Wednesday 2 December 2009

Feminism Event

On January the 5th at 6.30 till 8.30pm a feminism event will be taking place at:

Jacobs Well
Trinity Lane
Micklegate
York
YO1 6JX

The event is to look into the importance of feminism, go back to the fundamentals in order to promote awareness and demonstrate the importance of how feminism impacts on a womyn's life.

If you would like to attend or speak at this event, please contact May at maywillsher@hotmail.co.uk

Object: Stripping the Illusion Campaign

BREAKING NEWS from Object":

"A new law will see an end to the licensing of lap dancing clubs as cafes! This is a crucial piece of legislation that allows local councils to apply vital conditions on clubs and that gives local people the right to object to a club opening on their high street. Importantly, this legislation allows gender equality issues to be taken into consideration in the licensing process. This is a major victory in the struggle against the mainstreaming of the sex industry and the mainstreaming of sexism and it could not have been won without the lobbying, campaigning and activism from all of you."


find out more here: http://www.object.org.uk/index.php/campaigns/about-the-campaign

Reclaim The Night Leeds

On Saturday 28th November we joined around 200 people on the Leeds Reclaim the Night March. The aim of the walk was to highlight areas of the city were women felt vulnerable during the night and to raise awareness of the campaign for better services for the victims of rape and sexual attacks.

For more information and to view photos of the walk please visit: reclaimthenightleeds.org.uk

Also see this link to a local news article:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west_yorkshire/8385246.stm

Friday 23 October 2009

Stripping The Illusion

The Leeds University Feminist Society (Fem Soc) are screening Stripping the Illusion on Wednesday 28th October in the Peanut Gallery (downstairs in the Union) at 7pm. The film is from the national group Object and looks at the problem of lap-dancing clubs and their proliferation in recent years. It's open to non-members and non-students so everyone's welcome.

object.org.uk

THE WALK



Many thanks to those of you who attended the walk on Light Night, we hope to continue the conversations we had that evening and will post information about future events on this blog.

Wednesday 30 September 2009

DANCING IN LEEDS

A torch lit-walk past the lap-dancing clubs in Leeds City Centre

Friday October 9th 2009


WHY WE ARE WALKING


It is by experiencing our city first hand – by walking its streets – that we begin to understand its changes and what these changes mean to our lives. 


By walking together, by thinking and talking, by looking, we join a procession of scientists, philosophers , artists, feminists and activists who have, throughout history, always walked as a means of disseminating and understanding ideas. 


We are walking a route past eight lap dancing clubs in Leeds City Centre because we want to start a discussion about their impact on our cultural life and what it means to have more of them than bookshops, independent galleries and live music venues combined. 


How many art galleries does the centre of Leeds boast?  In Manchester, Liverpool and Sheffield, the ‘retail experience’ is balanced by its galleries, cultural quarters, independent cafes, theatres and cinemas. The ‘high-end’ retail face of Leeds has apparently become the viable signifier of our cultural life. Riding on the coat tails of this retail glitz we now have at least eight city centre lap-dancing clubs.


Amongst the promotional material for freshers’ week in Leeds, between adverts for club nights with names like ‘Filthy Orange Wednesday’ and ‘ Miss Conduct’ are website invitations from lap dancing clubs to ‘come down and see our dancers performing on podiums’ at a freshers’ fair in the University district. 


The assumption that these venues are the playgrounds of businessmen looks to have shifted. With the lure of vouchers for free dances, cheap entrance and drinks promotions, students are now seen as a desirable target by these businesses. 



Have lap-dancing bars become so mainstream that Leeds City Council and the educational institutions also accept that young people moving into the city are legitimate targets for this kind of activity, as potential clients, as potential lap-dancers?According to the Council “Leeds is internationally recognised as a major centre of learning”. Do we accept that, as part of that experience, students also learn how to objectify women and that visiting a lap-dancing club is a positive experience for a man? 


Do the blacked-out facades of these clubs constitute (in the City Centre Partnership’s own words)  “a vision of a vibrant, cosmopolitan city centre which actively embraces and nurtures its businesses, residents and visitors; an innovative, international city that offers opportunity, 

co-operation and partnership”?

 

What value do these strip clubs add to our city? What do they represent culturally and how do we start conversation and debate about what goes on inside them? Do they uphold the council’s standards on sexual equality? Are they somehow beyond debate? What do they say about all of us who live in Leeds and about the role of women in our city centre?

  

When we don’t ask questions, we endorse and accept.


That’s why we’re walking, as residents of this city, walking, and wondering, and asking questions.



FEMINISM IS A DIRTY WORD

We are a group of artists and designers from The Leeds School of Contemporary Art & Graphic Design at Leeds Met University who are working together to define feminism for ourselves and explore how these ideas apply to our lives and concerns. 


We are a collective of students and staff from different backgrounds, disciplines and age groups, formed as a direct response to the environment in we live and the visual material we encounter everyday that uses and creates images of women. 


Although this isn’t a recent trend, there appears to be a more mainstream acceptance of one-dimensional representations of women within popular culture; from advertising billboards to magazines and TV.  As people who work within the creative industries, using our skills as writers, photographers, curators, designers and artists, we are interested in questioning, initiating debate and discussing this material, as well as identifying the roles we can play in redefining women. 


The Women’s Movement is often seen as something that happened a long time ago, as something that doesn’t apply now. We believe in its relevance today for women and men of all ages and backgrounds who believe in the principles of equality.  We consider ourselves Feminists.