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It Happened in Cleveland – Women's Suffrage Headquarters, 1912

Suffrage

Woman suffrage headquarters in Upper Euclid Avenue, Cleveland–A. (at extreme right) is Miss Belle Sherwin, President, National League of Women Voters; B. is Judge Florence E. Allen (holding the flag); C. is Mrs. Malcolm McBride.

Anti-Suffragists - Harris & Ewing

Historically a number of men have engaged with feminism. Philosopher Jeremy Bentham demanded equal rights for women in the eighteenth century. In 1866, philosopher John Stuart Mill (author of “The Subjection of Women”) presented a women’s petition to the British parliament; and supported an amendment to the 1867 Reform Bill. Others have lobbied and campaigned against feminism. Today, academics like Michael Flood, Michael Messner and Michael Kimmel are involved with men’s studies and pro-feminism.

Other men have campaigned against feminism. During the suffragettes‘ campaign anti-suffragists numbered 160 in 1902 in Britain. In New York, the New York State Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage was founded in 1897, and by 1908 it had over 90 members. – Wikipedia – Feminism

Marine Engine Specialties Corp. – Broome Street – Soho, NYC

Marine Engine

Marine Engine Specialties Corp

Marine Engine Specialties Corp
© Frank H. Jump

Vesuvio Bakery – 160 Prince Street – Soho, NYC

Vesuvio Bakery
© Frank H. Jump

Free Tibet

Tibetan Flag
Save Tibet

Tibetan Uprising

Boycott Made in China

After the Maoist takeover of Tibet, is Nepal next?

Greene Street Graffiti – Soho, NYC

Greene Street Graffiti

Greene Street Graffiti
© Frank H. Jump

Luxury Retail – Wooster Street Flea Market – Soho, NYC

Luxury Retail - Wooster Street

Luxury Retail

Luxury Retail - Wooster Street
© Frank H. Jump

N.Y. Welding Corp. – Wooster & Grand – Soho, NYC

NY Welding Corp

NY Welding Corp

NY Welding Corp

NY Welding Corp

NY Welding Corp
© Frank H. Jump

Lazarus Swanrose – Sheepshead Bay & Flatbush Junction – Spring, 2005

Lazarus Swanrose

Swans - Sheepshead Bay

Lazarus Rose
© Frank H. Jump

Garden Variety Saints & Armchair Dictators – Alice, Lazarus & Mao – Flatbush Forsythia

Lazarus

Armchair Mao

Flatbush Forsythia

Alice & Mao
© Frank H. Jump

More on Lazarus & Forsythia

Torture Update – U.S. Commemorative Stamps – Susan Sontag Quote

US Torture Commemoratives Stamps
© Frank H. Jump

Here is a Sontag quote forwarded to me by David Duckworth who is preparing for a coming lecture [the 2008 National Popular Culture & American Culture Associations Conference] in which Duckworth will “discuss gay artists and the themes of detention and torture in art. I am sharing with you an excerpt from Susan Sontag’s “Regarding the Pain of Others”:

“All memory is individual, unreproducible — it dies with each person. What is called collective memory is not a remembering but a stipulating: that this is important, and this is the story about how it happened, with the pictures that lock the story in our minds. Ideologies create substantiating archives of images, representative images, which encapsulate common ideas of significance and trigger predictable thoughts, feelings. Poster-ready photographs — the mushroom cloud of an A-bomb test, Martin Luther King, Jr., speaking at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., the astronaut walking on the moon — are the visual equivalent of sound bites. They commemorate, in no less blunt fashion than postage stamps, Important Historical Moments; indeed, the triumphalist ones (the picture of the A-bomb excepted) become postage stamps. Fortunately, there is no one signature picture of the Nazi death camps.”

When they (we) executed Saddam Hussein, I was compelled to do a U.S. Commemorative Stamp series on American Torture in the name of democracy and freedom. The stamp design was modeled after Nazi German Propaganda stamps from the 1930s and the images were culled from what was made available on the Internet by the news media. Since the fall of Hussein’s regime- gay and lesbian Iraqis have been systematically hunted down and executed in the streets, their homes and driven into secrecy. There was evidence of religious pluralism and gender tolerance during Hussein’s reign. Here is a glimpse of what is occurring now that Iraq has been “liberated.”

The body of Karar Oda, who was murdered in April 2006 because he was believed to have had an affair with another man. Murdered and set ablaze April 2006, Karar Oda is just one of the many Iraqis dragged from their homes by hooded militia and shot, set on fire or beheaded because they were believed to be gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender. – Gay Lesbian Times 2006
In June 2006, Karar Oda, a thirty-eight-year-old man from Sadr City, was kidnapped by the Badr Brigade—an informal armed wing of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq—and a part of the country’s government. The Ministry of Interior presented an arrest warrant to his family. It stated that Karar was accused of homosexuality—something considered extremely immoral—and deserved to be punished by death. Karar’s burnt and mutilated body was found ten days later. – Diana Y. Vitoshka from The Modern Face of Honor Killing: Factors, Legal Issues, and Policy Recommendations