tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302245627574027504.post6287175361985000257..comments2019-05-15T23:59:20.159-07:00Comments on Feminist Legal Theory: The Silent Type of FeministLisa R. Pruitthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16469550950363542801noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302245627574027504.post-43014719325381703002009-09-17T17:08:39.595-07:002009-09-17T17:08:39.595-07:00While I disagree with this post from an ideals-ori...While I disagree with this post from an ideals-oriented standpoint, practically I do not think I can say with certainty that my behavior is/will be different. With many firms pulling out of OCI recruitment, deferring their hiring processes, and hiring fewer (if any) new associates this year, being picky is becoming impractical. After a disappointing OCI season, I expanded the scope of my job search, both geographically and in terms of practice areas. Ideally, I will find work in a progressive, feminist-friendly locale that pays enough to meet my bills, offers regular hours, and surrounds me with positive and helpful co-workers who give me interesting, fulfilling assignments. In reality, I find myself making similar compromises to this author.<br /><br />What happens if I don’t receive my ideal offer? Realistically, I need to pay rent, hopefully eat, and slowly chip away at this enormous, ever-accumulating debt to the government. If that means keeping my head down and my politics (and deeper identity convictions) to myself, I cannot say that I would refuse to make that sacrifice. I realize the choices I am making are damaging, privileged and perhaps ultimately unnecessary. However, as a dull, constant anxiety clouds my job search, I am with the author on this disturbing track - tailoring myself to our broken system with every direct application “send”.Kathleenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14689344157180289529noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302245627574027504.post-41960292439911839762009-09-16T23:01:49.578-07:002009-09-16T23:01:49.578-07:00I agree that we should make commitments to our rea...I agree that we should make commitments to our real identity in our work-life. In my personal experience, I was advised by my colleagues to not mention that I was a mother in law firm interviews, though motherhood was inextricable from my everyday identity. I ignored the advice, and asked each law firm about the work/life balance of other mothers and fathers at the firm. Sometimes this conversation was a turn-off (this is the risk we take), and other times it loosened up the tension in the room for the interviewer (who could finally relax and talk about their own kids instead of their billable hours). I ended up getting placed with a firm that was satisfactorily child-friendly. I felt free to talk about my “real life” while at work – having disclosed from the beginning that I was, indeed, nothing more or less than I presented myself to be.<br /><br />Similarly with the OCI situation, “feminism” may have complicated your job applications last time -- but if it is important to you for the firm to know about your interest in feminism, then it is important to be a risk-taker and mention feminism or gender theory in the interview process…and you just might open up the interviewer to (quietly) talk about her glory days as a feminist revolutionary in D.C. before she buckled down at a law firm to buy a big house in the suburbs and support her husband and children (I have witnessed this conversation, too)…I think that being yourself has its advantages, especially in the field of law, because it will take you to places where you will feel free to express your identity, instead of "covering" constantly with a fear of losing your job after your real identity is revealed.S Hhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13849775499290252682noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302245627574027504.post-247464418887718832009-09-14T15:53:13.943-07:002009-09-14T15:53:13.943-07:00I understand the fear of not finding a job for the...I understand the fear of not finding a job for the summer or post graduation, but I'm not sure why anyone who is a feminist would want to work for a firm that is opposed to hiring feminists. <br /><br />There are two general approaches to fighting the system: from within and from the outside. I chose to become a lawyer after becoming frustrated with the limited social change I was creating from grassroots organizing. However, I made a commitment to myself not to hide my identity or political affiliations. If an institution or employer isn't interested in a feminist, it's their loss. <br /><br />I think it's a slippery slope when we choose to hide ourselves or assimilate for the sake of gaining access to the system. It exemplifies our privileged ability to "pass" as non-feminist, straight, white, etc. By choosing to assimilate we are rewarding a system with which we should be challenging.Evehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09135677152343486647noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302245627574027504.post-90375840919179833992009-09-14T13:09:23.668-07:002009-09-14T13:09:23.668-07:00Is debate healthy or harmful to a job? Should one...Is debate healthy or harmful to a job? Should one speak up about the issues one believes in, or leave that to discussions extra-workplace? I've spent time in a job where everyone there was of one political affiliation, and I was the other. My solution was just like yours: I stayed silence for the sake of peace and the sake of keeping the job. But I felt like it shouldn't be an offense, much less a fire-able offense, to speak out and express my feelings, as long as I did so with respect to them. However, I was not brave enough to do so. Thus goes life.Naomihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09177733318872512581noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7302245627574027504.post-48005232409059274212009-09-13T13:22:55.224-07:002009-09-13T13:22:55.224-07:00The difference in treatment you received from the ...The difference in treatment you received from the recruiters based on the presence and absence of the word "feminist" is troubling. The choice between being silent about your feminism and speaking out is really tough, but if compromising now would give you the opportunity to fight back later, that may be the best choice. Ideally you wouldn't be faced with such a difficult decision, but thinking strategically may be the only way to even get a chance to change things.RHhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06751080929137894841noreply@blogger.com