Attention grabbing … Emmeline Pankhurst being arrested in 1910. Photograph: Trinity Mirror / Mirrorpix / Ala/AlamyTuesday 8 March 201611.58 GMTLast modified on Tuesday 8 March 201612.17 GMT
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[size=68]Green, white and purple sashes, powerful placards and large-scale marches – these are the hallmarks of feminist protest from days gone by. But while the suffragettes, and other activists, might have firmly etched such images on the public consciousness, a new wave of protesters are taking up the fight in inventive and surprising ways.
Marches are still important – and effective – of course, but with protests that don’t always involve rallies or banners, women around the world are also finding their own unique ways of making their point.
To celebrate
International Women’s Day, here are a collection of recent and varied examples that might inspire you to take your own stand. Some are individuals, who have reported their actions to the
Everyday Sexism Project. Others have hit the headlines with their unconventional and startling techniques for disrupting gendered oppression. Whether deeply personal or very public, all of them are finding new ways to stand up to inequality.
When media outlets in the Indian state of Kerala reported that 45 female employees had been strip-searched after a used sanitary towel was found in a factory toilet, feminist activists didn’t take it lying down. Campaign group Kiss of Love launched an action called
Red Alert in January last year, calling on women to send sanitary towels (“used or unused”) to the marketing director of the company where the incident occurred.
International Women's Day 2016 – as it happenedWe joined people around the world to mark IWD2016. Our live blog has finished but you can still share “What does equality mean to you?” on Twitter Read moreMeanwhile, at the beginning of this year, a group of women in Mexico City calling themselves “Las Hijas de Violencia” (Daughters of Violence) found a novel way to tackle street harassers,
using confetti guns and punk rock. The group told online news channel
AJ+:
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- اقتباس :
“When we are walking down the street and someone harasses us in any way … we run after this person, we grab our confetti guns, we shoot once, we turn on the speakers and we sing Sexista Punk.”
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Their
song includes the lyrics, “What you’ve done to me is called harassment,” and explains how these women are choosing to “respond” to such provocation rather than accept it as the norm.
Young people around the world have also been finding new and attention-grabbing ways to protest against sexist school dress codes, which enforce societal gender stereotypes, and often send the message that girls’ bodies are sexual and dangerous. In the most insidious cases, girls are told the reason they asked to cover up is that they risk distracting male peers from their studies. So when girls at a middle school in Illinois were
banned from wearing leggings in March 2014, they turned up to protest bearing placards that read “Are my pants lowering your test scores?”
When a transgender student in Brazil was fined because she chose to wear a skirt to school later that year, her male classmates supported her by turning up for lessons wearing skirts themselves. A
photo of the students in their skirts went viral, causing the school to announce it would consider a change in uniform policy.
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Pinterest Will of steel … Kubra Khademi with her body armour. Photograph: Massoud Hossaini/APIn Afghanistan, performance artist Kubra Khademi made a powerful statement about women’s bodies in public spaces last year when she
walked through the streets wearing metal body armour specially designed to emphasise her breasts, crotch and bottom. The performance, designed to highlight the discomfort caused by men groping and harassing women in the street, drew leers, thrown stones and death threats – perfectly proving Khademi’s point.
Gender equality remains a hot topic and something that women continue to strive for at every level. Entries to the Everyday Sexism Project suggest there are also thousands of individual women finding their own, personal methods of protest. Here are just a few:
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- One woman decided she had had enough of cold-callers demanding to speak to the “man of the house”, so she started putting them on to her six-year-old son. He would sing them I’m Sexy and I Know It until they hung up.
- A swimming coach who heard one of the boys on her team taunting another student saying: “You swim like a girl,” sent all her students a message about sexism by turning around and loudly telling him: “So could you one day, if you practise hard enough.”
- A woman who was asked: “Where’s the coffee?” by a male colleague when she walked into a meeting (at which it was not her job to provide the refreshments), answered: “I don’t know, but when you find it, mine’s black with one sugar.”
- Shocked and angered by a man catcalling her from the roof he was working on as she walked down the street, a woman decided to stop and confront him. But when her arguments against street harassment only led him to shout worse abuse, she gently removed the ladder and walked away, leaving him stranded and presumably giving him plenty of time to think about gender politics.
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Whether it’s coordinated collective action, a personal stand or even an unplanned instance of bystander intervention, there is something each of us can do to tackle the widespread normalisation of gender inequality. You don’t even have to go looking for opportunities to take part in the movement, because – unfortunately – sexism is likely to cross everybody’s path at some point; whether it’s witnessing street harassment, overhearing workplace discrimination, or seeing the impact of gender stereotypes on a young person you know. So the next time you come across the problem, let these women be your inspiration to get stuck in and become part of the solution.[/size]