Who are we? We're a concerned, creative, amazing group of MSU students and more. We are an independent group cosponsored by the Women's Center, WMGS department, Health Promotions, and SPECTRUMS. We are causing a scene to create a scene. We are Femme Vitales.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Fem-orabilia Fundraiser 2011 Catalogue

Here is an updated, more polished Fem-orabilia Catalogue for the Femvolution:MSU fundraiser.  Patches come as standard, 3x5” black fabric swatches with white ink (unless otherwise specified) and run for $5.  You can also order buttons for $1.25 each or 2 for $2.  Please f-email your order or any questions to us!


For a joint fundraising and consciousness-raising initiative, we'll be selling Fem-orabilia in the form of buttons and patches.  So now you can support Femvolutionand celebrate your favorite females!  The following are some of our stencil options--feel free to comment on ones you like/hate, what you'd like to see up, and whatever else comes up so you can order one for every (wo)man you know! 

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Time to Shake off the Snow...

It's been a sleepy winter break, but with the advent of the new year and new semester, it's time to get back to work FEMinizing Montclair State University.

Over the next few weeks, you can expect to see...

  • Updates and details for submitting to our zine;
  • Artist information on getting involved in the Feminist Banner art project;
  • Updates to the FEMME Festival schedule;
  • Information on how to sign up for the burlesque workshop, attend the lecture and performance, and more events;
  • Future fundraising events and how to help support the Femvolution;
  • Registration for the Femme craft space (where you can rent space to sell your goods, network with other craftsters, or teach your skills to small groups of students);
  • Updates from our next meeting (to attend, please f-email your availability to us);
  • Information on our Stencil Party: how to get involved in silkscreening, how to submit requests for stencils, how to donate fabric swatches to a good cause, and how to start wearing your favorite feminists on your sleeve! (or bag, or shirt, or patch... more accurately)
Excited?  Of course you are.  So are we.  And we'd love to get you involved, so f-email us with your interests and availability, because we're always expanding our membership to dynamic Femmes.  And come by our next meeting!

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Film Screener Wishlist: Take our Poll

For our final night on campus, the FEMME Festival will feature a 2-3 movie film night... showing whatever our lovely Femmes decide upon!  But these are the films we have ready access to, and we're working to cover a wide range of topics on the female experience, ranging from abortion rights, to sex work, to sex education, orgasms, sex therapy, LGBT horror stories AND love stories, censorship in media, misogynistic dystopian horror-worlds, women in horror, science and sexuality, and more.  Because we'll be partnering up with Montclair State's Women's Health Empowerment series, we'd like to show something that relates to women's health.  But we'd also like to mix Liouxsie's nerdy obsession with documentaries with comedy, horror, and cutesy love stories.



12th and Delaware is a documentary film set in a crisis pregnancy center and the abortion clinic across the street from it in Fort Pierce, Florida.

A drama that tells the story of a working class woman in London in 1950 who performs illegal abortions for women in need. It won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival and it was nominated for three Academy Awards and won three BAFTAs.

Inside Deep Throat is a 2005 American documentary about the 1972 pornographic film Deep Throat and its effects on American society.

The Education of Shelby Knox is 2005 documentary film that tells the coming of age story about the public speaker and feminist, Shelby Knox[1], a teenage girl who joins a campaign for comprehensive sex education in the high schools of Lubbock, Texas. It was an official selection of the Sundance Film Festival in 2005 and aired on PBS’ P.O.V. series that same year.

In the shocking and hilarious documentary, filmmaker Liz Canner takes a job editing erotic videos for a drug trial for a pharmaceutical company. Her employer is developing what they hope will be the first Viagra drug for women that wins FDA approval to treat a new disease: Female Sexual Dysfunction (FSD). Orgasm Inc. is a powerful look inside the medical industry and the marketing campaigns that are literally and figuratively reshaping our everyday lives around health, illness, desire — and that ultimate moment: orgasm.

About searching into the depths of Women in the Horror Genre from Scream Queens to Independent Filmmakers. Find out what Females are all about when it comes to blood, guts, and boobs.

The film is a dramatization of the real-life story ofBrandon Teena, a transgender man played by Hilary Swank, who pursues a relationship with a young woman, played by Chloë Sevigny.

But I'm a Cheerleader is a 1999 American satirical romantic comedy film. Natasha Lyonne stars as Megan Bloomfield, an apparently happy heterosexual high school cheerleader. However, her friends and family are convinced that she is a homosexual and arrange an intervention, sending her to a residential inpatient reparative therapy camp to cure her lesbianism. There Megan soon realizes that she is indeed a lesbian and, despite the therapy, gradually comes to embrace her sexual orientation. 

Private Practices: The Story of a Sex Surrogate is a 1985 American documentary filmdirected by Kirby Dick about the interaction between a sex surrogate and her clients.

This Film is Not Yet Rated is a 2006 independent documentary film about the Motion Picture Association of America's rating system and its effect on American culture, directed by Kirby Dick.  The film discusses disparities the filmmaker sees in ratings and feedback: between Hollywoodand independent films, between homosexual and heterosexual sexual situations, between male and female sexual depictions, and between violence and sexual content.

The Business of Being Born is a 2008 documentary film that explores the contemporary experience of childbirth in the United States. Produced by Ricki Lake[1], it compares various childbirth methods, including midwivesnatural birthsepidurals, and Cesarean sections[2]. The film criticizes the American health care system with its emphasis on drugs and costly interventions and its view of childbirth as a medical emergency rather than a natural occurrence.

The Screwfly Solution is the seventh episode in the second season of Masters of Horror. It is based upon the 1977 science fiction short story of the same name by Alice Sheldon; when a virus overcomes the male population of the world and turns them into murderous psychopaths, a mother and daughter escape across a country where their safety is in question.  Michael Gingold of Fangoria magazine, awarded the film three skulls for its "stinging mix of sociopolitical commentary and traditional horror mayhem". The political message was seen as a link between religious fervour and misogyny with special reference to Muslim fundamentalism.  

Documentary look at the 1996-97 effort of the dancers and support staff at a San Francisco peep show, The Lusty Lady, to unionize. Angered by arbitrary and race-based wage policies, customers' surreptitious video cameras, and no paid sick days or holidays, the dancers get help from the Service Employees International local and enter protracted bargaining with the union-busting law firm that management hires.

  • "The Science of Sex Appeal" (Netflix)
The seemingly elusive qualities of sex appeal are examined in exhaustive detail through the lens of science in this probing documentary, which documents the evolution and function of every component of human attraction. In this study of the real science behind "chemistry," you'll learn how thesubtlest sounds, sights and smells can affect sex appeal, and you'll discover how genetic, hormonal and neurological factors create sparks between people.

  • "Indie Sex" (Netflix)
For as long as there've been movies, there's been sex in movies -- a connection that filmmakers Lisa Ades and Lesli Klainberg explore in depth in this four-part series from the Independent Film Channel. In segments titled "Censored," "Taboos," "Teens" and "Extremes," a long list of film industry veterans -- including John Waters, Ally Sheedy, Dita Von Teese, Tatum O'Neal and more -- talk candidly about sex and cinema.




We'd like to think we covered a wide range of films here, but in case we didn't totally read your mind, you have the option to write-in your own film for our Film Screener Wishlist!  You can also vote on more than one film, if you can't choose.  (We don't blame you: we'd rather make a poll than make a decision ourselves!)

So please, take this poll, pass it along to the loves of your lives, and watch for the results on our Blogger page, Tumblr page, and Facebook page and group.  Thank you.



Film Screener Wishlist
Which 2-3 films would you like to see at our Friday, April 8th FILM SCREENINGS?
"12th & Delaware"
"Vera Drake"
"Inside Deep Throat"
"The Education of Shelby Knox"
"Orgasm Inc."
"Welcome to My Darkside"
"Boys Don't Cry"
"But I'm a Cheerleader"
"Private Practices: The Story of a Sex Surrogate"
"This Film Is Not Yet Rated"
"The Business of Being Born"
"The Screwfly Solution"
"Live Nude Girls Unite"
"The Science of Sex Appeal"
"Indie Sex"
"Hot and Bothered: Feminist Pornography"
Other: Leave a Comment with your Selection
See Results

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Bake Sale: Volunteers We're Calling You!

In order to prepare for the Big Day (Monday, December 13th from 11-3), we are recruiting volunteers to make the first bake sale as amazing as possible.  For more on volunteer opportunities, check out our updated "Volunteers, We're Calling You!" tab.

¡¡University Hall Bake Sale!!

Our first official initiative for fundraising is confirmed for Monday, December 13!  We'll be holding a bake sale outside University Hall Rm. 1010 from 11 a.m.-3 p.m.  There will be Girlie Goodie bags, pastie pastries (cupcakes!), and kinky candy.

Come visit us!  Show your support for Femvolution through buying everything we have!

Like this... but edible.  And less nude.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Supporting the Femvolution: or, When Redheads Collaborate

Recently, two lovely redheaded Vermonters (non-MSU students are still welcome to our Femvolution!) asked about supporting our projects through our fundraiser materials.  Up until now, I've been working under the assumption we would never stray far off campus, let alone Montclair, Nü Jersey, but they had a good point.  Even if we can't bring the FEMME Festival off MSU soil, we'd still love support for our feminist revival.


One level of on-campus support comes in the form of dropping your spare change in one of our brightly decorated donation jars.  And we would love it if you did!
Our donation jar, nestled comfortably among snacks in the WMGS office.  Come visit!

Our stationary donation jar is located in the WMGS Department, Dickson-120.  Visit the jar, if not the office, because you'll find lovely feminists milling around at almost any hour, and we love feminists.


Now, if you aren't the type to just give out "free money" to slackers like us, we'll also be selling goodies through several fundraisers throughout the year.  Dates will be posted as they are scheduled.  Following the December 7th and 8th first wave of Craft n' Conception Parties, we'll post a PDF of our ordering catalogue.  So even if you can make it to our in-person fundraisers, you can still show your (monetary) support for Femvolution.  And we can certainly use it.



Please check back soon for our updated Ordering Catalogue!



Craft n' Conception Parties: the First Wave

Join us for Femvolution's first ever Craft n' Conception Party!

This is a chance for us to talk, craft samplers for our fundraisers (which will be a huge component of our projects, because we need to raise funds if we're going to bring the Festival and zine to campus), and eat free food. Oh yes, there will be free food. Lunch and drinks will be provided.

What is involved in this meeting? 


❖ We'll be providing refreshments and snacks as well as crafting supplies for the following activities:

   ◊ decorating banners for our fundraising tables,
   ◊ pastie earrings,
   ◊ buttons,
   ◊ misc. feminist jewelry, 
   ◊ Girlie Activity Books,
   ◊ decorating Girlie Goodie bags,
   ◊ screen-printing projects,
   ◊ decorating donation jars for distribution and shifts among volunteers,
   ◊ Kama Sutra jigsaw puzzles, and
   ◊ crafting FEMME-orabilia for volunteers to keep and wear



❖ Before we hold our first fundraiser (which will be in the form of a bake sale), it would be great if we could put together a little catalogue to hand out with future items we'll be selling. Because some of the items we're thinking of selling take up more time than others, we'll offer pre-orders to the campus; that's where the pre-order catalogue comes in!


❖ This is a chance for everyone to brainstorm, or just sit around and talk if they're intimidated by all the glitter, and plan future volunteer opportunities that include...
   ◊ working on our zine (jobs include editing, writing articles, and production),
   ◊ signing up to table and collect donations on campus,
   ◊ networking with performers and speakers,
   ◊ working on the Festival's Scheduling,
   ◊ running around promoting Femvolution,
   ◊ and managing our various social networking sites.

In order to accommodate people's schedules,
there will be two Craft n' Conception Parties: one on Tuesday, December 7th from 12:30-2 p.m. (which I like to call the "day shift" (because that's cute)), and the other on Wednesday, December 8th from 7:30-9 p.m (which I'm calling "night vision" (because, again, I find it cute)).  If you have the chance to stop by both, please do! But be sure to RSVP individually to both.



At this point, we could use a few things from any volunteers willing to provide the following: hot glue guns, additional hot glue sticks, a photographer, mini cupcake trays, and a computer that gets internet access on campus.  If anyone can provide any of these things for one or both of the meetings, please e-mail Liouxsie.