Writer and Editor

Claudia Anderson

46 articles 2005–2017

Claudia Anderson was a writer and editor at The Weekly Standard, where she contributed articles on culture, family policy, and social issues over more than a decade. She wrote essays and profiles covering topics ranging from family structure and parenting to personal remembrances of notable figures. Her work at the magazine spanned from 2005 to 2017.

Say Yes to the Dress

September 8, 2017 · Casual, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

Reading about an exhibition that’s about to open at the Milwaukee Art Museum—“Inspiring Beauty: 50 Years of Ebony Fashion Fair”—took me back to the night long ago in Cincinnati when my teenage daughter and I saw this African-American extravaganza live. 

Beware the Wacky Sexual Politics on Campus

August 4, 2015 · feminism, College, Christina Hoff Sommers

Here are hot tips to help (1) libertarian and conservative students, (2) idealistic liberal female students, and (3) idealistic liberal male students navigate the bizarre world of safe spaces, othering, microaggressions, trigger warnings, alarming victimization statistics, and all the other…

Sexism at the World Cup

July 29, 2015 · Sports, Claudia Anderson, Blog

The Factual Feminist exposes the fallacy at the heart of the claim that female athletes face a “grass ceiling.”

Say It Again

July 6, 2015 · book reviews, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

The term “illiberal left” is one of the useful contributions of this book. Liberals, as Kirsten Powers grew up believing, are committed to tolerance, pluralism, and reasoned debate. Freedom of speech is, to them, a cherished principle. By contrast, she insists, “authoritarian demands for…

Patriarchal Oppression Lives!

June 9, 2015 · Claudia Anderson, Factual Feminist, Blog

Hear the Factual Feminist at her most eloquent, calling on Western women to demonstrate solidarity with women around the world who are struggling for basic rights we take for granted.

The Embarrassment of Trigger Warnings

April 15, 2015 · feminism, Christina Hoff Sommers, Claudia Anderson

Christina Sommers says it’s time to pull the trigger on trigger warnings and treat even the once-traumatized as adults.

New Front in the Gender Wars

March 11, 2015 · Claudia Anderson, Factual Feminist, Blog

A hundred years ago, the ADL was founded to combat the defamation of the Jewish people. The Factual Feminist wonders why it’s spreading gender propaganda in high schools.

Carol Glover’s Funeral: The Rest of the Story

January 20, 2015 · Washington, Claudia Anderson, Blog

When to mention race and when not? My fellow journalists who covered the funeral of the woman who died in the D.C. Metro last week chose not to mention it. Perhaps they deemed it a distraction, too fraught a subject to bring up at a solemn, family time. My own opinion, for what it’s worth, is that…

Free Speech Is Dying on College Campuses

September 30, 2014 · feminism, College, Claudia Anderson

The Factual Feminist warns that a “little army of junior assistant deans and harassment apparatchiks are quietly repealing the free speech protections of the First Amendment.”

Feminism vs. Truth

September 23, 2014 · feminism, Christina Hoff Sommers, Claudia Anderson

Christina Hoff Sommers, of Factual Feminist fame, continues to expose the feminist establishment’s war on truth. This jaunty five-minute video takes on the endlessly recycled pseudo-fact of the 23-cent wage gap between men and women. Watch it below:

Encourage Girls' Love of Science

July 21, 2014 · Science, Claudia Anderson, Factual Feminist

In her last video of the season, the Factual Feminist exposes the flimsy thinking behind a Verizon ad. Watch the video below:

Ask and the Factual Feminist will Answer

July 15, 2014 · Claudia Anderson, Factual Feminist, Blog

This week, Christina Sommers answers questions from her mailbag about workplace discrimination and discrimination in the sciences and responds to a critic of her employer, the American Enterprise Institute. See for yourselves:

Feminism Without Victimhood

June 16, 2014 · Claudia Anderson, Blog, Factual Feminist

This week the fabulous Factual Feminist answers some listeners’ questions — starting with why she calls herself a feminist at all. Watch her here:

How Thick a Stick May a Man Use to Beat his Wife?

June 5, 2014 · feminism, Woman, Claudia Anderson

Why would the leading textbook on domestic violence law persist in publishing a fantasy? Watch the Factual Feminist debunk the sinister legend of the “rule of thumb” -- the claim that English common law countenanced wife-beating as long as the stick a husband used was no thicker than his thumb.

Against the 'Rape Culture' Panic

May 19, 2014 · feminism, Rape, College

This week the Factual Feminist takes on the “rape culture” panic that is riling college campuses with help from the media, radical feminists, and too many politicians. Just as in the shameful panic over alleged child abuse at day care centers that sent innocent people to prison in the 1980s, false…

'Have American Boys Been Left Behind for Good?'

May 12, 2014 · feminism, Woman, Claudia Anderson

Boys are languishing in school--but "gender equity" in education means programs for girls. The Factual Feminist is concerned about all our children, boys as well as girls. Watch here:

'Do We Need Feminist Sciences?'

May 5, 2014 · Science, Claudia Anderson, Factual Feminist

This week the Factual Feminist takes on the new program in feminist biology at the University of Wisconsin, striking another blow for sanity and against agenda-driven, politicized science!

The Fabulous 'Factual Feminist'

April 29, 2014 · feminism, Christina Hoff Sommers, AEI

No one has done more than American Enterprise Institute scholar Christina Hoff Sommers to watchdog the perennially unreliable claims of activist feminism. Ever since her Who Stole Feminism: How Women Have Betrayed Women (1994), Sommers, a former professor of philosophy, has been performing the…

The Tale and the Teller

March 24, 2014 · Casual, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

My earliest memory of being spellbound by a piece of writing is of being read to as a small child from a book of Georgian (as in Caucasian) folk tales, the Yes and No Stories. For a time, I used to ask for “The Fox, the Bear and the Butter Jar” every night. 

Against the Wind

May 6, 2013 · Family, Casual, Claudia Anderson

Garden City (“What a misnomer!” said cousin Betty, who’d been there) is the seat of Glasscock County, a rectangular piece of flat, dry West Texas with a population density of two per square mile. The population of the “city” fell as low as 100 early in the last century, but the 2010 census put it…

We, the Grand Jury

February 18, 2013 · Features, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution gave its name to the protection against self-incrimination, and it also contains three other famous (and these days somewhat battered) guarantees​—​against double jeopardy; against deprivation of life, liberty, or property without due process of law; and of…

Austen’s Power

July 2, 2012 · Claudia Anderson, Magazine, Books and Arts

For decades now, media marketers and content producers have been milking the Jane Austen craze, first with fine dramatizations of the novels themselves for small and large screen, then with a vast bazaar of knockoffs—sequels by the score (Letters from Pemberley: The First Year, Captain Wentworth’s…

An Inspiration

March 13, 2012 · Claudia Anderson, Blog

For friends and admirers of Marilyn Hagerty, the North Dakota columnist whose straightforward review of the new Olive Garden in Grand Forks recently went viral, it’s been exhilarating to watch the blogosphere move in to mock her and come away humbled by the strength and charm of this seasoned…

Good Samaritans

February 27, 2012 · contraception mandate, Casual, Claudia Anderson

Last winter, I was in Paris for a few days and stayed at the epicenter of the old city, right next to Notre Dame, in a place called the Hôtel-Dieu, a large working hospital. Some years back a decision was made to provide rooms on the top floor for patients’ visitors to stay overnight. Then, finding…

Ivan’s Island

August 8, 2011 · Russia, Casual, Claudia Anderson

A cruise ship sank in the Volga River in heavy weather a few weeks back, with more than 100 lives lost. On the radio I heard President Medvedev vow to banish the antiquated boats that ply Russia’s waterways. A commentator called them “rust buckets,” and a shiver went down my spine.

Northwestern Reconsiders

May 12, 2011 · College, Claudia Anderson, University

Professor John Michael Bailey’s course on human sexuality has been dropped from Northwestern University’s offerings in psychology for next year. The publicity surrounding an optional after-class live demonstration of a motorized sex toy apparently had a sobering effect in the hallowed halls.

Second Sight

September 13, 2010 · Casual, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

 

Could Frank Rich Be Wrong?

July 8, 2010 · Claudia Anderson, Blog

David Blankenhorn, a valued contributor to THE WEEKLY STANDARD, has embarked on a doubtless quixotic quest for fair treatment at the hands of the New York Times. His letter to the paper’s “public editor” details, with characteristic clarity and courtesy, his thuggish treatment at the hands of…

The Turkey Vanishes

November 30, 2009 · Casual, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

Whenever conversation turns to dog stories, especially tales of dogs' misdeeds, my husband bides his time, hanging back while others spin their various yarns.

Picture Perfect

June 29, 2009 · Claudia Anderson, Magazine, Books and Arts

Golden Legacy

Fortress Washington

February 9, 2009 · Casual, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

In 1975, I moved back to Washington after several years away and started working as a freelance editor from home. It was lonely work, and sometimes I'd go stir crazy.

Friendly Persuasion

December 8, 2008 · Claudia Anderson, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Radical and the Republican

Parallel Lives

June 23, 2008 · Claudia Anderson, Magazine

Seeing Europe for the first time, a young Somali woman was dazzled by its order and cleanliness and its ingenious efficiency. It was "like a movie." Düsseldorf "looked like geometry class, or physics, where everything was in straight lines and had to be perfect and precise."

Pensacola Blues

November 26, 2007 · Casual, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

The Blue Angels--the Navy's demonstration team, the guys behind those six shiny blue fighter jets that fly in formation at air shows and do heart-stopping loop-de-loops at 500 miles an hour--have a peculiar shape to their year.

The Nuclear Wars

April 30, 2007 · Claudia Anderson, Magazine, Books and Arts

Marriage and Caste in America

Life with Jeane

December 18, 2006 · Casual, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

In 1982, Jeane Kirkpatrick brought out a collection of her essays under the title of the best known of them, "Dictatorships and Double Standards." The book is dedicated to "Douglas, John, Stuart, and Ricardo."

The Parent Hood

December 4, 2006 · Claudia Anderson, Blog

NEWSWEEK some weeks back had an arresting picture on its cover. The famous photographer Annie Leibovitz--tall, blonde, and 57, dressed in black trousers and a black V-neck top--stands with her three young daughters: a radiant, curly haired 5-year-old and adorable blonde toddler twins. Leibovitz is…

Defining Families Down

September 25, 2006 · Claudia Anderson, Magazine

THE WORST THING about public life in the United States is the harsh, ugly, barking, bad-faith-assuming, accusatory tone" of most discussion of important matters on which people disagree. So says David Blankenhorn, the unassuming and resourceful founding president of the Institute for American…

Anne Brunsdale, 1923-2006

February 13, 2006 · Casual, Claudia Anderson, Magazine

BACK IN THE STONE AGE, before the vast right-wing conspiracy and even the Reagan Revolution, there was a conservative Washington (just barely), and one of its fixtures was a handsome, smiling, slightly angular blonde woman named Anne Brunsdale.

Washington's Audubons

November 14, 2005 · Claudia Anderson, Magazine, Books and Arts

WHO KNEW THAT THE NATIONAL Gallery of Art possessed one of only two complete, never-bound, original sets of John James Audubon's Birds of America? The other such set reportedly is in Moscow.