Showing posts with label IMAGES OF BLACK WOMEN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IMAGES OF BLACK WOMEN. Show all posts

Saturday, February 4, 2017

ISSA RAE OF AWKWARD BLACK GIRL AND INSECURE

Feeling Rebloggy

Issa Rae reminds us that there’s a lot of work to do to achieve equality for women, and especially for women of color. 
When Issa grew up in the 1990s, she was influenced by a diverse spectrum of roles and characters people of color filled on television and TV. She explains, “Then, when the millennium hit and we disappeared, I felt kind of… hopeless, in a way.” 
Using the Internet, Rae grew a strong audience base and now takes a stand to question how women of color are represented in media and film. In her chapter “Leading Lady,” Rae asks “How hard is it to create a three-dimensional leading lady on television? I’m surrounded by them.” Media representation is just one example of inequity among all women, and particularly women of color.
Gender inequality is felt by all women, but there is a spectrum, and women of every culture experience dramatically varying degrees of discrimination, violence and inequity. Some believe that the mainstream feminist movement privileges white women.
[I'll go a step further. Some white feminists only care about making abortion a form of birth control sans consideration for anything else. Some white feminists complain about intersectionality as a distraction because they only thing they are trying to do is repair white womanhood so that the benefits associated with white supremacy are less fractured; They are only looking achieve equality for white women so that they are on par with white men, to the exclusion of all others -- though many may not realize this.

Black women, being unable to live their gender separate from their race and class and religion, know that all the oppressions must be worked on at the same time.]

To put [the inequality of women] into perspective, consider the fact that in the United States, women are paid an average of 70% of the salary a man would earn for doing the same job. For women of color, it’s 64% or less, demonstrating how wage inequality varies culturally in America. Being a feminist doesn’t mean you speak out against men, it is a call for all humans to be created equally, and this includes women of all cultures.
You may have heard the excerpt of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s speech in BeyoncĂ©’s hit song, and you can watch the full speech below, which was a Ted Talk by Adichie, “We Should All Be Feminists.”

~KQED.ORG

https://ww2.kqed.org/learning/2015/04/07/how-are-women-of-color-changing-pop-culture/

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

THE INCREDIBLE JESSICA JAMES

Feeling Rebloggy

An aspiring playwright in New York strikes up a friendship with a guy while on the rebound from a break-up.
JESSICA WILLIAMS IS JESSICA JAMES




After working with Jessica Williams in his 2015 film People, Place, Things, writer/director Jim Strouse (of Grace is GoneThe Winning Season) recruited her for a lead role and wrote an entire film around her. The Incredible Jessica James stars Jessica Williams as a struggling playwright living in New York City, dealing with a break up. Strouse makes light, amusing, charming films that have fun stories based on real situations. The Incredible Jessica James is no exception, and might just be Jim's best film to date. It's full of so much life and passion and love and, most importantly, optimism. In these troubling, tumultuous times, where depression and frustration are all too prevalent, a little bit of refreshing optimism goes a long way.
The Incredible Jessica James also stars Chris O'Dowd as a guy she's introduced to by a mutual friend as a rebound from her past relationship. The relationship aspect of the film isn't very deep, there isn't a great amount of introspection or any major revelations, except to say that we should stop pushing away people that make us happy. Some of the film deals with how we're caught up in our minds, and how emotions (and nostalgia) push us to act a certain way rather than to stay true to what our heart is really telling us. The film also focuses on passion and having a love for what you do, even if it's not exactly successful. In the case of Jessica James, that's being a playwright, but it's also an obvious reference to filmmakers and making films.
~FIRSTSHOWING.NET
SUNDANCE 2017


Read More:http://www.firstshowing.net/2017/sundance-2017-the-incredible-jessica-james-is-light-optimistic-fun/

This is at Sundance Right Now. It's due out in theaters sometime this year. 



Tuesday, January 31, 2017

KERRY WASHINGTON ON LIFE, LOVE, AND ANITA HILL

Feeling Rebloggy

For five seasons on Scandal, Kerry Washington has stockpiled TV megastardom. Now she's using it to power her most political project to date, Confirmation, the HBO film she not only stars in—as Anita Hill—but also executive produced.
In 1991, Anita Hill, a 35-year-old law professor at the University of Oklahoma, appeared at the confirmation hearing of Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas.  At the time, Kerry Washington was just 14 years old. But like everyone else, Washington was transfixed by the two days that followed, in which Hill calmly recounted in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee the sexual harassment she claimed to have experienced while working for Thomas a decade prior at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

In the April issue of ELLE, Washington talks about everything from how she's handling motherhood to why she feels it's important to create work for herself instead of putting her artistic destiny in someone else's hands to the reason Anita Hill's story matters today...

~ ELLE.COM