April 29, 2008

Dinner: Grilled chicken, portabello mushrooms, fennel, zucchini and carrots on noodles covered with poppyseed dressing.

Dessert: fresh pineapple chunks, blueberries and almonds drizzled with the last drops of maple syrup.

Finally: all ate while reading Open Book:
Chuck Palahniuk writes stories that fearlessly expose the darkest parts of the human experience. So why is it that when it comes to his sexuality there are still some things he likes to keep hidden?

Queer couple plays with traditional marriage.

After this was marked for school (and got an A!) I decided that it would be awesome to post on my blog so that people could read it. I ended up writing this after a after-work conversation with my manager Mindy. She is rad. So is her wife Sarah. They were so awesome in fact, that I had to write about them. What was once an academically sided feature on gender became an awesome lesbian marriage story. At least I hope it did.
[This was intended for my grandmother's generation to read and understand, thus the obvious nature of some of it.]

Thanks for reading!


Queer couple plays with traditional marriage.

Mindy Hurlburt-Wong smiles out from the frame of her wedding photo. Perched on her partner’s lap she holds on tight and laughs while the hem of her white strapless dress falls to the floor. Sarah Wong plays the groom to Mindy’s bride and Sarah sits proudly in a suit and tie. In 2005 when Mindy married her longtime girlfriend they resembled the traditional cake topping couple. Being a same-sex couple allowed the pair to examine their own identities and figure out how they saw themselves in relation to their straight friends.

“There’s still not a lot out there as far as cultural identification [goes],” says Mindy, sipping on her glass of white wine. “[Queer people] have to find identity through what we’re not.” They found that they fit the mainstream images of male and female, but this is not as straightforward as it first appears.

If you saw Mindy on the street you couldn’t tell that she’s a lesbian. She identifies as “femme.” A derivative of the word feminine, femme is a term for women - or men - who wish to be feminine in their appearance. Wong prefers to stick to her typically masculine appearance. It is the state in which she is most comfortable. But her masculine appearance doesn’t mean she wants to be a man. It is just the way she feels at ease.

“It doesn’t really affect anything more than what kind of clothes we like to wear,” Mindy says. “Everybody plays with those kinds of roles to some degree. It doesn’t mean that I’m not always the one that kills bugs in our house.”

Culturally, the stereotypical lesbian looks more like Billy Idol than Madonna. She might have a job as a truck driver or a construction worker. Her hair is short and her she stands with an intimidating posture – not the type of person you’d want to meet in a dark alley. The increased awareness and acceptance of lesbianism has helped dismiss this stereotype, but Mindy agrees there’s still work to be done.

While Sarah adopts some of the traditional lesbian qualities - short hair and male dress clothes - she still does not have the rough personality historically associated with her appearance. Mindy finds that she doesn’t need to take on the traditional lesbian image. She can enjoy the parts of being a woman that she loves. “I love being a woman and I don’t plan to change that during my lifetime – but that doesn’t mean I won’t take on other roles,” she says, making it clear that her appearance doesn’t make her weak or inadequate.

Mindy doesn’t see any characters on TV or in magazines who look and act the same as she does. Most of the queer images in mainstream media send a negative message, which makes finding a positive and realistic sign of queer culture difficult.

“The only representations I’ve encountered in mainstream media are victims [of abuse] like Matthew Shepherd and transgender people like Hillary Swank in Boys Don’t Cry,” she says, pointing out the sensationalism and factual errors that accompany any portrayal of alternative lifestyles.

Lacey Haynes has studied queer lifestyles and finds that the media is quick to pigeonhole people into stereotypes for clarity rather than accuracy. “You lose all the other aspects of people based on their label. Then everyone with the same label becomes the same person. Like queer female and that’s her label but we forget that that person is also a mother and an academic,” says Haynes. “We like to think that we are more progressive than we actually are. I think it’s still really black and white.”

Often the labels of lesbian relationships extend from sexual preference into gender roles. “Gender wise I would have to say that there is no definitive identification available to any of us,” says Mindy. “I think it’s quite a fluid thing and depends on the circumstances of my partner and how I hold myself and present myself in any given situation,” she says, making reference to her feminine stature in her wedding photo. “I think playing femme is a big part of our relationship. I admittedly call it a performance.

“I think when I am with my wife I’m always read as straight because we are read as a straight couple everywhere we go. I appear to be very feminine and she appears to be very masculine,” she says. “We’ve had a few issues with that within the gay community as well. Sometimes people think that my wife is a transman,” she says, referring to the gender presentation of biological females who have transitioned to be males.

We talk about other forms of transformation. “I love the idea of drag. It’s what we did when we were kids. We dressed up. We used to play Gun Smoke. The girls always stuffed their mothers’ bras with tennis balls,” she says, laughing as she recalls the popular ‘50s show.

The mention of childhood role-playing brings her back to our discussion of adult roles. “Sarah believes we are no different from hetero middle class males,” says Mindy. “She said ‘we want a house, we want a wife, we want a car, we want a vacation once a year,’” Mindy says, explaining the generalized goals of the male middle class.

Mindy finds that she and Sarah stretch the acceptable boundaries of what is permitted among their middle class straight friends. “The kids of friends of ours ask my wife, ‘Why do you look like a boy?’ Or ‘Are you a boy or a girl?’” Mindy says she often sees her friends shush their children as they ask these questions about Sarah’s appearance. Mindy says that her wife is very open to explain herself, “Sarah has never ever hesitated to kneel down and explain, ‘I’m a girl, I like to wear my hair short and I like to wear boy’s clothes but I’m a girl,’”

“I think there is definitely a political sensitivity that is making it more difficult than it has to be,” says Mindy.

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Kar finally gets some rest.

After about a month and a half (two months) of going steady I finally got a day off yesterday. I slept until 1:30. Got up, showered, went to the grocery store, ate some pineapple. Slept from 3 till 9. Made breakfast for dinner. Tidied a bit. Talked to mom. Went to bed and read Kissing the Witch. I disagree with the NY Times review though. I'm not sure it's a children's book at all. If it is, then it is also an adult book.

My next book is as of yet undetermined. I'll know by tonight.
I've started many goals for my summer. My thing lately is achievable goals.
1. Read one book a week. I must read at least 50% of my class reading lists.
2. Make an art portfolio that I could use if I needed too.
3. Become the master of my finances.

Other than that I hope to have mini weekly goals. This will be what I mostly write about in this blog.
This week I begin with all three and see which wins out. I bought a bunch of craft supplies after my shift on Sunday with the intent to come home and craft during my days off. So far that hasn't happened but the day is not over yet. I also have started writing in a book journal. This will hopefully allow me to continue to keep a journal, something I've never done and also keep track of my reading. Think Nick Hornby in The Polysyllabic Spree, one of my favorite books.

I'm planning all sorts of things. Which is good. Now I need to figure out how to follow through.

Most importantly. I had a wonderful Birthday. I have some astonishingly wonderful friends. I wish I could go back in time and tell 15-year-old me that I could just forget about the idiots who I was trying to befriend and just wait until I was grown up. I would have saved myself a lot of grief.

I also have the best girlfriend and the best cat. I have probably over stated this, but it's true. If I could go back to that same 15-year-old and just say, chill out, enjoy your teenage years, because things are going to get much much better and you will have everything that you are dreaming about now.

15 year-old me wouldn't have listened. Oh well. I'm happy now.



Oh! New template. Let me know if anything doesn't work.

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April 14, 2008

did I like anything this year? yes.

This may be premature but, here is a list of things that I enjoyed reading this term.

From Contemporary Critical Theory:
Shklocsky: Art as Device
Eco - Over Interpreting Texts
Saussure - I can't remember what' it's called. All about Structuralism
Benjamin - Art in the World of Mechanical Reproducibility

From Fiction of the Later 20th Century:
The Crying of Lot 49 - Pynchon
Song of Solomon - Morrison
The Buddha of Suburbia - Kureishi
Maus - Spiegelman

From the Romantic Era
Byron - Don Juan
Coleridge - Kubla Kahn

Renaissance Drama:
The Roaring Girl - Middleton

inhale and....... exhale.

Two exams down, two to go. One essay left and a potential essay re-write. My week(s) is a blur. Today is which day? My next exam is when. Work?? Oh jeez.

This afternoon, as a post-exam treat, I'm going to clean up the house a bit, then kick back on the couch and read a book cover to cover. Mmmmm. (Mind you, it's not a book of choice, it's a book of obligation.)

April 11, 2008

Not only are moleskein agendas useful for keeping track of homework, they work fantastically to hold open the books for reading. Simply open the book to the desired page and place the moleskein at the top, overlapping the book about two inches and ta-dah, an open book.

April 10, 2008

who... am...are... you... I?

Tuesday, I spent the entire day working on this. I wish that I could say that I just started it yesterday, but that is actually the product of non-stop work from Friday afternoon to Tuesday evening.

Then, yesterday, I woke up at 7:30, got on the bus for 8:30, was at school by 9. I started writing an essay for my Renaissance Drama class at approx. 9:13, I finished writing it at 11:17, I printed it off and handed it in by 11:30.

Then, I handed in the first assignment, the webpage. Then I handed in the journalism take home exam that was due, apparently, at noon on Wednesday, but I got it there at 2. To that I say, take your take home exam and shove it.

Last night, after my last class of the school year, I tried to clear some junk off of my computer, because the harddrive is full, like totally and completly. Maybe 2% empty. And Shannon and I watched Connie and Carla, which was fantastic.

Today, it's 12:45, and all I've done is make bannana and coconut french toast, and make a mess of the kitchen.

This afternoon I have to write a 10-12 page paper on Maus and Buddha of Suburbia, and hopefully get some of my Contemporary Critical Theory text read, so that I can write the final essay, and on Saturday I can write the exam.

I am taking this all calmly and rationally. I can't believe that I handed in an essay that I'd started two hours earlier. I didn't think I'd ever be this person. I'm scared to look at it now incase it makes no sense.

April 08, 2008

Sometimes, I indulge too much.


April 05, 2008

winter term reading list update

I am very proud of myself.
In order of when I need to read it:

January
Shklocsky: Art as Device (essay)
Eco - Over Interpreting Texts (essay)
Wordsworth - The Prelude
Gillmor - The Gates Come Down (essay)
Marlowe - Tamburlaine the Great (play)

Nabokov - Pale Fire (novel)
Kovach - The Elements of Journalism
Shelley - To Wordsworth & Alastor
Kyd - The Spanish Tragedy (play)
State of the News Media 2007
Pynchon - The Crying of Lot 49 (novel)
Shelley - Te Mask of Anarchy & Ode to the West Wind (poems)
Briggs - Web 2.0 (chapter)
Cary - The Tragedy of Mariam (play)
Online State of Emergency (essay)



February

Byron - Manifred
Iser, Hisch, Fish (essays)
Middleton - The Revenger's Tragedy (play)
Knowles - The French Lieutenant's Woman (novel)
Online Reading: Historical Reference Points
Byron - Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (poetry)
Saussure, Kristeva, Jacobson (essays)
Barthes - Mythologies (collection of essays)
Poetry by Hemans
Morrison - Song of Solomon (novel)
Webster - Duchess of Malfi (play)
Online Media Magazine (article)
Middleton - The Roaring Girl (play)


March
Austen - Northanger Abbey (novel)
Silko - Ceremony (novel)
Middleton - A Chaste Maid in Cheapside (play)
Essay by Noam Chomsky

Delillo - White Noise (novel)
Beaumont - The Knight of Burning Pestle (play)
Keats - The Eve of St. Agnes (poem)
Kureishi - The Buddha of Suburbia (novel)
Jonson - Volpone (play)
Briggs - Chapter 6
Online Canadian Newspaper Association 2007
Keats - The Odes of 1819 (poem)
Speigleman - Maus(novel)
Middleton - The Changeling (play)
Keats - Ode on a Grecian Urn (poem)
Shelley - Ozymandias (poem)
Hemans - Image in Lava (poem)

Shelley, M - The Last Man (novel)
Ford - 'Tis a Pity She's a Whore (play)
More Online Journalism articles
Ryszard Kapuchinsky (essay)

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