Gender Violence & Self-Mutilation

Disfigurment; real & self-imposed  by Gwynne Hunt

Who would have ever thought that cheap sulfuric acid would increase gender violence towards women?  It is estimated that over 200 acid mutilations occur in Bangladesh every year.  Our western publications cover cases of gender violence on a regular basis.  Shocking but not overwhelming until you really think about how many women are burned and mutilated for dowry disputes and domestic fights.

I read a report last year about a woman inBangalore,India who is blind and disfigured because her boss who was in love with her threw acid on her when she refused to return to work and his advances.  Hassena is not alone as it is estimated that thousands of young women in India have been burned when they have spurned lovers or have tarnished the family honour.

A report from Cambodia claims that not only men use acid to disfigure women but other women prefer this method of revenge.  It is reported that two thirds of acid attacks are perpetrated by women.  An angry wife of a government official threw acid on her husband’s 17-year-old mistress.  In a poor country like Cambodia where girls don’t have equal access to education, beauty can be the only way to a comfortable life.  The aim of disfigurement is not to kill but to strip a woman of her beauty.

In western culture we find other means of attacking women’s self-esteem so they literally disfigure themselves with anorexia and bulimia.  During the selfish generation of the 80s it was popular to believe that you cant be too rich or too thin.  Fat people have always been seen as not as bright, not as desirable, not as acceptable.  Ugly women aren’t very popular.

A healthy body image is the most important tool a woman can have today to succeed.  We are held back by our fear of being unacceptable and most of our vulnerability comes from the way we look.  The average woman sees 400-500 advertisements a day and by the time she is 17 she has seen 250.000 commercials.

Advertisers often put huge emphasis on sexuality and the importance of physical attractiveness.  Being thin and beautiful is the ideal standard  for women.  The diet industry generates billions of dollars in revenue each year.  Marketing tactics tend to stress the health benefits of being thin but it is really about looking good.

Women compare themselves to other women.  If you watch commercials with nothing but thin women you begin to feel bad about your tummy and your flab.  Look at all the shows on television where the wives are beautiful thin model types and the husbands are fat, overgrown boys.  Yeah, isn’t that every boys dream?  Men don’t feel the pressures to be beautiful and thin as much as women.

Certainly there is a trend for men to wax, pluck and exfoliate these days.  More men exercise and take care of themselves and many bow to the same societal pressures as women.  But no man feels the pressure to be beautiful as much as a woman does.  Men can be slightly homely and still pass for attractive if they clean up nice.  A homely woman is a homely woman and women are still judged by their looks more then men.  You rarely hear of a man being disfigured by a jealous girlfriend.

How we define what is beautiful depends on society.  Regardless of era  there has always been an expectation for women to be beautiful and destroying her beauty the greatest insult.

In the early 1900s women attempted to contort their bodies for that thin corseted hourglass look. Flappers in the 1920s were supposed to be free of those Victorian traditions with their flat-chested skinny little bodies.  They were still slaves to being desirable and beautiful.  We went from full-body curves in the 1950s to the skinny Twiggy look of the 60s and evolved into the 80s feeling smug because now we were just being healthy and fit.  Healthy and fit with lovely faces.

Only about 4% of women in the 90s obtained that frail waif-like look naturally.  Now most women don’t have the large breasts and narrow hips that the models do.  Skinny gaunt women with that ‘junkie’ look tend to be junkies.  The average woman is 5 foot 4 inches tall and weighs at least 140 pounds.  Most of those average women spend enormous amounts of time trying to look like 4% of the population.  So the norm is not set by our peers but by the media, advertising and marketing.

How many older women do we have to see on television that have had face lifts before we feel sensitive about our own waddles?   So more women are heading to the plastic surgeons to look good and mutilate their own bodies to look like what they perceive the rest of the world does.  Supporters of do what every makes you feel good don’t take into consideration that is societal pressures that makes us feel bad.   In the 50s, 50-year-old women looked like 50-year-old women.  Now 60-year-old women look 40 and that leaves the majority of women feeling fat, stupid and ugly.

If make-up makes you feel good about the way you look, ask yourself this simple question, if nobody wore make-up would you?  Not likely, because we would all look like we just got out of bed and have uneven complexion and blah eyes.  We base our appearance on what everyone else looks like.  When it was a fad in the early 1900s to have a straight nose women wore a horrible contraption called a nose shaper that was metal and adjusted by screws.  Today, they just get nose jobs.

Young girls use make-up to look attractive and older, older women use make-up to look attractive and younger.  Women don’t wear make-up to look attractive to men . . . we wear it to look attractive to each other and to fit in to what society says we should look like.  We strive every day to fit the description.

There is such a huge emphasis placed on flaw-concealment.  Beauty icons worked hard for a natural look in the 60s.  Then towards the end of the 80s we had the Madonna women who symbolized what a woman was supposed to be then.  Very sexy, feminine but in charge, in control.  A big homely women in charge would be called a lesbian.  So, as I understood it I could be woman and I could be strong but I had to look devilishly cute while doing it.

Cosmetic surgery has simply raised the bar and made looking good even more obtainable and while I wear make-up and do my best to look good I balk at surgery and find I am overly annoyed at my sisters who go under the knife to maim and cut themselves.  They are leaving us hard-nosed realistic women behind like the ugly stepsisters while like Cinderella they run off to the ball with everything they ever wished for.

From the turn of the 20th century to now the predominant feature of beauty is the importance of outward appearance and obsession with everything beautiful.  Beauty is linked with success and success to happiness.  You can destroy someone’s happiness if you take away their beauty.  We may not have a rash of acid throwing in North America but gender-violence is on the rise against women and girls.

Strong women on this planet today don’t have to wait to be attacked or maimed– we mutilate ourselves in order to keep looking good.

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Ending violence

Every year 160-200 women are killed in Canada. We know about 100 children are murdered every year as well. What are we doing about it?

Do you even know what is going on in your back yard? next door?  What about in your own house? Do you use derogatory language when talking about women, allow sexist video games in your home, tell blonde jokes?

We have to change our language and the way we talk about women, the way we label them, dissect them and demean them.  I’ve spent the last six years working on The List of 4,000 missing and murdered women and children in Canada-3 years on my newly released book Rampage:the pathology of an epidemic. For five years now we have been doing the Memory March-a walk/vigil to honour the women and children. But for many years before that I have worked in my own way to help ease the violence against women by doing Spirit to Heal workshops, producing plays with an anti-violence message and by my other writings.

I would love to come to your group meeting, your club, organization or event and speak about the issues we are facing and how we can change the way we think, how we can make a difference.

Contact me at gwynne1@telus.net to book a time.  We can change the world one person at a time.

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Reader’s Respond

I just found this on tumblr. but did not put the writer’s name on it as I don’t know it-just a blog I found interesting about Rampage:the pathology of an epidemic

I’m reading a new book Rampage;the pathology of an epidemic. It’s by Gwynne Hunt and it is basically about a list. Specifically, the femicide List. Gwynne Hunt took the task of completing a list of all the murdered/missing women across Canada (and children, as well, eventually) from Mary Billy in approximately 2005.

In “Rampage” she gives the reader a ist of names, one letter list per chapter and offers comments and stories about her experiences putting the list together, organizing marches, and most commonly, about the victim’s listed. I am only on the third chapter “c” so it’s not very far in at all . . .but already I think this is a worthwhile read. Even if it is painful.

 

I just finished reading Rampage and I have to say I think you did a hell  of a job on it. I know you got started on the ‘List’ thanks to Mary Billy but I have to say I thought the way you formatted the names in the book made it easier to digest the sad content. I am sorry as hell for the women who have been murdered and or disappeared. I am sorry that you have this enormous responsibility of trying to record these terrible events but I wanted you to know I am grateful for the truth of what goes on in our big back yard of a country. My words are small and may not reach many ears but I will keep writing and trying to bring the issue to light.
Your book is HUGE and I know you will keep the faith. Your book, your work, is amazing and I have the utmost respect for everything you do. You are brave and strong and wise and don’t forget how pivotal this work will be to effecting change. Just hang in there, you and Mary will see, I know it!
 
much love Shelley

(Shelley Haggard-poet-Mission, BC)

Hi Gwynne,
Got the book yesterday and read it cover to cover. Other than too much Mary Billy, it’s a terrific thing you’ve done. It brings it all back, that deep, deep hurt to the heart at the violent nature of these murders. Such hatred against women, it boggles the mind. And makes me think there is something much deeper going on. I wonder what that is?
 
Thanks again for this huge effort. You must be proud. I hope you are. None of us can fix it alone, but each step each of us takes counts in the overall solution, or at least betterment of treatment of women. Not to say that we don’t still have a long, long way to go.
 
I hope this book gets the exposure it so deserves. Stay in touch and let me know how it goes, okay?
Love,
Mary 
(Mary Billy-poet-activist-Squamish, BC)
 
Hi Gwynne:I rec’d your book yesterday and read it from front to back last p.m.  You
did a great job and I commend you for your tenacity. I certainly identified
when you mentioned how mentally exhausting it is to maintain the list and
try hard not to internalize how tragic these senseless deaths are.  I now
realize why at times, I just can’t open the file and begin new postings.
Also, we are on the same page where our thinking is concerned.  I agree that
we need both genders to speak against the violence and male bashing solves
nothing.
Thank you so much for allowing me to contribute to your book. 
I have recommended to a couple of people to send away for it.
Regards,
Barbara

(Barbara Mills-activist-Toronto, ON)
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Editor’s Notes

“Spring has sprung, the grass is riz”.  That phrase is often credited to Ogden Nash or ee cummings but the author is anonymous-the title of the poem is “Spring in the Bronx”

March 19th–the day before spring sprung in Abbotsford, BC we held our fifth annual Memory March and the International Celebration of Women.  Poorly attended because people are apathetic about missing and murdered women and children. Who cares? Not in my backyard–but women are murdered in our backyards everyday. 

I didn’t realize how depressing it was working every day on a book about murdered women and children-well, I realized it was depressing but I didn’t think I was that burdened by it-it was a job that had to be done.  Now that I am finished I feel happy again. I realized I had not been happy for a long time. Whenever my grandkids are around I am happy but the rest of the time I have been very burdened. But now it is done.

I hope there is a ground swell of support for my book-it deserves to be read for the incredible content and to honour the women and children. I wrote it to archive the work of grassroots workers, and to record the names of the missing and murdered.

So far, there has been no rush to buy Rampage:the pathology of an epidemic.  I’ve done all the groundwork I can to make it available on-line, emailed hundreds of women’s agencies (sold one), waited for relatives to show support buy buying a book but beyond a cousin who bought and sold 15 books and another second cousin selling 3 or 4, most of the relies have remained silent.  Doesn’t concern them I guess or interest them.  I have friends but lots of people know me from years of doing The Vagina Monologues-we probably directed over 300 women over the years . . .my guess is, a good number of them know about the book. I haven’t sold one to any of the ‘giners.  We raised $70,000 for non-profits around the lower mainland and Fraser Valley-organizations who work to end violence against women . . .hmmm, no sales there either.

I could take it personal but the book is too huge for that, it is not personal–not to me, but to the 4,000 names I carefully collected and lovingly added ot the pages, it is personal; to the families, the ones left behind.  The book is to honour them.  Raise awareness. Fuel the outrage we should all feel and yet after emailing 170 women’s groups across the country I only sold 1 book.

I have yet to get the book into the bookstores and know my market is through going to events and speaking; and I will get there but in the meantime, I had thought that with all the people I know and all the events I have organized and all the hearts I have touched in these last 20 years that my book would have been scooped up within the first few weeks.

But that was not meant to be and I have to reflect on the small support system I do have and appreciate the few who share my struggles and who even give a damn.

If you give a damn, you can order the book by emailing gwynne1@telus.net

pay by cheque or Visa or Master Card

$22 plus HST plus shipping=$29.64

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Memory March Press

Gwynne Hunt believes the death of any woman and girl due to violence is inexcusable.

So inexcusable that she has organized an Abbotsford Memory March, a silent walk and ceremony in remembrance of the hundreds of women that go missing or are murdered each year across Canada.

Hunt hopes Abbotsford residents of all genders and ages feel equally outraged, and will attend the march on Saturday to remember the victims of violence and work for change.

The event follows hard on the heels of International Women’s Day today, a global day celebrating the economic, political and social achievements of women past, present and future.

While women have secured many gains over the last few decades, freedom from violence is not one of them, said Hunt.

“We had the feminist movement in the 70s, but 40 years later the violence against women is still the same,” she said.

“There’s lot of equality in other ways, but not as far as violence is concerned.”

An average of 200 women and girls are murdered annually, said Hunt, who intends to display the names of almost 4,000 victims of violence at the end of the march in Thunderbird Memorial Square.

The catalogue of names is something Hunt took over in 2005 from another women’s rights activist, Mary Billy, who started the Femicide List after the Montreal Massacre in 1989 when Marc Lepine murdered 14 women.

“Mary wanted to list the names,” said Hunt.

“We all knew the name of Marc Lepine, but she couldn’t find the names of the victims anywhere.”

Seeing the names of murdered and missing women is important and makes their deaths more real, more concrete, she added.

“We need to honour all these women and children who are gone,” Hunt said.

“I don’t think many people know how many women are dying in a violent way.”

The Memory March is the fifth to be organized by Hunt, but it is the first time it’s being held in Abbotsford.

Previously, the event took place in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, but Hunt decided it was time to bring attention to violence against women in her hometown.

“I feel strongly there needs to be more of this kind of action in this city, and other smaller and medium-size cities, rather than just in large urban centres.”

The march is not just about grieving, but empowerment as well, as participants feel connected and hopeful of change, said Hunt.

Everyone is welcome at the event, she added.

“Feminism today is everyone working together [for change], rather than pointing fingers,” she said.

“We need to change the violence in homes and the violence we subject our children to.

“If we become more aware it, maybe we can change the problem.”

w The Memory March is Saturday, March 19 and starts at 10 a.m. from the Mill Lake water spray park at 2310 Emerson Street. The march will travel to Thunderbird Memorial Square adjacent to City Hall for the final ceremony and vigil. This year the Memory March is followed by arts performances at the International Celebration of Women from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. and/or from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Best Western Regency Conference Centre, 32110 Marshall Road. Tickets cost $6.

For more information visit ragmag.net/memory-march/.

RBaker@abbotsfordtimes.com

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Rampage:the pathology of an epidemic


My business is as a publisher of small poetry chapbooks, memoirs, social activism books and cookbooks. As a writer, creative writing teacher and as a playwright, I offer all editing and writing services.

“Rampage; the pathology of an epidemic” is my own work. The cover is a painting by Kristen Hunt-Jones and winner of the People’s Choice award for a 2010 Amnesty International fundraiser event in Vancouver.

On March 19th, the book ‘Rampage; the pathology of an epidemic’ written by Gwynne Hunt was released at the International Celebration of Women in Abbotsford. The book is Hunt’s personal journey over the last six years working on the book and the Memory March (a walk/vigil honouring over 4,000 missing and murdered women and children in Canada). It includes interviews with grassroots’ workers she met. There are a lot of individual, concerned people who work to end violence against women. One of those women is Mary Billy, a writer and activist in Squamish. There are interviews, case stories and conversations with family member’s who have lost loved ones. The book is not about how we are going to end the violence but an examination of the problems, concerns and stereotypical thinking that keeps us trapped in a cycle of violence. Included are the names of 4,000 missing and murdered women and children that have been compiled for The List.

The book archives the struggles of grassroots’ workers who actively try to raise awareness and focus a light on the violence against women. Domestic violence accounts for most of the murders but media tends to focus on ethnic groups and women at risk. All women are at risk and it is time society stood up united to end the violence.

Rampe:the pathology of an epidemic

cover by Kristen Hunt-Jones

 

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Penny-a-Line Promotions

Inkslinger-media communications-literary services-writing workshops-creative and business seminars-publishing-event organizing

We publish books; poetry chapbooks, cookbooks, memoirs, social activism books and help with services including ISBN numbers, barcodes, editing, cover design, ghost writing, contrcting with printers, marketing, promotions and distribution.

Writing & Theatre Workshops: Creative Writing, Storytelling & Traditions, theatre for Kids-creative Art Play, The Play’s The Thing.

Presentations: Ending Violence Against Women and Children, Telling Your Story, Spirit to Heal.

Events: fundraising events like murder mysteries, radio play presentations, slam poetry, one-act plays, custom skits for corporation presentations.

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