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NEWS & LETTERS, July 2002 

Confronting sexism in Memphis

by Jen Ainbinder

A few weeks ago, I went to Memphis to give a presentation. In planning the trip, my comrade and I didn’t realize that the weekend we chose was also the weekend of the Tyson-Lewis fight. I don’t pay a lot of attention to professional boxing, but the last that I had heard, Mike Tyson was not allowed to fight in Las Vegas, and the fight was going to be moved to Washington, D.C.

Apparently, the powers-that-be in Memphis lobbied hard to get Mike Tyson and Lennox Lewis to fight in their city, citing the goodies that the publicity would bring to Memphis. And it worked—sort of. On Saturday, June 8, movie stars and B-list celebrities rented out most of the clubs and bars on Beale Street.

People dressed up in their best party clothes and paid hundreds of dollars to watch a convicted rapist try one more time to become the “heavyweight champion of the world.” And Memphis got more publicity in one weekend than it had cumulatively for the last ten years.

More accurately, parts of Memphis got publicity. The Pyramid, where the event was held, the ugliest building that I have ever seen with my own two eyes, received more than its share of publicity. The Gay Pride parade and celebration held the same day of the fight got very little attention, and the Women’s Action Coalition of Memphis was invisible to all media. While the local media did note (very briefly and inaccurately) that some “Gay Rights” organization was protesting Tyson for his homophobia, they left out crucial points of the protest.

The fact is that Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender groups, WAC, and News & Letters were protesting not just Tyson’s homophobia and the fact that he is a convicted rapist. They were protesting boxing as a blood sport, but they were also protesting the way that the mayor and the city of Memphis spent a great deal of public resources for one fight which contributed very little to the long-term well-being of the city.

What could not be televised was the quality of human interactions. I was privileged to give a presentation, sponsored jointly by N&L and WAC on “Sexism, The Youth Movement, and Women’s Liberation” to a group of intelligent, thoughtful, committed young people.

Clearly, in any group there will be points of disagreement, but the way that this group handled the discussion was wonderful. The goal seemed to be a common understanding of the points of discussion, not absolute agreement. A sizable percentage of the people came to the Left out of the anarchist tradition. Consequently, an underlying thread in the conversation was the individual vs. collective responsibility question.

It is people like these who reaffirm my hope that the youth movement has much to contribute to the Left and to the larger political debate. Youth issues encompass all of the forces of revolution. Youth issues are women’s liberation issues; youth issues are labor issues, and the youth that I met in Memphis were asking important questions about the kind of work that people should be doing.

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