Feminist Sweepstakes Explained

Feminist Sweepstakes
Type:studio
Artist:Le Tigre
Cover:Feminist_Sweepstakes.jpg
Released:October 16, 2001
Studio:Modern Recording, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Genre:Art punk, electronic rock, riot grrrl
Length:40:58
Label:Mr. Lady
Producer:Chris Stamey, Le Tigre
Prev Title:From the Desk of Mr. Lady
Prev Year:2001
Next Title:Remix
Next Year:2003

Feminist Sweepstakes is the second studio album by American electro-punk band Le Tigre. It was released on October 16, 2001, by record label Mr. Lady.

Feminist Sweepstakes is Le Tigre's first album to feature JD Samson as a member of the band. She had previously worked with the band as a roadie and the operator of former member Sadie Benning's slide show during live performances in support of their first record.

Background

The album title "Feminist Sweepstakes" was explained by JD Samson:

"The idea came to us when pondering the idea of what a feminist Easter basket may look like. We began planning a basket of goodies that would be a prize that could be won by an unsuspecting record buyer. Soon enough, after bouncing the word sweepstakes around, we looked up 'sweepstakes' in the dictionary and there was instant gratification. A sweepstakes is a contest in which the members of the contest put together their own (be it money or objects, etc.) in order to come out with a large winning of some sort for the prize winner. For us, the feminist sweepstakes is the life we live as feminists (for one) every feminist gives her/his own to the rest of the community, and each person then is able to have the collective power of feminism itself. And number two, each song then becomes a prize for each willing/winning listener."[1]

Songs

F.Y.R.

"F.Y.R.", which stands for "Fifty Years of Ridicule", is one of the album's faster songs. The song name is a reference to the book The Dialectic of Sex by Shulamith Firestone, which describes the fifty years of ridicule American women had to deal with between obtaining the ability to vote in 1920 to the book's publication in 1970. It also includes references to mifepristone/RU-486, Title IX, the shower scene in which Janet Leigh is killed in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho, Mrs. Doubtfire and Virginia Slims cigarettes, who used the slogan "You've Come a Long Way, Baby" and themes of independence and liberation to advertise towards women during the 1960s and 1970s.

The song's outro (or, as listed in the liner notes, the intro to the song, On Guard) is a live performance of an excerpt from the stand-up monologue, The Saturday Night Special: Rape and Other Big Jokes, written by Naomi Weisstein.

Dyke March 2001

Dyke March 2001 consists mainly of recorded samples from the Dyke March in New York City, which the band members attended. Samson said the song was written in mind of making it a dance hit for lesbian bars; "Lesbian bars shouldn't have to play Madonna and Young M.C. We really wanted to create a song that was made for and by queer women all over. We wanted women marching and exploding with lesbian pride to fuel the song as lyrics and percussive instruments."[2]

Keep On Livin'

"Keep On Livin'" is a song about "both forms of coming out", as an abuse survivor and/or as an LGBT person, and moving on from the hardships of it. It was written collaboratively by Hanna and Samson, who both felt their respective experiences of sexual abuse and coming out drew emotional parallels. It was also inspired by Ann Cvetkovic's essay, "Sexual Trauma / Queer Memory", which discusses the intersections between "Incest, Lesbianism and Therapeutic Culture", and led to the decision to mention both subjects in the same song.

Le Tigre has a dedicated page on their website, also called "Keep On Livin' ", which contains advice from JD Samson for coming out, as well as help from Kathleen Hanna for sexual abuse survivors. The page also contains a music video for the song, which was and produced and directed by Paper Tiger Television in collaboration with Samson, and features several LGBTQ+ youths from New York.[3]

Release

Feminist Sweepstakes was released on October 16, 2001.

Another version of the album was released on August 24, 2004, with a bonus multimedia track, a different version of "Well, Well, Well" featuring Vaginal Davis.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Le Tigre Interview, Dec '01. 2022-02-12. www.phinnweb.org.
  2. "Interview with Le Tigre". https://www.ceciliadougherty.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/2004Le-Tigre-Interview.pdf
  3. Web site: 2006-04-22 . Le tigre. 2022-04-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060422215527/http://www.letigreworld.com/sweepstakes/html_site/keep/keep.html . 22 April 2006 . dead.