Denise Mueller-Korenek, 45, has become the fastest human ever to ride a bicycle over open ground, racing in the draft provided by a dragster.
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@feministlibraryonwheels
Denise Mueller-Korenek, 45, has become the fastest human ever to ride a bicycle over open ground, racing in the draft provided by a dragster.
She left from Berlin, riding east. And on Thursday, she returned to Berlin, riding from the west. In between, Scottish cyclist Jenny Graham rode thousands of miles to become the fastest woman to ride around the world unsupported.
It took less than 125 days ā just over one-third of a year ā for Graham to complete the ride, covering some 18,000 miles on her bike. That lopped nearly three weeks off the old record of 144 days set by Paola Gianotti in 2014.
Her official time: ā124 Days, 10 hours and less than 50 minutes,ā according to filmmaker Mike Webster, who helped document the trip.
Jenny Graham Cycles Around The World In Under 125 Days, Shattering Record
Photo:Ā Christoph Soeder/picture alliance via Getty Image
Days is a flexible hybrid retail model that hinges on different collections. Communities of dreams, ideas, perceptions, objects, trips. ExploringāpDays is an iterative and fluid retail/community/event space in Los Feliz. With each iteration we host events and bring together collections under different themes. Days is a space responsive to dreams, ideas, perceptions, objects, trips; a place where we can engage with each other as makers and thinkers and people.
Join Girls at Library (GAL) for a celebration of women and literature with Feminist Library on Wheels (F.L.O.W.), and The Lev bookstore.
Come exchange books by women authors or featuring female protagonists with other interesting people, and build community and dialogue around literature. Your recommendations may get featured on GAL! GAL is an online journal that features engaging literary interviews with and book recommendations from remarkable, diverse women who share a passion for reading.
F.L.O.W. recently had their wheels stolen, so in addition to donating leftover books we will be collecting donations to help them replace their bike! FLOW is a node of the Womenās Center for Creative Work in Los Angeles, CA. A multimedia collection of feminist texts, artifacts and ephemera made available to as diverse an audience as possible, by bicycle.
The Lev currently needs your help to turn their pop-up bookstore into a long-term establishment! Come support The Lev who will also be selling our top feminist book picks! The Lev is is a community bookstore founded to build a community around women and books, and to promote women and people of color writers.
All are welcome: free!
Yellow or Gold Sun Atlas tricycle, serial: GM03144408. Stolen 04-01-2018 from 2425 Glover Place, Los Angeles, CA, 90031, US. There is a custom welded box between the two back wheels.
Have you seen this Sun ATLAS CARGO TRIKE? @project529 #endbiketheft
Use this link to stay in touch if you see our missing trike!
The Feminist Library On Wheels (aka F.L.O.W.) was started by Jenn Witte and Dawn Finley, with the aim of bringing feminist literature and media to the people of Los Angeles, with a focus on diversiā¦
Participating drop-off locations where you can return your Feminist Library on Wheels (FLOW) books, bring new donations, and otherwise enjoy for all they have to offer.
OUR WEBSITE IS UNDER CONSTRUCTION
It is going to be really grand when it launches, very soon! Until then, enjoy this page as our blog, and find us on FACEBOOK, INSTAGRAM, and TWITTER. View our entire collection on LIBRARYTHING.Ā
Tonight! We will be in the Friendly Fires section from 6-9.
To celebrate the publication of our new Feminist Radical Thinkers Verso brings you a selection of extracts from the Set, brought together in this ebook collection, to download for FREE!
Bjork speaking up about dudes getting credit for everything
Pitchfork: When it was originally misreported that Vulnicura was produced by Arca, instead of co-produced by you and Arca, it reminded me of the Joni Mitchell quote from the height of her fame about how whichever man was in the room with her got credit for her genius.
Bjork: Yeah, I didnāt want to talk about that kind of thing for 10 years, but then I thought, āYouāre a coward if you donāt stand up. Not for you, but for women. Say something.ā So around 2006, I put something on my website where I cleared something up, because itād been online so many times that it was becoming a fact. It wasnāt just one journalist getting it wrong, everybody was getting it wrong. Iāve done music for, what, 30 years? Iāve been in the studio since I was 11; Alejandro had never done an album when I worked with him. He wanted to putting something on his own Twitter, just to say itās co-produced. I said, āNo, weāre never going to win this battle. Letās just leave it.ā But he insisted. Iāve sometimes thought about releasing a map of all my albums and just making it clear who did what. But it always comes across as so defensive that, like, itās pathetic. I could obviously talk about this for a long time. [laughs]
Pitchfork: The world has a difficult time with the female auteur.
Bjork: I have nothing against Kanye West. Help me with thisāIām not dissing himāthis is about how people talk about him. With the last album he did, he got all the best beatmakers on the planet at the time to make beats for him. A lot of the time, he wasnāt even there. Yet no one would question his authorship for a second. If whatever Iām saying to you now helps women, Iām up for saying it. For example, I did 80% of the beats on Vespertine and it took me three years to work on that album, because it was all microbeatsāit was like doing a huge embroidery piece. Matmos came in the last two weeks and added percussion on top of the songs, but they didnāt do any of the main parts, and they are credited everywhere as having done the whole album. [Matmosā] Drew [Daniel] is a close friend of mine, and in every single interview he did, he corrected it. And they donāt even listen to him. It really is strange.
Pitchfork: How does it make you feel when this happens now?
Bjork: I have to sayāI got a feeling I am going to win in the long run, but I want to be part of the zeitgeist, too. I want to support young girls who are in their 20s now and tell them: Youāre not just imagining things. Itās tough. Everything that a guy says once, you have to say five times. Girls now are also faced with different problems. Iāve been guilty of one thing: After being the only girl in bands for 10 years, I learnedāthe hard wayāthat if I was going to get my ideas through, I was going to have to pretend that theyāmenāhad the ideas. I became really good at this and I donāt even notice it myself. I donāt really have an ego. Iām not that bothered. I just want the whole thing to be good. And Iām not saying one bad thing about the guys who were with me in the bands, because theyāre all amazing and creative, and theyāre doing incredible things now. But I come from a generation where that was the only way to get things done. So I have to play stupid and just do everything with five times the amount of energy, and then it will come through.
When people donāt credit me for the stuff Iāve done, itās for several reasons. Iām going to get very methodical now! [laughs] One! I learned what a lot of women have to do is make the guys in the room think it was their idea, and then you back them up. Two! I spend 80% of the writing process of my albums on my own. I write the melodies. Iām by the computer. I edit a lot. That for me is very solitary. I donāt want to be photographed when Iām doing that. I donāt invite people around. The 20% of the album process when I bring in the string orchestras, the extras, thatās documented more. Thatās the side people see. When I met M.I.A., she was moaning about this, and I told her, āJust photograph yourself in front of the mixing desk in the studio, and people will go, āOh, OK! A woman with a tool, like a man with a guitar.āā Not that Iāve done that much myself, but sometimes youāre better at giving people advice than doing it yourself. I remember seeing a photo of Missy Elliott at the mixing desk in the studio and being like, a-ha!
Itās a lot of what people see. During a show, because there are people onstage doing the other bits, Iām just a singer. For example, I asked Matmos to play all the beats for the Vespertine tour, so maybe thatās kind of understandable that people think they made them. So maybe itās not all sexist evil. [laughs] But itās an ongoing battle. I hope it doesnāt come across as too defensive, but it is the truth. I definitely can feel the third or fourth feminist wave in the air, so maybe this is a good time to open that Pandoraās box a little bit and air it out.
Found from various places online:
The Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire
Angela Y. Davis - Are Prisons Obsolete?
Angela Y. Davis - Race, Women, and Class
The Communist Manifesto - Marx and Engels
Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches by Audre Lorde
Three Guineas byā¦
Ricci and I threw flower petals at people at Otherwild for the Feminist Library on Wheels blessing of the bikes event on September 13th, 2014.
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