https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/926034761/it-aint-pretty
Women in Surfing
Ryan Reft talks about surfing, gender, and feminism in 20th century California
“I like surfing because I feel like the true me. I think that surfing can show off to people that you can actually do something,” Salinas, CA resident and pre-teen surfer, Mari Howarth, told filmmaker Jay Dunn. “If somebody says really mean things like ‘Boys can do this and girls can’t,’ that’s a stereotype. If you really want to do it, just believe in it and you can do it.”
As a participant in the Wahine Project, an organization and movement founded by Salinas native and surfer Dionne Ybarra, Howarth represents the upcoming generation of female surfers, and Ybarra’s program embodies the multiracial, transnational, boundary eschewing nature of the sport. Established in April of 2010, the Wahine Project aims to eliminate barriers to surfing — geographic, economic, and cultural — for children, particularly girls aged 7 to 17. Wahine uses surfing to link young women across state, national, and international borders, while promoting its Global Citizenship curriculum as a means to encourage collective action and awareness. In many ways, the Wahine Project represents the 21st century culmination of over 50 years of perseverance by California women to create a place for themselves on the waves.
Read full article at KCET.
Brown Girl Surf gets an interview on Time Travel Plans
Named in honor of Polynesia’s first female surfers, Brown Girl Surf ™ is dedicated to fostering a diverse, alternative women’s surf community in the San Francisco Bay Area and around the world.
We do this by offering surf lessons locally, to introduce women and girls of all ages and backgrounds to the great sport of surfing. We sponsor community events and create media which celebrates female surf culture, highlights the achievements of diverse female surf pioneers, and challenges many of the pervasive media norms surrounding women’s surfing. Through the sale of our products and gear, we sponsor, support, and empower surfing women around the world who are working towards social change.
Mission:
Our mission is to elevate the historical significance of trailblazing female surfers, and to connect them with resources and support (and each other!) so they can continue making waves of change in their communities now and for generations to come.
Read the interview with Brown Girl Surf at Time Travel Plans.
