Transnational Feminist Theory
In today’s modern world, it is very hard to believe that women are still not treated better than they were years ago. As a black woman, I know the struggles of dealing with my own issues and then having to handle the pressure society puts on you to survive and be successful. I can sympathize with the women in the writings.” The rise of religious fundamentalism with their deeply masculinist and often racist rhetoric poses a huge challenge for similar struggles around the world. Finally the profoundly unequal “information highway”, as well as the increasing militarization (and masculinization) of the globe accompanied by the growth of the prison industrial complex in the United States, pose profound contradictions in the lives and communities of women and men in most parts of the world (Mohanty). The New York Times had a story titled Pope says church should acknowledge history of male dominance, abuse of women. The Pope said “A church always on the defensive, which loses her humility and stop listening to others, which leaves no room for questions, loses her youth and turns into a museum”. And while he said the church should be “attentive to the legitimate claims of those women who seek greater justice and equality” and that young people had complained of a “lack of leading female role models”, he offered no new ideas (Reuters, 2019). While that was good of him to say, but without resolution, the problem remains.
Pope Francis said on Tuesday the Catholic Church had to acknowledge a history of male domination and sexual abuse of women and children, and
The girl effect is a good concept that plans to empower woman by giving them a more positive outlook on life. Rather then young girls becoming mothers and being sexual objects (making them disposable), the girl effect strives to help them stay in school and gain a secondary education this way they can become prominent members of society (durable). It gives the girls the power to determine their future and set goals for themselves at a pace comfortable for them. The video “I dare you too see I am the answer” stated “when an educated girl earns income, she reinvests 90% of it in to her family, compared to 35% for a boy”. Meaning if girls get an education and career, they will more than likely be the one who set future generations up for success, thus repeating the cycle. “Invest in a girl and she will do the rest” (Switzer). I do believe this statement for I have seen it more than once. That all it takes is for us to help one another and show each other the way. More of us can and will shape those young women into future role models. It’s just a matter of having the patience to listen and then to show them and teach by example. It is up to us women to save the world from those destructive men and to break the curse of durable and disposable women. To say we are more than just baby-makers who then afterwards become useless. We must rise and say we can have it all ... the fame, the glory and the babies. Like Beyoncé said who run the world?
Cross cultural connections made me feel that the comparing of two cultures was just not justifiable. The fact that women in the US have many options available to them and Indian women have very little is upsetting to say the least. The reading was a tad confusing because I did not know if Indian women who were abused were committing suicide by setting themselves on fire in their kitchens or if their husbands were doing it because they knew it was highly likely for them to get away with murdering their wives. In the US most of the abusers know they will end up in jail especially if the abuse resulted in murder. “ Battered women home in the west... seem to act as useful types of short term intervention because of (a) The existence of a welfare system, which includes some, even though inadequately Provisions for public assistance, unemployment, benefits, subsidized housing, and free schooling for children; (b) The overall employment situation being very different from there in India; (c) The lower stigma on women living on their own and moving around on their own and (d) The existence of certain avenues of employment that are not considered permissible for middle-class women here” (Kishwar). This brings me to what is happening at the US-Mexico border. As females begin to speak out about the injustices they have faced in different outlets, their stories of sexual misconduct and workplace harassment cannot begin to compare to the horrors the woman at the border face. Just the very thought of looking forward to freedom and opportunity only to have it snatched away by a sadistic, racist, misogynistic predator who is supposed to help you but instead does the unthinkable to poor, frightened, brown women and girls. In the New York Times there is an article called You Have to Pay with Your Body: the Hidden Nightmare of Sexual Violence on the Border, which explains the treachery of the victimization of females. ”On America’s southern border, migrant women and girls are the victims of sexual assault that most often go unreported, uninvestigated, and unprosecuted. Even as women around the world are speaking against sexual misconduct, migrant women on the border live in the shadows of the #MeTooMovement (Fernandez, 2019).
Of all the hazards facing migrant women along the southwest border, one of the most ubiquitous and devastating is sexual assault.














