All posts by In The Fray Contributor

 

Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

Every time a woman makes herself laugh at her husband’s often-told jokes she betrays him. The man who looks at his woman and says “What would I do without you?” is already destroyed. —Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

Every time a woman makes herself laugh at her husband’s often-told jokes she betrays him. The man who looks at his woman and says “What would I do without you?” is already destroyed. —Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

 

Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

Freedom is fragile and must be protected. To sacrifice it, even as a temporary measure, is to betray it. —Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

Freedom is fragile and must be protected. To sacrifice it, even as a temporary measure, is to betray it. —Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

 

Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

I didn’t fight to get women out from behind vacuum cleaners to get them onto the board of Hoover. —Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

I didn’t fight to get women out from behind vacuum cleaners to get them onto the board of Hoover. —Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

 

Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

The tragedy of machismo is that a man is never quite man enough. —Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

The tragedy of machismo is that a man is never quite man enough. —Germaine Greer, writer, broadcaster, academic, and feminist

 

Barbara Bush, former First Lady

And who knows? Somewhere out there in this audience may even be someone who will one day follow my footsteps, and preside over the White House as the president’s spouse. I wish him well! —Barbara Bush, former First Lady

And who knows? Somewhere out there in this audience may even be someone who will one day follow my footsteps, and preside over the White House as the president’s spouse. I wish him well! —Barbara Bush, former First Lady

 

Barbara Bush, former First Lady

Bias has to be taught. If you hear your parents downgrading women or people of different backgrounds, why, you are going to do that. —Barbara Bush, former First Lady

Bias has to be taught. If you hear your parents downgrading women or people of different backgrounds, why, you are going to do that. —Barbara Bush, former First Lady

 

Abigail Adams, former First Lady

We have too many high-sounding words, and too few actions that correspond with them. —Abigail Adams, former First Lady

We have too many high-sounding words, and too few actions that correspond with them. —Abigail Adams, former First Lady

 

Betty Ford, former First Lady

The search for human freedom can never be complete without freedom for women. —Betty Ford, former First Lady

The search for human freedom can never be complete without freedom for women. —Betty Ford, former First Lady

 

Lady Bird Johnson, former First Lady

It’s odd that you can get so anesthetized by your own pain or your own problem that you don’t quite fully share the hell of someone close to you. —Lady Bird Johnson, former First Lady

It’s odd that you can get so anesthetized by your own pain or your own problem that you don’t quite fully share the hell of someone close to you. —Lady Bird Johnson, former First Lady

 

Lady Bird Johnson, former First Lady

The clash of ideas is the sound of freedom. —Lady Bird Johnson, former First Lady

The clash of ideas is the sound of freedom. —Lady Bird Johnson, former First Lady

 

In the shadows

A glimpse into the downtown alleys one young woman calls home.

Behind the popular coffee shops, crowded sidewalks, and entertainment of bustling 9th Street in Columbia, Missouri, lives a family stuck in the shadows of society.

Over the past three years, Sheena Marie Andrews has overcome drug addictions and struggled with emotional depression while living on the streets. She was kicked out of her father’s house at 17 for her drug use and turned to her street family, which offered money, alcohol, tobacco, and companionship for the high school dropout.

At 20, Sheena is one of the youngest women sleeping in the alleys of downtown Columbia. She has quickly grown tired of the city, but not the lifestyle, and is looking for a way to escape before her next court date. Sheena struggles to come to grips with reality, but confusion over love, family, and identity has clouded her future.

Click here to enter the photo essay.

 

The crucifix of the matter

Why Madonna's latest religious performance means nothing.

When it comes to raising religious ire, the Pope has nothing on Madonna. Madonna has made a career out of mussing the collars of the clergy and horrifying the holy. Given her long career, seeing Madonna on a cross might seem almost hackneyed at this point. Her use of a Christian symbol is like George Foreman naming one of his children George – it comes with the hubris. However, her latest stunt consists of donning a crown of thorns, lowering herself onto a sparkly cross, and singing “Live to Tell” as pictures of impoverished children appear on a screen behind her. The performance has prompted Christians to denounce her as a “blasphemer.” Madonna claims the imagery is intended to encourage concertgoers to donate to AIDS charities.

NBC has decided to air the concert on November 22, 2006 — without the crucifixion scene.

As humans, we are driven to find meaning and significance; literary critic Roland Barthes deems us Homo significans, or meaning-makers. In the death of Steve Irwin, the famed “Crocodile Hunter,” we see the revenge of the animal kingdom. In Madonna’s performance on a cross of Swarovski crystals, we see a sinner or a saint. In truth, she is neither. By putting herself on a cross (a move that has been so overdone that future generations are in danger of thinking that Jesus is Kanye West), Madonna is no more impious than she is a benefactor of the needy.

To be a blasphemer one must, through word or actions, deny the divinity of God or exhibit gross irreverence toward an object worthy of esteem. Madonna’s antics, though they may seem to invoke the holy, are anything but blasphemous. Her use of the cross is not intended to replace God or to deny his divinity, but rather to express unjust pain and suffering through a universal symbol. This interpretation is reinforced by the synchronous use of footage showing unjust suffering in developing nations. Instead of being flattered by the use of such imagery, which acknowledges the importance and predominance of Christian symbols in our culture, the Christian community responds with anger, under the reasoning that the use of a Christian symbol by someone who does not profess to be a Christian is an insult. But, if that logic holds, Confucianism could have a great case against Winnie the Pooh (that unrepentant blasphemer) for his work, The Tao of Pooh. The use of a common symbol comes nowhere close to blasphemy, even in the loosest sense of the word.

Madonna’s excuse for the symbolism is weak at best. While the song is reportedly about abuse, the song’s meaning is lost in the shadow of the Madonna media machine. At the end of the day, it’s not about the children on the cross. The show is Madonna herself, in a mixed message of self-promotion. The media spin is further reinforced by Madonna coming down with a wicked case of the Angelinas in adopting a child from an impoverished nation.

In Sartor Resartus, Scottish essayist Thomas Carlyle tells us that symbols are evocative of the infinite, and that “by symbols, accordingly, is man guided and commanded, made happy, made wretched.” While Madonna’s crucifixion certainly makes Christians wretched and Madonna happily rich, it does not guide, command, or even evoke the infinite. It is simply another tale told by a marketing machine, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.