Monday 26 November 2012

http://projectunbreakable.tumblr.com/ We are going to use text from this in our protest. These words are really strong and scarily true to people around the world; to protest, we need to have an understanding of supporting those who have been though what we are protesting about and therefore the use of these words will have more of an impact on us and therefore the way people see what we are doing.
http://she.msn.astroyogi.com/photo-gallery/index.aspx?GalleryId=30This picture shows women who are on the Slut Walk. We thought of the idea to use masks with slut written on them to portray the idea that all we are seen as is sluts and people don't look for the person behind the stereotype of women who aren't completely covered up.

Friday 23 November 2012

This video is of a protest group called 'Femen' who use their bodies to portray a message of feminism. The desperation with which they move and shout conveys their ideas in one way- we had the idea of writing on us before I saw this, but this just shows that it is a way of symbolising what seems to be written over women today.
'Rape conviction rates may have improved but women remain reluctant to report the crime. The poor understanding by young men of what rape is all about worries me.' Guardian Article

Wednesday 14 November 2012

After researching and finding sites and clips of previous protests against rape and sexual objectification, such as the links here... we have developed our ideas for the protest. 

We initially thought of the idea to dress with very little on, with words that are used to describe women with negative connotations written all over our body in black and red to represent the dirt and fact that on the outside, women are an image that men have drawn for their sakes. We formed the idea that, because we actually are not the image they conceive, we will rub off the words with some form of water/wipes as part of the theatrical piece to symbolise the idea that together we can get rid of this image. 

I found this quote from the bible: 'God said unto woman: "I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thy shall bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee." Genesis, Chapter III verse xvi' 
I found this really shocking, because there are so many people who will follow the bible as a culture and are justified by something that is internationally recognised by many cultures. 

We have written facts and statistics on pieces of large cardboard so that there are visual aids for people to know what we are protesting about. Whilst we are getting the words off of us, we may say the statistics, after shouting the words that we will use from 'Project Unbreakable' at both the beginning and the end. 

I was hoping to maybe walk on holding hands with all of our group and walk off doing the same, showing a sense of community, and if we are all in it together, we can change something. The idea of us coming on with hardly any clothing on will shock people and create instinctive thoughts and comments made by people passing who will then in turn feel uncomfortable about thinking or commenting on us once they have understood what we are standing for. The personal guilt will hopefully change what they say to girls in the future. 



Sunday 11 November 2012

Starting it off...

I am in a group with Molly and Immie, and we are going to protest against the objectification of women; there being absolutely no excuse for it in any shape or form.

We all have strong feminist views that come from different angles but we will show these off in our protest; concentrating on the idea that girls should be allowed to wear whatever they want and not be objectified. Women all over the world are violated against, raped, trafficked, shouted at and generally abused- we want to make sure that this abuse is never seen as the victim's fault because she was 'asking for it'... abuse should never be accepted.

The use of the school building will be really interesting because there is so much objectification in school, such as name calling and joking about that is completely unnecessary and even though is seen as a joke, can lead to much more serious implications.

We are fighting against this. From the smallest to the biggest violations... there is no excuse.

Our first ideas were to dress in little clothing to catch people's attention and draw out people's first thoughts about girls in little clothing, because we know what the majority of people will be thinking; 'sluts' and 'I want some of that'. Our statistics, dialogue, and art forms will make people feel ashamed of thinking these things and noticing what few words can do in the long run. We were thinking of writing names that women are called over our bodies as if they are permanently attached to us- maybe we could continue with the idea of getting them off of us as a protest that things can change.