Wednesday 31 March 2010

A sad story

Tonight I went to see Scream Club. After listening to a few too many Robots songs this afternoon I realised that they were actually quite annoying and I was possibly not in the right place to see them, and so Scream Club became all the more the focus of my evening.

I arrived at the O2 Academy and everyone there was a twatty fifteen-year-old girl bleating incessantly and taking MySpace pictures of herself and her friends. Throughout the evening I saw one woman I thought might be gay, barring Scream Club. This isn’t anything to hold against anyone, but it did make me feel a bit more alienated than I was expecting to be; I later found out from Corin that Scream Club had only sent an email saying they were going to be performing in Britain a few days ago, so I guess those who might have been interested probably weren’t aware.

The first band on were fucking dire. They were called 123 something (123 on? 123 go? Something shit like that) and were comprised of lazy fucking ‘pretty’ boys who seemed to believe that being male and wielding a guitar meant that they were worth something. They sounded like an awful mixture of Low Shoulder, Euphoria Audio and Fall Out Boy – they sang in American accents despite being British. The lead singer was only a performer in that he performed privileged male heteronormativity – he was constantly flirting with the audience in a really sickening, authoritative way, and most of the teenage girls were fucking loving it. I felt grossed out and left to rant at Corin for a bit down the phone.

Upon returning to the room I bought some Scream Club merch, feeling more than ever that they were to be my salvation from marginalisation and general extended fury. I spent £22 at their table on a DIY purse and a t-shirt. The t-shirt was an XL women’s size; I did not get it because it was the last size they had; I got it because it was the size that fitted me. I usually wear a size 14, although I can sometimes fit into a 12 depending on the generosity of the sizing. Size 14 is not fucking extra fucking large. I felt a bit grumpy about this but didn’t pursue it, still mostly excited for Scream Club to come on. It was at this point that a girl a couple of people along from me started repeatedly impersonating a rape alarm. I wanted to tell her to stop because it was triggering and trivialising an important issue but I felt like I'd just come across as lecturing and mental. I also hoped she'd just stop. She didn't.

And then Scream Club came to my rescue. They were wearing awesome stripy DIY suit-y things and looked superb. Cindy Wonderful said that Party Time, their opening track, was about everyone, ‘boys, girls, in-betweens’ getting together and having a good time. There was audience participation (SC: What time is it? Everyone: PARTY TIME!). Things were looking promising. But that was literally the queerest moment of the entire gig.

While they didn’t go so far as to remove all references to homosexual feeling from their lyrics, they cut out swear words and more explicit sexual references. This fucked me off because I thought Scream Club were all about sexual liberation, about being able to be explicit without being told you were being inappropriate or wrong. Turns out I was wrong. They still played And You Belong and Girl, You Look Expensive, but the queerness was only visible if you already knew they were queer; the vocals were not particularly clear and their between-song banter indicated nothing.

The worst twist of the knife came when they closed with Revolution. Cindy, who clearly thought she was being inspirational, was talking about how the song was about the importance of challenging injustice. The examples she used were sexism, racism and ablism. Of course I think these are laudable – but they missed out homophobic?! They didn’t even mention the elephant in the fucking room?! I mean, Jesus fucking God, the three –isms mentioned, whilst barely always fully acknowledged, are the most fucking famous ones, and also the ones which many an ignorant person can (to their minds) unproblematically tell themselves they are tastefully avoiding. They did not acknowledge the insidiousness of prejudice; all they did was tell a roomful of twats that ‘revolution’ was flapping around with fake guns and feeling self-satisfied. Of course you can’t hope to convey every complexity of discrimination in one set, but you could try a lot fucking harder, especially if you’re a band whose core fanbase is comprised of queers who felt they had a home in you. That’s what I felt – I thought they were going to relieve me from feeling misplaced, and represent, or even just acknowledge, my values and identity politics. But nothing of the sort happened – they seemed to be far more concerned with appealing to as wide a demographic as possible rather than staying true to the very principles that they purported to support. I was left feeling disenfranchised and really, really let down – particularly when these people eschew playing Sapphic Traffic, a genuinely positive queer night where the audience would really get something out of seeing them and where they could be fucking real and inspirational, in favour of playing with a bunch of penises with guitars and a band whose every output sounds pretty much the same as all the others. Or the fact that they wouldn’t play ST at all if Staffy didn’t pay far more than she was willing, or even able, to do.

Cindy said they were going to be at the merch table after their set to meet people. At first I left the room, feeling like there was nothing I wanted less than to meet those sell-outs, but then I thought that perhaps I could turn the situation into something positive and just try to encourage them to be a bit queerer, maybe. I imagined telling them about how I’d found out about them, that my girlfriend had told me on the first night we met about the bands she was into, about how they were one of the bands she said were her favourites, along with Team Dresch, and that I’d had no idea who these people were and it was really awesome to discover all this queer music I’d never known before, and how she’d put Internationale on the first mix CD she made for me and how we used to listen to Big Deal at her house all the time. I imagined saying this to them and then casually mentioning that I was surprised that their set wasn’t queerer; not berating them, but just sayin’. But after twenty minutes they hadn’t shown up and Robots were going to start their set in ten and there was no way I could even hope to express this to them once they’d started, and I also realised that I was probably far better at expressive myself in writing, so would be better placed to try to email them or something. I left and called Corin and ranted to her all the bus-ride home.

Now I’m in my house with my mother and dog and some wine. I feel a bit less upset, but still rankling. I have £22 worth of merchandise that I am going to have to seriously work to reclaim. I understand that being out is difficult, I do. But when you are, you make a promise, however tacitly, that you will defend your right to be. When you are an out queer artist, you lead your fans to believe that you will represent them, because you are in a far better position than they to do it. I am not naïve; I don’t think that being an out queer artist is going to give you financial security, or that financial gain doesn’t matter to the artist. But there is a fucking line between compromising and selling out, and tonight Scream Club crossed it. 

Tuesday 30 March 2010

Tomorrow I am seeing Scream Club!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Tomorrow I am seeing Scream Club!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

That's it; I'm just excited.

I am also seeing Robots in Disguise - less exciting, but still exciting. <3

I always vaguely hope I'll meet the most interesting person of my life when I go to gigs by myself but it never happens because I just stand there drinking vodka and looking surly (when the bands aren't on) or crazy (when they are). Also, everyone around me in these situations has never as awesome as I imagine they might be before I get there. In fact, I often just silently judge people to within an inch of their lives.

But, on the plus side and a far more happy/relevant note, I AM SEEING SCREAM CLUB TOMORROW.

Saturday 27 March 2010

EEEEEEEE

This must be short because I woke up 2390487235 hours ago and spent basically all day in a car with a dog wriggling all over me BUT: I listened to Evelyn Evelyn (by Evelyn Evelyn) for the first time and since then I have been unable to listen to anything else because it is SO GOOD. I. Love. Amanda. Palmer. And Jason Webley is probably excellent, since he's involved in this, which is fucking RAD. I'm in no fit state to be eloquent but for now I'll just say that it is theatrical to the max and fucking beautiful. So tragic! So haunting! Awesome! Current favourites include Evelyn Evelyn, You Only Want Me 'Cause You Want My Sister (my FAVE), My Space, and the Love Will Tear Us Apart cover which, in my extremely overexcited opinion, is the best rendition of the song that I have ever heard. (I am not really a Joy Division fan. I heard the song too many times in dingy indie clubs in Bristol full of gropey misogynists pretending their pretensions to meaning meant their actions were fine. Well, that and their penises. ANYWAY.) I am extremely pleased. I AM ALSO SEEING THEM NEXT MONTH. Wowzers in my trow-zers. I can't *wait* until I'm back in Leeds to enjoy the (hopefully delivered) presale package that entitled me to these mp3s a week early.

eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

Thursday 18 March 2010

Some alarming facts about Ann Widdecombe

I am watching 'The People's Politician' on BBC2 at the moment, which heavily features Ann Widdecombe. Tom asked me what I thought of her and I said I had a soft spot for her but had no idea why, so I decided to learn some more about her (on the Be All And End All Of Truth, ie Wikipedia). Here are the things I found most troublesome:
- she converted from CofE to Roman Catholic following the Church of England's decision that women could become priests
- she opposed the repeal of Section 28 (and opposed fifteen out of seventeen motions for equal rights for homosexuals - the two she did not vote against were the two she did not turn up to vote about)
- in 2009, she said, 'there is no climate change. Hasn't anybody looked out of the window recently?' (She has apparently expressed a variety of views on this issue. However, I think saying things like this when your opinions can affect not only what parliament decides to do but also potentially others' views, regardless of what else you've said, is dangerous and irresponsible. Has she *read* anything on the subject?)
- in 1996 she defended the government's policy to shackle pregnant women prisoners with handcuffs and chains when giving birth in hospital (THIS IS THE ONE I FIND THE MOST DISTURBING)

So I don't really have much of a soft spot for her any more. I kind of think she's a bit monstrous.

All information in this post is pretty much copied verbatim from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Widdecombe

The Vajayjay Monologues

Last week, the School of Culture and Performance (or whatever) put on The Vagina Monologues. Ryder noticed that it wasn't either week surrounding Valentine's Day, which isn't in keeping with Eve Ensler's seemingly excessive performance rules (apparently she dictates costumes and set and everything? I mean, not that I don't have any understanding of artistic ownership, but let yr frickin' baby grow up, Ensler). Anyway, that's a sidenote. The important thing is what I thought of it. Which was considerably less than I was expecting to.

TVM was quite a formative part of my formative years - I bought a copy of the book from Fopp for about £3 when I was thirteen or so and, for some reason, was pretty interested in it. I especially liked My Short Skirt, and the monologue about all the different types of moans. When I was nineteen and in my gap year some local feminists were putting on a showing, which I auditioned for and got a role in - due to some fuckery, which I won't go into because it's tedious and beaurocratic and long ago and also I'm still a bit cross about it, I didn't end up being in it after all (N.B. this experience is not accountable for any ill-feeling I have towards the play, just FYI).

Then comes Friday night. Corin and I went alongside (not really with - we missed the preceding Old Bar gathering) the feminist society. I was quite looking forward to it, since it'd been present in my consciousness for some time but I'd not seen it before. Then it started and I felt immediately out of place, like I should have been catapulted into the past but actually it was the present and it was actually a bit embarrassing. I mean, some bits were good - the woman who performed the moaning monologue was especially good - but overall it was quite shambolic, which I think was more to do with the script than the actors. It seems to aim to represent women of several different backgrounds, but in this attempt it only really succeeds in othering those who are not straight, white, and middle-class. The attempts to represent queerness where patchy - as before, the moaning monologue was done well, but the woman talking about her seduction by an older woman as a teenager just wasn't convincing, and I don't think that's just because of the performance. (Also, PROBLEMATIC - if that monologue were about a teenage girl's experiences with an older man it wouldn't have been 'acceptable', so I suppose women just can't be sexually predatory or abusive in the same way.) Furthermore, the intermissions of images of acid burn victims in Asia was not made congruent with the rest of the pieces - which mainly amounted to middle-class women voicing concerns - which completely othered them. The assumption seemed to be that these women *should* be in a society like ours, that they would want that. I'm not saying that many people would *want* to be in societies in which 'honour' killings etc are accepted, but our presumed superiority was all over the whole thing.

Also, and I think most importantly, I think something like TVM just doesn't do now what it may have done (or sought to do) when it first came about. Most women in the room were feminists, most women I know know where their clitoris is, and probably more know that they are worthy of liberation. I think we're living in a post-Vagina Monologues state of consciousness, and I don't think it has much political weight, particularly since it is only accessible to people of a very specific group, and fails to offer that group much in the way of feminist realisation that is inaccessible anywhere else.

Tuesday 9 March 2010

I KNOW this is my third post today but

Tom found a sticker in some toilets today on campus emblazoned with 'Speak out against feminism and the demonisation and scapegoating of men'. Nobody in the Peanut Gallery (which has been recently saved, hooray!) could figure out who or what produced it. We are all very interested. I personally would like to have a debate with them. And by 'debate' I mean 'let them know that feminism is actually about gender equality and they even have a feminist society whose Facebook group page encourages men to join and challenge outmoded perceptions of genders'. Ryder says we should make some stickers with 'Speak out against sexism and the demonisation and scapegoating of feminists' and put them where the previous ones were.

Today

Something really annoying just happened.

Picture the scene: I am settling into a seat in Conference Auditorium 2 for a lecture on eighteenth-century literature. I am alone; there is nobody around me to whom I can quietly rant/at least gesticulate. Behind me are two students, a man and a woman, bitching about all the reading they have to do. Then THIS happens:

She: God, and we have to read Mansfield Park this week.
He: Ugh, that's just a load of feminist crap.
She: Mansfield Park is not feminist!
He: It's written by a woman, and it's shit. [she giggles] That's feminist.
[LIZ DIES]

Obviously I was in no position to question this self-assured DICK CHEESE because the lecture started (it turned out to be on landscape and nature again - why is it that whenever I actually turn up it's to the boring ones?). Anyway, I was totally disinterested, and there was no way for me to conveniently leave since I was in the middle of the row, so I started Mansfield Park. Which so far has yet to be feminist or "feminist."

The hour before this lecture was my eighteenth-century lit seminar, in which I had to give a presentation on James Thomson, Anne Finch and Mary Leapor's nature poetry. I spent most of it talking about the gender personifications in Thomson's 'Spring' - how the masculinised aspects of nature are imperial, powerful and, at one point, literally penetrative, and how the feminised aspects of nature are smiling and willing, how gales only 'sigh', and how feminised Nature's assets are separated into desirable and not desirable (there's a line referring to the 'moist Meadow' and the 'wither'd Hill'). After I'd spoken my tutor said something along the lines of 'that's a really interesting point; I've read this poem hundreds of times and I'd never realised that. I'll never be able to read that moist line again!' I mean, I recognise that of course not everyone has the same research interests as me in this field, but I'd always assumed gender was pretty rudimentary; my tutors in the past have never flinched to bring it up, and I've certainly never been in a situation before where my observations about what a text says about gender (or that a text says something about gender) have been met with such surprise.  Then I was thinking about my previous tutors and I realised that the majority of them have been feminists, so maybe I've just been super-privileged until this point. But still. Weird. She's working in an institution whose English exam papers and essay questions always, always include a gender question.

Finally, and less angrily (although I will likely get angry about this when the time comes) I discovered this morning that Germaine Greer is giving a public lecture in a fortnight at Leeds Met. I'm pretty excited; I hate her so much. I mean, I've not studied her works or the period so I have only a dim idea of what she did for second wave in the seventies; all I know about her really is what she's said when wheeled out onto Newsnight Review and what other feminists have said about her attitudes towards more contemporary feminist concerns. From this I have deduced that she is a belligerent, sanctimonious, self-serving twit of a transphobe. Corin feels very similarly, although I haven't asked her what she knows of Greer so please don't anyone assume she's as ignorant as me. We're both really looking forward to it. It'll be good to actually experience some of her ideas first-hand - either I'll end up with fewer things to be angry about or my anger with her will gain something resembling authenticity. Woo!
Sof wants me to write a blog (how many blogs I follow by people I know have started with some permutation of this sentence recently). I was thinking about what to write about, and it struck me that I pretty much literally just talk about work, which is LUDE. The problem is, I now don't know what to talk about.

............................

Oh, I saw Alice in Wonderland the other day. It was (overall) awesome! I mean, I didn't really like the ending (Alice's 'freedom' means she becomes a capitalist, great) and the DANCING was problematic; I think I was also expecting more of a Tim-Burton-amazing-wow feeling, which I didn't really get. However, Helena was amazing - very who's Queen? - and Anne was superb. I think I laughed every time she came on screen. She was great. Also, it was my first 3D experience, and it was so amazing? It was nice feeling how I imagine it must have felt when colour film first came out. Wowee.

Also, on Saturday we went as a house to see Bjorn Again and it was a literal spectacle. We were at the front dancing VERY enthusiastically, and Agnetha kept singing at Ryan! Their performance was so fun - I was especially impressed with the women, because we were tired enough belting out the songs, and they had dance routines and everything on top of that. Afterwards we hung out outside with some other 'die-hard fans' (they were a lot older than us and we were somewhat hypocritically bothered by them) and then we met Agnetha (! ! !) who was very nice and said that our enthusiasm had given their performance more energy. WOW. Also, it was very apparent that she wasn't in fact Swedish and Ryan said a little plaintively, 'so you aren't from Sweden?' and she replied, 'no, I'm from Chesterfield!', and we all lolled, and she signed our tickets/ABBA money. Then we went to the Old Bar and discussed our glorious experience. It was really nice to spend time with everyone :o)

Monday 8 March 2010

Friday 5 March 2010

Doo-doo-doo, we're onto you

I've just realised that part of the reason that my current mice, Annie and Egg, are much nicer and/or less mental than my previous mice, Hamlet and Fran, is possibly because I used to smoke weed all the time and now I don't. It definitely affected Hamlet and Fran when I had it - they'd hurl themselves on their food and run around like lunatics - and so I think it's likely that it had longer-term effects on them as well, not least because I used to smoke quite a lot, and would usually do so in my room. I've not done this since I got the new mice - in fact, I've not smoked in my room at all - and they're so much calmer and more pliable. Neither of them have bitten me yet, or anything. I mean, I'm aware that female mice are less likely to be aggressive because they're generally less testosteroney, but I don't think that's the sum of the reason for the massive difference between their behaviours. I feel sad about this, like a bad mother, except there is literally nothing I can do to try to change this because Hamlet and Fran are dead now. Fran was so violent that he once tried to bite Hamlet's balls off - we don't know whether he was successful because Ry and I know nothing about mouse anatomy, or really about bollocks in general, but Hamlet definitely bled a lot and if they were still there they must have receded or something. Note to self: do not attempt to support life when you're too self-indulgent to even support your own.

Naturally, I am avoiding working on my Frankenstein essay, which I know is silly because I love the book and I got two seemingly exciting books out of the library about it. Ugh. Maybe I'll tidy my room. It is, of course, a pit of despair. And I need to install my new bookcase and get rid of the old one which has been broken and ugly since I brought it in from the road outside my house.