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I am a PhD student in Rhetoric and Composition at Purdue University, where I also teach professional writing. I'm currently working on my dissertation, which deals with narrative and trauma. Other research interests include: feminist theory, new media, digital writing, and technical writing.
I am once again reading trauma (and trauma-related) blogs. Michael Sullivan's blog, Recall: An Involuntary Soldier's Story, is teaching me a lot about the military. Though this blog isn't explicitly about PTSD, it does address issues of war, which I believe to be inherently trauma-related. So here are a few things that I've learned:
From Day 41:
In her column, "Subject to Debate," Katha Pollitt at The Nation has articulately interrogated both the feminist response to Obama and his actions, some of which (like making Larry Summers director of the National Economic Counsel) seem to be counter to feminist/women's concerns. Her article is a great example of a balanced inquiry into actions of political figures. So frequently we only see the attack or the uncritical lauding of political figures. To read Pollitt's article, click here.
I'm back in Lafayette after a difficult and exhausting trip to SC. I left Indianapolis in the late afternoon on Friday and started off my trip by having an anxiety attack because of my extremely cramped quarters. Given that I am just slightly above 4'11" it is a truly sad day when I don't have enough room. What about all of the normal-sized adults? The NWA (henceforth referred to as Northworst Airlines)flight attendants were remarkably unsympathetic and the woman who gave me her aisle seat did so grudgingly. Needless to say, the rest of the flight was miserable as I tried to regulate my breathing while enduring the glare of nearby passengers and the refusal of the flight attendants to give me any coffee. My trip was not off on the best foot.
Wow. There are times when stunned doesn't even begin to describe how I feel after reading some blog comments. Most of the time I just ignore what I feel to be ignorant rantings. Everyone is entitled to their opinion and to express that opinion just as I am entitled to choose not to listen (or read, as the case may be). However, since I found this in my search for knitting stores in SC, I was trying to find out why this site appeared during my google search. (Apparently, the owner of the blog listed knitting as one of her hobbies and had written an entry regarding a SC law.) What I first found was a blog entry about the recent controversy over domestic violence laws in SC (notably, the lack of enforcement).
It may be more accurate to title this "why rhetoricat? why not femminista?" but...
