Take Back The News: Four Sisters Confront the Rape
P.O. Box 110-945,
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Emily Brandt
718/599-8857
Amnesty International recently published a report concluding that one in three people believes that women who behave flirtatiously are at least partially responsible for being raped, and a similar number think that women are partially or wholly responsible for being raped if they are drunk. Recent statistics (
February 13th marks the launch of Take Back The News’ new website, www.takebackthenews.org. Take Back the News works to raise public awareness about the epidemic of rape, in order to foster greater public dialogue and ultimately greater public responsibility. The new site reflects the incorporation and revamp of this anti-rape organization, including the formation of a Media Response Project to streamline communications with media outlets, and the distribution of free Community Print Project Kits that college activist groups can use to gather and publish rape survival stories.
Jen Curley, who organized a Take Back The News Community Print Project at
Takebackthenews.org continues to publish rape survival stories told in survivors’ own words, as was the project’s original mission beginning in 2001. These stories are the very heart of the organization’s mission to confront the misrepresentation and underrepresentation of sexual assault by mainstream media.
The revitalization of this nonprofit organization is due, in large part, to the formation of a Board of Directors comprised of four sisters, Emily Brandt, the project’s founder and a New York City public school teacher; and Julia Brandt, a public school teacher and veteran activist; Laura Blasberg, an attorney; and Maria Brandt, a college literature professor. The Board has established four main components of the project:
- Media Response Project: a streamlined system to track and archive media articles regarding rape and to contact editors and reporters regarding our concerns of how rape is misrepresented or underrepresented in the media
- Creative Writing Program: a program for colleges to use to encourage survivors to write about the circumstances surrounding their assault
- Book Project: a published book of compiled rape survival stories intended to increase public awareness that sexual assault is an epidemic that must be addressed with greater urgency by our lawmakers, policymakers, and law enforcement agencies
- Community Print Project Kits: Take Back the News print kits to be sent to community centers and campus women’s centers with instructions on how to raise community awareness through newspaper print projects and related events
In addition to these projects, Take Back the News is building a resource of information on police reporting experiences. To learn more about these projects, visit www.takebackthenews.org today.
For more information, contact Emily Brandt at Emily@takebackthenews.org or at
718-599-8857.
Published in: Take Back The News: Four Sisters Confront the Rape Epidemic, Press Release, Take Back The News, 5 February 2006.
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