Things I Read That I Love #64: Giddy, Girlish and Deeply Shallow

coffee-paperHELLO and welcome to the 64th installment of Things I Read That I Love, wherein I share with you some of the longer-form journalism/essays I’ve read recently so that you can read them too and we can all know more about the post office! This “column” is less feminist/queer focused than the rest of the site because when something is feminist/queer focused, I put it on the rest of the site. Here is where the other things are.

The title of this feature is inspired by the title of Emily Gould’s tumblr, Things I Ate That I Love.

Do You Really Want To Live Without The Post Office? (January 2013), by Jesse Lichtenstein for Esquire –  I’ve been saving this one because I knew it would be so good and obviously it is. It profiles the people who do the work on the ground and in the government, gets into the debate right now about the postal service budget and where the problem started, the evolution of the post office in general and the array of potential futures for the post office if the right people make the right decisions. Maybe one day the post office will find a way to take less than two weeks to deliver Autostraddle calendars or something.

Trying To Unlock the Secrets of a Dead Serial Killer (January 2013), by Sharon Cohen and Rachel D’Oro for The AP – This is basically an episode of Criminal Minds, except scarier because it’s true and also less satisfying because there was no Reed, Penelope, or neat ending.

Kappa Kappa Glamma (November 1996), by Bob Ickles for Allure – “On September 5, as Saddam Hussein marched 30,000 troops into Kurdistan, 445 young women ‑all of them smiling and all but two of them white‑ stormed Sorority Court at the College of William and Mary. Quivering amid the purity of Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia, they were about to begin the ten‑day contest known as sorority rush. Long a staple of American college life, rush is a grueling battery of parties, skits, and small talk. When it concludes, the houses will have decided which candidates fit their secret ideals of poise, kindness, and just plain old politically incorrect glamour.” ‘ [sidenote: it really annoys me when women’s magazines hire men to write articles about women’s culture!]

The Distress of the Privileged (September 2012), by Doug Muder for The Weekly Shift – This is a really interesting examination of privilege and, incidentally, why the anti-gays are missing the point, and other stuff. “As the culture evolves, people who benefitted from the old ways invariably see themselves as victims of change. The world used to fit them like a glove, but it no longer does. Increasingly, they find themselves in unfamiliar situations that feel unfair or even unsafe. Their concerns used to take center stage, but now they must compete with the formerly invisible concerns of others.”

I Was A Teenage Freak (September 2003), by David Kushner for Rolling Stone – There’s this whole town in Florida, Gibsonton, which has always been mostly populated with carnival sideshow performers, but times are changing — they talk to performers who are still in the business and the kids who’ve been working in circuses since they were babies and talks about class and other stigmas involved in the industry. Photos by Mary Ellen Mark.

America’s Hardest Working Know-It All (February 2013), by Kevin Lincoln for Buzzfeed – A profile of Ken Jennings, master of Jeopardy.

Spit & Mud (February 2013), by Roxanne Gay for The Rumpus –  “I keep trying to have an open mind about the issues that challenge me most. In this instance, it is particularly difficult. I tell myself Pope Benedict is not an evil man. I tell myself the church does more good than evil. But then I think about children who trusted their spiritual leaders and had that trust broken in the most terrible ways and were then shamed or silenced. I think about people who merely want to love who they want to love, who are shunned and shamed. I think about women carrying pregnancies to term because they have no other choice, because their priests tell them it is God’s will. It is really hard to do anything but judge when faced with this painful reality. I judge even though this is so much bigger than me, so beyond me, and still so close.:

Anymall, U.S.A. (August 1997), by Nik Cohn for Life Magazine – “Not too big, not too fancy, the shopping mall in Parma, Ohio, is the center of civic life. It’s the city’s Main Street, a climate-controlled barometer of social stress. For decades, nothing at Parmatown mall seemed to change. Now the old order has been turned inside out.” [sidenote: by “turned inside out” he means “some very old conservative white people are uncomfortable from time to time while at the mall”]

Aarushi Talwar murder: Inside story of India’s Most Controversial Trial (January 2013), by Shree Paradkar for The Star – The author is the cousin of the mother of the girl who was murdered, who has been accused of murdering her daughter despite no evidence. – “Four-and-a-half years, one state police force, two federal investigative teams, two sets of suspects, five arrests and countless fumbles later, the murder remains unsolved.”

In China, Families Bet It All On College For Their Children (February 2013), by Keith Bradsher for The New York Times – This story makes the institutionalized classism of America’s higher education system look almost not-terrible?

Swinging Modern Sounds #41: Utopian Communities (February 2013), by Rick Moody for The Rumpus – I’m not really that into reading about music usually but I love Rick Moody’s writing style when he writes about music and also I liked this mostly for its musings on utopian communities rather than the stuff about the sound of the band he’s focusing on.

Before you go! Autostraddle runs on the reader support of our AF+ Members. If this article meant something to you today — if it informed you or made you smile or feel seen, will you consider joining AF and supporting the people who make this queer media site possible?

Join AF+!

Riese

Riese is the 41-year-old Co-Founder of Autostraddle.com as well as an award-winning writer, video-maker, LGBTQ+ Marketing consultant and aspiring cyber-performance artist who grew up in Michigan, lost her mind in New York and now lives in Los Angeles. Her work has appeared in nine books, magazines including Marie Claire and Curve, and all over the web including Nylon, Queerty, Nerve, Bitch, Emily Books and Jezebel. She had a very popular personal blog once upon a time, and then she recapped The L Word, and then she had the idea to make this place, and now here we all are! In 2016, she was nominated for a GLAAD Award for Outstanding Digital Journalism. She's Jewish and has a cute dog named Carol. Follow her on twitter and instagram.

Riese has written 3164 articles for us.

7 Comments

  1. Thanks riese, I particularly loved “The distress of the Privileged.” That was a fantastic deconstruction.

  2. As an alumna of William and Mary, and as a non-Greek who actually went through informal recruitment at one point, I just want to say that it’s definitely not like that anymore. The article is an interesting picture of what one dude (ugh) thought of recruitment almost 20 years ago. But current college freshmen were around 2 when the article was written.

    • I agree with you that article reads as super dated. I’d be really interested in reading what current recruitment looks like.

  3. that Isreal Keyes one gave me CHILLS

    Distress of the Privilege was super.

    But the Aarushi Talwar case both gave me chills and makes me feel like whaaaaat- I don’t understand the protocol taken in this case at all.

  4. Distress of the Privileged has been one of my favorite articles since the first time I ran across it a few months ago. It so perfectly encapsulates so many thoughts I’d had about many of the straight, white boys I know.

  5. The NYT article about college in China is very interesting – it’s a good surface look at some of the big issues. I worked as an English teacher in one of China’s largest cities last year, and I can attest to the advantages affluent urban kids have — although that does not really reduce the pressure they feel to score high on the college entrance exam, get into a good college, get a good job and support their parents. Even urban kids who are not affluent have some degree of advantage over the rural poor. But I also think of my local coworkers, who had four year college degrees from decent Chinese universities, who made one third of what I made as a “foreign expert.”
    On the other hand, the article has a line about Western parents who invest heavily in their children’s education being able to fall back on Social Security and Medicare in their old age. Oh, New York Times. Your elitism is showing again.

  6. You Americans and your taking your postal service for granted! Sometimes I want to move to the US just for how cheap sending things is. It’s the cheapest in the world to mail within the country (as opposed to Canada, which is one of the most expensive in the world)

Comments are closed.