Lego Creates Female Scientist Set Months After 7-Year-Old Girl Called Their Female Toys “Boring”

http://www.buzzfeed.com/rachelzarrell/lego-creates-female-scientist-set-months-after-7-year-old-gi?bffb

“The new Lego kit comes a few months after 7-year-old Charlotte Benjamin chastised the company in a handwritten letter for their lack of smart female toys.

‘I love Legos,’ Charlotte wrote, but said there are ‘barely any Lego girls.’ When she saw the sets at the store, she noticed all the female Legos did was ‘sit at home, go to the beach, and shop,’ while the male toys ‘saved people, had jobs, even swam with sharks!’

The little girl’s letter went viral, with the company itself responding a few days later, telling Charlotte, “We have been very focused on including more female characters and themes that invite even more girls to build.”

Lego wrote that it was considering a female set just two days after Charlotte’s letter went viral, though it’s possible that was just a coincidence.”

Leaders Of The New School: 15 Queer Female Hip-Hop Artists You Should Know

http://www.autostraddle.com/leaders-of-the-new-school-15-queer-female-hip-hop-artists-you-should-know-247819/

“The emergence of queer and queer-conscious hip-hop artists is a small revolution. It parallels changing social and political attitudes towards LGTBQ women as the doors of opportunity open slowly but surely.  The artists that come out now are going to break down barriers in hip-hop, music, pop culture and the world at large.

The women featured here are a diverse bunch but all of them are businesswomen, brands, revolutionaries, really dope human beings and a key element of the future of hip-hop. Speaking for the underrepresented, they’re our soundtrack for minorities and marginalized groups around the globe, cracking open doors of opportunity for the next generation of openly queer and gender non-conforming music artists to follow. They’re from all over the globe kickin’ ass and takin’ names one record at a time. Hear them. See them. Support them!”

Women’s Literature 101: The Book List

http://thefeministpress.tumblr.com/post/94659545033/womens-literature-101-the-book-list

“Part II in our Feminism 101 Booklist series, here is a list of literature by ladies that shakes the boundaries of old-white-dude academia. All books are linked to their publisher’s purchase page, not Amazon. Most are published by independent presses.

  • Give it to Me– by Ana Castillo, the hilarious, bold, and insightful journey of forty-three-year-old, pansexual Palma, in equal turns addictive and poetic.
  • Purple Hibiscus– Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s first novel, an intimate narrative of fifteen-year-old Kambili in a religious Nigerian household; a reflection on joy, power, and family.
  • Brown Girl, Brownstones– Paule Marshal’s tale of coming of age in a Brooklyn immigrant family and the struggle of balancing personal and community aspirations.
  • Persepolis– by Marjane Satrapi, a two-volume graphic novel confessional of a young woman coming of age in Tehran, the story of a girlhood and the story of a country.
  • I Love Myself When I Am Laughing– by Zora Neale Hurston, edited by Alice Walker. Hurston is one of the essential voices of the twentieth century, shaping and reshaping literary convention. This is the first and most comprehensive collection of her short works.”

Find more at: http://thefeministpress.tumblr.com/post/94659545033/womens-literature-101-the-book-list

Indian Prime Minister Uses Biggest Speech Of The Year To Slam Rape Culture

http://thinkprogress.org/world/2014/08/15/3471675/modi-rape-culture-speech/

“Today as we hear about the incidents of rapes, our head hangs in shame…I want to ask parents when your daughter turns 10 or 12 years old, you ask, ‘Where are you going? When will you return?’ Do the parents dare to ask their sons, ‘Where are you going? Why are you going? Who are your friends?’ After all, the rapist is also someone’s son. If only parents decide to put as many restrictions on their sons as they do on their own daughters.”

America Is Not For Black People

http://theconcourse.deadspin.com/america-is-not-for-black-people-1620169913/+GregHoward1

By Greg Howard

“By all accounts, Brown was One Of The Good Ones. But laying all this out, explaining all the ways in which he didn’t deserve to die like a dog in the street, is in itself disgraceful. Arguing whether Brown was a good kid or not is functionally arguing over whether he specifically deserved to die, a way of acknowledging that some black men ought to be executed.

To even acknowledge this line of debate is to start a larger argument about the worth, the very personhood, of a black man in America. It’s to engage in a cost-benefit analysis, weigh probabilities, and gauge the precise odds that Brown’s life was worth nothing against the threat he posed to the life of the man who killed him. It’s to deny that there are structural reasons why Brown was shot dead while James Eagan Holmes—who on July 20, 2012, walked into a movie theater and fired rounds into an audience, killing 12 and wounding 70 more—was taken alive.

To ascribe this entirely to contempt for black men is to miss an essential variable, though—a very real, American fear of them. They—we—are inexplicably seen as a millions-strong army of potential killers, capable and cold enough that any single one could be a threat to a trained police officer in a bulletproof vest. There are reasons why white gun’s rights activists can walk into a Chipotle restaurant with assault rifles and be seen as gauche nuisances while unarmed black men are killed for reaching for their wallets or cell phones, or carrying children’s toys. Guns aren’t for black people, either.”

Lean Out: The Dangers for Women Who Negotiate

http://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/lean-out-the-dangers-for-women-who-negotiate

“This spring, an aspiring professor—W, as she’s chosen to call herself in a blog postabout the experience—attempted to negotiate her tenure-track job offer with the Nazareth College philosophy department. She wanted a slightly higher salary than the starting offer, paid maternity leave for one semester, a pre-tenure sabbatical, a cap on the number of new classes that she would teach each semester, and a deferred starting date. “I know that some of these might be easier to grant than others,” she acknowledged in her e-mail. “Let me know what you think.”

Nazareth didn’t hesitate to do just that: W wrote that the college promptly let her know that she was no longer welcome. ‘The institution has decided to withdraw its offer of employment to you,” the terse reply concluded. “We wish you the best in finding a suitable position.'”