Saturday 28 March 2015

Instagram apologises for removing poignant photos of a woman on her period



Poet and college student Rupi Kaur, 22, tried to post the above photo of a woman on her period as
part of a photo series she was working on for school on Instagram, but Instagram removed the photo, citing violation of the "Community Guidelines."

Thank you @instagram for providing me with the exact response my work was created to critique. You deleted a photo of a woman who is fully covered and menstruating stating that it goes against community guidelines when your guidelines outline that it is nothing but acceptable. The girl is fully clothed. The photo is mine. It is not attacking a certain group. Nor is it spam.

 And because it does not break those guidelines I will re-post it. I will not apologize for not feeding the ego and pride of a misogynist society that will have my body in an underwear but not be okay with a small leak when your pages are filled with countless photos/accounts where women (so many of whom are underage) are objectified, pornified, and treated less than human.

Thank you. This image is a part of my photoseries project for my visual rhetoric course. you can view the full series at rupikaur.com. I bleed each month to help make humankind a possibility. My womb is home to the divine, a source of life for our species, whether i choose to create or not. But very few times is it seen that way. In older civilizations this blood was considered holy. In some it still is. But a majority of people, societies, and communities shun this natural process.

Some are more comfortable with the pornification, the sexualization of women, the violence and degradation of women than this. They cannot be bothered to express their disgust about all that but will be angered and bothered by this. We menstruate and they see it as dirty, attention seeking, sick, a burden. As if this process is less natural than breathing. as if it is not a bridge between this universe and the last. As if this process is not love, labour, life. Selfless and strikingly beautiful.

This morning, Instagram apologized for removing the photo twice, according to Vice, saying, "When our team processes reports from other members of the Instagram community, we occasionally make a mistake. In this case, we wrongly removed content and worked to rectify the error as soon as we were notified. We apologize for any inconvenience."

The photo is now back on Kaur's account. Kaur told Vice that she feels like she won and can't believe anyone thought it was a big deal in the first place since "it's just a red spot."

Canary Updates

By Lane Moore

No comments:

Post a Comment