Thursday, September 30, 2010

What we do not know

http://features.pewforum.org/quiz/us-religious-knowledge/index.php

http://www.economist.com/node/17103701

Friday, September 17, 2010

Book for October

Michael Kimmel's Guyland will be the next book we will be reading. In our discussion last night, we mentioned that young women seem to either think equality has been reached or they seem to be wanting to be heading back to the idealized 1950s/early 1960s. Perhaps, to achieve equality we need to reach out to the men, grow some male feminists, or ????
Michael Kimmel is the led scholar on masculinity studies, he will also be talking the evening of Oct. 22 at marist as part of the Women & Society conference...

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Monday, September 06, 2010

Happy Labor Day

Most of us consider Labor Day the official end of summer--its the end of summer vacations. (And, while most of us are no longer in school we still measure time by the start of the school year.)
We celebrate the end of summer with a bbq or a day at the beach or in the stores at the Back to School and Labor Day Sales. Once Labor Day was a day of speechifying and parades, but no more. Labor Day began back in the 1880s Labor Day by the NY labor unions to celebrate the workers. Congress made it a federal holiday in 1894, after the Pullman Strike resulted in the death of some strikers.
I think it fitting that we take a moment to think of the worker today--in today's economy. We are told the economy is getting better. Yet many of us are still economically insecure: the cost of living is still very high; there is still high unemployment (9.6%); little to no job growth to speak of--and the competition for those new jobs is fierce among the newly minted graduates/job seekers and the under- and un-employed; and foreclosures are still the order of the day. . .

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