Remembering the Miners’ Strike March 25, 2009
Posted by gesta in Boundaries, Debate, Politics.Tags: Geoffrey Elton, labour history, memory, Miners' Strike, practice of history, Thatcher, Tory, West Yorkshire
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This month saw the 25th anniversary of the beginning of the 1984-85 Miners’ Strike. When the strike began, I was only eight, but more than anything else that happened in that decade, the strike had a profound effect on me, instilling a sense of social justice, community and a lasting and deep loathing of the Tory party in general and Thatcher in particular. It also left an interest in labour history and had things turned out differently, I may have been blogging about very different things. This is an intensely personal post, but I want to try to show why the strike was so important in the way I think and do history, as well as the process of remembering.
Today I got angry and joined the Fawcett Society July 1, 2008
Posted by gesta in Debate, Politics.Tags: Fawcett Society, feminsim, Jackie Fleming
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I am down right fed up and angry today. The anger isn’t a sudden thing, it has always been there, but today I read something in the Guardian that brought it back into the open. I have always described myself as a feminist, ever since I became political animal. For that reason ‘I’m not a feminist, but …’ are five of the most depressing words to be found in sequence in the English language, especially when used by my students, who seem to think all the battles have been won and think we live in a ‘post-feminist society’. On top of that, there has been a steady drip, drip of worrying news for women, particularly in relation to pregnancy, employment rights and opportunities for women in minority groups, but equally insidious is the rise of ‘raunch culture’ and its knock on effects. Just after Christmas, the Guardian published a small piece in its ‘Women’ section on ‘Random acts of feminism‘ that kept me smiling for a couple of days, largely because I’d turned round all the lads mags in the service station shop on the way to my parents for Christmas. However, such small acts of defiance have never been enough and after another semester of female students using what I now refer to as ‘five words banned in sequence’, combined with an atmosphere of sexism in the archery club Reivers and I attend that, at times, has made me feel incredibly uncomfortable, and latent (not so latent?) misogyny in other areas of my life, I have joined the Fawcett Society and will be encouraging other men and women of my acquaintance. I think I will also buy a job lot of Jackie Fleming cartoon postcards and distribute them around the place (particularly the archery club).
Girls can play: sport and gender politics January 15, 2007
Posted by gesta in Debate, Fencing, Politics.add a comment
Veiled faces and boundaries October 6, 2006
Posted by gesta in Boundaries, Politics, faith.add a comment
It will not have escaped the notice of many people in the UK that a might furore is going on about some comments Jack Straw has made about Muslim women who veil their faces. He has spoken out to say he feels uncomfortable holding a discussion with a woman who covers her face and would prefer it if they didn’t. As a result, he’s been accused of Islamaphobia, praised by others who think likewise and found himself allied with some very strange people indeed (possibly given credence to racist ideologies). (more…)