marycarnival wrote:..author's name is LeGuin, tho![]()

Ya ya. Also maybe The Good Terrorist by Doris Lessing, and .. i'll stop there.marycarnival wrote:Another novel that might be of interest is The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood.
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marycarnival wrote:..author's name is LeGuin, tho![]()
Ya ya. Also maybe The Good Terrorist by Doris Lessing, and .. i'll stop there.marycarnival wrote:Another novel that might be of interest is The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood.
23 wrote:Your comment, Miss Willow, reminded me of conversations that I've had, with several women, about this very issue. So I'm piqued to ask you a clarifying question or two, if you don't mind.
You say that you don't expect to know what that feels like. Does that mean that you don't know what being loved, for whom you are, feels like?
If it does, and you don't know what it feels like, how do you know that it is absent then?
I ask because for me to know that a certain feeling is absent, I first need to know what that feeling feels like.
If I do and it's not there, then I can attest to its absence.
But if I don't, than I can't attest to it being absent.
Know what I mean?
TIA
Canadian_Watcher wrote:I liked Revolution From Within. when I was young. (Willow I'm pretty sure you had a more lofty work in mind, but this book was my primer to feminism and I can say that it changed my life - I was a teen let's not forget)
Canadian_Watcher wrote:IWhat I remember of it was that it gave voice to all these fears and frustrations I'd been feeling but didn't understand. I learned that I wasn't crazy for feeling these feelings, and that I wasn't alone.
barracuda wrote:Yeah, but you know - women, who can please 'em? They're never happy.
annie aronburg wrote:Project Willow wrote:Nordic, Nordic Nordic, dude, just pick one, single, 2nd wave feminist text and read it. Please dude, if for only your daughter, it won't hurt you, it may very well help her.Nordic wrote:Willow, in all seriousness, I could do that, but it would fall upon deaf ears in her case. She would not be remotely interested. Perhaps when she's in college and isn't just interested in her social life and shopping for clothes ..... And she's got a lot of homework, too, that she HAS to do .....
It's frustrating with her because she has father issues (due to her biological father) and although she has only been on one "sort-of" date and has never had a boyfriend, the issues are manifesting themselves already in some powerful ways as far as her relationships with boys, even as superficial as they are right now.
Having once been a teenage female, I can assure you that even the super-shallow ones from Southern California, have, you know, inner lives.
Project Willow wrote:23 wrote:Your comment, Miss Willow, reminded me of conversations that I've had, with several women, about this very issue. So I'm piqued to ask you a clarifying question or two, if you don't mind.
You say that you don't expect to know what that feels like. Does that mean that you don't know what being loved, for whom you are, feels like?
If it does, and you don't know what it feels like, how do you know that it is absent then?
I ask because for me to know that a certain feeling is absent, I first need to know what that feeling feels like.
If I do and it's not there, then I can attest to its absence.
But if I don't, than I can't attest to it being absent.
Know what I mean?
TIA
I think it's instinctual, we all, men and women, need to be loved and valued, it's part of survival, is it not? I think I may have difficulty taking in feelings of appreciation, I never really learned what to do with them, much as I crave them.
I also think I threw myself a helluva pity party last night, with wine.![]()
It's some man's fault, of course.![]()
Stephen Morgan wrote:Joe Hillshoist wrote:Stevo this is the cop shop where this century or very late last one reports including medical evidence were presented to the coppers regarding the pack rape of two girls (both U15) by a bunch of young men and no acytion was taken. In fact the complaint was laughed out of the station and the two girls in question criticised for being young teenage girls - obviously they were asking for it and deserved everything they got.
I know cos the girls left my place to make the reports and came back here rather upset about the situation.
Its now 2 am and I'm too tired to respond to your comments so you'll have to wait till I get some sleep.
Did you file a complaint with whatever your local equivalent of the Independent Police Complaints Commission may be?
Canadian_watcher wrote:82_28 wrote:What with it being Sunday and all, I just thought I would humbly bring up I just got home from this:
Can't recommend the fellowship enough.
What with it being Sunday? The day of the Lord?
Men's Group. In a misogyny thread? you see no problem with this?
edit: on re-reading, that sounds much more defensive than I intended! I'm just messin.. sorta.. a little context would be helpful though.
wintler2 wrote:Also maybe The Good Terrorist by Doris Lessing, and .. i'll stop there.
Stephen Morgan wrote:
That one's a website. If no-one mind a book, which I believe may be on Google books, Blackstone's infamous commentaries on the Laws of England has this to say:But though our law in general considers man and wife as one person, yet there are some instances in which she is separately considered; as inferior to him, and acting by his compulsion. And therefore any deeds executed, and acts done, by her, during her coverture, are void; except it be a fine, or the like manner of record, in which case she must be solely and secretly examined, to learn if her act be voluntary. She cannot by will devise lands to her husband, unless under special circumstances; for at the time of making it she is supposed to be under his coercion. And in some felonies, and other inferior crimes, committed by her through constraint of her husband, the law excuses her: but this extends not to treason or murder.
The husband also, by the old law, might give his wife moderate correction. For, as he is to answer for her misbehaviour, the law thought it reasonable to intrust him with this power of restraining her, by domestic chastisement, in the same moderation that a man is allowed to correct his apprentices or children; for whom the master or parent is also liable in some cases to answer. But this power of correction was confined within reasonable bounds, and the husband was prohibited from using any violence to his wife,
The tl;dr version is this: married women were not considered under the jurisdiction of the law because it was assumed that all their actions were under coercion by their husbands, therefore if they committed crimes, other than minor crimes payable by a fine and murder or treason, the husband was punished for it. Murder and treason the wife would be punished for, as she would have ot pay a fine, as married property wasn't intermingled. On these grounds the man was given jurisdiction to "chastise" his wife, but specifically forbidden from "using any violence". Presumably the chastisement was therefore of limited use. The cite then goes onto some latin I can't read before saying that the above applied until the "politer" reign of Charlie 2, late seventeenth century, when all forms of jurisdiction which a man had borne over his wife were abolished, although Blackstone points out that poor people often prefer the old law. Unmentioned is that at about that time the law was extended to apply directly to women, rather than through their husbands.
So what I've done here is present to very most anti-female law I could find in England, DV-wise, and it still specifically forbids the use of violence against one's wife. If c_w would like to present evidence of a law in England, or for that matter any English speaking nation, which renders wife-beating legal, I would be interested to see it. The medieval legal position of women is quite fascinating.
Joe Hillshoist wrote:Put yourself in their shoes for a minute (if thats possible - I dunno if it is for anyone who hasn't been thru something that horrible) having been thru a horrific experience that totally shattered your worldview and faith in humanity you attempt to approach the people who are sposed to protect you and bring you justice and get the case laughed at.
wintler2 wrote:wintler2 wrote:Is that a tangled way of saying you overlook contrary evidence?Stephen Morgan wrote:What the hell are you talking about?
Your text, read it again:Stephen Morgan wrote:I feel that if I was to lament rape, while devoting most of my words to pointing out how many false accusations there are and how they shouldn't be allowed to abuse the system, without even supporting any sort of legal action against rape it wouldn't be seen as a great feminist statement on my part.
You were trying to justify being unbalanced/ignoring contrary evidence, remember? nice smokescreen, aping a feminist POV and all, but: bzzzzz, fail!
crikkett wrote:Stephen Morgan wrote:crikkett wrote:It's stupid to make absurd assertions without a basis in fact, but you're doing that.
*cough*lookinamirror*cough*
I've provided facts. If you'd like evidence for any of them just say. Always happy to oblige.
That's funny, when Canadian Watcher asked you for evidence you responded thus:On the grounds both of extraordinary claims need extraordinary evidence and of affirmative statements needing to be proven, as it is impossible to prove a negative, the burden of proof doesn't lie with me.
So I'll second her request, perhaps you're happy to oblige me
By the way, American Statute Law from the 1600's won't do the job.
The first attested use of the expression "domestic violence" in a modern context, meaning "spouse abuse, violence in the home" was in 1977.[177] Violence between spouses has long been considered a serious problem. The United States has a lengthy history of legal precedent condemning spousal abuse. In 1879, law scholar Nicholas St. John Green[178] wrote, "The cases in the American courts are uniform against the right of the husband to use any [physical] chastisement, moderate or otherwise, toward the wife, for any purpose." Green also cites the 1641 Body of Liberties of the Massachusetts Bay colonists -— one of the first legal documents in North American history —- as an early de jure condemnation of violence by either spouse.
Editing to provide the bit that Stephen may choose to substantiate. Statements #2 and #3 are clearly assertions, not fact.Stephen Morgan wrote:The fact is (1)domestic violence against women has never been legal, and has always been grounds for divorce back when divorce needed special grounds. A situation analogous to that (2)prevalent today, where men who are victims of violence can be arrested simply because they are physically larger, for example, has never existed for women. (3)The police were once negligent, but they never formed an actively hostile force to female victims.
Actually - don't do it for me Stephen, I'm tired of this thread.
blanc wrote:Statistics for rape, and false accusations of rape are seriously skewed by a legal system which makes it very difficult to get convictions, or as one criminal lawyer stated on a BBC prog. very easy to get the accused off.
According to the lawyer mentioned above, a standard technique is to make the victim out to be a liar
compared2what? wrote:It is, but I'm not so sure the law you're citing is meaningfully "medieval."
I mean, I notice that Wikipedia appears to believe that English history remains medieval through the end of the 16th century. But even allowing for the fungibility of historigraphical eras, I can't for the life of me imagine why. It's decidedly post-reformation. Plus in England, post-moot-point from Henry VIII's break-up with Rome in 1533 onward -- even Mary I couldn't reverse the tide on that one, she just swam against it.
The Manorial/Feudal system wasn't formally abolished, but it had been in a state of severe decline for over a century and its days as the all-that of military-economic-and-social order were long, long gone even before the ascent of the Tudors.
And....Henry VII wasn't very medieval, but he was so incredibly dull that I'm skipping straight to Henry VIII, who was definitely a Renaissance prince (as was Elizabeth I, needless to say) from the very beginning of his reign. That whole Cloth-of-Gold thing with Francois I was practically the Miss America Pageant of early Renaissance Princedom. Language? Early modern and not Middle English. Art? Definitely not medieval. Literature? Ditto. Architecture? Can't think, off the top of my head. But I'm just guessing NOT MEDIEVAL.
In any event. I say the Middle Ages were over in England c. end-of-the-15th century at the absolute latest. That's as generous as I can honestly be. And that is my quarrel with Wikipedia. I mean, Sir Thomas More? Come on. He was a humanist. How much more Renaissance does shit gotta be?
However. Getting back to the issue at hand: As you know, common law, statutory law and the concept of jurisprudence that attaches to both were all Made in England during the Middle Ages. The High Middle Ages, mostly. Meanwhile, elsewhere in Europe -- at, I think, around the same time, 13th-century-ish -- you got your revival of the Code of Justinian going on, some elements of which washed into the English legal system.
Plus, of course, canon law, then in the early stages of the slow war of attrition that it lost to common law. The winning of which was pretty much common law's reason for being, if you were Edward I, Hammer of the Scots. Except for its other reason for being, from the same perspective, which was the subjugation of the baronial class (ie, the beginning of the end of the feudal/manorial system's heyday).
So. This is my point. Early English common and statutory law is (by definition) kind of a historigraphical outlier. Because the entire point of having and enforcing it was political-administrative in nature, and Papacy-autonomous centralized-hierarchically-institutionalized-monarchy-of-a-nation-state-establishing in purpose. In short, it had met all the graduation requirements for Being Medieval and had nothing to do except cool its heels in some non-specific nameless early-modern-era dimension for several hundred years until the rest of the class had caught up.
Medieval medieval English law is pre-Norman. Or, you know: Anglo-Saxon.
Would, I suppose, be another way of putting it. And also pre-Christian, afaik. Like the pre-Christian parts of the Salic Code, where -- because murder didn't really become murder until everyone had an immortal soul -- if you killed someone, you paid the equivalent of contemporary civil damages to his family and/or tribe to compensate them for lost income. And payment was called "wergeld"! Which translates to "Man money"!
I learned that during college. But not in college, where I learned nothing that I now remember.
It's also worth bearing in mind that (serfs or no serfs) there was simply no such thing as all people being equal under the law until much, much, much later than the medieval period when you're talking about Wimmin and the law.
Because obviously women had considerable independent property and inheritance rights during the middle ages if they were, like, Eleanor of Aquitaine.
And some of them were. They had plenty of education, too. And there was actually a lot more sexual license for both genders than you might think. At all class levels, within reason.
Episodically. The sexually repressive side of Christianity is an overwhelmingly post-reformation phenomenon, by and large.
Which is not to say that the Roman Catholic Church wasn't in the premiere league wrt sexual repression once that game got under way. Obviously.
Stephen Morgan wrote:Joe Hillshoist wrote:Put yourself in their shoes for a minute (if thats possible - I dunno if it is for anyone who hasn't been thru something that horrible) having been thru a horrific experience that totally shattered your worldview and faith in humanity you attempt to approach the people who are sposed to protect you and bring you justice and get the case laughed at.
I don't think I'd have the guts to go to the police in the first place, to be honest.
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