GenderYOUTH Network

An on-line forum for youth activists combating discrimination and violence caused by gender stereotypes

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GenderPAC

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IUSB: Blurr zine calls for submissions

Call for submissions... on gender.

Greetings!

Gender Project is well underway at Indiana University of South Bend. We are a new, student organized, gender advocacy group on campus associated with GenderPAC.

Last month we distributed our first issue of Blurr, a new zine with a focus on gender. It was a great success here at IUSB and soon we hope to be able to share the zine with a much larger audience by making the publication available online.

In the meantime, we are currently compiling works for the second issue. We hope to begin printing in just a few short weeks.

This zine is a focus on all aspects of gender and how it crosses lines of socioeconomic status, race and ethnicity, sexual orientation, age, and more.

A call for submissions... more info below.

With as much diversity as we have among our students and faculty here at IUSB (and the larger community), I know there is just as wide a range of creativity. I would like to use these creative voices in order to educate and advocate the versatility and complications of gender as they are portrayed and interpreted in our society.

We're looking for artists, poets, essayists, personal stories, etc. -anything that can be related to gender, be it positive or negative.

Can you help or do you know someone who would be interested? If you would like to send us a submission or if you have questions, please contact us via e-mail.

Karrie Blevins
Coordinator, The Gender Project
Indiana University at South Bend

For submissions:
E-mail: blurr@iusb.edu

For questions:
E-mail: kblevins@iusb.edu

For snail mail:

The Gender Project
Indiana University South Bend
1700 Mishawaka Ave
South Bend, IN 46634

X-posted to relevant online communities including the GenderYOUTH Network on Yahoo.

RSS feed available via Livejournal.

Posted by Karrie Blevins on October 25, 2005 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Let's play bully!

Take a look at this:

This game is evidently scheduled for release in October.  Here’s the web site about the game: http://www.rockstargames.com/bully/

I AM VERY ANGRY!  Why would someone think up something like this game?  Oh right....it is about the "Benjamins!"  Already people are bullied everyday at schools leaving them physically and emotionally abused.  This country really needs to re-think its embracing of violence. It is so ridiculous that we have an easier time digesting violence over sex.  I was already upset about Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, which allows suburbanites to voyeur into a barrio of LA and beat up and kill sex workers (tragically, a reality of street-based sex work). "Hey, I am a gangsta. I wanna beat some hoes!".....AHHH!

We already have a hard time eradicating arbitrary gender expectations and the violence that is caused by them.  Then this freaking game pops its ugly head.  The game only reinforces a culture of violence in schools.  When are Americans  going to stand up and say it is not okay to HURT people, because they are different or for any other reason (save self-defense).  Oh wait!  Some of are expendable...urgh!

While we have finished updating the DTL materials, I hope that in some way you incorporate this game into your campaign.  Tyrone

Posted by Youth Program Coordinator on August 26, 2005 | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)

IUSB: The Gender Project

Hey all! Hope everyone is enjoying their summer. I know I am
especially enjoying the 14509345823049 degree heat. Yum. :/

Right. Well, back to business....

"The Gender Project" will be the name of our GenderYOUTH group here
at IUSB, at least to start off with. We're working on a couple
things before classes start in the Fall.

A website is being developed and we plan to have it up and running
by mid-August.

We're also hoping to get the G-Zine printed around the same time.

As mentioned in our last post, we are looking for submissions that
would be topic related - drawings, poems, OpEds, etc.

As for the website, we welcome suggestions for information,
materials, etc. to be included.

Looking forward to hearing from many of you before school starts.

X-posted


For equality & diversity,
Karee

Posted by Karrie Blevins on July 19, 2005 | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)

Zine: IUSB chapter calls for submissions...

We are working on putting a zine together for the beginning of the Fall
semester here at IU-South Bend. This first issue will be geared towards
incoming freshmen students and student organizations getting back into the
swing of things.

This is a call for submissions (or suggestions)... So, if you have some
artistic talent that you'd like to share... along the lines of gender,
stereotypes, labels, etc., let us hear 'em!

Interesting articles, poems, or other written works would be greatly
appreciated too. (Plus, we can send you a copy once its ready to
distribute.)


*Feel free to pass this message along to any person(s) or group(s) you feel might be interested.



Karee B.
e-mail: karee23@hotmail.com

Posted by Karrie Blevins on June 21, 2005 | Permalink | Comments (12) | TrackBack (0)

Check out the new Newsletter

Be sure to check out the latest GenderYOUTH newsletter for information about what's going on nationwide in the GenderYOUTH campaign.

Posted by Youth Program Coordinator on January 24, 2005 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Drop the Labels in the Des Moines Register

Posit_1
The Des Moines Register published an article about Drop the Labels at Cornell College & Iowa State University.

Did you want to bring Drop the Labels to your school but didn’t have time to pull it all together for this week? You can still participate – Drop the Labels has been extended!

Take action and raise awareness about bullying and harassment on your campus – look for your Action Kit in the mail & visit the Drop the Labels website for more information.

Students act against gender stereotyping: An effort begins at 24 campuses across the nation to end violence linked to labeling.

By NICOLE PASEKA REGISTER CORRESPONDENT September 23, 2004
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sara Hoffman's shirt made more than a fashion statement Wednesday.

The Cornell College art student pinned to her clothes 120 sticky notes on which gender slurs such "goddess," "slut," "jock" and "girlie-man" were scrawled.

Hoffman asked students and faculty to write the words - which she said are often cast at students who don't live up to peers' gender expectations - on the notes.

Hoffman, 23, a senior at the Mount Vernon college, said she wants people to be more accepting.

She called the response positive. "Lots of people were really interested in why I was doing it and how I came up with it," she said.

Student groups at 24 campuses nationwide, including Cornell College and Iowa State University in the state, began a coordinated campaign this week to end bullying caused by gender stereotyping.

The campaign, called "Drop the Labels, Back to School," is sponsored by the Gender Public Advocacy Coalition, or GenderPAC, a nonprofit group based in Washington, D.C., working to end discrimination and violence linked to gender stereotyping.

Increased attention has been paid to bullying in Iowa in the past year. Gov. Tom Vilsack recently sent a letter to school districts asking officials to adopt policies to prohibit bullying based on "real or perceived race, sex, creed, color, national origin, religion, marital status, disability, sexual orientation, physical appearance, and/or personality characteristics."

Some at Cornell had trouble coming up with gender slurs, "unless it's something they're called frequently," Hoffman said.

A Cornell chemistry teacher, for example, added "girlie-man" to a sticky note, saying he's heard the term too much.

Hoffman said she also is asking students to sign postcards that will be sent to members of Congress, asking that they help protect students from bullying.

The campaign is the first of its kind to focus solely on gender as a cause of school bullying, said Riki Wilchins, GenderPAC's executive director.

Wilchins said that up to 80 percent of high school students will endure bullying or harassment at some point because of gender stereotyping, based on GenderPAC's research. "Those are terrible numbers, and they don't surprise anyone who's been in high school," she said.

The harassment doesn't just affect gay, lesbian and transgender students, Wilchins said. Males who aren't considered "manly" or females who aren't "ladylike" also face bullying from their peers.

"I think for the most part, ISU students are not aware of the importance of gender issues and the complexity of gender issues," said Patricia Coleman, an ISU graduate student.

Coleman said she would like to see more classes at ISU that educate students about sex and gender issues.

"The idea of feminism is still a very demonized idea on the ISU campus. I think that says a lot (about) students' understanding of the gender rights movements," Coleman said.

GenderPAC student activists' goals:

• Gather support for the Federal Anti-Bullying Bill (H.R. 4776), which would make school anti-bullying policies and training mandatory.

• Support colleges in adding gender identity and expression to Equal Employment Opportunity policies. Twenty-one colleges and universities have adopted such policies. Cornell College is in the final stages of adding the language to its policy; Iowa State University has not included gender identity and expression in its policy.

• Educate high school teachers, students and parents on how to recognize and prevent gender-based bullying and harassment.

ISU plans

WHAT : "Drop the Labels, Back to School," sponsored by the Gender Public Advocacy Coalition.
WHEN: 5 p.m. Saturday Sept 25 at Sloss House on the Iowa State University campus in Ames. Film clips addressing gender issues will be shown; conference call at 6 p.m. with other groups across the country.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOURCE: http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2004409230371

Posted by Youth Program Coordinator on October 15, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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