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Review & Book Giveaway: Sex Object, by Jessica Valenti

April 12, 2016 By HKearl

“Deeply moving, honest, and unflinching, Sex Object secures Jessica Valenti’s place as one of the foremost writers and thinkers of her generation. Her personal story highlights universal truths about being a woman, and makes the case for why feminism today is an unstoppable force.” – Cecile Richards, President, Planned Parenthood Federation of America

SEX OBJECT BOOK GIVEAWAY1In honor of International Anti-Street Harassment Week, we have partnered with Dey Street Books for a giveaway of @JessicaValenti’s new memoir. I’ll do a random drawing for two copies of the book per day, from April 12-16.

To enter the drawing:

  • Post about street harassment on social media using #EndSH and #SexObject and tagging @DeyStreet and @StopStHarassmnt

OR

  • Share your street harassment story, poem, article etc via tinyurl.com/ShareSHStory.

If your name is drawn, I’ll be in touch to get a mailing address from you in a few days. Note, Sex Object is on sale June 7th, so Dey Street will fulfill shipping at that time.

____________________________________________________________

I’ve been following the work of author and Feministing.com co-founder Jessica Valenti for a while. I’ve read a few of her books and I read her Guardian columns. I follow her on social media, including her new podcasts for the Guardian.

I’ve been a regular Feministing.com visitor for nearly a decade. In fact, I think Feministing was where I first learned the term street harassment via a feature about websites like Hollaback and the Street Harassment Project in 2006, and that led to me writing my master’s thesis on street harassment at GWU in 2007. I had one of the first accounts when Feministing started their community section and I’ve had the honor of guest blogging and being interviewed on the site.

I feel a lot of gratitude toward Valenti for the ways (likely unknown to her) that she has shaped my life and work.

While I’ve never met Valenti, from reading so much of her writing and seeing photos of her pup Monty and glimpses of her daughter Layla, I felt like I knew her a bit. But how much do you really know a person from their online persona?

After reading an advance copy of her forthcoming memoir Sex Object, it was clear that even when someone like her shares a lot, it’s still not everything (nor, of course, is everything in her book, either).

As the title suggests, a main theme throughout her book is how people treat her based on her body and the ways in which her body has informed some of her decisions and life paths. She writes about dealing with relentless street harassment, assault, slut-shaming in person and online, abortions, drug use, and the dangerous, life-threatening delivery of her daughter months before her due date.

To set the stage, in the opening of her book, she writes about the violence her mother and grandmother experienced by men in their lives and how “female suffering is linear” in her family. “Rape and abuse are passed down like the world’s worst birthright, largely skipping the men and marking the women with scars, night terrors, and fantastic senses of humor.”

This resonated with me as there has been a line of sexual violence, rape, incest, domestic violence, and street harassment on my maternal side of the family. I also have heard snippets about street harassment, including stalking, from my paternal grandmother and my dad’s sister. Sometimes I feel like I’m carrying the weight of not only the harassment I routinely face, but also the violations my female relatives and family members have each survived.

Valenti writes, “Worse than the violations themselves was the creeping understanding of what it meant to be female – that it’s not a matter of if something bad happens, but when and how bad.”

When every woman around you has faced violations, this rings completely true.

Sex Object titties quoteShe discusses her street harassment experiences, including the many men who flashed her and masturbated at her – and even on her – when she was a teenager.

She writes, “Living in a place that has given up on the expectation of your safety means walking around in a permanently dissociative state. You watch these things happen to you, you walk through them on the subway and on the streets, you see them on the television, you hear them in music; and it’s just the air you breathe, so you narrate the horror to yourself because to engage with it would be self-destructive.”

I agree. For so many of us, street harassment is an undercurrent of our life, and one that we don’t always want to acknowledge or dwell on because it’s so depressing. It’s hard to understand or realize how much street harassment – let alone all the other ways our bodies may be violated – impacts us, our psyche and our achievements and peace of mind. I am grateful to her for bringing this reality forward to clearly.

Valenti is always a compelling story-teller and she doesn’t disappoint in this book. I read it in a weekend, curious about her life, saddened to learn what she’s been through, and inspired by her resilience to keep on going, to do the work that she does that has helped shape so many women like me.

I recommend it to anyone who is a fan of her work and also to any who has gone through the tough experiences she has, as there is some comfort to be had in knowing you’re not alone.

Just as Valenti’s first book Full Frontal Feminism helped so many women identify as feminist, I hope her memoir can help women who’ve faced similar forms of abuse against their bodies know that it should not have to be “normal” or inevitable, and that together, we are strong and we can speak out and change the culture. In the same way that Valenti is working to create a better world for her daughter, so too can we all work together to ensure that life is better for the next generation.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week Tagged With: dey books, feministing, jessica valenti, memoir, sex object, street harassment

Street Harassment Weekly – Jan. 5-11, 2015

January 12, 2015 By BPurdy

Welcome to the Street Harassment Weekly, your update on all the street harassment news you missed from the past week. Here’s what’s been going on:

The ATM At Which Women Can Report Sexual Assault – “In the Indian state of Odisha, the state government estimates that around 60 per cent of sexual assaults against women go unreported. The ICLIK, developed by the Odisha government and OCAC, a local computer company, allows women to log a report of assault or harassment while appearing to visit a bank machine.”

Indian “Sex Offender” Forced to Bend Over To Be Smacked By Women– “Is this India’s new, creative way of disciplining sex offenders? A man, 23, accused of sexually harassing several young women in central India was reportedly forced to bend over in the middle of a public street to have his buttocks smacked by a group of angry schoolgirls.”

Commentary: Why Do We Ask For Gender-Segregated Transport For Women If The Problem Is Men Behaving Badly? – “Women need to be able to occupy public spaces and use public transport in the same way that men do. We need to go to work and school and walk the streets without fear – and a women-only train car doesn’t do anything but offer a temporary solution filled with too many gaps. If we want to stop harassment on subways and buses, we need to start with men and getting them to change their actions.”

Acid Attacks: The Other Half of the Story You Don’t Know– “Acid attacks are seen as one of the most horrendous crimes against women. However, not only women, men are equally prone to the attacks. Chandras Mishra from Meerut is an acid attack victim. He was attacked with the lethal chemical three years back by his landlord’s son, who he had stopped from eve teasing a woman.”

Four Arrested for Eve-Teasing in Hyderabad – “The victim, in her complaint to the police, said that on Friday while she and her sister were returning from a shop the accused started to tease her. When she stopped and questioned them, one of the accused tried to pull her scarf.”

One Tweet Sums Up The Struggle Every NYC Woman Faces On the Sidewalk – “This is called “manslamming,” which Jessica Roy, who interviewed Breslaw about her experience for the Cut, defines as “the sidewalk M.O. of men who remain apparently oblivious to the personal space of those around them” who “will walk directly into you without even acknowledging it” should someone fail to move out of their path.”

It Happened To Me: I Was Catcalled Wearing the Equivalent of a Down Comforter – “Women get catcalled in skirts. They are catcalled in jeans. They get whistled at in trench coats, in yoga pants, in business suits. The problem with catcalling does not lie with women’s clothing. Rather, the problem is with the men who do it.”

The Backlash Against African Women – “Public strippings represent the front lines of a cultural war against women’s advancements in traditionally conservative but rapidly urbanizing societies. They aren’t really about what women are wearing. They are much more about where women are going.”

Street Harassment: Why It’s Not Ok To Comment On Me – “A woman’s body is part of a person; it’s not an object. I am a woman, and my body belongs to me and no one else. Strangers on the street having the right to comment on it? When did that happen? Did I miss the memo?”

CONTEST:
Female Singer-Songwriters wanted to help create anti-street harassment video

UPCOMING EVENT:
Challenging Violence Against Women and Girls on UK Public Transport–
DATE: Tuesday 20th January 2015
TIME: 10.45 to 13.00 (with lunch provided 13.00-14.00)
VENUE: Room G1 & G2, British Transport Police Force Headquarters, 25 Camden Road, London NW1 9LN

 

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment, weekly round up Tagged With: acid attacks, Hyderabad India, ICLIK, India, jessica valenti, manslamming, NYC, Odisha, public stripping, UK Public Transport, women-only public transportation

“Song for the Man”: Beastie Boys’ Anti-Street Harassment Anthem

May 9, 2012 By HKearl

To mark the passing of Adam Yauch from the Beastie Boys,  Jessica Valenti wrote a piece for The Nation called, “MCA’s Feminist Legacy.”

Even though I’ve heard many of their songs, I didn’t know anything about the Beastie Boys or Adam. I was intrigued to learn that they evolved into feminists with overtly anti-rape messages at award shows and pro-respect for women messages in songs. One of their songs, “Song for the Man,” was inspired by street harassment.

Info about the song —

“I don’t really know where to start with this one. Sexism is so deeply rooted in our history and society that waking up and stepping outside of it is like I’m watching Night of the Living Dead Pt. II” all day, every day. Listening to the lyrics of this song, one might say that the Beastie Boy ‘Fight for Your Right to Party’ guy is a hypocrite. Well, maybe; but in this fucked up world all you can hope for is change, and I’d rather be a hypocrite to you than a zombie forever.

One summer I kept taking the 1 train (my personal favorite) and guaranteed on my way to the station I’d see some guy saying some stupid shit to a woman; you know like, “Hey you’re so pretty, don’t be sad; you should smile.”

Anyway, on my way to meet a friend one day this guy was on the train with his buddy. He was making these like, snapping sounds with his teeth at this lady. I think it was his pick-up line. She tried to just ignore them and get off at her stop, which she did. After she left and the doors closed, the guy and his buddy started to rate her on a scale of one to ten. This song is for them.”


Here are the lyrics:

“I don’t like your attitude boy.

What makes you feel
And why you gotta be?
Like you got the right
To look her up and down?

What makes this world
So sick and evil?
I know you don’t know.

What makes you feel
Like you got miracle whip appeal?
Who made you the judge and jury?
Ain’t you never heard of privacy?

What makes this world
So sick and evil?
You figure it out.”

Thank you, Beastie Boys. I wish more people with influence over potential harassers spoke out like this. It makes a difference.

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Filed Under: male perspective, street harassment Tagged With: Beastie Boys, jessica valenti, song for the man, street harassment, the nation

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