(made some attempt to reduce bias)
(Attempt to make our editorial position on Islamophobia clear.)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
At the World Atheist Convention in June 2011 in Dublin, Ireland, prominent atheist and skeptic Rebecca Watson appeared on a panel about communicating atheism, during which Watson talked about women's experiences and sexism in [[atheism]]. At the same conference, late at night, upon entering an elevator, a man asked if she would like to have coffee in his room.
 
At the World Atheist Convention in June 2011 in Dublin, Ireland, prominent atheist and skeptic Rebecca Watson appeared on a panel about communicating atheism, during which Watson talked about women's experiences and sexism in [[atheism]]. At the same conference, late at night, upon entering an elevator, a man asked if she would like to have coffee in his room.
   
After arriving home from her travels, she posted video blog about the conference which included a mild rebuke about being hit on by a strange man in an elevator at four o'clock in the morning. This sparked a controversy involving responses from many dozens of sources on the web, which eventually became known as "Elevatorgate". Prominent atheist Richard Dawkins, whom Watson had been a fan of, posted sarcastic comments dismissing Watson's take on her experience as much ado about nothing, even comparing the incident to the plight of a Muslim woman as a way to further demean and minimize Watson. Dawkins' comments escalated the situation, with Dawkins becoming a target of criticism, including from Watson, who blogged that she was no longer a fan of his.
+
After arriving home from her travels, she posted video blog about the conference which included a mild rebuke about being hit on by a strange man in an elevator at four o'clock in the morning. This sparked a controversy involving responses from many dozens of sources on the web, which eventually became known as "Elevatorgate". Prominent atheist Richard Dawkins, whom Watson had been a fan of, posted sarcastic comments dismissing Watson's take on her experience as much ado about nothing, comparing the incident unfavourably to the apparently more sympathetic plight of a hypothetical Muslim woman he addressed in the second person, both [[Many bad things in the world|minimising]] Watson's experience and participating in the Islamophobic narrative that Muslim women are invariably oppressed by their religion and culture. Dawkins' comments escalated the situation, with Dawkins becoming a target of criticism, including from Watson, who blogged that she was no longer a fan of his.
   
 
In September 2011 Watson [http://skepchick.org/2011/09/mom-dont-read-this/ reported that she was still being harassed], including by several blogs. The incident was somewhat revived in June 2012 when Watson opted to skip that year's "The Amaz!ing Meeting" because of a failure by the organizers to provide her with a copy of their policy or plan about handling harassment.
 
In September 2011 Watson [http://skepchick.org/2011/09/mom-dont-read-this/ reported that she was still being harassed], including by several blogs. The incident was somewhat revived in June 2012 when Watson opted to skip that year's "The Amaz!ing Meeting" because of a failure by the organizers to provide her with a copy of their policy or plan about handling harassment.

Revision as of 03:14, 30 January 2014

At the World Atheist Convention in June 2011 in Dublin, Ireland, prominent atheist and skeptic Rebecca Watson appeared on a panel about communicating atheism, during which Watson talked about women's experiences and sexism in atheism. At the same conference, late at night, upon entering an elevator, a man asked if she would like to have coffee in his room.

After arriving home from her travels, she posted video blog about the conference which included a mild rebuke about being hit on by a strange man in an elevator at four o'clock in the morning. This sparked a controversy involving responses from many dozens of sources on the web, which eventually became known as "Elevatorgate". Prominent atheist Richard Dawkins, whom Watson had been a fan of, posted sarcastic comments dismissing Watson's take on her experience as much ado about nothing, comparing the incident unfavourably to the apparently more sympathetic plight of a hypothetical Muslim woman he addressed in the second person, both minimising Watson's experience and participating in the Islamophobic narrative that Muslim women are invariably oppressed by their religion and culture. Dawkins' comments escalated the situation, with Dawkins becoming a target of criticism, including from Watson, who blogged that she was no longer a fan of his.

In September 2011 Watson reported that she was still being harassed, including by several blogs. The incident was somewhat revived in June 2012 when Watson opted to skip that year's "The Amaz!ing Meeting" because of a failure by the organizers to provide her with a copy of their policy or plan about handling harassment.

References

Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted.