T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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270.1 | | ENGINE::FRASER | Amor vincit Insomnia | Tue Aug 30 1988 11:04 | 13 |
| Interesting question. I read recently that 'men' are confused,
in that 'women' have demanded their space, so 'men' have
stepped back and given the space. Now, 'women' are complaining
that 'men' are not giving enough commitment, apparently now
conditioned to give space instead.
Masculinity? Being strong when strength is required, being
caring and gentle, being supportive, but also being strong
enough to be able to accept support - to share the load.
Honest in all things, dependable, trusting and trustworthy.
&y.
|
270.2 | That's ME !!! | MUNTRA::TOWNSHEND | Fear & Loathing in M�nchen... | Tue Aug 30 1988 12:47 | 1 |
|
|
270.3 | My opinion is old fashioned | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Tue Aug 30 1988 13:50 | 33 |
| Interesting topic Jim. In my view masculinity is to men, what feminity
is to women. It's what makes us different from one another. I
think that most men and women like the other attributes (of femininity
and masculinity) in the other sex. I also think that men and women
will never be equal. At certain things, men will have the upper
hand or the expertise, and at other things women will have the upper
hand and the expertise. (To disclaim this previous statement somewhat,
let me say that this is in most instances. If I were not to
generalize, this note would have to deal with every exception)
It is my belief that human nature will take care of things and decide
where everyone fits in the picture.
When I hear the words act like a man, I usually relate it to stand
up for what you believe in, be more courageous in confronting your
fears, and own up to your actions.
I think the situation as it was 30-40 years ago was out of kilter
towards favoring men. However, I think we have to be careful that
we quite possibly might have over corrected for the way things were.
We now have mothers who want to stay home with their kids, who can't
because both incomes are needed to provide the basics for the family.
This is the reason why I don't think the feminist movement represents
the beliefs, or is for the benefit of most women. I am going to
teach my daughters to act like ladies and my sons to act like gentlemen
in the traditional sense. Whereas I think it's important to do
what you want to do in the workplace, I think it more important
and rewarding that ones family is in order.
Lastly, I think that when you can't distinguish womens roles from
mens, we all will be worse off and less happy because of it. I don't
think that it will last long though, things will be as they are meant
to be, no matter how smart mankind thinks he/she is.
|
270.4 | Man Needs Women | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Tue Aug 30 1988 14:12 | 15 |
| When you try to derfine it, its realy tough to do isn't it.
I feel it is lost, because so far all the definitions that
have been given, women also fit into, or at least we are told.
An anthropologist that I seen on a talk show (I don't remember his
name) said, as masculinity declines so will the human species. He
said that men need women, but women today are begining to feel
they don't need men. A woman can have children, nuture them, work
at a career without a man. A man can only work at a career without
a woman. Men have a psychological need to perform for women. He has
a need to be the provider and cartaker of his woman and children.
I don't remember all the things he said, and I wish I could remember
his name because he has a book out on this subject.
Jim
|
270.5 | A new noters point of view! | NYEM1::COHEN | aka JayCee...I LOVE the METS & #8! | Tue Aug 30 1988 15:25 | 21 |
| I'm new to this conference, but I certainly hope that masculinity
is not dead....I always seem to have a problem in that I like to
be treated like a woman...god knows, in this day of the '80's
MEGA-WOMAN and all that jazz, I was probably born at the wrong time...
Masculinity is what each man makes of it....for some it's not being
afraid to show that soft, sensitive side, for others, it's fighting
at a bar with some roughnecks who happened to look at a woman
wrong...defending their honor type-of-stuff, and for others, well,
I'm sure I'll be reading to find out...you guys seem to have some
good ideas.
When I hear the expression "be a man" or "take it like a man" I
usually think of that MACHO stereotyped kind of guy...not the kind
I"m attracted to, but the stereotype keeps coming up in my head.
Like I said, masculinity is what each of you make it, and I'm just
glad that you all do!
Jill
|
270.6 | masculinity is alive and well! | MCIS2::POLLITZ | | Tue Aug 30 1988 05:52 | 18 |
| re .0 Masculinity is biologically rooted and its expression has
the whole of history on its side.
I am continually amused by those that are taken in by
the ideas of movements that do not reflect the sexual
behavior that the sexes have engaged in throughout history.
Masculinity and femininity are alive and well.
Masculinity is not affected in those men that have refused
accept ideological substitutions for reality.
A movement that squashed itself due to blatant absurdities
can hardly squash a man's masculinity.
Or femininity for that matter.
Russ
|
270.8 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Wed Aug 31 1988 10:06 | 64 |
| RE: .3
> At certain things, men will have the upper
> hand or the expertise, and at other things women will have the upper
> hand and the expertise. (To disclaim this previous statement somewhat,
> let me say that this is in most instances....)
Care to name some things that men will have more expertise at
than women (and vice versa)? Are you feeling brave today? :)
> When I hear the words act like a man, I usually relate it to stand
> up for what you believe in, be more courageous in confronting your
> fears, and own up to your actions.
Sounds like a few good human traits to me. (I mean, I seriously
doubt that my cats can do these things, but as head of household
and provider for my family, and as an adult in general, I'm
called upon to have these traits. Male sexual organs are
apparently not a mandatory prerequisite.) :)
> We now have mothers who want to stay home with their kids, who can't
> because both incomes are needed to provide the basics for the family.
> This is the reason why I don't think the feminist movement represents
> the beliefs, or is for the benefit of most women.
Since when did feminists gain control of the whole economy (or
were you just taking a free stab while you had the opportunity?)
Feminists only asked for one thing for women: CHOICES! It
was necessary because not all women can enjoy the "protection"
of a man, and needed to be able to support themselves. CHOICE
made it possible to do that for millions who would not have
had decent employment opportunities any other way.
> Whereas I think it's important to do
> what you want to do in the workplace, I think it more important
> and rewarding that ones family is in order.
Do you plan to quit your job and stay home to make sure
that everything is in order at home? What if you found that
your wife could earn more than you do (and it was better for
your family if you gave up work and stayed home)? Would you
do it? (Isn't it more important to you than your career?)
> Lastly, I think that when you can't distinguish womens roles from
> mens, we all will be worse off and less happy because of it. I don't
> think that it will last long though, things will be as they are meant
> to be, no matter how smart mankind thinks he/she is.
Do you really feel that you need a defined role to be a man?
If men and women were sharing roles more, would some men feel like
less of a person (or just less of a man?) Do you think women
should limit their development as human beings in order to make
men feel more masculine?
How do *YOU* know how things were "meant to be" for men and
women in our culture (and what makes you think that women will
be willing to give up the progress we've made in opportunities
just because some men are having doubts about how much of their
masculinity is left?)
Masculinity should be something that you know you have (inside
yourself.) Why do some men seem to need so many external
reminders and ways to measure/prove it (when it is something
that just exists on its own whether anyone else sees it or not)?
|
270.9 | What I feel | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Aug 31 1988 12:24 | 18 |
|
Feelings are emotions resulting from perceived experiences, whether they
be perceived correctly or incorrectly. If I feel masculine, what am I
feeling? Power, wisdom, provider or protector ? Women feel the same things.
Does that make them feel masculine ? Women still look for masculinity when
searching for a mate. They usually look for a man who is strong, wise,
protective and good provider. How many women do you know that have
married men who are weaker, unwise, cowardly and can't provide and are still
happy ? A woman who makes a man feel weak, unwise, cowardly, or unable
to provide threatens his masculinity. The woman who makes a man
feel masculine, is a treasure that he will keep close to his heart. Masculinity
as someone said, is part of a man's biological/psychological make up. So then,
maybe it isn't masculinity in men that's being lost, but femininity in women ?
What does it mean to be feminine ?
Jim
|
270.10 | Was I percieving correctly? | RANCHO::HOLT | Readings are getting stronger, Captain | Wed Aug 31 1988 12:39 | 19 |
|
re .8
Sure, Suzanne, I'll bite -;
On the basis of socialization, I'd suggest that men might
be more apt to do their own brakes or change their own
water pumps, than women might be.
Of course, nature doesn't preclude women from doing their
own car maintenance...(I believe HMtheQ was a chauffeur/mechanic
during WWtheSecond)...
I feel that being able to fix things/remodel bathrooms/do plumbing
has enhanced my feelings of masculinity. The fact that women can
and do fix things/do plumbing doesn't detract from my having my
masculinity feelings enhanced, in the least.
|
270.11 | signs of the times | UNTADI::ODIJP | Or is this a canoe in my pocket ? | Wed Aug 31 1988 12:53 | 17 |
| Masculinity is an ever changing conceptual ideology .
What is accepted or prefered today as "being a man" will change
tomorrow (or the day after) and is different now than it used to
be . It this respect you cannot 'lose' your masculinity , but see
it become out of fashion .
Re .10
Of course women can do anything men can do , and vice versa .
The only limitations are physically or biologically .
It's just this sort of attitude that gets women's backs up
and reduces their chances of being 'recognised' .
John J
|
270.12 | | SEDJAR::THIBAULT | Expecting to Fly | Wed Aug 31 1988 13:00 | 15 |
| re:< Note 270.10 by RANCHO::HOLT "Readings are getting stronger, Captain" >
> On the basis of socialization, I'd suggest that men might
> be more apt to do their own brakes or change their own
> water pumps, than women might be.
Well, they might be more apt to, but that doesn't mean men have the upper
hand or expertise. In my case they do cuz when I tried to take auto-mechanics
in high school they wouldn't let me. Girls were supposed to take home-ec
(I got thrown out of that one) and business stuff back then (1976). I don't
really know how to define masuline. I consider my BF to be masculine and I
know I like him that way, but household chores certainly have nothing to do
with it.
Jenna
|
270.13 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Wed Aug 31 1988 14:05 | 78 |
| RE: .9
> If I feel masculine, what am I feeling? Power, wisdom, provider
> or protector ? Women feel the same things. Does that make them
> feel masculine ?
No, it doesn't, unless they are willing to buy into the idea that
only *men* can have positive human traits like these. Myself, I
don't buy into that, so I think more positively of myself
as a *PERSON* when I feel powerful, wise, protective and see
myself providing well for my family.
> Women still look for masculinity when searching for a mate.
> They usually look for a man who is strong, wise, protective and
> good provider.
You keep defining these traits as being "masculine" while not
all women do. Sure, I like men and women who are strong, wise, etc.
(because I have much in common with them.) :)
> How many women do you know that have married men who are weaker,
> unwise, cowardly and can't provide and are still happy ?
Perhaps women don't feel the need (that some men have) of deli-
berately marrying people over whom they can feel stronger, wiser,
more protective, braver, and for whom they can provide.
> A woman who makes a man feel weak, unwise, cowardly, or unable
> to provide threatens his masculinity.
Oh, I see. Men are threatened by feeling weak, unwise, cowardly,
etc., but it's fine for women to feel this way instead. You
probably think that feeling weaker, unwise, cowardly, dependent
and unable to provide is feminine (which is the opposite of
masculine.) It doesn't matter if these feelings bring on a
low self-esteem for women (as long as men are made to feel
better about themselves.) Right? That's the important thing.
> The woman who makes a man feel masculine, is a treasure that
> he will keep close to his heart.
Who wouldn't? Gee, it might be nice to have someone compromise
their self-esteem for me so that *I* could get constant feedback
on how powerful, wise, and protective I am (not to mention my
abilities as a provider.) The person might feel sort of crummy
about their being weaker, less wise, less protective and less
of a provider than I am, but that doesn't matter! Their reward
would be that I would hold them close to my heart as a treasure
(and would, after all, give them the TREMENDOUS BENEFITS of
my strength, wisdom, protectiveness and monetary support as
a provider.) How generous that would make me... :)
> Masculinity as someone said, is part of a man's biological/
> psychological make up.
And this you define as being strong, wise, etc... (as if men
were literally BORN to have these traits and women weren't...)
> So then,maybe it isn't masculinity in men that's being lost,
> but femininity in women ?
If a woman is as strong, wise, and protective as you are (and
makes as much or more money at DEC than you do) and she LIES to you
about those things to make *YOU* feel stronger, wiser, etc. --
is that what you would consider feminine?
> What does it mean to be feminine ?
It *doesn't* mean holding yourself back or lying about your
personal strengths to make a man feel masculine -- not in MY
opinion, anyway.
If masculinity is part of a man's makeup, then why do
some men need weaker, less wise, etc. people around them to
convince them of it? If a woman has the same good traits (and
the two people are roughly as strong, wise, and protective as well as
being equally able to provide,) why would any man need to
feel that his masculinity is being threatened?
|
270.15 | Your favorite subject, perhaps? :-) | NEXUS::CONLON | | Wed Aug 31 1988 14:25 | 11 |
| RE: .14
Actually, that looks like a fairly complete list to me. :)
But remember that .3 said that his comment (about men having
more expertise at some things and women at others) applied
in "MOST INSTANCES"!
Your list may cover the most important things in YOUR life,
:-) -- but how about naming a few trivial things, like say,
how one might earn a living...
|
270.16 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | They say it's mostly vanity... | Wed Aug 31 1988 14:55 | 18 |
| I like a manly man--the kind who doesn't take no for an answer. The
kind who drinks sixpacks of manly beer, six at a time. The kind who
admires Sylvester Stallone films. The kind who writes in incomplete
sentences.
I like manly sports, especially those that involve firearms. Shooting
guns is the manliest of manly sports, although fraternity initiation
rites come in a close second. Masculine men know that when a woman
says "no, not in a million years, you pond scum and goad turd", she
really means "yes". Masculine men like to sweat, and know that
deodorants are for sissies. Masculine men pick their teeth with nails,
and brush their teeth with saws. Masculine men laugh at pain.
Masculine men eat raw flesh with their teeth. Masculine men can change
a tire without using a jack. Masculine men have chewing tobacco for
breakfast.
-- Mike
|
270.17 | Bet Their The Best | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Aug 31 1988 15:40 | 6 |
| re:16
Well that doesn't define masculinity, becasue your note descibes
some women I know.
Jim
|
270.18 | I don't know what "masculinity" means | CLAY::HUXTABLE | Dancing Light | Wed Aug 31 1988 15:43 | 43 |
| re .0 > Even the ladies of this conference, what does masculinity mean to you ?
Jim, I'm not entirely sure I'm a lady, but I'll try and
answer anyway. :)
When I think of someone who is "masculine" I think of many
more physical traits than emotional/psychological ones. I
think of someone taller than me, much more massive,
relatively more muscular, and generally with lots of body
hair.
But when I think of "masculinity" I draw a blank. I have no
clue. The next best thing I come up with is "sexy" and what
means that to me--and the things that I find make someone
sexy are not peculiar to one sex or the other. Another close
word might be "macho" but I don't think that's really
"masculinity" either.
This is funny, because I know what it means to speak of
someone's "femininity," but I don't know what it means to
speak of someone's "masculinity." Maybe because I grew up
female and learning "femininity" but not "masculinity"...?
If you're asking what qualities I value in a man as a friend,
lover, or husband, they're honestly not much different than
the qualities I would value in a woman, and so "masculinity"
wouldn't seem to apply. But if it helps, some of those
qualities are a sense of humor, intelligence, the ability to
listen, an interest in the connectedness of things (for lack
of a better word), and the ability to have fun.
re .?
In reference to a woman looking for a strong, protective,
finanacially sound husband...Maybe I'm an exception, but I'm
inordinately pleased to be married to my husband, who is my
height and weight, has less endurance and stamina than I, and
makes two-thirds my salary. But those things are not *why*
I'm happy with him, nor I think would I be happier with him
if he were bigger and stronger than me. Of course, if he
were rich (as in millionaire), we could both retire... :) :)
-- Linda
|
270.19 | insert obligatory smiley face here | VIDEO::MODICA | | Wed Aug 31 1988 16:06 | 17 |
| RE: 13 by Nexus::Conlon
> "Oh I see, men are threatened by feeling weak, unwise, cowardly, <
> etc., but it's fine for women to feel this way instead" <
As usual, *you* take things out of context and seem to find things
that were not said. Perhaps you might re-read .9. The author
explained how he felt about the base note, I thought he explained
it quite well, and I generally agree with the feelings expressed..
> You probably think...... <
And I've also go to wonder why you seem to find the need to speculate
on what noters *probably think*.
|
270.20 | Over my head | GENRAL::SURVIL | d|o|g|i|t|a|l | Wed Aug 31 1988 16:08 | 6 |
|
RE:.13
Christ, Bonnie, just what IS it you want him to say???
Todd
|
270.21 | Maybe It Needs Clarification | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Aug 31 1988 16:19 | 121 |
| Re:13
> If I feel masculine, what am I feeling? Power, wisdom, provider
> or protector ? Women feel the same things. Does that make them
> feel masculine ?
>> No, it doesn't, unless they are willing to buy into the idea that
>> only *men* can have positive human traits like these. Myself, I
>> don't buy into that, so I think more positively of myself
>> as a *PERSON* when I feel powerful, wise, protective and see
>> myself providing well for my family.
As I said, women feel the same things, so I question those feelings
as a description of masculinity. I would say that the strength,
wisdom, and provider and protector is different in a woman, but
of no less value.
> Women still look for masculinity when searching for a mate.
> They usually look for a man who is strong, wise, protective and
> good provider.
>> You keep defining these traits as being "masculine" while not
>> all women do. Sure, I like men and women who are strong, wise, etc.
>> (because I have much in common with them.) :)
I defined these traits because this is what many men feel, because
they see and hear it from women, as to what they look for in a man.
Also, I'm not saying he would be superior in these traits to a woman.
> How many women do you know that have married men who are weaker,
> unwise, cowardly and can't provide and are still happy ?
>> Perhaps women don't feel the need (that some men have) of deli-
>> berately marrying people over whom they can feel stronger, wiser,
>> more protective, braver, and for whom they can provide.
Nothing is done deliberately. Both of their qualities balance out
or it doesn't work. I should also have said that a man would
not look for less in a woman also.
> A woman who makes a man feel weak, unwise, cowardly, or unable
> to provide threatens his masculinity.
>> Oh, I see. Men are threatened by feeling weak, unwise, cowardly,
>> etc., but it's fine for women to feel this way instead. You
>> probably think that feeling weaker, unwise, cowardly, dependent
>> and unable to provide is feminine (which is the opposite of
>> masculine.) It doesn't matter if these feelings bring on a
>> low self-esteem for women (as long as men are made to feel
>> better about themselves.) Right? That's the important thing.
Because a man feels strong, wise, and provider, doesn't lower the
self esteem of a woman. In fact when she's has a man with these
qualities it raises her self esteem. Thats what probably what
attracted her to the man in the first place.
> The woman who makes a man feel masculine, is a treasure that
> he will keep close to his heart.
>> Who wouldn't? Gee, it might be nice to have someone compromise
>> their self-esteem for me so that *I* could get constant feedback
>> on how powerful, wise, and protective I am (not to mention my
>> abilities as a provider.) The person might feel sort of crummy
>> about their being weaker, less wise, less protective and less
>> of a provider than I am, but that doesn't matter! Their reward
>> would be that I would hold them close to my heart as a treasure
>> (and would, after all, give them the TREMENDOUS BENEFITS of
>> my strength, wisdom, protectiveness and monetary support as
>> a provider.) How generous that would make me... :)
As I said in the last statement, no one sacrifices self-esteem.
You take it as a put down to women. Its not. No one can take
a person for granted. Their qualities must be a compliment to
each other. They are gifts to each other. But we happen to be
talking about mens feelings right now.
> Masculinity as someone said, is part of a man's biological/
> psychological make up.
>> And this you define as being strong, wise, etc... (as if men
>> were literally BORN to have these traits and women weren't...)
This is the way men feel. I'm not advocating women don't
have traits that are of equal value, please don't think
that, but what I'am saying is that, these are the things men
feel when it comes to masculinity.
> So then,maybe it isn't masculinity in men that's being lost,
> but femininity in women ?
>> If a woman is as strong, wise, and protective as you are (and
>> makes as much or more money at DEC than you do) and she LIES to you
>> about those things to make *YOU* feel stronger, wiser, etc. --
>> is that what you would consider feminine?
No. I would consider it deceit.
> What does it mean to be feminine ?
>> It *doesn't* mean holding yourself back or lying about your
>> personal strengths to make a man feel masculine -- not in MY
>> opinion, anyway.
Who advocated that ? I'm asking the question.
>> If masculinity is part of a man's makeup, then why do
>> some men need weaker, less wise, etc. people around them to
>> convince them of it? If a woman has the same good traits (and
>> the two people are roughly as strong, wise, and protective as well as
>> being equally able to provide,) why would any man need to
>> feel that his masculinity is being threate.
Men don't need to feel stronger, wiser, or better protector and
provider than a woman. I never said that. I said a man needs
to feel strong, wise, a protector and good provider. Its not
done at the expence of a woman's self esteem. Because a woman
with a bad self esteem could never make a man feel anything
but bad.
Jim
|
270.22 | wrong author | WMOIS::B_REINKE | As true as water, as true as light | Wed Aug 31 1988 16:23 | 8 |
| in re .20
um, Todd, that was Suzanne not Bonnie!
which Bonnie were you thinking of (me or Bonnie Randall Schutzman)
Bonnie (who is always a bit surprised when people call Suzanne
by my name :-) )
|
270.23 | | GENRAL::SURVIL | d|o|g|i|t|a|l | Wed Aug 31 1988 16:27 | 4 |
|
OOps, I was reading Bonnie's note and replying to Suzanne's.
Todd
|
270.24 | you're a funny guy...! | RANCHO::HOLT | I came, I saw, I threw up... | Wed Aug 31 1988 17:08 | 11 |
|
re .16
You left out:
o the male custom of gretting one another with "Yo!" (*deep voice*)
o calling each other by one syllable nicknames (anything that sounds
like a grunt)..
o driving like demented knuckleheads
|
270.26 | Yo, Holt, check this... | MCIS2::HARDY | The night time is the Right time... | Thu Sep 01 1988 02:06 | 22 |
|
REAL men kick ass and take names. Real men never back off.
Real men swagger with their chests out, their guts in, and their
chins up. Real men drink boilermakers. Real men fire their M-60's
with one hand. Real men only shave every couple of days, if
they feel like it. Real men don't worry about jackshit. Real men
can take women or leave 'em; guns and other real men are more
important. Real men don't even know who Phil Donahue *is*. The
only manly sports can be counted on one hand: shooting guns,
professional wrestling, football, frat house initiations, and
monster truck battles. Real men own real dogs, which also can be
counted on one hand; German shepherds, Rottweilers, pit bull terriers,
Great Danes, and Rhodesian ridgebacks. Real men hunt wild boars
with Colt .357 magnums. Real men listen to country-and-western.
Real men hardly ever smile. Real men are steely of eye and grim
of jaw. Real men wouldn't mind pasting you with a knuckle sandwich
if you got out of line. Real men don't stand in line. Real men
take no guff, backtalk, lip, crap, or excuses. Real men don't knuckle
under, take a dive, fall down, wimp out, or cave in. Real men don't
beg, cry, whine or whimper. Real men move on, move out, press on,
haul ass, stand up, and sound off.
|
270.27 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Sep 01 1988 03:53 | 33 |
| Some of these descriptions of "manly men" are hilarious!
Well, before we get too lost down any number of available
ratholes (and there limitless possibilities in this issue,)
I'd just like to say that I don't think it is necessary for
people to adopt definitive "masculine" and "feminine" roles
(and, in answer to question in the basenote, "No, I *don't*
think we are losing anything as a society because of this.")
If people *want* to have set roles laid out for them (as to
what men or women should do and precisely how they should
act,) that is fine as long as they keep in mind that most
general traits that do not directly involve sexual organs
can usually be considered "human" traits, too (and thus,
can be considered as belonging to people of both sexes.)
What it boils down to is that if a person's masculinity
is all wrapped up in traits that he thought primarily belonged
to men, he is going to be disappointed (because all/most of
the positive human character traits are now being shared by
all of us to some degree.)
It's not that masculinity is dying, or that men have lost
their identities (or that women are no longer feminine.)
It's just that a large number of positive human traits never
should have been characterized as strictly male in the first
place (because they have nothing at all to do with one's sex,
but more with one's uniqueness and character as an individual.)
I *do* believe strongly that people have sexual identities as
men and women, but I just don't think that one can turn a detailed
list of HUMAN traits into a laundry-list definition of what
it means to be a man or a woman. I see that as way too limiting.
|
270.28 | it's all about names | UNTADI::ODIJP | Or is this a canoe in my pocket ? | Thu Sep 01 1988 04:53 | 6 |
|
YO !!! (in a deep voice)
Real , manly masculine men are called John .
John
|
270.30 | My Wife, The Source Of My Strength | 27781::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Thu Sep 01 1988 09:01 | 24 |
|
To me I like a woman who is feminine, whatever those qualities are
defined as. To me being feminine means being different from being
masculine and I like the difference. If we are reducing everyone
to one common denominator, then we have lost something. To me being
different is beautiful. Being different doesn't mean being of less value.
Why are we celebrating differences if thats what it means ? I don't but
the notion that men and women are sitting down and deciding what roles
masculinity or feminity should play, it just works out that way
because men and women are different.
Is masculinity lost ? No, but it is changing.
Is femeinity Lost ? No, but it is also changing.
Are they becomming the same ? No, but hopefully their changing
as a benifit to each other. That
will only happen if we appreciate
the difference, instead of begrudging
it.
Jim
|
270.31 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Sep 01 1988 10:05 | 47 |
| RE: .30
> To me being feminine means being different from being
> masculine and I like the difference.
How different does the person have to be? And in exactly
what ways? (Can we stop being vague here for a minute?)
> If we are reducing everyone to one common denominator, then
> we have lost something.
All individuals are different. Even identical twins who dress
alike every day. That's why we all have different fingerprints.
We are NOT ALL THE SAME PERSON and there is no danger of it.
Honestly! If we give up "masculine is YYYY" and "feminine is
ZZZZ" rules, we don't lose a damn thing (especially since those
who still need strict guidelines like that are free to use them
on themselves and their spouses.) Society does not lose if
the rest of feel that we don't need artificial roles to establish
our sexual identity (with rules to follow.)
> To me being different is beautiful. Being different doesn't mean
> being of less value. Why are we celebrating differences if thats
> what it means ?
It's GREAT that you value differences! That means I can ask
you to value my difference for having a different notion of
femininity than your wife does (and for deciding that I and
my SO don't need to follow rules about it.) Then we agree!
> I don't but the notion that men and women are sitting down
> and deciding what roles masculinity or feminity should play,
> it just works out that way because men and women are different.
No, no, no. The point is that men and women don't NEED defined
roles as men and women anymore, not that we are making up NEW
ones. That means that men and women are not confined to the
artificial roles that used to limit them in the past.
Yes, men and women are different. However, they are different
naturally and don't need any help to be different by having
rules of behavior to follow. Let men and women be different
in any way they want to be (even if it turns out to be something
that can't be measured for men or women as a group en masse.)
We can appreciate men's and women's difference without setting
out to make damn sure they HAVE measurable differences (or else!)
|
270.32 | IIIII"MMMMMM BAAAACCCCCKKKK | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Thu Sep 01 1988 11:33 | 31 |
| Was out of town yesterday on a business roadtrip. I would like
to respond to NEXUS::CONLON on some of her questions with regards
to my note #3.
Most me are naturally more physically able than women. Note that
I said most. Even though you and your boyfriend are the same height
& weight I think if he would be able to lift more than you.
Women are usually better at nuturing children than men. I've seen
it many many times. Yes, I've also seen it the other way. These
are very much in the minority though. Please also note that I say
women are usually better, not that men can't and women can. This
brings me to my next point.
It seems to me that you are trying to make things black and white.
They are not. There are different degrees to which males and females
have these different traits. I agree that men and women can have
the same traits, however, they are very much to different degrees.
I also don't see how you cannot generalize when talking about
relationships between gender. Whereas I agree that the degrees
of traits people have are different, I believe that some traits
are more prevalent in men and some are more prevalent in women.
Lastly, I would like to say that yes, we are all people, however,
I am glad there are differences between men and women. I think
both my wife and I are glad that she has feminine traits and I have
masculine traits. Most of my neighbors are too. When ever men
or women get together, you may hear something like "typical female"
(in the mens gathering) or "isn't that just like a man" (in the
female circle".
Mike
|
270.33 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Sep 01 1988 11:49 | 33 |
| RE: .32
First off, you are confusing me with someone else. My 'boyfriend'
is 11 inches taller than I am, so yes, I would assume that he
can lift more than I can (but I've never asked him to prove
it, nor do *either* of us consider it as a critical part of our
relationship.) [I am 5'3" tall, and he is 6'2" tall.]
Even so, I have worked at more "physical" jobs than he has.
(I was a camera operator in a large studio for some years, during
which I was required to both take apart and carry large studio
cameras in special padded boxes for remote shoots. Also, I
have been in Field Service for almost 7 years, and although
I am a desk-bound support engineer now, for several years I
was in the Field where I repaired, installed, and often moved
large VAX's with no trouble.) I didn't let being a 5'3" woman
hold me back in those areas, and neither did the television
studio or DEC.
As to my considering sexual roles black and white, quite the
reverse is true. I don't see why special roles for the sexes
are necessary (nor why anyone should worry about society's
loss of them in general.)
I am quite different than my 'boyfriend,' but none of the
differences in my personality are specifically part of some
role I am playing as a woman.
As for 'That's a typical guy for ya,' don't say that around
my 'boyfriend' in this conference, because he hates generalizations
about people of either sex. He likes to be himself, and he
likes me to be myself, too. We have no trouble figuring out
who is who when we are together. :)
|
270.34 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Sep 01 1988 12:06 | 9 |
|
P.S. In case you didn't see it earlier, I *do* think that
men and women are different, but I don't think it has anything
to do with things like having personal strength, wisdom, or
being able to provide a sizable income with which to support
one's family. I think we have natural differences that don't
need to be forced artificially (or worried about if we can't
quite figure out what they are.)
|
270.35 | unoriginal predictability | UNTADI::ODIJP | Or is this a canoe in my mouth ? | Thu Sep 01 1988 12:51 | 7 |
| Re .29
I just *knew* someone was going to enter that .
If you're half as old as that joke ...........
John J
|
270.38 | ! | UNTADH::ODIJP | Or is this a canoe in my mouth ? | Fri Sep 02 1988 14:15 | 7 |
| Re .37
Neither (well maybe a little bit of maso..) actually .
Just bags of hope .
John J
|
270.40 | | GENRAL::SURVIL | d|o|g|i|t|a|l | Fri Sep 02 1988 18:24 | 6 |
|
RE:.39
Not bad Eagle!
Todd
|
270.41 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Sat Sep 03 1988 01:15 | 47 |
| RE: .39
As more and more women join men in all aspects of work-related
endeavors, masculinity will become less and less synonymous
with words involving one's ability to earn a good living.
As we become more enlightened as a society, we will continue
to discover that most of the positive qualities that we used
to call "masculine" are actually "human" qualities (and that
some men HONESTLY don't need to feel that their manhood is threatened
because women can do things that were traditionally done only
by men.) As more and more of us come to this realization, less and
less people will find themselves telling women who are engaging
in HUMAN BEHAVIOR involving work-related endeavors that they are
"acting like men."
As we make these cultural adjustments, men who still feel the
need to support a woman will seek a woman who is willing to
be supported (and vice versa) while those of us who do not
subscribe to these roles (as being *mandatory*) will seek others
who also do not subscribe to them. Both kinds of potential
mates will be available for a long time (due to the fact that
cultural changes happen very, very s l o w l y, and are not
universally accepted by every single member of a given society
at the same moment.)
Incidently, your comments about "women acting like men" and
"men [in turn] acting like women" remind me of an argument
I heard against Civil Rights in the mid-60's. Someone told
me that it was inherent in the very NATURE of relations between
races that one race dominate completely. This person went on
to say that we should HOLD BLACK PEOPLE DOWN AS HARD AS WE CAN
because he was of the opinion that if whites didn't dominate
blacks, blacks would surely dominate whites (and that our roles
as races would eventually REVERSE 100% if we gave blacks ANY
CONCESSIONS AT ALL in the name of Civil Rights.)
The scenerios I keep hearing about all the drastic things that
will happen to our culture if women keep advancing in work-
related ways sound very much like that argument to me. Some
people are incapable of imagining a society where NEITHER RACE
and/or NEITHER SEX completely dominates the other (in terms
of employment opportunities and political power.)
Myself, I *CAN* imagine such a society (and I'd like to see us keep
working TOWARDS it instead of thinking up all sorts of rationaliza-
tions about why we shouldn't.)
|
270.43 | Dream Master at large..... | SALEM::AMARTIN | Right Wing Yankee Yuppie Yahoo! | Sat Sep 03 1988 02:24 | 1 |
| In **SOME** people's minds, it is.....
|
270.44 | The Ideology of Choice | MCIS2::POLLITZ | | Sat Sep 03 1988 03:58 | 159 |
| If Mr Baranski's note in =wn= about women increasingly valuing
men by his wallet is any indicator, I would like to know how you
would define a HUMAN trait when one sex is defining another by
quantitative terms (as opposed to qualitative ones)?
If masculinity isn't tied to money, then why does your sex
tie a man's value to it?
If I make what your sex does, will you still love me?
As more women COMPETE with men in all aspects of work,
how can men "earn a good living" (thus satisfying the "acceptable
terms of exchange") when increased Labor guarantees less capital
for a man's wallet.
How can men "make more" when one sex's competition makes
them "earn less" ( thus making men less & less desirable in one
sex's eyes) ?
Do you see the problem here?
If your sex judges men by their ability to make money, how
about doing something to ENABLE us to make more?
IE a reduced Labor market ----> higher pay for "eligible
bachelors."
The Labor market can accomodate everyone, of course.
Particularly men who, for some reason, can't quite ever
make enough....
On another note, while you see distinct M/F traits as too
limiting, I see the increasing sexual integration before us as too
expansive. Or intrusive if you will.
This, backed by continued legislative efforts/enactments
encouraging/guaranteeing increased sexual integration - in all fields.
Lemme see.
A simple example of a fallen "barrier." The FWO privacy loss.
As we all know by now, =wn= cannot discriminate against men
by excluding them in a FWO note.
Isn't this dandy.
Funny, while many (most?) of my male friends were against
the FWO's, I wasn't.
Now, why do you suppose that was/is?
Right. I value differences. That's right folks, I valued
that difference.
I value privacy. In this case, a woman's privacy. To such
extent that I didn't even read them. Or the FGD's for that matter.
Now, when ideological thrusts to remove nearly ALL forms of
sexual (etc) discrimination are EVENTUALLY ENACTED, what do you
think will happen?
For one thing, some valuable differences, some valuable NEEDS
will be washed away - perhaps forever.
These are the consequences not of traditional sexual roles
and obligations, but of the reality that comes when well intentioned
people want/demand that ALL barriers that divide the sexes FALL.
You say that Feminism is about *choice.* Without going into
other accompanying themes, let us start to sort out the consequences
of *choice.*
The ideology of *choice* says that a human being can be or
try to be anything that s/he sets out to be, without regard to
biology, historical traditions, or what have you.
Compared to the long course of historical events, *choice*
is an idea that is different from the set of ideas that comprise
traditional M/F defined roles and obligations.
Men have a tradition of working outside the home to provide
for their wife and children. Men have a tradition of desiring to
marry. Men have a tradition of controling the political and economic
realms in which they work. Men have a tradition of sports involvement,
having their wives take their last names - and wills as well.
Men like to achieve ranks and titles. Captain, Major, Professor,
Doctor, General, President, Ambassador, Scholar, and so forth.
Women have traditionally excelled in the role as wife and
mother in a family unit. In marriage.
Before women took to the IDEA of female birth control in droves,
the matter of motherhood and family life was a natural way of life.
Women's Liberation absolutely insisted that ALL women immediately
be on birth control so that the destiny of their lives was no longer
tied to a life of forced roles or obligations.
As the ideology of choice became the norm for American Society,
all sorts of cultural and political changes took place. And continue
to take place.
I have but one question. What set of ideas in the long course
of human history justifies the ideologies (and, consequently, different
behaviors) that women have decided to take?
In short, what is there that can be pointed to that can lend
support to the idea that an abandonment of traditional roles and
obligations for women is a viable course for human history to take.
What in History says that ideologies based and focused upon
*choice* for the sexes, is superior to time-proven roles and
obligations.
Men don't seem to really have a choice in life. What are
the consequences when another sex decides to create an ever expanding
World of them?
If all the "barriers" that separate the sexes fall due to
ideological/political/actual intrusions ("changes"), what is left
that makes us sexually distinct?
If female bodybuilders on TV cannot bear children (they cannot)
what distinguishes them from men, human traits, or anything else
of VALUE?
And what of this obsession with HUMAN traits? Have you lost
the ABILITY to distinguish those which are most clearly human -
those being tied to the female and the male?
If man has lost control over the domain of work, is it possible
that woman has lost control over the domain of family? ie birth?
Whose fault is it really.... for the saturated labor market?
Men.
Whose fault is it really for the loss in reproductive powers
and the advent of test - tube baby technology?
One guess.
Well, it was still just one question.
The consequences of choice are with us today.
As are the consequences of all those barriers yet to fall.
I guess the times demanded life be the ideology of choice.
I'll stick by what I know.
Russ P
|
270.45 | Duh......HUH??? | SALEM::AMARTIN | Right Wing Yankee Yuppie Yahoo! | Sat Sep 03 1988 05:24 | 1 |
|
|
270.46 | | RANCHO::HOLT | I smell a rancid corn dog! | Sat Sep 03 1988 14:27 | 11 |
|
re .44
>Men like to achieve ranks and titles. Captain, Major, Professor,
>Doctor, General, President, Ambassador, Scholar, and so forth.
This is not unique to men. We call this credentialism, the accumulation
of formal titles or diplomas.
Striving for these is often a substitute for actually being/doing
the real thing.
|
270.47 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Sat Sep 03 1988 19:48 | 95 |
| RE: .44
> If Mr Baranski's note in =wn= about women increasingly valuing
> men by his wallet is any indicator, I would like to know how you
> would define a HUMAN trait when one sex is defining another by
> quantitative terms (as opposed to qualitative ones)?
Unfortunately, we are still in the situation where one sex
is economically disadvantaged compared to the other, so there
is one sex that still has a number of members who view marriage
to a good provider as one of the only clear ways to insure that
a future family will have a means of support.
As economic opportunities equalize between men and women, less
and less women will feel the need to look to men for support
(like me, for example.) I already make enough money to own
my house and support my family, so a man's income is relatively
insignificant to me. However, many young women are not as
fortunate as I am in that respect.
> If masculinity isn't tied to money, then why does your sex
> tie a man's value to it?
It's still a matter of pure survival for some women.
> How can men "make more" when one sex's competition makes
> them "earn less" ( thus making men less & less desirable in one
> sex's eyes) ?
> Do you see the problem here?
The only problem I see is in your logic. SOME women value money
in men because they have so few opportunities to make a good
living themselves. The more we can level things out between
the sexes, the less some women will NEED to value money in men.
> Women's Liberation absolutely insisted that ALL women immediately
> be on birth control so that the destiny of their lives was no longer
>tied to a life of forced roles or obligations.
That is a lie. The women's movement insisted that birth control
be made AVAILABLE to all women who did not desire to become
pregnant at that moment in her life. THERE IS A HUGE DIFFERENCE
BETWEEN THIS AND INSISTING THAT ALL WOMEN IMMEDIATELY BE ON
BIRTH CONTROL.
> I have but one question. What set of ideas in the long course
> of human history justifies the ideologies (and, consequently,
> different behaviors) that women have decided to take?
Our species has a LONG HISTORY of social and cultural evolution
(otherwise we'd still be living in caves using implements made
of stone.) This evolution has been going on for as long as
humans have existed on this planet. Is that a sufficient length
of time to justify future cultural changes for you, Russ?
>In short, what is there that can be pointed to that can lend
>support to the idea that an abandonment of traditional roles and
>obligations for women is a viable course for human history to take.
See above.
>What in History says that ideologies based and focused upon
>*choice* for the sexes, is superior to time-proven roles and
>obligations.
See above again.
> If female bodybuilders on TV cannot bear children (they cannot)
> what distinguishes them from men, human traits, or anything else
> of VALUE?
The ability to bear children is not the determining factor in
any individual woman as to her womanhood (any more than a man's
sperm count is the determining factor in an individual man's
masculinity, as far as I'm concerned.)
> Whose fault is it really for the loss in reproductive powers
> and the advent of test - tube baby technology?
> One guess.
Fertility problems have been with humans since the beginning.
In this century, technology can help some infertile couples
conceive. There was no big "loss in reproductive powers"
except that which may have occured because of modern diet
habits or exposure to chemicals in foods and the environment
in general. Which sex do you blame for that?
> I'll stick by what I know.
Be my guest. Whenever a society goes through rapid social
and cultural changes, there are ALWAYS some who would rather
remain in the dark ages. You are welcome to stay there forever
as far as I'm concerned...
|
270.48 | have a coke and a smile and shut... | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Sun Sep 04 1988 06:55 | 8 |
|
Sounds like a broken record....
You're playing old tapes, Colon.
This note has turned into a 'rat-hole.'
|
270.50 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Sun Sep 04 1988 12:25 | 6 |
| Re: .49
OH! I thought he was addressing an organ. Mike, I think you
are infringing on our constitutional right to misspell.
Ogre
|
270.52 | Still making progress two hundred years later... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Sun Sep 04 1988 21:32 | 31 |
| In case anyone thinks that the women's movement in something
totally new (in the past twenty years) and as such, is something
that has no historical basis nor chance for survival in future
generations... The following is quoted from that well-known
'Feminist' publication, the Encyclopaedia Britannica.
"Women's liberation movement, also called Feminist Movement,
social movement that seeks equal rights for women, giving
them equal status with men and freedom to decide their own
careers and life patterns.
"Concern for women's rights dates from the Enlightenment.
The 18th-century philosopher Condorcet spoke in favor of
female emancipation, and in 1789, the year of the French
Revolution, Olympe de Gouges wrote 'The Declaration of
the Rights of Women.' This declaration strongly influenced
Mary Wollstonecraft's 'A Vindication of the Rights of Women,'
published in England in 1792, which challenged the idea that
women exist only to please men and proposed that women receive
the same treatment as men in education, work, and politics
and be judged by the same moral standards....."
These ideas came out in ** 1792 ** (not in 1963 when 'The Feminine
Mystique' was written by Betty Friedan.)
Encyclopaedia Britannica continues this article with the words,
"But action was slow in coming...." (World class understatment,
considering we are still working on these issues two hundred
years later.) We have never stopped making our slow progress,
however. In no way is the women's movement some sort of modern
flash in the pan that will disappear in the next decade or so.
|
270.53 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Sun Sep 04 1988 22:17 | 5 |
| RE: .52
What was that in reference to?
Greg
|
270.55 | spontaneous rhetoric?? | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Sun Sep 04 1988 22:35 | 1 |
|
|
270.56 | C'mon Mike, clean up the harbor....:-) | SALEM::AMARTIN | Right Wing Yankee Yuppie Yahoo! | Sun Sep 04 1988 23:36 | 4 |
| re: 48 It usually does.....
re: mike WOW! What a MAN! You are the apidomy (sp) of manlihood!
:-)
|
270.57 | a future gift for =wn= from Russ... | MCIS2::POLLITZ | | Sun Sep 04 1988 23:43 | 9 |
| re .52 Thank you for citing information from a quality source.
I've studied feminism from all sides and will present
my findings in the appropriate topic when time permits.
Such things best appropriate in other topics and Conf's.
Russ P
|
270.58 | Assuming you were asking about the reference itself... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Sep 05 1988 01:36 | 7 |
| RE: .53
> What was that in reference to?
It was the beginning of an article entitled "Women's Liberation"
in the Micropaedia section of the newest version of the
Encyclopaedia Britannica that came out this year.
|
270.59 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Mon Sep 05 1988 10:30 | 6 |
| Re: .58
No, no. I was trying to find out to which comment you were
replying.
Greg
|
270.60 | facing feminism head-on | MCIS2::POLLITZ | | Mon Sep 05 1988 14:51 | 70 |
| re .60 Biologically there's no evidence to suggest that
the sexes should behave differently than the 1000's
of cultures that have preceeded them.
Regarding the idea of ancient matriarchies filled
with bliss, feminists from literary (as opposed
to social-scientific) backgrounds argue that "rule
by women" was the original way of life.
Kate Millet is a clear example of this kind of
"qualified" proponent.
Fairly egalitarian societies like the Minoans SEEM
to be when contrasted with the radically male-dominated
culture of Athens at its peak.
Evidence is very thin for the case of primitive
matriarchies.
A feminist social scientist notes, "there is little
evidence for the existence of truly matriarchal
societies at any time." ( Women and Men in Society,
Charlotte G. O'Kelly; NY: D.Van Nostrand, 1980).
"I have consulted the original ethnographic materials
on every society I have ever seen alleged by anyone
to represent a matriarchy, female dominance, or the
association of high status, nonmaternal roles with
women.... I have found no society that represents
any of these." ( The Inevitability of Patriarchy,
Steven Goldberg, NY: Wm Morow & Co., 1973).
Goldberg is the Chairman of the Dept of Sociology,
City College,CUNY. His '73 book researched over
4000 cultures finding no absence of male dominance
in any. ie all patriarchies, no matriarchies.
As Margaret Mead said, "Steven Goldberg's data is
faultless."
The myth of primitive matriachies was in vogue in
the 70's and even Eisler still believes in such
nonsense.
Sexual Suicide by Gilder, '73, analyzes the need
for sexual roles and distinctions, with the con-
sequences for cultures ( backed up with historical
examples) that mix the sexes in all areas of life.
A landmark work.
Maybe I went a bit overboard with the idea in May,
but life goes on.
The break from the role of Motherhood seems to
be a Societal trend that has no historical basis
to justify it.
As Goldberg and many others point out, its not
their business to tell the sexes (specifically
women here ) what they SHOULD do..... for life to
work well.
They say that the evidence suggests that women
WOULD do well to follow the footpaths of those
that have proceeded them.
The career standard has nothing in history to suggest
that it WOULD be the best thing for women to do/change.
Russ P
|
270.61 | a slight disappearance... | MCIS2::POLLITZ | | Mon Sep 05 1988 14:54 | 1 |
| OK, make that .47 and .52
|
270.62 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Sep 05 1988 15:58 | 65 |
| RE: .60
> Biologically there's no evidence to suggest that
> the sexes should behave differently than the 1000's
> of cultures that have preceeded them.
Wrong. Previous cultures *wasted* millions of years
worth of human resources by their inability to see women
in more than one narrowly-defined role. When a culture
exhibits massive short-sightedness as a traditional practice,
present and future societies are under no obligation to
continue the practice (and would be quite foolish, in fact,
to insist on it for the sake of tradition.)
> The break from the role of Motherhood seems to
> be a Societal trend that has no historical basis
> to justify it.
Women, as a sex, have not broken from the role of Motherhood.
Most women are no longer limited to being *ONLY* Mothers (which
was largely the established practice until this century.)
Why do you keep implying that women NEED to justify our
pursuit of freedom and fair opportunities? What authority
is standing over us requesting this justification? You?
(Don't make me laugh.)
> As Goldberg and many others point out, its not
> their business to tell the sexes (specifically
> women here ) what they SHOULD do..... for life to
> work well.
Exactly right.
> They say that the evidence suggests that women
> WOULD do well to follow the footpaths of those
> that have proceeded them.
They can suggest all they like. However, their definition
of what it takes for women to "DO WELL" is obviously quite
a bit more limited than mine. I think that women would do
well to pursue the paths that *we* choose for *ourselves*
rather than doing what some of us DON'T WANT TO DO (and would
be ABJECTLY MISERABLE DOING) because someone *suggests* to us
that we would "DO WELL" to follow traditional paths simply because
so many others before us didn't have the choices that we have
today.
> The career standard has nothing in history to suggest
> that it WOULD be the best thing for women to do/change.
According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, women have been working
in a number of cultures over the past 200 years to break from
limited roles in order to pursue equal rights in education, employ-
ment, and politics (requesting to be judged by the same moral
standards as men.)
Those of us who are alive today were preceded by many women
who *refused* to accept the limitations of *ONLY* Maternal and
spousal roles (and pursued their educations and employment
opportunities in SPITE of the tremendous difficulties.) Many
of us today are FOLLOWING IN THEIR FOOTSTEPS (and consider their
dedication to 'choice' as a NEW tradition WORTH ESTABLISHING!)
Not that we needed any sort of justification to do this.
|
270.64 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Mon Sep 05 1988 16:26 | 6 |
| Well, let's get biological about it. A hairy chest is not
a feminine trait. An hour-glass figure is not a masculine trait.
Masculine and feminine attributes DO exist. It's just a matter
of discerning the real attributes from the mythical ones.
Greg
|
270.65 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Sep 05 1988 17:07 | 17 |
| RE: .64
Greg, of course there are certain biological traits that can
be considered masculine and feminine. I've never denied that.
Furthur, it is my opinion that there are ENOUGH natural differences
between men and women that artificial sexual roles are not
necessary to keep men and women different.
It is these artificial roles that tend to limit people (both
in their personal lives and in their education/employment
opportunities) and for this reason, I object to the idea of
*forcing* standardized roles on people of either sex.
On the other hand, whoever WANTS to play these standardized
sexual roles should still be free to do so (as a function of the
same individual CHOICE that would permit others NOT to play.)
|
270.66 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Sep 05 1988 17:30 | 15 |
| RE: .63
> I can only hope it doesn't sink down any further with feminist
> propoganda..... [sic]
Not much danger of that since the only reference used so far
to support a feminist position has been a well-estalished
Encyclopaedia. If I were you, I'd be more concerned about
the ANTI-feminist propaganda (including the use of casual
slurs and innuendos about philosophical positions that have
neither been presented nor defended in this particular topic.)
You can do much yourself to help prevent the extensive use of
tactics like these in a discussion that has managed to avoid
these particular pitfalls up to now.
|
270.67 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Mon Sep 05 1988 18:18 | 15 |
| re: .65
That sounds reasonable. So, therefore, there are two groups
who need to modify their behavior: machos and femmos. The machos
are casting disfavor upon the more aggressive women, and the femmos
are casting disfavor upon the less aggressive women. In the eyes
of the machos, a woman who values career above children (family),
is not a woman. Similarly, the femmos tend to look negatively upon
the woman who chooses to be a housewife and mother (and maybe
financially dependent upon her mate).
Both sides seem to deny their contribution to this, but the
facts remain.
Greg
|
270.68 | Save for notes & college campuses - it's dead | MCIS2::POLLITZ | | Mon Sep 05 1988 18:32 | 41 |
| Suzanne,
I have read the Britanica, Colliers, World book, etc
accounts of feminism, and the (supposed) female struggle toward
whatever (usually listed as "equality of this or that").
Like most newspapers and TV programs, these pieces
of "analysis" are tripe compared to the works of important
intellectuals that have examined history and the sexes closely.
Carol Gilligan is first rate. Her work, while flawed,
has taken writers and readers to interesting places.
On the other hand, poisonous negativity consumes none
other than the Steinems, Millets and Dworkins of the world.
Friedan's anti-feminine complaints in 'The Feminine
Mystique' has been convincingly ripped to shreds by Decter,
Davidson, and others.
"Male oppression of females."
How absurd. So absurd that plenty of nuts planned
to "liberate" your sex from these "artificial things":
home, family, love.
The Feminist Era is over, save for those that live
in the DARK AGES.
Should its destructive ideologists ever reform their
attitudes and philosophies, women's viewpoints may be better
reflected, but it's a longshot that men's viewpoints will be
accurately represented.
And so it is with all half baked ideologies.
And ideologues.
Russ
|
270.69 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Sep 05 1988 21:20 | 47 |
| RE: .68
> The Feminist Era is over....
First off, the Feminist Era as you describe it NEVER EXISTED!!!
You have an exceptionally ugly and twisted view of a movement
that Gloria Steinham herself has characterized as being about
CHOICE (and nothing more.)
As a Feminist myself, I am not obligated to accept as Gospel
every word ever written by every feminist who ever lived. (If
I don't purchase, read and subscribe to every feminist book
ever written, no one is going to come and take my Feminist 'card'
away from me, sending me home in disgrace.)
So if you think you can change my mind about Feminism by
'tearing to shreds' many/most of the books written by best-selling
feminists, don't bother. I didn't form all/most of my ideas based
on their works anyway. Many of them raised my consciousness about
a few things, but I don't make it a habit of blindly accepting
every ideology that I read in a book. I believe in the basic
premise that women should have CHOICES (and my ideologies beyond
that are a function of my unique position as an individual human
being who lives and makes philosophical decisions based on the
available information offered by my culture at any given moment.)
In other words, my opinions grow and change as I do (and the
only idea that I hold consistently is that which involves the
existence of CHOICES for women.) And the availability of choices
involves having opportunities.
If Feminism is dead (in your eyes,) Russ, then why do you spend
so much time studying it and trying to convince women (in files
like Womannotes) that Feminism is finished (and was wrong in
the first place.) If Feminism were really dead, you could just
let it alone (and we'd all find out eventually.)
You can't kill Feminism (or the ideology of CHOICE for women)
by merely insisting that it is already dead. Feminism has
never been measured in terms of dues-paying members of any one
organization and/or Feminist magazine. As long as women still
seek choices (and opportunities,) the spirit of Feminism is
alive and well (no matter how many people actually consider
themselves Feminists.)
As long as CHOICES (and opportunities) continue to exist and
to grow for women, Feminism has achieved what it set out to
do in its most basic form. That is ALL that counts!!!
|
270.70 | Again, it's just about choice... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Mon Sep 05 1988 21:37 | 15 |
| RE: .67
Greg, I find it quite interesting that you defined BOTH of
your stereotypes according to how each group (male and female)
would like to influence the behavior of WOMEN IN PARTICULAR
(instead of merely choosing their OWN behavior or the behavior
of men, which IS the subject of this topic after all.)
Try this on for size... How about if individual men and women
choose their OWN BEHAVIOR in relation to the opposite sex.
In other words, if people WANT to choose 'traditional' roles,
they CAN! If they do NOT want to choose these roles, they
can do SOMETHING ELSE THAT MAKES MORE SENSE TO THEM AS INDIVIDUALS!
In other words, CHOICES! See what I mean?
|
270.71 | ___FLUSH!___ | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Mon Sep 05 1988 22:27 | 12 |
| Re: .70
Suzanne, when you don't see something objectionable enough
in my writing, there is no need to create things. I think you know
full well that I was merely saying that BOTH of these groups are
limiting the ability of women AND men to make their own choice of
how they wish to be.
...and another topic is being choked off because Conlon does
not believe in masculinity.
Greg
|
270.72 | I study the sexes | MCIS2::POLLITZ | | Tue Sep 06 1988 00:00 | 153 |
| re .69 "..the Feminist Era as you described it NEVER EXISTED!!!"
The considerable press afforded feminists (and their
works) in the late 60's/70's clearly made for an 'Era.'
Marches, media stars, ERA (remember Phyllis S.?) and
abortion, rights demands and equality over the other
virtues saturated the public consciousness with images,
information, and dis-information.
"You have an exceptionally ugly and twisted view of
a movement that Steinem...[ eventually - RP ] character-
ized as being about CHOICE (and nothing more.)"
The movement was more than about mere 'CHOICE', as
numerous male observers of this conference have
seen.
Many of us have been on the receiving end of self-
righteousness, venality, vindictiveness, and other
things that often spill over from the ideology of choice.
There is so much excess that's documented, that I'm
surprised so few (feminists) have layed into the
mistakes like they could.
Notice I didn't say "should." I'm a patient man who
realizes the hopeless inability of some people to
show excess for what it is.
I understand people now who simply do not have the
human trait called "integrity" to be able to do so -
....
That aside ( unapologized verbal murder [ hey C.I. are
you listening?...thought not]) I believe that women
should have a choice.
"As a Feminist myself, I am not obligated to accept
(what feminist authors have written)."
No, of course not. You do seem to have accepted the
ideas of equality and rights which is reflected in
your notes.
"..if you think you can change my mind ... don't bother."
I present what I know like you do.
"I believe in the basic premise that women should have
CHOICES."
Choices are good as far as they go.
Like "equality"...CHOICE is much more a matter of
something that people MAKE HAPPEN. ie earned instead
being "given."
In an analogy of sorts, perhaps you recall the 'Dallas'
show a few years back when Patrick Duffy *thought*
that his father (who had promised) was going to "give
me those Oil fields."
To which his father snarled back, "Nobody gives you
nothing-you gotta TAKE IT."
The same with 'CHOICE.'
The concept of 'Equality' can be a difficult one
to discuss, particularly since controversial and
complex things like 'forced fairness legislation'
enters into it.
Suffice it to say, that which cannot be equitably
worked out by interest groups OUTSIDE of the STATE,
are those things that the STATE seems quite willing
to work out for them.
I would like to see a Major male and female group
work more issues out without everything falling
into the "legislative ghetto."
There are many Feminist agendas that reach right
up to the State that i wonder about sometimes...
"If Feminism is dead (in your eyes)...why do you
spend so much time studying it and trying to
convince women (ie =wn=) that Feminism is finished
(and was wrong in the first place)?.... if Feminism
were really dead, you could just let it alone."
The fervor of the 70's publicity about Feminism
certainly is not with us today. there has been a
neo-conservatism mood in the 80's, reflected in
the choice for the current Administration, etc.
As notes (ie H_R, Mn, Wn) involves a continual
exchange of ideas, I have found myself engaged in
frequent discourse with the many feminists that note.
I consider a feminist a person (usually a woman)
that accepts most of the basic tenets of the word
'feminist.' ( or 'feminism').
'Feminism' defined as the advocacy of political,
social, and economic equality of men and women.
That's the definition.
Many call all women 'feminists' but I do see the
2 words defined differently; a difference I respect.
Now.... a country that guarantees the basic rights
of all its citizen's is one thing. Going into
the complex concept of 'equality' involves the
businesses, State, & Gov't. And ideology.
Anyhow, with that in mind, i felt it well to study
up.
As some women talk about feminism, I like to
talk about it too.
And i like to think that I engage the intellect
of noters - rather than telling them what to think.
It turns out that the study of Feminism involves
ideas that have the potential of taking the sexes
to new and exciting heights.
While some notions are lifeless, some are quite
alive - all of which means that I will continue
doing what I'm doing.
It's not so much that I study feminism (prefering
liberty and basic rights as opposed to equality
being pushed everywhere, ie clubs, no FWO, quotas)
as it is that I study the sexes.
I view contemporary equality as a "lets see what
we can legislate next" trap. Or, "everything's
50/50 in this household."
Read the first MS issue to see that doosie.
No, I'm into the sexes. I read whatever will
take them to the heights of spiritual, moral,
intellectual, and emotional pinnacles.
And if that means their 'playing' outside of
'the rules', - then so much the better.
Russ P
|
270.73 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Sep 06 1988 00:18 | 32 |
| RE: .71
> Suzanne, when you don't see something objectionable enough
> in my writing, there is no need to create things.
Hey, I didn't object to the way you phrased your note. I
merely commented that it was interesting. I had no idea
that being called 'interesting' was such a hot button with
you. (Sorry, but I find *that* interesting, too.)
> I think you know full well that I was merely saying that BOTH
> of these groups are limiting the ability of women AND men to
> make their own choice of how they wish to be.
You started your note (which was in response to mine) by saying,
"That sounds reasonable. So, therefore...." (as if you were
trying to paraphrase my ideas.) If that wasn't your intention,
then you should have worded your note some other way. If it
*was* your intention to rephrase my ideas, then I had every
right to correct your misrepresentation of my point of view.
> ...and another topic is being choked off because Conlon does
> not believe in masculinity.
In reply 261.142, YOU wrote, "I have yet to see an opinion which
did not have the right to be seen" (when one man tried to set
a debate to rest and another man said that the debate could/should
NOT be put to rest because of the principles he felt were involved.)
Did your statement apply to some of us in this conference (or
to all of us?) Do we ALL have the right to stand up for our
stated principles here (or not?)
|
270.74 | Flush, flush, flush! | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Tue Sep 06 1988 00:24 | 7 |
| Re: .73
> Do we all have the right to stand up for our principles (or not)?
Yeah, we all do. So, give someone else a chance.
Greg
|
270.75 | Thoughts | FRAGLE::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Sep 06 1988 00:26 | 38 |
| re Russ and Suzanne:
I'm no moderator, but still: BOTH OF YOU KNOCK IT OFF!!! If you
want to debate the history/validity/justification/ad_nauseum of
feminism, TAKE IT TO ANOTHER TOPIC!!!
re "lost" masculinity:
I always feel so sad when I hear someone talking about this whole
issue. How can you _lose_ your male-ness?? I mean after all, you
still have that equipment dangling between your legs (or your knees,
for those of you with no sense of reality...:), you still have that
y chromosome, you still have a horomone balance which would be labeled
"testosterone poisoning" if it were in _my_ body. Even the most
"effeminate" of men is still unmistakably, and deliciously male.
I have a hard time with the words "masculine" and "feminine", I
guess. Perhaps I rely more on being entirely female than on being
feminine; that way I can dress any way I want, act any way I want,
and I am still female. Perhaps it's more a sense of "my actions
define what is feminine in me, female ergo feminine".
Is it masculine to feel protective of others? To want to be wise?
To want to provide for my family? Funny, I feel intensely female
at the same time as feeling these things.
Is it possible that while past movements (which will remain unmentioned
and undebated here) have provided women the ability to define
themselves, men still try to fulfill externally defined roles?
Why is it a woman like Katherine Hepburn can be "feminine" (intensely
so) while wearing men's clothing (hat, tie, coat, men's cut pants,
etc), but no man can be "masculine" in a dress? Is it possible
that the growing acceptance of earrings on men (which I find quite
attractive and verrrrry male/"masculine") is a step towards more
freedom for men to define their own sexuality?
Lee
|
270.76 | | RANCHO::HOLT | | Tue Sep 06 1988 00:38 | 6 |
|
re -.1
Knees will do nicely for me, thank you, reality notwithstanding.
|
270.77 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Tue Sep 06 1988 00:47 | 8 |
| Realizing that it is no longer in vogue, I still think that
the terms masculine and feminine are necessary descriptors (or attempted
descriptors) of attributes which make something masculine identifiable
from something feminine, and vice versa. Equal ability in other
aspects of life aside, there are good reasons to be able to discern
between the two.
Greg
|
270.78 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Sep 06 1988 00:56 | 13 |
| RE: .77
There will always be attributes that will make women (in general)
identifiable from men (in general.) I seriously doubt that
we will ever be in danger of not being able to ever again tell
the difference between the two sexes.
If I happen to feel that it is *inevitable* that there will
be identifiable differences between men and women, do you feel
that these differences are not natural enough that they will
need to be cultivated? If so, exactly what behaviors would
you suggest that each sex cultivate, and why?
|
270.79 | dive bomb someone else | MCIS2::POLLITZ | | Tue Sep 06 1988 01:03 | 14 |
| re .75 Not a chance Lee T.
The base note mentioned the feminist factor regarding
questions of gender ID.
PS And newcomers to the conversation have no right to judge
either Suzanne or myself regarding this.
If I entered that first paragraph in =wn= I know what
would happen.
later,
Russ P
|
270.80 | | FRAGLE::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Sep 06 1988 01:08 | 20 |
| re .77 "masculine" and "feminine" still necessary words
I guess I don't like them because I ascribe to them a lot of garbage;
stuff like "I'm not feminine because I wear flats", "I'm not feminine
because I like to think I'm tough", "You're not masculine because
you cried yesterday", "You're not masculine because you like bubble
baths", ad nauseum.
While I personally am very happy with the way I have come to terms
with what is inherently male and what is inherently female, the
old terms still carry a lot of the old implications, one which say
I cannot be what I _am_ and still be strong or willful. I find
it very freeing to live outside old bogus definitions, and I can't
see how anyone, male or female, can live with themselves if they
aspire to those definitions of un-reality.
Lee
ps, Bob Holt - "knees"?!?! explain to this sleepy brain...
|
270.81 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Tue Sep 06 1988 01:14 | 12 |
| Re: .78
"Cultivate" was your choice of words. It in no way conveys
my ideas.
However, I see nothing wrong with the men who choose to maintain
those things which they see as identifiably male. It doesn't mean
that "they need some external definition of their maleness" or that
they are less that confident in themselves. It just means that
they share my belief that an androgynous world would not work.
Greg
|
270.83 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Tue Sep 06 1988 01:19 | 12 |
| re: .80
I see what you mean, Lee. There are some very fantastic (meaning
fantasy-like) connotations to masculinity and femininity. They
can be discarded without crippling the world. There are basic
realities, though, which we cannot function without.
Greg
PS: Well, Russ, why don't you folks start a two-member conference
and blast at each other till the cows come home?
|
270.84 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Sep 06 1988 01:24 | 10 |
| RE: .81
Ok, I'll accept your choice of words as "choose to maintain those
things which they see as identifiably male."
While I have no objection at all to those who CHOOSE to do
this, I want to know why you think that the world would
be androgynous if people were to STOP doing this (and how
many of us need to make this particular choice to avoid having
the world face the threat of being androgynous?)
|
270.85 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Tue Sep 06 1988 01:32 | 10 |
| Re: .84
How many? I would guess that that number who choose to do
so, under current pressures, are sufficient. A natural variance
in tastes is good enough. I have noticed that, as pressures from
some quarter has increased for less masculine tendencies (my opinion),
even more ridiculously stereotypical masculine tendencies have arisen.
I guess it moderates itself.
Greg
|
270.86 | Simple, isn't it? | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Sep 06 1988 01:39 | 11 |
| RE: .85
> I would guess that that number who choose to do so, under
> current pressures, are sufficient. A natural variance in
> tastes is good enough.
> I guess it moderates itself.
Thank you very much. That is all I have been trying to
say all along.
|
270.87 | | FRAGLE::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Sep 06 1988 01:47 | 2 |
| well, what sort of traits _are_ those? or can they be described?
|
270.88 | ...Uh-huh... | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Tue Sep 06 1988 01:58 | 8 |
| Re: .86
"That number which choose to do so" includes those men who,
in your stated opinion, need an external definition of their
masculinity. If you have been agreeing with me all along, then
you chose some ODD words to do so.
Greg
|
270.89 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Tue Sep 06 1988 02:07 | 12 |
| Re: .87
If you're referring to those things which some men feel are
identifiably male, I'll offer a bit of a description. Most of the
time, it isn't a conscious thing. In fact, that is the difference
between phoney macho and natural masculinity. With natural
masculinity, it is simply something a guy feels comfortable doing.
With phoney macho, one has to think about it, and how it looks to
others. Societal influences permeate both, but at least one is not
so derived.
Greg
|
270.90 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Sep 06 1988 02:42 | 33 |
| RE: .88
Greg, I haven't been agreeing with you all along. You finally
saw what *I* was saying from the beginning, that's all. For
that, I am grateful.
If you go back to my earliest replies on this topic, I stated
that I think there are natural differences between men and
women (but I challenged the notion that "masculinity" included
all sorts of positive traits that women have, too.)
Obviously, you misunderstood many of my notes (and since
I will be away from the net for an entire week due to my having
major abdominal surgery first thing in the morning,) I will
gently explain it to you one last time.
What I originally objected to (early on in this topic) was the
idea that some men felt that it was necessary to define masculinity
(and were defining it with traits that many women have and NEED
in order to be successful in the business/technical world.)
The argument seemed to be that society would be losing something
if men and women stopped being 'different' (and at the same
time, these 'differences' were being described in ways that
implied, and even suggested, that women were being 'masculine'
if we exhibited some of the very traits that are *necessary* for
us if we are to be successful at the jobs for which we have
been educated, trained, and for which we have worked long and
hard for our success.)
That, in a nutshell, was the whole basis of my argument (and
everything else I said was in response to the various arguments
that have surfaced about this along the way.)
|
270.91 | | FRAGLE::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Sep 06 1988 02:54 | 18 |
| re .89 - diff between phony macho and natural masc.
a-hah! so we (xx and xy) don't think all that differently after
all (ie. I actually liked that).
Every time I try to describe traits which are masc or fem, I end
up having a hard time doing it. Taking myself and one or two of
the masculine but not "masculine" men I know, I find so many exceptions
to each of the traits...
I think no matter how androgenous a society may be in terms of dress,
acceptable behavior, rights, and opportunities, the _real_ masculine
and feminine traits will still be there. It may be a little harder
for kids to get a handle on what being a man or being a woman really
_means_ but on the other hand they might find it easier since a
lot of the old smokescreens will be removed.
Lee
|
270.92 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Sep 06 1988 06:38 | 33 |
| RE: .79 Russ Pollitz
> The base note mentioned the feminist factor regarding
> questions of gender ID.
Just wanted to let you know that you are absolutely right
about that. (I went back and double-checked.) :) And I
bet some folks thought that you and I never agreed on anything. :)
Sometimes it really helps to get an historical perspective on
why cultural changes happen (and I will admit that you got me
to do some research that I had not previously done on this
particular aspect of how and why so many changes in traditional
masculine and feminine roles have already occured after only
twenty or so years since the movement started in the mid 60's.)
So I actually learned quite a bit from some of the offline reading
that I did in the course of this topic, which was great, even
though we got CUT OFF before I could relay MOST of what I had
found (that was pertinent to the basenote) as a reply. It was
pretty relevant to the subject matter, but if it's going to
upset people then it just isn't worth it. I'll send it to you
by mail when I get a chance.
See you in some other part of the noter galaxy (sometime after
I come back from being in the hospital.) Oh yeah, they decided that
I would NOT be able to note from the operating room (with the
anesthetist reviving me every time an 'Update' in womannotes,
mennotes or Human_Relations shows a number other than '0' next to it.)
Guess I'll just have to quit Notes cold turkey til I'm home again.
(Geesh, the sacrifices one is asked to make for one's health.
Honestly!) :)
Take care!!
|
270.93 | | COMET::BRUNO | C'mon George, DEBATE! | Tue Sep 06 1988 08:40 | 7 |
| Re: .90
Sorry Suzanne, my view never changed, and I STILL don't see
what you were saying from the beginning. BUT, if you want to attach
that to the meaning of my note, you have my blessing.
Greg
|
270.94 | Rat Poison Needed | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Tue Sep 06 1988 11:54 | 15 |
| My base note wasn't meant to bring about a discussion about the feminist
movement. It was meant to address masculinity and how men, and women
feel about it. The big problem I see is that, some women don't want to
hear how men feel. This was not an attack against women, some have
interpreted it as that. The rathole resulted. When I entered the note
I wondered if men could express their feelings about something that
is close to them in a mensnote file. I sense that some men wanted to,
but backed off after the attacks started. Is this what men are doing
today, backing off from expressing the way they're feeling, and just
going into a corner and trying to hide, because they're
afraid of offending women ? It is this attitude that made me wonder,
is masculinity was truely lost ?
Jim
|
270.96 | Geez, you folks have been buy over the weekend! | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Tue Sep 06 1988 12:44 | 28 |
| RE:.41 Not that again. Please don't equate sex equality with racial
equality, they are two distinctive arguments. For example. I am
150% for racial equality, however, sex equality is something I see
as a detriment to men, women and children, especially children.
RE:.47 You say that one sex is economically disadvantaged to the
other. FACT: Since 1975, men & women with similar educational &
woking bacckgrounds. Women earn $1.01 for every $1 men earn.
RE:.72 I think feminism is a misleading word. It implies thata
woman has to have these beliefs in order to be feminine. Fortunately
most women were too smart to get trapped into this. The fact is
that the majority of women are not feminists and do not believe
in feminism. It seems to me that this is a prime example of the
tail trying to wag the dog.
RE:.92 Good luck in your surgery. Our thoughts will be with you.
In reading the replies which have been entered over the weekend,
it seems to me that there is a consensus that feminine traits and
masculine traits do exist. Everyone is also an individual and has
a varying amounts of these traits. Is masculinity lost? I don't
think so. There are always going to be those who believe in the
traditional ways and will keep those ways going. I also think that
it is going to be the majority of the people.
Mike
different traits.
|
270.97 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | They say it's mostly vanity... | Tue Sep 06 1988 16:32 | 47 |
| I am glad that there are still some real mean and real women around who
understand the importance of artificial and arbitrary sex roles in
maintaining the moral fabric of this nation. Just the other day, I
asked my hero and fellow intellectual giant, Sylvester "Rambo" Stalone,
what effect androgyny was having on our culture:
Me: Hello, Mr. Stalone.
SS: (grunt)
Me: What do you think of androgyny?
SS: What's androgyny?
I have carefully analyzed this issue, and I have determined that
if we abolished sex roles, our society would collapse for the following
reasons:
1) Men would stop opening doors for women. Since the ability to
open a door for oneself is a genetic trait located on the Y chromosome,
women would be trapped outside of buildings a lot. This would spur
science to invent doors that open like on the TV series "Star Trek".
2) Women would start fighting wars alongside men, which would severely
damage our ability to fight wars effectively. Men can fire weapons
more accurately than women because their hand-to-eye coordination is
naturally developed, as a result of all the years of aiming at
cigarette butts in the urinal at public rest rooms. Now some smart alec
might point out that men are notorious bad aimers in this activity,
often hitting the floor; but that only happens when there are no
cigarette butts in the urinal or toilet, and the man is bored.
Once the Soviets saw that we had women in combat, they would invade us,
and we'd all be speaking Russian, comrade.
3) The country would be run by wimpy, Alan Alda type men, and by women
with hairy legs. They would pass a law requiring every woman to use
birth control, and every man to have a vasectomy. They would abolish
marriage, show hardcore pornography on the public airwaves, and ban the
Bible. Worst of all, they might actually pass the ERA!
It is a good thing that there are people in this country with
traditional values who understand the importance of traditional roles,
who will stand up to those who would destroy our country's moral fiber.
Western civilization was made by men who owned guns and lynched
criminals, and by women who stayed home and cooked and got pregnant a
lot. It is people like that who, God willing, will preserve our
society, and build it forward into the twenty first century!
-- Mike
|
270.99 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Tue Sep 06 1988 17:31 | 25 |
| re: .94
> The big problem I see is that, some women don't want to
>hear how men feel.
I'd like to hear how men feel. As a matter of fact, a man who I'd
consider one of the most "masculine" I had met cried on my shoulder
last week. I was really touched that he trusted me, and did my
best to help as much as I could. I am GLAD men have feelings.
I think it is a masculine trait to feel the freedom to express those
feelings (of course, within the proper situations, as with all feelings
one generally finds acceptable releases for them, you know what
I mean).
>I wondered if men could express their feelings about something that
>is close to them in a mensnote file.
That would be fine with me. And, as in womannotes (oh no, the "W"
file), if men decide they'd rather women didn't respond in the same
notes string, but set up a separate topic for general discussion
of the subject, that would be cool, too.
-Jody
|
270.100 | too much fun the way it is. | COMET::BRUNO | Mentat of House Atreides | Tue Sep 06 1988 17:52 | 7 |
| Re: .99
Perish and forbid such a thought! When the mennotes noters
become so insecure as to need For Men Only topics, the bell will
indeed toll.
Greg
|
270.102 | A relayed man's opinion... | CEMENT::HUXTABLE | Dancing Light | Tue Sep 06 1988 19:08 | 25 |
| I discussed this with my husband (a non-DECcie, so he can't
participate). Without going into the details of our long and
rambling discussion, we had a vague idea that "traditionally
masculine" traits (such as career ambition) now seem to apply
comfortably to both sexes, whereas some "traditionally
feminine" traits (such as enjoying lots of new clothes) still
seem to apply only to women--and that to some extent men are
now defined in terms of negatives, in terms of being *not*
those feminine traits.
For example, I often don't carry a purse when I go out; I
purposefully chose jeans and a wallet which will fit in the
pocket. No one thinks much of it (although if I get dressed
up in "traditionally feminine" attire for a fancy dinner, I'd
better have a purse). On the other hand, I see only a few
men with purses/bags, despite the fact that some men carry
enough junk (oops, I meant vital necessities) to need
them--it seems that a purse is "feminine" and so a man can't
carry one. So my husband often puts junk in mine when I
carry it, or wears a jacket with lots of pockets.
Do you men feel similarly that your "masculinity" is defined
in terms of what you *can't* be and do?
-- Linda
|
270.103 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Wed Sep 07 1988 03:16 | 29 |
| The only problem I have with feminisim is when it becomes such an
issue that it interferes with men and women comunicating/relateing
with one another. Whenever one person becomes so caught up in their
own opinions and ideas that they cannot understand anothers(note
I dident say agree) there is a problem. I have/do know fems that
allow this to happen and it at times works against what they are
trying to acheive.
I never thought that there was a true mans/womans job as a child
my female role models(grandmother,aunt,mother) all worked as hard
as any man. In my family my mother has worked as long as I can remember
there were no set man/woman roles there my father cooked,cleaned
and my mother would mow the yard. They both think the feminist ideas
to be odd as its an idea they never even thought about. Granted
most of my early years were sheltered from this in a small town
without many of the problems others encountered but I never have
seen it except when its been stuck in my face. Am I blind to a
very important issue or is this just being blown all out of actual
porportion?
I do believe that men and women should be paid the same for the
same skills and job, lesser skills be it man or woman should be
reflected as lower pay. I dont see any justification to pay anyone
more than they are worth just because thay are man or woman.
There are things a man can do that a woman cannot possibly do as
well as things a woman can do that a man cannot. Whats the real
issue besides just having something to complain about?
-J
|
270.104 | aren't all surgeons lucky..? | RANCHO::HOLT | | Wed Sep 07 1988 03:34 | 5 |
|
re .96
Hopefully luck will have nothing to do with Suzannes
success in surgery...
|
270.105 | Who gives a rat's ass... | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Wed Sep 07 1988 08:09 | 9 |
|
A REAL MAN will define MASCULINITY any damn way he wants to and
will tell those that don't like "his definition" to stick it where
the sun don't shine.
And that's the name of that tune...
|
270.106 | The Way I'am | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Sep 07 1988 10:03 | 28 |
|
Most of what I feel about masculinity came from the role models
I grew up with. My father was the greatest masculine role model
I had. My father would work a 12hr shift in a paper mill and come
home and tear off a slate roof of our two story house, go to work
the next day come home and put the new roof on. I have never met
a woman that could do the physical labor that my father, my grand-
fathers or my uncles did. They were my role models. My mother and
grandmothers and aunts worked hard at traditional house wife chores
but the work they did, I as a child could help with. Not so with the
things my father did until we were at least 12yrs old. The family
get togethers always involved the woman siting around talking and
the men always got into heavy horseshoe tournaments. The girls in the
family never showed the desire to get involve with the men's activities,
its just the way it was. As a result of the way I grew up, it has been
hard for me to adjust to women participating in men's activities. The
sportsmen's club I belong to, has just been forced to allow women to be
members. I know women like hunting and fishing, and I've seen them
shot trap and skeet well also, but it just an adjustment that I and other
men are having a hard time adjusting to. When I'm with the guys at
activities I feel more masculine than when women are around. It seems
conversation changes and attitudes change whenever women are around,
and I get really upset that women don't seem to respect this anymore.
Masculinity is felt for me anyway, in the company of men, not women.
Being today its harder to be in the company of men exclusively, I feel
many younger men don't know what masculinity is about.
Jim
|
270.107 | A younger man responds | SKYLRK::OLSON | green chile crusader! | Wed Sep 07 1988 14:21 | 23 |
| re 270.106 by Jim PCCAD1::RICHARDJ-
Jim, I have a different perspective. I'm in no way quarreling or
demeaning your role models, your life or your choices. However,
for me, I disagree when you say this:
> Being today its harder to be in the company of men exclusively, I feel
> many younger men don't know what masculinity is about.
I had some role models similar to yours. I think I know what you're
talking about. I cannot personally aspire to such a role because
I think its too limiting. Men hanging out with other men, men
uncomfortable when women are added to the scene. Women are half
of where its at, for me, and I cannot buy into any definition of
"masculinity" that excludes them. So I know what you mean by it,
and I know its *wrong* for me personally. Don't tell me I don't
know what its about, just because I've CHOSEN differently than you.
I did it with my eyes open. I'll rewrite your statement for me:
Being today its harder to be in the company of men exclusively,
I feel many older men don't understand what younger men are about.
DougO
|
270.108 | I Respect Other's Feelings | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Sep 07 1988 16:17 | 9 |
| re:107
OK Doug,
I'm open to another point of veiw, and I don't claim that
my statements are facts, only feelings. Remember feelings are
niether right nor wrong, they're only feelings. My masculine feelings
arn't limited to the company of men, but its were they are most
dominant. I can enjoy the company of women, but there are times
I prefer being with men only. I'm not saying it's right for everyone,
but its they way I'am.
|
270.109 | A few ramblings | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Wed Sep 07 1988 16:46 | 26 |
| RE: .105 Did your wife tell you you could say that? :')
RE: .106 Jim, I agree with you. This is how our family and family
events have always gone. As far as mens clubs go, I think that the
feminists are being petty trying to invade these places. I would
never want to join a womens club. I respect their right to associate with
whom they want. There are some things that men will say in front
of other men that they won't say when women are present and visa
versa. You can let your guard down. You were right when you said
masculinity was hard to explain (in an earlier note). It's something
you feel on the inside which no definition can be put on. When
you try, people see you as a narrow minded chauvenist. that's the
way some people deal with differing opinions and cultures. They
dump you in a stereotypical bucket and write the differing opinion
off to ignorance or narrowmindedness. I don't want to make everyone
think the way I do and I refuse to be brought to their way of thinking
unless,in my mind, I am convinced it is the right way.
RE: .106 & .107 Oh no, it's the generation gap raising it's ugly
head!:')
Mike
PS I think setting has alot to do with this topic. Country, city,
etc.
|
270.111 | Be a MAN, not a MOUSE! | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Thu Sep 08 1988 06:38 | 6 |
|
-1
Mike - I'm NOT married - thank you very much! ;^)
Dwight
|
270.113 | Dwight, have you dated.....women?;') | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Thu Sep 08 1988 09:29 | 1 |
|
|
270.114 | | COMET::BERRY | Howie Mandel in a previous life. | Fri Sep 09 1988 05:23 | 12 |
|
re: 113 Mwannemacher
Nothing funny about me.... Jack ... or is it Jackie?
You're walking on thin ice, and summers coming! :^)
Seriously, I've always had a weakness for the female gender, even
married one, divorced her, and now I'm starting the cycle all over
again.
Dwight
|
270.115 | Looks like we have the same weakness (women) | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Fri Sep 09 1988 13:35 | 3 |
| Was worried about my last entry. Good to see you have a good sense
of humor. Have a good weekend.
|
270.116 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Foole | Fri Sep 09 1988 19:37 | 14 |
| re: .97
Encore, Mike!
re: the title question
Nope, got mine right here, uh, wait a sec. . .dang! I thought it
was in this pocket!? Uh, well, look, I'm sure it's in my other
suit. . .or maybe I put it in my purse. . .son of a snake! I guess
mine *is* lost. Boy do I wish I'd had the Citibank Masculinity
card.
Steve
|