Senegal’s Feminist Hip-Hop Star
January 13, 2012 by Christie Thompson · Leave a Comment
Sarabah, the stirring documentary directed by Maria Luisa Gambale and Gloria Bremer, will premier this Sunday, Jan. 15, on Link TV. Click here for showtimes and channel information. Sarabah is available for purchase at Women Make Movies. Senegalese rapper Fatou Mandiang Diatta defied her country’s traditional expectations for women in order to succeed in Senegal’s male-dominated hip-hop scene. Now, using her music as a medium, [...]
Alice Walker: Beauty In Truth
October 25, 2011 by Aishah Shahidah Simmons · 1 Comment
I am the woman: Dark, repaired, healed Listening to you. … —Alice Walker, from her poem “Remember?” For more than four decades, Alice Walker has used the written word to make visible that which has been made invisible as a result of exploitation and marginalization. Equally as important, she is a humanitarian and social-change agent [...]
A Celebrity Making Change in Africa–And Not the One You Think
August 2, 2011 by Emily Musil Church · 1 Comment
This time, we’re not talking about an Irish guy in aviator glasses. Or anyone who has ever headlined a Hollywood movie. Or a billionaire media empress. We’re talking about fearless West African singer and rapper Sister Fa. Not yet 30 years old, Fatou Mandiang Diatta, aka “Sister Fa,” has become a global phenomenon. Her music [...]
7 Billion Reasons
July 27, 2011 by Suzanne Petroni · 5 Comments
By Suzanne Petroni Chances are, you’ll hear or read soon that the world’s population is about to hit 7 billion. Get ready for cool graphics demonstrating its remarkable escalation over the past century, as modern medicine and agricultural advances helped people live longer and societies flourish, while fertility rates remained higher than “replacement level” in much [...]
On 9/11, Listening to Muslim Women’s Voices
September 11, 2010 by Rafia Zakaria · 6 Comments
Much has been said about Imam Abdul Rauf, the Imam behind the proposed Park 51 Islamic Cultural Center in New York City, which would stand a few blocks from the site of the 9/11 attacks nine years ago today. In the intense controversy surrounding the construction of the community center, he has been called a [...]
Guerilla Vulvas Take on Vaginal Rejuvenators
August 26, 2010 by Meika Loe · 11 Comments
Vulva-activism is alive and well–and on its way to Las Vegas. The latest protests stem from concern about the growing number of practitioners performing female genital cosmetic surgery. The surgeries take many forms. A labiaplasty reduces the size of the labia (while often performed to correct damage to the labia during childbirth or to alleviate [...]
Blog Roundup: Editors’ Picks, June 14-18
June 19, 2010 by Annie Shields · 1 Comment
Ms. brings you our faves from the blogosphere during June 14-18: from mail-order wombs to American Apparel’s employee manual to Margaret Cho! From Jezebel: Master sleazeball and American Apparel CEO Dov Charney offers a flimsy rejoinder following the recent s**t-storm over his company’s elaborate and creepy photo-vetting hiring process, chronically grotesque ad campaigns and bizarrely [...]
Newsflash: Pediatricians Rescind Female Genital “Nicking” Policy
May 27, 2010 by Alexandra Tweten · 6 Comments
After suggesting that American doctors should be allowed to “nick” girls’ genitals if it would save them from being sent overseas to have a full female genital cutting procedure done, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has reversed its decision. Human rights group Equality Now decried the original announcement. Citing that even the nicking procedure [...]




