Author: Cara has written 429 posts for this blog.

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31 Responses

  1. 1
    Megan 1.5.2009 at 5:55 pm |

    What about “Best Sports Blog”? This is a community that needs to grow in order to get attention toward women’s sports and Title IX-related issues!

  2. 2
    Megan 1.5.2009 at 6:01 pm |

    I retract my previous comment. I didn’t realize the nominations were closed. As you can see, in the “sports” category, there are no women. This is a problem.

  3. 4
    Caryn 1.5.2009 at 6:05 pm |

    This isn’t what you meant, but my baseball blog, Metsgrrl.com, is a nominee.

    The ‘grrl’ part isn’t an accident.

    Also, Feministe, the awards are recommending that you edit the link so it goes directly to the voting page for your category….

  4. 6

    [...] Jon look like quite the nutbar. If you aren’t sure who to vote for, Feministe has a great list of feminist finalists. It’s always good to take the opportunity to raise awareness of social [...]

  5. 7
    Lisa 1.5.2009 at 7:02 pm |

    The Bilerico Project should definitely have a spot here. (BEST LGBT BLOG)

    Jess Hoffman and many brilliant folks set up home over there.

  6. 9
    Livy 1.5.2009 at 8:02 pm |

    L-girl writes We Move To Canada, which has been nominated under Best Canadian blog. She’s a feminist (although it is not the focus of her blogging, it informs her opinions and writings) and an activist, but today she threw her support for the award behind Attack of the Redneck Mommy, which I only started reading today but already like very much.

  7. 10
    caryn 1.5.2009 at 9:21 pm |

    It’s funny – to the Mets fans, I’m this bra-burning feminazi hoyden.

    But over here, not a feminist.

    I mean, it’s really, really funny.

  8. 11
    Jill 1.5.2009 at 9:52 pm | *

    …who said you weren’t a feminist?

    (Not being bratty, I swear. I just feel like I missed something).

  9. 12
    Rachel 1.5.2009 at 10:28 pm |

    xkcd is both feminist-minded and up for Best Comic Strip blog – what sayeth the Feministers?

  10. 13
    Rachel 1.5.2009 at 10:43 pm |

    Also, Autism Vox and Stirrup Queen for Best Medical/Health Issues Blog; Dooce for Best Diarist (not commenting on the content – although I happen to enjoy her writing, I know some people don’t, but regardless, she’s a feminist).

  11. 14
    Renee 1.5.2009 at 10:50 pm |

    To be honest I am really irritated that there is no feminist category and there is no anti-racist category. There are so many blogs dedicated to writing about this and doing such great work I think that it is an embarrassment that these categories were excluded. Blogs like Racialicious, Stuff White People Do, Professor What if and Tanglad deserve to be recognized.

  12. 15
    denelian 1.5.2009 at 11:05 pm |

    can someone explain to me that “Authority” means in this case? it has all these categories of size based on whatever “authority” means…
    look, i know i’m kinda untutored when it comes to online stuff – i tried to set up RSS feeds, and was totally lost and confused (Auguste over at Pandagon was abolutely wonderful and took time out of his incredibly busy schedule to email me through the process, otherwise it STILL wouldn’t working correctly. i don’t speak this language lol)

    also – xkcd is, in my opinion, one of the BEST comics ever and is reallyreallyreallyREALLY useful when trying to explain feminism and feminist concepts to guys who are cool but don’t understand something. i use it all the time. and i will vote for it as soon as i figure out how lol.

  13. 17
    denelian 1.6.2009 at 12:19 am |

    Cara:
    thank you. i read it, i just didn’t totally understand it. i should have been clearer in what i was asking.
    i THINK that it says that “authority” is the number of other blogs that link to you in the past six months. not the number of times, the number of discrete blogs. is that correct?
    thank you again, i appreciate you taking the time and the effort 8-)

  14. 18
    blue milk 1.6.2009 at 8:36 am |

    Can I put a plug in for supporting Looky Daddy! under Best Parenting Blog? He is feminist-leaning and strongly supportive of GLBT rights on top of being a terrific and very funny writer. As a bonus he is in a hetero couple who have reversed the traditional gender roles of primary care for their children, in other words, a stay-at-home father.

    http://2008.weblogawards.org/polls/best-parenting-blog/

  15. 19
    jackie sheeler 1.6.2009 at 8:46 am |

    i voted for a few of your favorites, especially bitchphd and lindsay b. at risk of alienating god knows who, i posted all of my votes at getangrywithme.com today. only voted when there was a blog in that category that i read fairly regularly, so maybe half the categories are represented.

  16. 21
    Dana 1.6.2009 at 11:17 am |

    Thanks for the endorsement!

  17. 22
    Brian 1.6.2009 at 11:20 am |

    Thanks, blue milk, for the endorsement, and thanks, feministe, for the inclusion. I’m really quite taken aback, and more than a little honored. Honestly.

  18. 23
    Kai 1.6.2009 at 12:13 pm |

    Thank you, Cara!

    Yeah I agree with Renee that the categories are very constricted. A single flat list with weird continental groupings and the two progressive-oriented categories “liberal” and “LGBT” isn’t exactly a rich snapshot of the diversity of blogland.

    Eventually perhaps there will be more precise groupings and subgroupings, with people nominating and voting only in subject areas relevant to their lives and/or interests. A “social justice” category including subcategories such as “feminist”, “anti-racist”, “LGBT”, “differently abled”, “union”, etc, would certainly interest me and make more sense than lumping together blogs about, say, graphic design, banking, policing, reactionary punditry, and popular struggle, just because all those bloggers live in Asia. The challenge would be to develop a comprehensive taxonomy based on expertise in each domain.

    As for Technorati Authority, Denelian is right that it’s confusing, and indeed quite innaccurate. I don’t track Technorati stats at all because I view their software as being flawed beyond redemption. Sooner or later, bloggers and ad execs will wise up to better ways of tracking links, clicks, and eyeballs, not to mention socio-cultural and discursive influence.

    Anyway, thanks again for the good word. Zuky extends its respect. ;-)

  19. 24
    Radfem 1.6.2009 at 12:43 pm |

    Thanks for the links! I haven’t heard of some of these blogs and plan to check them out.

    To be honest I am really irritated that there is no feminist category and there is no anti-racist category. There are so many blogs dedicated to writing about this and doing such great work I think that it is an embarrassment that these categories were excluded. Blogs like Racialicious, Stuff White People Do, Professor What if and Tanglad deserve to be recognized.

    Amen to this.

    It’s funny – to the Mets fans, I’m this bra-burning feminazi hoyden.

    But over here, not a feminist.

    I mean, it’s really, really funny.

    I know the feeling of being considered one or the other when you’re really in between having been called a “braw burning feminist” on a couple of occasions and then as a blogger on police issues having them often being challenged as feminist in some circles. Because it often seemed that if you spoke out or wrote out about men impacted by police abuse including Sean Bell, the speaking out was almost seen as anti-feminist or nonfeminist. That’s why I thought it was really good when bloggers on Feministe and other places wrote postings about the men as well and labeled it as a feminist issue. Because among other things, the women were very much involved in the issues and indirectly impacted by what happened to men.

    Because the definition of feminist is left up to people in various places but that’s how it is with a lot of labels.

    Sometimes a woman just blogging about a male-dominated issue can be a feminist act knowing how difficult it’s been for women to get to cover most sports with male athletes. Because baseball is seen as a male-dominated sport and a female writing about it can be viewed as an aberration. Sports is a really hard glass house to break through.

  20. 25
    Mel 1.6.2009 at 1:18 pm |

    I can’t thank you enough for this. It made me really proud to make your list.

  21. 26
    Lisa 1.8.2009 at 9:09 am |

    What about best online community? I hear 20something bloggers is pretty awesome…

  22. 27
    riese/autowin 1.8.2009 at 9:16 am |

    Hi!

    I’m up for best LGBT blog this year and feminism is definitely one of my top ten feelings, and one of the few themes I feel completely confident echoes through my work. It may not seem apparent from first glance, but um, I feel really sad not being included as a feminist-minded blog. It’s like if a Cupcake Blog was left out of a list of “blogs with the most sugar.” I feel also the grammar and sentence structure in this paragraph won’t convince anyone but um, it’s early.

    Anyhow have a look:

    http://marielynbernard.blogspot.com = This Girl Called Automatic Win.
    http://theroadbeststraddled.blogspot.com = Autostraddle.

  23. 28
    Jon Swift 1.8.2009 at 12:36 pm |

    I’m no expert on feminism but I must disagree with your support of Dooce in the category of Best Diarist over the lovely and talented Blue Girl in a Red State (Blue State). I also should point out Avedon Carol’s The Sideshow is nominated for Best Midsize Blog and Kathleen Maher, who writes wonderful fiction, is nominated for Best Literature Blog. And while my modest blog, which is nominated for Best Humor Blog, certainly doesn’t fit your criteria, I was called a “feminist racist” by Ramesh Ponnuru and that should count for something:
    http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=ZGNiYWQ1NzA0M2Q2Mjk4OTAzODcxMmYyYzMxOGFiM2I=

  24. 29
    Jill 1.8.2009 at 12:38 pm | *

    Jon, I don’t know how we missed ya. Cara sent this post to all of us, and yet somehow there were still oversights. Sorry about that! Thanks for the heads up.

  25. 31
    Kathleen Maherl 1.8.2009 at 10:05 pm |

    Hey, thanks for endorsing Diary of a Heretic! I am 100% feminist but I wouldn’t have guessed anyone could tell from my blog’s serial episodes. Fiction means I gotta follow the story whatever it is and wherever it came from. And I’m honest about the characters, who are never me, although I usually do love them.

    I’m losing for real, not like the clever, modest, reasonable Jon Swift, who says he’s losing when we all know he’ll win. (Thanks for the all mentions, Jon. You promote me better than I do.)

    Point is, loser or not, I’m thrilled to think that maybe my strongest beliefs bleed through. A vast, deep, and continual global adjustment that’s pro-woman and anti-racist is long overdue–since forever.

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