• Log In
  • Log In
Science Leadership Academy @ Center City
Science Leadership Academy @ Center City Learn · Create · Lead
  • Students
    • Mission and Vision
  • Parents
  • Community
    • Mission and Vision
  • Calendar

Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band Public Feed

Create a Post

Feminist Film Review

Posted by Nathan Little in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Wednesday, March 14, 2018 at 4:16 pm

​Feminism Film Review
By: Nate Little 

Introduction

The tests for films are called the Bechdel Test and the Mako Mori Test. The Bechdel Test specifies towards a film where 2 female characters talk but NOT about a different character. Specifically a male character. However, the Mako Mori Test specifies towards a film where at least one female character is in a movie and has a main role in the film. The character has her own perspective and CANNOT specify towards another character. Specifically a male character. These tests exist because we have many movies today where there’s either a male’s perspective film or a female’s perspective film but the female include a different gender in her film. One cannot aside from the other because one gender (the male) is most likely in every film. Many movies are also sexist, masculine, or feminine. 

Southpaw & Deadpool Film Essay 

Southpaw was a very uproaring, selfless, battle of an experienced fighter who battles his struggles and fights to keep his legacy living. Fighting to be remembered as one of the greatest boxers of all time. Billy Hope or “Billy The Great Hope.” as there were good reviews and comment rendering through in the movie, it leaves off as a good film but stirs up certain situations that many critics would question. One of those questions would lead to about his legacy, or if this was based on a true story. But regarding this towards feminism, that situation actually plays a big role. One role that many reviewers and critics would not even think of. At the beginning of the movie, the boxer wins a fight to win his “one of so many” championships. Of course, his trainers and his posse helped Billy win this championship, a certain someone was able to really helped him render through to obtain that title. His wife. Maureen Hope. She was the big reason for that championship. She was the prime core of Billy being the focus and winning that championship and giving Billy Hope the motivation he needed to win. 

Image result for south paw gif


Obtaining the championship was his goal, other problems persisted when another talented boxer Miguel Escobar entered Billy’s premises where he despised Billy (how every boxer supposed to be.) They want to win. Miguel got into Billy’s head. His masculinity raged when Miguel triggers Billy in which a devastating that made him lose his wife that night. Shots were fired and one of the bullets hit his wife Maureen. Beforehand, Maureen feminine side was trying to retain Billy. As she told him “it’s not worth it baby.” “Keep walking baby.” But as Miguel Escobar kept exchanging negative words to Billy. The film basically describes the masculinity in a man’s life and how it can change rapidly. This movie relates to the Bechdel Test where the protagonist is messing up and certain women (who played in the movie) was having the same effect in the situation. The movie does not meet the Mako Mori Test.  


Deadpool was, however, a fighting/action/love movie. I wouldn’t call it a happy loving movie. It’s pretty messed up. The movie consists of a guy who helps people for a cost. Whether if it’s hiring to take out people that other people want to get rid of/dead or whether if its a warning, he would help them for a price. Wade Wilson was his name. Even though Wade was living in a win-win situation and met this beautiful young lady Vanessa. An unexpected symptom came up as he found out that he had cancer. He didn’t know what to do as he freaked out and knew that the cancer was getting worse. He met this fellow at the bar to try and prevent cancer. But the outcome wasn’t on his specific terms. 

Image result for deadpool laying down gif


The enemy in the movie turned out to be Francis and they took him under his will. They froze his body, ran some tests, and made him into a superhuman. He couldn’t feel pain and he couldn’t die as he escaped but the enemy slipped through Wade’s hands. He couldn’t return to his love for he was different. He disappeared on the hunt for his enemy Francis. Beforehand, femininity played a role in this when his girlfriend cared for Wade’s well being, no matter how much Wade tried to hide his feelings from Vanessa, she just knew. Masculinity really played after the incident to the end of the movie by fixing his problems alone and not with others and not thinking he is good enough for the change he couldn't show to Vanessa. She wound up finding out when Francis had her and he took his mask off to hide the identity he was now. She, however, accepted for who he was. This film relates more to the Mako Mori Test because it included one female character, she had her own narrative when Wade supposedly died, she moved on to working at a strip club and living alone in an apartment. And lastly, she didn’t just support Wade, but she supported herself and made standards for her well being. 

If I had to create a test for a movie. My test would feature at least one male and female character who either have their own problems in the movie OR have problems on their own that they figure out together. Not one problem they both have to figure out. It can’t just support a man’s story or a woman’s story, they have to support both of their stories. I think it’s important to see this kind of criteria in a movie because people need to see that one gender is all powerful (especially males). People need to see that each gender is powerful in their own way and that figuring out their problems together can make a huge bondage for a man and a woman. Whether if they’re friends, boyfriend, and girlfriend, or husband and wife. One movie that meets my criteria is 50 shades of grey because they each never knew each other but getting to know each other (through sex) gave them a bondage but beforehand, they both had separate problems that soon brought them together to figure out. 

Be the first to comment.

Intersectional Feminist Film Review

Posted by Alexandrea Rivera in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Tuesday, March 13, 2018 at 11:09 am

Intersectional Feminist Film Review  (1)
Be the first to comment.

Lesbian Feminism

Posted by Waverly O'Neal in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Monday, January 22, 2018 at 1:29 am

Lesbian feminism emerged as a result of exclusion from the women’s liberation movement. Lesbianism was largely ignored because many believed that it would undermine the credibility of the movement by reintroducing sex into the feminist agenda and a lot of women preferred the sexual respite feminism granted and thought including lesbian feminism would eliminate said respite.

Betty Friedan founded the National Organization for Women in 1966. She also was a feminist who wasn’t all for the integration of lesbian feminism, though, her exclusion wasn’t entirely unfounded. Her concern, and that of other straight feminists, was that the first thing that would come to the minds of men would be “‘mannish’ or ‘man-hating’ lesbians” and that, consequently would “hinder the cause”. A lesbian agenda would compromise political power and image that feminists worked so hard to gain and create. However, she failed to realize, or perhaps care, that these so called “man-hating” lesbians were women, too, and they wanted and deserved the same things that every woman in the country was fighting for. All they wanted was to aid the cause.  Friedan, eventually, went so far as to refer to lesbian feminism as the “lavender menace”, which further infuriated lesbian feminists and practically lit the fire of persistence in the heart of movement.

In the ten-paragraph manifesto titled The Woman Identified Woman, written The Radicalesbians, a lesbian is defined as “the rage of all women condensed to the point of explosion...She...acts...to be a more complete and free human being than her society-,...cares to allow her...these needs and actions...bring her into painful conflict...until is in a state of continual war with everything around her, and usually herself.” This quote pretty much sums up the amount of strength that a lesbian has to have to simply be there self-a luxury every heterosexual doesn’t even acknowledge on a day-to-day basis. On top of this she must also battle the challenge of owning up to herself semi-acceptable identity as a woman. Everyday that this woman decides to show herself she shows the political and societal defiance of ten straight feminists. On May 1, 1970, at the “ Second Congress to Unite Women” lesbian activists rushed the stage, conspicuous in there objective to be heard. To their surprise, they were almost immediately joined by members of the audience who wished to aid in their cause.

Initially, the women’s liberation movement wasn’t an all-inclusive cause. The heterosexual feminists that dominated it, succeeded in being seen as the men they fought so hard to be venerated in relation to, in the way that they regarded lesbians as nothing more than a discredibility, because that wrongly placed and forced stigma/stereotype. However, after many protests and the cooperation of open, understanding minds, lesbian rights soon became, and continue to be, recognized as “‘a legitimate concern of feminism.”’


Be the first to comment.

Tie Your Tubes

Posted by Aidan Williams in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Monday, January 15, 2018 at 2:26 pm

​For my Erasing Erasure project, I wrote a song about forced sterilization in Puerto Rico from the early-to-mid 1900s.

https://drive.google.com/open?id=1UUTS6CRgGc2KJQf0mlH-fI7Pz8FA8jFW
Be the first to comment.

Saudi Arabia Quiz

Posted by Cianni Mack in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Tuesday, January 9, 2018 at 8:26 pm

Saudi Arabia Quiz_
slide https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1nZENgUNo4TwTKOYNUcgf_Ysz7Ca27SFXYMVn7jezWR8/edit?usp=sharing
Be the first to comment.

The Great Madame CJ Walker

Posted by Naseem Hameid in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Wednesday, January 3, 2018 at 9:00 am

Podcast ft. Afi, Kay, Josh

Podcast ft. Afi, Kay, Josh
Podcast ft. Afi, Kay, Josh
Be the first to comment.

Malala Yousafzai

Posted by Naeem Goins in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Thursday, December 21, 2017 at 2:47 pm

​Link to Information:

https://docs.google.com/a/scienceleadership.org/document/d/1ZQ9LzkAibhbLX6kVebuTxB2Sdl2uZvclnm4WWRkdR_0/edit?usp=sharing

Link to Quiz:

https://goo.gl/hXR1bZ


Be the first to comment.

The Evolution of the Black Woman’s World

Posted by Quran Riddick in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Wednesday, December 20, 2017 at 12:09 am

Link to Article/Informational Piece
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1yHyLB-1Oz2gIYtjoXhZul3gr2LbQmAHVZEtrV-NCwic/edit?usp=sharing 

Link to Worksheet/Quiz
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1K-Zui2zwbM_JqbRF17GLp-UpTNc6WCAEuE-Gkeee750/edit?usp=sharing
Be the first to comment.

Seneca Convention- Justin Stewart

Posted by Justin Stewart in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Tuesday, December 19, 2017 at 9:15 pm

The Seneca Convention was the first ever women’s rights convention ever held in the United States with almost 300 women participating in it.The Convention took place in Seneca Falls, New York on July 19–20, 1848. It was organized by two abolitionists who met at the 1840 World Anti-Slavery Convention in London named Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. They were Barred from the convention floor because they were women. This Convention advertised itself as “a convention to discuss the social, civil, and religious condition and rights of woman.” On the second day of the convention, men were invited to attend the convention and about 40 men did, including Frederick Douglass. The Declaration of Sentiments and Grievances was adopted and signed by the assembly. The convention passed 12 resolutions which called for equal rights for women. The Seneca Falls Convention was followed two weeks later by an even larger meeting in Rochester, N.Y. The national woman’s rights conventions were held annually, focusing on the growth for the women’s suffrage movement. After the many years of struggling, the 19th Amendment was adopted in 1920, granting American women the constitutionally protected right to vote. The Convention wanted to have equal rights for women and they got what they wanted. The Convention accomplished the signing of the The Declaration of Sentiments, a document that outlined the rights of women.

Quiz!

  1. Was The Seneca Convention the First or Second women’s rights Convention?

  2. What were the names of the women that were in charge of the Convention?

  3. Why were Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton barred from the Convention?

  4. How many Men were at the Convention?

  5. What did The Convention accomplish?

Bibliography

-“Seneca Falls Convention.” HistoryNet, www.historynet.com/seneca-falls-convention.

-Worthen, Meredith. “The Women’s Rights Movement and the Women of Seneca Falls.” Biography.com, A&E Networks Television, 13 July 2017, www.biography.com/news/seneca-falls-convention-leaders.

-“Seneca Falls Convention begins.” History.com, A&E Television Networks, www.history.com/this-day-in-history/seneca-falls-convention-begins.

Be the first to comment.

Rosie The Riveter

Posted by Alexandrea Rivera in Intersectional Feminism · Menasion · e1 Band on Tuesday, December 19, 2017 at 11:12 am

Rosie The Riveter Lesson (1)
Be the first to comment.
33 posts:
← Prev
  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
Next →
RSS

GSTUDIES-002

Term
2017-18

Other Websites

Launch Canvas

Blog Tags

  • Public 1

Teacher

  • Elizabeth Menasion
Science Leadership Academy @ Center City · Location: 1482 Green St · Shipping: 550 N. Broad St Suite 202 · Philadelphia, PA 19130 · (215) 400-7830 (phone)
×

Log In