Ms. Blogger
Anna Kelner
Anna is a writer studying at Columbia College, Columbia University in New York City.
Website: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/anna-kelner
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Anna Kelner's Posts
The Makings of the Modern Heroine: Truong’s Bitter in the Mouth
August 17, 2010 by Anna Kelner · Leave a Comment
Like so many outsiders, Linda(mint) Hammerick is a synesthete. Unlike Vladimir Nabokov, who, as Linda discovers, saw color in letters and sounds, or Wassily Kadinsky, whose paintings evoke the colors he heard in music, Linda tastes words as she hears and speaks. Linda is the heroine of Bitter in the Mouth, the new novel by [...]
Filed under Arts, Books · Tagged with Anne Finch, Bitter in the Mouth, Books, Charlotte Anna Perkins, Literature, Monique Truong, Synesthete, The Book of Salt, Virginia Woolf, Vladimir Nabokov, Wassily Kadinsky
Global News Roundup: Iran, Afghanistan, Jamaica, Pakistan
August 13, 2010 by Anna Kelner · 1 Comment
This week, the Iranian woman facing stoning allegedly “confesses” on state-run TV; the Taliban executes a pregnant Afghan widow; a gay Jamaican man is granted asylum in Canada; and a maternal health hotline in Pakistan offers some questionable recommendations. IRAN: Amidst international media coverage condemning the stoning sentence of Iranian woman Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, Iran [...]
Filed under Global, Ms.cellany · Tagged with Abortion, Gay Rights, Pregnancy, Violence Against Women
Global News Roundup: Kenya, Iran, Malaysia, Sudan, Zambia
August 6, 2010 by Anna Kelner · Leave a Comment
In this week’s global round-up, Kenya gets a new, woman-friendly constitution; Iran’s Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani death sentence saga continues; Sudan punishes its gender-bending pioneers; and more! KENYA: A new era begins for Kenya as the country inaugurates its new constitution, passed more than two decades after reform was first proposed. The constitution includes some exciting [...]
Filed under Ms.cellany, Newsflash · Tagged with Iran, Kenya, Malaysia, Newsflash, Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, Sudan, Zambia
Global News Roundup: Bangladesh, Israel, Malaysia, Rwanda, the UN, Zimbabwe
July 29, 2010 by Anna Kelner · Leave a Comment
This week, the world’s lowest-paid garment workers get a raise; Israel convicts for rape by deception; women remake Rwanda; the UN finally goes gay; and more. BANGLADESH: Globalization grows more equitable–slightly–as Bangladeshi garment workers, the lowest-paid garment workers in the world, receive an 80 percent wage increase, from about $25 to about $45 a month. 4,000 [...]
Filed under Ms.cellany, No Comment · Tagged with Bangladesh, Gay Rights, Israel, Malaysia, Maternal Mortality, Rape, United Nations, Work, Zimbabwe
A Feminist Focus at the International AIDS Conference
July 23, 2010 by Anna Kelner · 2 Comments
The six-day International AIDS Conference, ended today. At the annual conference, people working to stop the pandemic as well as persons living with HIV gather to assess progress, evaluate scientific discoveries and plan more efforts. Coverage has ranged from condemnation of the U.S. War on Drugs to researchers’ efforts to develop a safe, effective vaccine [...]
Filed under Africa, Global, Health · Tagged with Africa, HIV/AIDS, Prostitution, Sex Work, Women's Health, World Health Organization
We Spleen: Hugh Hefner, Civil Rights Hero?
July 23, 2010 by Anna Kelner · 10 Comments
Last night on Larry King Live, King interviewed the original Playboy on his pioneering civil rights activism. But there was barely a mention of Playboy’s “pioneering” work in making sexist soft porn mainstream. Hefner reminisced on his collegiate activism, his progressive upbringing and his racially integrated TV show and clubs. He attributed racial discrimination to “fear of [...]
Filed under Ms.cellany, We Heart + We Spleen · Tagged with Media, No Comment, Playboy
Global News Roundup: Africa, England, France and the World Wide Web
July 23, 2010 by Anna Kelner · 1 Comment
AFRICA: As Drew Hinshaw reports in “No Turning Back,” his piece in the summer Ms. issue, the adoption of parliamentary gender quotas in transitioning African governments has “changed southern and eastern Africa into regions unparalleled for women politicos.” In Zambia, though, electoral processes still limit the election of women. The Zambia National Women’s Lobby Group (ZNWL) is [...]
Filed under Ms.cellany · Tagged with Africa, Gender Representation, HIV/AIDS, Media, Newsflash, Transgender, TV
The “Mad Men” Effect: Bringing Back Sexism with Style
July 22, 2010 by Anna Kelner · 19 Comments
Simple, provocative, to the point: the ad to the left is one Don Draper of Mad Men would’ve adored. This signature ad in American Apparel’s summer campaign could just as easily be from 1962 as 2010. As Aviva Dove-Viebahn explains in “Feminism in a Mad World” in the latest issue of Ms. magazine, the show [...]
Filed under Media, Print, TV · Tagged with Advertising, American Apparel, Clothing, Sexualization
No Comment: Goodbye ‘Got Milk,’ Hello Gendered ‘Mootopia’?
July 16, 2010 by Anna Kelner · 6 Comments
Eager to outdo itself–or finally bored with milk mustaches–the California Milk Processor Board has devised a new ad campaign centered around Mootopia, “a perfect land of beautiful hair, healthy nails and strong muscles.” These milk-marketing masterminds have decided milk = breasts = beautiful women. The TV ads and online fairy tale depict a fertile paradise where [...]
Filed under Ms.cellany, No Comment · Tagged with Advertising, Media Sexism, No Comment
Global Roundup: Vatican, Argentina, Guatemala, Scotland
July 15, 2010 by Anna Kelner · 2 Comments
VATICAN CITY: The Vatican has deemed the ordination of women priests a crime comparable to heresy and even sex abuse by priests. The Church still isn’t doing too well on the latter front, as the head of a U.N. panel has said that the Vatican’s report on child rights is nearly 13 years overdue. Attempting to [...]
Filed under Ms.cellany · Tagged with




