Saturday, March 14, 2020
5 Reasons Building a Personal Website Will Help You Find a Job
5 Reasons Building a Personal Website Will Help You Find a JobIts all about the brandinghow many times have we heard that mantra? How many times have we used it ourselves? Lots, and theres a good reason you need to stand out. In life, sure, but especially when youre looking for a job. When you apply for a job, you know youre great (confirmed by your fifth grade soccer trophy, among other things), but how do you prove that when there are 10, 20other applicants with similar resumes? Building a personal website googletag.cmd.push(function() googletag.display(div-gpt-ad-1467144145037-0) ) It seems overwhelming, but a little bit of time up front can yield great results for your job hunt. Read on to find out why.1. It impresses hiring managers.Having a supplemental website that outlines your professional goals and achievements shows that youre committed to your job search, and are trying to find ways to stand out in the crowd.2. Like your career, a website can evolve.A resume is what it i s a frozen snapshot of you at a particular point in your career. Once you send it out the door via emaille or on paper, theres no taking it back, no making changes in the short term. Having a personal website (which youd link in the cover letter or the resume itself), gives you the opportunity to update information that hiring managers can see in real time. Think of it as a kind of living resume to supplement the traditional one that goes out.3. Its easy.Even if youre not comfortable with doing web entwurf yourself, these days everyone has a brother, cousin, or roommates buddy who does freelance web design. And if you dont go that route, there are plenty of free and inexpensive tools online that can help you get started with a basic website. Sites like Strikingly or GoDaddy can help you get your brand online quickly and easily.4. Its a way to collect your branding in one place.Chances are, hiring managers are going to Google you. Normally what would come up is a smattering of social media accounts (and hopefully not that blog you started back before people knew they needed to moderate their online presence). Having your own branded site can collect all of those things in one place, creating a hub thats all about you. (Of course, make sure that only the social media that shows you in your best professional light are included.)5. It can raise your profile.Your website wont just be accessible to hiring managersyou might be surprised at the opportunities that could come from potential employers searching online. A website can also enhance your social media presence, and start building the kind of network that could introduce new opportunities as well.If you find that youre struggling to get interviews or stand out from the pack as you apply for jobs, its time to shake things up a bit and add something new. Building a website shows a commitment to your professional brand, and could be just the extra edge you need to get in the door for an interview.
Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Feminist Books Your Book Club Will Love
Feminist Books Yur Book Club Will Love Looking for your next book club pick? Picking the perfect book can be difficult. Do you want a crowd pleaser or a controversial selection? Fiction or nonfiction? You want to choose something you can talk about, of course, but therbeibeie are just so many options and so little time to browse.Why not bring some feminist literature into your group? Whether or not your group is a feminist book club per se, there are many books that beistand feminist theory and enlighten and entertain men and women alike. You might even learn something newHere are 16 feminist books to inspire, educate, and entertain your members at your next book club meeting.16 Feminist Books1.For readers who have burned through Jane Austen and all of the Bront sisters, Elizabeth Gaskells classic novel about love and cotton mills in the Victorian era is the perfect choice. This story looks at poverty, labor, and the roles of men and women in a Northern England town that is rapidly c hanging in the wake of the Industrial Revolution.2. From Victorian England to 1970s Seoul. An unnamed teenage protagonist leaves her family in the countryside to work the assembly line at a stereo factory and attend night school in the hopes of becoming a writer. Originally published in Korean, The Girl Who Wrote Loneliness is an autobiographical novel and coming-of-age story about a woman looking back on her childhood, teetering on the edge of poverty as a factory girl.3. Ursula Le Guin is a master of science fiction, and The Left greifhand of Darkness was one of the first books in the newly minted feminist science fiction genre. The story tells of Genly Ai, a man sent to another planet as an envoy. There, he encounters the ambisexual inhabitants, people with no fixed sex. In this context, Le Guin examines the role of gender in culture and what happens when you eliminated gender, to find out what was left.This novel is part of the Hainish Cycle, so fans can travel back to Le Guins universe again and again.4. There are More Beautiful Things Than BeyoncBy Morgan ParkerThis poetry collection examines the reality of being a black woman in contemporary American culture. Poems feature women and members of the feminist movement throughout history, from Jesuss wife to Michelle Obama to, of course, Beyonc. Parkers brash style is both performative and vulnerable and demands respect.5. In this first volume of Jelly Sue DeConnicks graphic novel series, non-compliant women in a futurist, male-dominated world are sent to prison on another planet. The story riffs on women-in-prison exploitation films, following different women as they move towards their lives on Bitch Planet, as well as the dramas that face them in prison.6. Korean author, Min Jin Lee, weaves a multi-generational epic following the women of a Korean family that is eventually exiled to Japan. Pachinko, titled the Japanese slot-machine-meets-pinball game, is a story of resilience and the immigrant experience and beautifully portrays the sacrifices that people, particularly women, have to make when they are deemed second-class citizens.7. When We Were OutlawsBy Jeanne CrdovaJeanne Crdova, a queer, Latinx activist and icon of the womens movement, chronicles her struggles to choose between her personal life and her dedication to her cause in this memoir. Crdova sought to change the world and fight for the rights of LGBT+ people in the 1970s. She became an underground reporter and created her own magazine, The Lesbian Tide, fighting for lesbian visibility while navigating her own love life and quest for self-identity.8. By Carol Ann DuffyThe first themed collection from Scottish poet and playwright Carol Ann Duffy takes histories, myths, and stories that focus on men and tells them through the point of view of their wives. Duffy brings these women to the forefront, discussing themes like sexism and equality and birth and death with a decidedly feminist bent.9. Roxanne Gay, author of Bad Fem inist, calls Morgan Jenkins a writer to be reckoned with. In this collection of essays, Jenkins tackles all of the tough, controversial subjects pertaining to the feminist movement, civil rights, and beyond. A must read for discussion of intersectional feminism (which should be all feminism).10. In this collection of essays written between 1976 and 1984, black lesbian poet and feminist writer Audre Lorde takes on sexism, racism, class, and homophobia, among many other issues. Lorde tells us to never close our eyes to the terror, to the chaos which is Black which is creative which is female which is dark which is rejected which is messy which is11. Based on Mackenzi Lees weekly Twitter series, this collection brings to life the female trailblazers that history has forgotten. The collection spans from the Mirabal Sisters, four Dominican women who helped to topple Rafael Trujillos dictatorship, to Sayyida al-Hurra, Mediterranean pirate queen, and demonstrates that there are other badas s history-making women besides Marie Curie and RBG.12. Calpurnia Tate is a young girl growing up in post-Civil War Texas with four brothers, and it is high time she started acting like a lady. But Calpurnia wants to keep exploring in the woods and learning about science from her grandfather. This middle-grade novel perfect for an intergenerational book club. (And its okay for adults to read childrens literature, too Often, we can learn a lot from it.)13. From debut author Lilliam Rivera, The Education of Margot Sanchez is a coming-of-age story about a girl spending her summer at home in the Bronx after a year spent at an expensive prep school. After stealing her fathers credit card to buy clothes to help her fit in with her rich white friends, Margot is grounded for the summer and forced to spend her days working in her familys supermarket. Along with grappling with her racial identity, Margot has to deal with the machismo of her father and older brother. This teen novel is another great intergenerational pick, perfect for teens and adults who worry just a bit too much about fitting in.14. This novel, originally written in Persian, follows five women who find themselves in a garden on the outskirts of Tehran. The women live together, without men, escaping the confines of family and society. Shortly after the novel was originally published, Shahrnush Parsipur was arrested and jailed for the books portrayal of female sexuality. And pssttheres also a movie adaptation.15. Vivian Carter lives in small-town Texas, where football players are gods, and girls have to deal with dress codes and sexual harassment. Vivian is sick of it, so she starts her own feminist zine and distributes it anonymously at school. Her writing strikes a chord, and other girls join in on the conversation, creating new friendships that stretch across boundaries of popularity and class. Moxie is a must-read for any woman of any age looking to share her voice.16. Peri is a wealthy Turkish woman on her way to a dinner party when she is attacked. The rediscovery of an old photo from her time at Oxford University sends her into a memory spiral about the two women she befriended and lost.Chapters alternate between Peris past and present. She floats through the dinner party, trying to hide from her wealthy and oblivious contemporaries, and she travels back to her adolescence and early adulthood, where Peri often found herself stuck in the middle of extremes.More Feminist MediaFor clubs that read poetry, we have 15 feminist poetsfor you to choose from tooWhether you are a member of a general or feminist book club, these books are sure to spark conversation at your next meeting. For more feminism in pop culture, check out 45 Feminist Movies to Add to Your Binge List or find a new favorite site in our 10 best feminist blogs.
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