipresence of men raping female children as a literary subject, from Tess of the d’Urbervilles to Less Than Zero, along with real-life accounts like that of Jaycee Dugard (kidnapped at 11 in 1991 and used as a sex slave for 18 years by a Bay Area man), can have the cumulative effect of reminding women that we spend a lot of our lives quietly, strategically trying not to get raped, which takes a huge toll on our lives and affects our sense of self. Sometimes art reminds us of life.

      Hardy’s novel is in fact a tragedy of what happens when a poor young woman’s lack of agency, beginning with her lack of the right to say no to the sex forced on her by a rich man, spirals out to destroy her life in a grand manner. It could be recuperated as a great feminist novel. There are a lot of male writers, even a long way back, who I think of as humane and empathic toward female as well as male characters: Wordsworth, Hardy, Tolstoy, Trollope, Dickens come to mind. (That none of them are blemishless human beings we can discuss another time, possibly after hell freezes over.)

      There is a common attack on art that thinks it is a defense. It is the argument that art has no impact on our lives, that art is not dangerous, and therefore all art is beyond reproach, and we have no grounds to object to any of it, and any objection is censorship. No one has ever argued against this view more elegantly than the great, now-gone critic Arthur C. Danto, whose 1988 essay on the subject was formative for my own thinking. That was in the era when right-wing senators wanted to censor art or cancel the National Endowment for the Arts altogether. The argument against this art, which included Robert Mapplethorpe’s elegantly formalist pictures of men engaged in sadomasochistic play, was that it was dangerous, that it might change individual minds and lives and then our culture. Some of the defenders took the unfortunate position that art is not dangerous because, ultimately, it has no impact.

      Photographs and essays and novels and the rest can change your life; they are dangerous. Art shapes the world. I know many people who found a book that determined what they would do with their life or saved their life. Books aren’t life preservers; there are more complex, less urgent reasons to read them, including pleasure, and pleasure matters. Danto describes the worldview of those who assert there is an apartheid system between art and life: “But the concept of art interposes between life and literature a very tough membrane, which insures the incapacity of the artist to inflict moral harm so long as it is recognized that what he is doing is art.” His point is that art can inflict moral harm and often does, just as other books do good. Danto references the totalitarian regimes whose officials recognized very clearly that art can change the world and repressed the stuff that might.

      You can read Nabokov’s relationship to his character in many ways. Vera Nabokov, the author’s wife, wrote, “I wish, though, somebody would notice the tender description of the child, her pathetic dependence on monstrous HH, and her heartrending courage all along…” And the women who read Nabokov’s novel in repressive Iran, says Azar Nafisi of Reading Lolita in Tehran, identified too: “Lolita belongs to a category of victims who have no defense and are never given a chance to articulate their own story. As such she becomes a double victim—not only her life but also her life story is taken from her. We told ourselves we were in that class to prevent ourselves from falling victim to this second crime.”

      When I wrote the essay that provoked such splenetic responses, I was trying to articulate that there is a canonical body of literature in which women’s stories are taken away from them, in which all we get are men’s stories. And that these are sometimes not only books that don’t describe the world from a woman’s point of view, but inculcate denigration and degradation of women as cool things to do.

      Dilbert comic Scott Adams wrote last month that we live in a matriarchy because, “access to sex is strictly controlled by the woman.” Meaning that you don’t get to have sex with someone unless they want to have sex with you, which if we say it without any gender pronouns sounds completely reasonable. You don’t get to share someone’s sandwich unless they want to share their sandwich with you, and that’s not a form of oppression either. You probably learned that in kindergarten.

      But if you assume that sex with a female body is a right that heterosexual men have, then women are just these crazy illegitimate gatekeepers always trying to get in between you and your rights. Which means you have failed to recognize that women are people, and perhaps that comes from the books and movies you have—and haven’t—been exposed to, as well as the direct inculcation of the people and systems around you. Art matters, and there’s a fair bit of art in which rape is celebrated as a triumph of the will (see Kate Millet’s 1970 book Sexual Politics, which covers some of the same male writers as the Esquire list) . It’s always ideological, and it makes the world we live in.

      Investigative journalists T. Christian Miller and Ken Armstrong just published a long piece about how police caught a serial rapist (and how one of his victims was not only disbelieved for years but was bullied into saying she lied and then prosecuted for lying). The rapist told them, “Deviant fantasies had gripped him since he was a kid, way back to when he had seen Jabba the Hutt enslave and chain Princess Leia.” Culture shapes us. Miller and Armstrong’s grim and gripping essay, “An Unbelievable Story of Rape,” bears witness to both the impact of popular culture and of women’s stories being discounted and discredited.

      But “to read Lolita and ‘identify’ with one of the characters is to entirely misunderstand Nabokov” said one of my volunteer instructors. I thought that was funny, so I posted it on Facebook, and another nice liberal man came along and explained to me this book was actually an allegory as though I hadn’t thought of that yet. It is, and it’s also a novel about a big old guy violating a spindly child over and over and over. Then she weeps. And then another nice liberal man came along and said, “You don’t seem to understand the basic truth of art. I wouldn’t care if a novel was about a bunch of women running around castrating men. If it was great writing, I’d want to read it. Probably more than once.” Of course there is no such body of literature, and if the nice liberal man who made that statement had been assigned book after book full of castration scenes, maybe even celebrations of castration, it might have made an impact on him.

      I hasten to add that I don’t think I’m injured by these guys at this point in my life, and I don’t feel sorry for myself. I just goggle in amazement at the batshit that comes out of them; it’s like I’m running a laboratory and they keep offering up magnificent specimens. Apparently over the horizon some of them got so upset that no less a literary voice than this year’s Booker Prize winner Marlon James said, “Liberal men. I’m not about to stop your inevitable progress to neo-liberal and eventually, neocon, so let’s make this one quick. It seems some of you have a problem with Rebecca Solnit’s new piece. There is censorship, and there is challenging somebody’s access to making money. This is not the same thing.”

      And though I was grateful to James for calling them out, I wasn’t even challenging anyone’s access to making money. I just made humorous remarks about some books and some dead writers’ characters. These guys were apparently so upset and so convinced that the existence of my opinions and voice menaced others’ rights. Guys: censorship is when the authorities repress a work of art, not when someone dislikes it.

      I had never said that we shouldn’t read Lolita. I’ve read it more than once. I joked that there should be a list of books no woman should read, because quite a few lionized books are rather nasty about my gender, but I’d also said “of course I believe everyone should read anything they want. I just think some books are instructions on why women are dirt or hardly exist at all except as accessories or are inherently evil and empty.” And then I’d had fun throwing out some opinions about books and writers. But I was serious about this. You read enough books in which people like you are disposable, or are dirt, or are silent, absent, or worthless, and it makes an impact on you. Because art makes the world, because it matters, because it makes us.

      Rebecca SolnitSan Francisco writer, historian, and activist, Rebecca Solnit is the author of seventeen books about geography, community, art, politics, hope, and feminism and the recipient of many awards, including the Lannan Literary Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. She is a contributing editor to Harper’s, where she is the first woman to regularly write the Easy Chair column (founded in 1851).

      http://lithub.com/men-explain-lolita-to-me

  • COP21
    L’INTERDICTION DE MANIFESTATIONS EST UN ABUS DE POUVOIR

    23 nov. 2015

    Naomi Klein, journaliste canadienne, auteure, cinéaste et militante altermondialiste considère l’interdiction de manifester pendant la conférence Climat comme un révélateur des injustices politiques actuelles. « Encore une fois, un pays occidental riche place la sécurité des élites devant les intérêts de ceux qui se battent pour leur survie. Encore une fois, le message est : notre sécurité n’est pas négociable, la vôtre ne compte pas. »

    Naomi Klein, journaliste canadienne, auteure, cinéaste et militante altermondialiste considère l’interdiction de manifester pendant la conférence Climat comme un révélateur des injustices politiques actuelles. « Encore une fois, un pays occidental riche place la sécurité des élites devant les intérêts de ceux qui se battent pour leur survie. Encore une fois, le message est : notre sécurité n’est pas négociable, la vôtre ne compte pas. »
    --
    Qui protège-t-on, quand on cherche à assurer la sécurité par tous les moyens nécessaires ? Et qui est sacrifié, alors que l’on pourrait faire beaucoup mieux ? Ces questions sont au coeur de la crise climatique. Les réponses sont la raison pour laquelle les sommets du Climat finissent si souvent dans l’acrimonie.

    La décision du gouvernement français d’interdire les manifestations, marches et autres « activités en extérieur » pendant le sommet du Climat est perturbante à plusieurs niveaux. Ce qui m’inquiète le plus, c’est qu’elle reflète l’injustice fondamentale de la crise climatique elle-même, et cette question centrale : qui sont les personnes dont la sécurité est considérée importante dans notre monde asymétrique ?

    La première chose à comprendre, c’est que les personnes exposées aux pires effets du dérèglement climatique ne peuvent quasiment pas se faire entendre dans le débat public occidental, quand on se demande s’il faut agir sérieusement pour empêcher un réchauffement catastrophique. Les gigantesques sommets du climat comme celui que Paris s’apprête à accueillir sont de rares exceptions. Pendant deux petites semaines, les voix de ceux qui sont touchés, en premier et le plus fort, ont un peu de place pour se faire entendre là où des décisions majeures sont prises. C’est pour cette raison que des habitants des îles du Pacifique, des chasseurs Inuits et des personnes de couleur pauvres vivant à la Nouvelle Orléans parcourent des milliers de kilomètres pour y participer. Participer à ce sommet est une précieuse occasion pour parler du dérèglement climatique du point de vue de la morale, et de mettre des visages humains sur la catastrophe en train de se produire.

    Le deuxième point important c’est que même lors de ces rares moments, les voix de ceux qui se trouvent en « première ligne » n’ont pas assez de place dans les réunions officielles, où dominent les gouvernements et les ONG les plus riches. Les voix des gens ordinaires s’expriment surtout dans les rassemblements de base qui se tiennent parallèlement au sommet, ainsi que dans les manifestations et les moments de protestation qui attirent de cette manière l’attention médiatique. Or le gouvernement français a décidé de confisquer le plus puissant de ces porte-voix, en affirmant qu’assurer la sécurité des manifestations mettrait en péril sa capacité à garantir la sécurité de la zone du sommet officiel où les dirigeants politiques vont se rencontrer.

    Certains disent que cela se justifie dans la situation de riposte contre la terreur. Mais un sommet du climat des Nations-Unies n’est pas comme une réunion du G8 ou de l’Organisation Mondiale du Commerce, où les puissants se rencontrent et ceux qui n’ont pas de pouvoir tentent de gâcher leur fête. Les évènements concomitants de la « société civile » ne sont pas un ajout ou une distraction de l’évènement principal. Elles font intégralement partie du processus. C’est pourquoi le gouvernement français n’aurait jamais dû être autorisé à décider quelle partie du sommet il annule, et quelle partie il continue d’accueillir.

    Après les épouvantables attaques du 13 novembre, il aurait plutôt dû décider s’il avait la volonté et la capacité d’accueillir tout le sommet, avec la pleine participation de la société civile, y compris dans les rues. S’il ne le pouvait pas, il aurait dû y renoncer et demander à un autre pays de le remplacer. Pourtant, le gouvernement de François Hollande a pris une série de décisions qui reflètent une échelle de valeurs et de priorités très particulières quant à qui et quoi obtient la pleine protection de sa sécurité par l’Etat. Oui aux dirigeants du monde, aux matchs de foot et aux marchés de Noël. Non aux manifestations pour le climat et aux rassemblements qui reprochent aux négociations, compte-tenu du niveau des objectifs de réduction des gaz à effet de serre, de mettre en danger la vie et les conditions de vie de millions, si ce n’est de milliards de personnes.

    Et qui sait où cela finira ? Doit-on s’attendre à ce que l’ONU révoque arbitrairement les accréditions de la moitié des participants de la société civile ? Ceux qui semblent le plus susceptible de causer de l’agitation à l’intérieur du sommet bunkerisé ? Je n’en serais pas du tout étonnée.

    Il est important de réfléchir à ce que l’annulation des manifestations et protestations signifie en réalité et au plan symbolique. Le dérèglement climatique est une crise morale car à chaque fois que les gouvernements des pays riches échouent à agir comme il le faudrait, ils envoient le message que nous, au Nord, plaçons notre confort immédiat et notre sécurité économique devant la souffrance et la survie de certains des habitants les plus pauvres et les plus vulnérables de la planète.

    La décision d’interdire les espaces les plus importants où les voix des personnes affectées par le climat auraient pu s’exprimer, est l’expression dramatique de cet abus de pouvoir profondément non éthique. Encore une fois, un pays occidental riche place la sécurité des élites devant les intérêts de ceux qui se battent pour leur survie. Encore une fois, le message est : notre sécurité n’est pas négociable, la vôtre ne compte pas.

    Un dernier point : j’écris ces lignes depuis Stockholm, où je participe à une série d’événements publics sur le climat. Quand je suis arrivée, la presse s’excitait autour d’un tweet envoyé par la ministre de l’environnement, Asa Romson. Peu après la nouvelle des attentats de Paris, elle a tweeté sa colère et sa tristesse face à ces morts. Puis, qu’elle pensait que c’était une mauvaise nouvelle pour le sommet du climat, une pensée qui a traversé l’esprit de tous ceux que je connais, et qui ont un rapport avec le sommet du climat. Pourtant, elle a été jetée au pilori à cause de son insensibilité supposée : comment pouvait-elle penser au dérèglement climatique alors que venait de se produire un tel carnage ?

    Cette réaction est révélatrice de l’idée que le changement climatique est une question mineure, une cause sans véritables victimes, un événement futile. En particulier quand les problèmes sérieux de la guerre et du terrorisme sont au centre de l’attention. Cela m’a fait penser à ce que l’auteure Rebecca Solnit a écrit récemment : « le dérèglement climatique est une violence ».

    C’est une violence. Une partie de cette violence est infiniment lente : la montée du niveau des mers qui efface peu à peu des nations, les sécheresses qui tuent des milliers de personnes. Cette violence est aussi terriblement rapide : les tempêtes qui portent les noms de Katrina et Haiyan emportent des milliers de vies en un seul instant ravageur. Quand les gouvernements et les grandes entreprises échouent en conscience à agir pour empêcher la catastrophe du réchauffement, c’est un acte de violence. C’est une violence si grande, si mondiale, et infligée à tant de périodes temporelles à la fois (cultures anciennes, vies présentes, futur potentiel) qu’il n’existe pas encore de mot capable de décrire toute cette monstruosité. Faire preuve de violence pour réduire au silence ceux qui sont le plus vulnérables à la violence climatique est une violence de plus.

    Pour expliquer pourquoi les matchs de foot se tiendraient comme prévu, le ministre français des Sports a déclaré : « la vie doit continuer ». Oui, c’est vrai. C’est la raison pour laquelle j’ai rejoint le mouvement pour la justice climatique. Parce que quand les gouvernements et les grandes entreprises échouent à prendre en compte toutes les vies sur Terre, ils doivent être contestés.

  • Tomgram: #Rebecca_Solnit, #YesAllWomen Changes the Story | TomDispatch
    http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175850

    According to one account of the feminist conversation that followed, a young woman with the online name Kaye (who has since been harassed or intimidated into withdrawing from the public conversation) decided to start tweeting with the hashtag #YesAllWomen at some point that Saturday after the massacre. By Sunday night, half a million #yesallwomen tweets had appeared around the world, as though a dam had burst. And perhaps it had. The phrase described the hells and terrors women face and specifically critiqued a stock male response when women talked about their oppression: “Not all men.”

    It’s the way some men say, “I’m not the problem” or that they shifted the conversation from actual corpses and victims as well as perpetrators to protecting the comfort level of bystander males. An exasperated woman remarked to me, “What do they want — a cookie for not hitting, raping, or threatening women?” Women are afraid of being raped and murdered all the time and sometimes that’s more important to talk about than protecting male comfort levels. Or as someone named Jenny Chiu tweeted, “Sure #NotAllMen are misogynists and rapists. That’s not the point. The point is that #YesAllWomen live in fear of the ones that are.”

    • The point is that #YesAllWomen live in fear of the ones that are.

      Quelle horrreur ! Je vais demander autour de moi si c’est vrai.

      D’ailleurs c’est un sujet récurrent au point où le groupe « punk » Die Ärzte l’a traité dans une chanson qui en évoque les idée recues traditionelles. La vidéo plaira surtout aux amateurs (amatrices ?!?) de revenge movies .

      http://www.goranagar.com/TR/Coll/TR-Lara-Aerzte.JPG

      Die Ärzte - Männer sind Schweine - 1989

      Männer sind Schweine

      Hallo, mein Schatz, ich liebe dich
      Du bist die Einzige für mich
      Die anderen find ich alle doof
      Deswegen mach ich dir den Hof

      Du bist so anders, ganz speziell
      Ich merke sowas immer schnell
      Jetzt zieh dich aus und leg dich hin
      Weil ich so verliebt in dich bin

      Gleich wird es dunkel, bald ist es Nacht
      Da ist ein Wort der Warnung angebracht

      Männer sind Schweine
      Traue ihnen nicht mein Kind
      Sie wollen alle nur das Eine
      Weil Männer nun mal so sind

      Ein Mann fühlt sich erst dann als Mann
      Wenn er es dir besorgen kann
      Er lügt, dass sich die Balken biegen
      Nur um dich ins Bett zu kriegen

      Und dann am nächsten Morgen weiß er
      Nicht einmal mehr wie du heißt
      Rücksichtslos und ungehemmt
      Gefühle sind ihm völlig fremd

      Für ihn ist Liebe gleich Samenverlust
      Mädchen, sei dir dessen stets bewusst

      Männer sind Schweine
      Frage nicht nach Sonnenschein
      Ausnahmen gibt’s leider keine
      In jedem Mann steckt doch immer ein Schwein

      Männer sind Säue
      Glaube ihnen nicht ein Wort
      Sie schwören dir ewige Treue
      Und dann am nächsten Morgen sind sie fort

      „Was hab ich denn getan, dass du mich immer quälst und sagst du liebst mich nicht?“
      "Du hast doch nicht die geringste Ahnung was Liebe ist, wir kennen uns ja nicht mal"

      Und falls du doch den Fehler machst
      Und dir nen Ehemann anlachst
      Mutiert dein Rosenkavalier
      Bald nach der Hochzeit auch zum Tier

      Da zeigt er dann sein wahres Ich
      Ganz unrasiert und widerlich
      Trinkt Bier, sieht fern und wird schnell fett
      Und rülpst und furzt im Ehebett

      Dann hast du King Kong zum Ehemann
      Drum sag ich dir denk bitte stets daran

      Männer sind Schweine - linke Schweine, fiese Schweine
      Traue ihnen nicht mein Kind - eklige Schweine, fiese Schweine
      Sie wollen alle nur das Eine - dumme Schweine, dumme Schweine
      Für wahre Liebe sind sie blind - geile Schweine

      Männer sind Ratten - linke Schweine, fiese Schweine
      Begegne ihnen nur mit List - eklige Schweine, fiese Schweine
      Sie wollen alles begatten - stinkende Schweine, linke Schweine
      Was nicht bei drei auf den Bäumen ist - geile Schweine

      Männer sind Schweine - linke Schweine, fiese Schweine
      Frage nicht nach Sonnenschein - eklige Schweine, fiese Schweine
      Ausnahmen gibt’s leider keine - dumme Schweine, Nazi-Schweine
      In jedem Mann steckt doch ein Schwein - geile Schweine

      Männer sind Autos - wir wollen keine Bullenschweine
      Nur ohne Reserverad - fiese Schweine, fiese Schweine
      Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeaaah - Mollies und Steine, Bullenschweine

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=404oPn6tudE

      http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/13_%28Die-%C3%84rzte-Album%29#M.C3.A4nner_sind_Schweine

      Die Single „Ein Schwein namens Männer“ erreichte im gesamten deutschsprachigen Raum Platz 1 der Chartlisten und wurde damit zu einer der kommerziell erfolgreichsten Veröffentlichungen der Band. Zu diesem positiven Ergebnis trug unter anderem das mittlerweile sehr populäre Video zum Lied „Männer sind Schweine“ bei, in ihm ist eine Schießerei zwischen der Videospiel-Heldin Lara Croft und den drei Bandmitgliedern zu sehen, an deren Ende die Musiker unterliegen.

      Männer sind Schweine wurde von der Band lange nicht mehr live gespielt, da es ihr nicht gefiel, dass das Lied auf dem Oktoberfest gespielt wurde, oder auf diversen Ballermann-CDs Coverversionen des Songs auftauchten. Besucher des Oktoberfests und Ballermann-Fans seien nicht das Zielpublikum der Band.

  • The Future Needs Us, by Rebecca Solnit | TomDispatch
    http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175788

    The arc of justice is long. It travels through New Orleans, the city I’ve returned to again and again since Hurricane Katrina. It’s been my way of trying to understand not just disaster, but community, culture, and continuity, three things that city possesses as no place else in the nation. Hip-hop comes most directly from the South Bronx, but if you look at the 1970s founders of that genre of popular music, you see that some of the key figures were Caribbean, and if you look at their formative music, it included the ska and reggae that were infused with the influence of New Orleans. (In addition, that city’s native son and major jazz figure, Donald Harrison, Jr., was a mentor to seminal New York City rapper Notorious B.I.G.)
    If you look at New Orleans, what you see is an astonishing example of the survival of culture — and of the culture of survival.

    (#musique, #politique et #cartographie_radicale — dommage que la carte soit seulement « presque » lisible)

  • Are The Techno Riche Really Ruining San Francisco ? Yes, Says Rebecca Solnit
    http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-12-31/are-the-techno-riche-really-ruining-san-francisco-yes-says-rebecca-sol
    Le blocage des bus des multinationales du web à San Francisco n’était pas un feu de paille ou une action ultra-minoritaire semblerait-il. Voilà un entretien assez complet (parmi beaucoup d’autres articles) avec une activiste sur le site de Bloomberg oO

    The author who has best traced the pre-Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) origins of Silicon Valley (in her biography of the photographer and inventor Eadweard Muybridge), Rebecca Solnit was also among the first to cast the Google bus as a symbol of disparity and discontent in the San Francisco Bay Area. Writing a year ago, she described the big, luxury coaches that ferry employees from San Francisco and Oakland south to Google (GOOG) headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., as “gleaming white, with dark-tinted windows, like limousines, and some days I think of them as the spaceships on which our alien overlords have landed to rule over us.

    What steps would you like to see taken to mitigate the change you oppose?
    Google and Facebook, in particular, are now so ubiquitous as to be essentially global commons, the way that the airwaves for radio and television broadcasting are supposed to be FCC-regulated commons, governed for the good of the people. We broke up the big trusts, notably Standard Oil, a century ago, and I think that some of these megacorporations with so much power and so little accountability should either be broken up or become public trusts governed by—I don’t know exactly who or what by, off the top of my head, but not governed by a handful of hubristic young libertarian billionaires with overt amorality. Look at Google’s membership in [the American Legislative Exchange Council] or Mark Zuckerberg’s taking out an ad to push the Keystone XL pipeline not because he believes in it, but because it’s quid pro quo for getting a conservative politician to sponsor immigration laws that make it easier for him to hire cheap engineers from overseas.

    On pourra également lire des articles sur le sujet ce blog collectif de San Francisco : http://uptownalmanac.com

    http://cdn1.uptownalmanac.com/cdn/farfuture/OAXhnG10b8YykYuMXqbQpiBn76ADpL9oj3rp3mzujsA/mtime:1388087136/sites/default/files/imagecache/full-post-width/images-on-cdn/clean-up-the-streets-tech-buses.jpg

    #google #gentrification

  • Rebecca Solnit · Diary: In the Day of the Postman · LRB 29 August 2013
    http://www.lrb.co.uk/v35/n16/rebecca-solnit/diary

    In or around June 1995 human character changed again. Or rather, it began to undergo a metamorphosis that is still not complete, but is profound – and troubling, not least because it is hardly noted. When I think about, say, 1995, or whenever the last moment was before most of us were on the internet and had mobile phones, it seems like a hundred years ago. Letters came once a day, predictably, in the hands of the postal carrier. News came in three flavours – radio, television, print – and at appointed hours. Some of us even had a newspaper delivered every morning

    #Solnit #internet #mails

    • I wonder sometimes if there will be a revolt against the quality of time the new technologies have brought us, as well as the corporations in charge of those technologies. Or perhaps there already has been, in a small, quiet way. The real point about the slow food movement was often missed. It wasn’t food. It was about doing something from scratch, with pleasure, all the way through, in the old methodical way we used to do things. That didn’t merely produce better food; it produced a better relationship to materials, processes and labour, notably your own, before the spoon reached your mouth. It produced pleasure in production as well as consumption. It made whole what is broken.

      Some of the young have taken up gardening and knitting and a host of other things that involve working with their hands, making things from scratch, and often doing things the old way. It is a slow everything movement in need of a manifesto that would explain what vinyl records and homemade bread have in common. We won’t overthrow corporations by knitting – but understanding the pleasures of knitting or weeding or making pickles might articulate the value of that world outside electronic chatter and distraction, and inside a more stately sense of time. (Of course, for a lot of people this impulse has been sublimated by cooking shows: watching the preparation of food that you will never taste by celebrities you will never meet, a fate that makes Tantalus’ seem rich.)

      #temps #critique_techno #accélération #mutation #spectacle

  • Rebecca Solnit · Diary : Google Invades · LRB 7 February 2013
    http://www.lrb.co.uk/v35/n03/rebecca-solnit/diary

    San Francisco’s tech boom has often been compared to the Gold Rush, but without much discussion about what the Gold Rush meant beyond the cute images of bearded men in plaid shirts with pickaxes looking a lot like gay men in the Castro in the 1970s. When gold was discovered in 1848, employees left their posts, sailors abandoned their ships, and San Francisco – then a tiny port town called Yerba Buena – was deserted. In the Mother Lode, some got rich; many died of contagious diseases, the lousy diet, rough life and violence; some went broke and crawled back to the US, as the settled eastern half of the country was called when the gold country was an outpost of newcomers mostly arriving by ship and the American West still largely belonged to the indigenous people.

    Supplying the miners and giving them places to spend their money became as lucrative as mining and much more secure. Quite a lot of the early fortunes were made by shopkeepers: Levi Strauss got his start that way, and so did Leland #Stanford, who founded the university that founded #Silicon_Valley. The Mexicans who had led a fairly gracious life on vast ranches before the Gold Rush were largely dispossessed and the Native Californians were massacred, driven out of their homes; they watched their lands be destroyed by mining, starved or died of disease: the Native population declined by about four-fifths during this jolly spree.

    #San_Francisco exploded in the rush, growing by leaps and bounds, a freewheeling town made up almost exclusively of people from elsewhere, mostly male, often young. In 1850, California had a population of 120,000 according to one survey, 110,000 of them male. By 1852 women made up ten per cent of the population, by 1870 more than a quarter. During this era prostitution thrived, from the elegant courtesans who played a role in the city’s political and cultural life to the Chinese children who were worked to death in cribs, as the cubicles in which they laboured were called. Prices for everything skyrocketed: eggs were a dollar apiece in 1849, and a war broke out later over control of the stony Farallones islands rookery thirty miles west of San Francisco, where seabirds’ eggs were gathered to augment what the chickens could produce. A good pair of boots was a hundred dollars. Land downtown was so valuable that people bought water lots – plots of land in the bay – and filled them in.

    #histoire #tech_companies #gentrification

    Voir aussi : http://mondediplo.com/openpage/welcome-to-the-don-t-be-evil-empire

  • Welcome to the (don’t be) evil empire, by Rebecca Solnit - English edition
    http://mondediplo.com/openpage/welcome-to-the-don-t-be-evil-empire

    Finally, journalists have started criticizing in earnest the leviathans of #Silicon_Valley, notably #Google, now the world’s third-largest company in market value. The new round of discussion began even before the revelations that the tech giants were routinely sharing our data with the National Security Agency (#NSA), or maybe merging with it. Simultaneously another set of journalists, apparently unaware that the weather has changed, is still sneering at San Francisco, my hometown, for not lying down and loving Silicon Valley’s looming presence.