T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
394.1 | I don't know | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Fri Jul 17 1987 10:31 | 8 |
| That is an interesting point that you bring up....being on
the older side I had tended to think that it was the younger
women who were more radical and that the older women had mellowed
out a little. But then I don't know how I come over to readers
in re feminism. Perhaps what we see depends on where we are
standing.
Bonnie
|
394.2 | How old is younger? | OURVAX::JEFFRIES | the best is better | Fri Jul 17 1987 10:37 | 3 |
|
Interesting! Being on the older side, I too felt it was the younger
women that were the most vocal re. feminism.
|
394.3 | Is 27 young, f'r instance ? | CHEFS::MAURER | It's not the gig, it's how you play. | Fri Jul 17 1987 10:47 | 7 |
| Isn't this funny ...
as a "younger" woman, I found myself nodding with .0.
I've rarely felt oppressed in my life, but if I'd grown up (ie come
of age) in the 50s or 60s I don't think I'd be able to say that.
|
394.4 | | MANTIS::PARE | | Fri Jul 17 1987 10:50 | 15 |
|
I think I would agree with you. When women are younger they tend to be
concerned with their families, immediate problems and lives. Thats how
it should be.
As we get older, we take a more global perspective. Our
children are grown (or almost) and we become concerned about issues that
we know will affect their and their childrens future, the world we are
leaving them, the social legacy they have inherited. The elders of any
society have more responsibility to react to injustices and ....the closer
one gets to death the less one has to lose by standing by principles and
ethics and fighting for a better world for those loved ones left behind.
Perhaps I should go in record too. I am 42 and do consider myself to be
a hardcore feminist_:-)_Mary
|
394.5 | | TSG::PHILPOT | | Fri Jul 17 1987 12:15 | 9 |
| I tend to agree with .0, but more for the reasons stated in .3
("younger" women have perhaps grown up in a world with a little
less "oppression") than for the reasons stated in .4. If I am
misreading .4, I apologize, but it sort of sounds like "younger"
women don't give as much of a hoot about what goes on in the world
as "older" women do, for whatever reason. That's just not true.
Just because you don't feel oppression or discrimination does not
necessarily mean you aren't aware. It could very well mean that
it isn't there.
|
394.6 | ...a little clarification... | TSG::PHILPOT | | Fri Jul 17 1987 12:18 | 4 |
| Before anybody gets upset, don't take my previous reply to mean
that I don't think there aren't any injustices against women - there
are. But I do believe that as time goes on, some are less prevalent
and are beginning to go away.
|
394.7 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Jul 17 1987 12:37 | 10 |
| I, too, suspect that you're right (though there are notable exceptions
in our community: Ellen Gugel, Karen Sullivan, and Sandy Ciccolini
spring instantly to mind as younger women who are strong, vocal
feminists). There *is* less sexism today...still several orders of
magnitude too much, but less...than there was when we were coming up.
Now it's much more subtle, harder to see, and it may be difficult for
younger women to really get in touch with it precisely because there's
less of the blatant "You can't do <x>, that's a *man's* job".
=maggie
|
394.8 | It doesn't mean we aren't aware | CHEFS::MAURER | It's not the gig, it's how you play. | Fri Jul 17 1987 12:42 | 6 |
| re: .5,.6 Thanks, Ian. I felt vaguely insulted by .4, but couldn't
put my finger on what it was. You did just that.
I've had to fight less for my rights than women 10-15 years older
than me because they had gained so much. Am I grateful? You bet.
|
394.9 | | MANTIS::PARE | | Fri Jul 17 1987 12:58 | 5 |
| I think I've been misunderstood. I didn't mean to imply that younger
women didn't care as much as older women but rather that younger
women often have different priorities. We focus on different issues
at different stages of our lives (quite appropriately). My apologies
to anyone I've (unintentionally) insulted.
|
394.10 | | MANTIS::PARE | | Fri Jul 17 1987 13:56 | 11 |
|
When I was young I was asked to leave my boys with a stranger to
assist the NAACP (whom I supported) in a project. I refused.
My kids always came first with me, ...... I thought about this
during lunch and realized that my kids still come first with me.
I went back and read my reply again and it sounded remarkably
arrogant. I've decided that you are (collectively) right and I
was (singly_:-) wrong...
** but love is never having to.....
barf, nevermind
|
394.11 | I don't think age is a factor, except in generalizations | BETA::EARLY | Bob_the_hiker | Fri Jul 17 1987 14:00 | 36 |
| re: ....
Its funny how "perceptions" are. We seem (or at least me) 'color'
opinions according to our own experiences.
If we look at the "theory" - "One exception disproves the rule"
- then, within the realm of my personal experiences in observing
women - and men - feminists - sexists - children - foreigners
(foreign to any country) - age bears little on whether or not persons
have ant particular tendency in the light of "wanting what is theirs
to have".
Several years ago (20 ?) some <dubious facts follow> agency did
a survey on "What white people want from life, and what Black people
want of life".
Well, the whites listed the top ten in one order, and these same
white put THEIR perseptions of what blacks wanted in REVERSE order.
ANd when the Blacks were given the same questionairre, they put their
top ten in the SAME order as the whites.
I have found, after living in many states, albeit very short times
for some; and in reading through these files; it appears MOST of
us (the worlds population) would like the same sort of things as
everyone else.
Well, I don't think age was a factor, except many would like to keep
getting older (as opposed to the alternative).
.bob.
|
394.12 | the olden days... | XANADU::BURROUGHS | | Fri Jul 17 1987 14:39 | 12 |
| I think the time when we grew up has a lot to do with our attitudes.
When I was 13 (yes, folks, 25 years ago!), I told my father I wanted
to be an engineer, and he said, "You can't! A woman can't be an
engineer." And that was pretty much true back then. I became a
teacher instead, and it was only when I was 28 that I made a career
switch. There aren't a lot of women engineers my age around here!
It's been hard to get where I am - prejudice, harassment,
discrimination, and victimization have all been big stumbling blocks.
I know I tend to be more "serious" about women's issues than many
younger women I talk with.
|
394.13 | not just age, but experience... | ARGUS::CORWIN | I don't care if I AM a lemming | Fri Jul 17 1987 14:59 | 15 |
| I was thinking of something similar to this basenote myself the other day, when
I was trying to understand my mixed feelings on the Cheryl Tiegs poster note.
I figured that I personally haven't had the bad experiences with sexism that
many of the others have had, regardless of age. Therefore, I consider myself
ignorant in some of these matters. If I had to fight for the right to take
college prep. courses in high school, or attend college, or get a good job,
I might be more vocal and aware of the injustices of society. If I was treated
as a sex symbol, I might be more opposed to the poster, for example.
That's one reason I enjoy this conference so much; I'm learning a great about
other people's realities, and how my reality might be subtly affected in ways
I hadn't noticed before.
Jill
|
394.14 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | Life is a cliche | Fri Jul 17 1987 17:02 | 25 |
| I agree with everyone who thinks that the times we grew up in influence
whether or not we consider ourselves to be hardcore feminists.
I'm almost 38 yrs. old and, although not always vocal and hardly
ever strong, I do consider myself to be a hardcore feminist. But,
I have never wanted to have a so-called "man's job", I hate sports,
and when I was in high school I'm not sure I had ever heard of computer
engineers. Just growing up female, trying to make friends, go out
on dates, get married, be a wife, a mother, and trying to work at
an office job to get money, has made me feel oppressed. At first
I thought it was just the way life is for everybody, but at some
point I started to notice that it was even worse for women. A couple
of examples that come quickly to mind are my ex-mother-in-law trying
to make me feel bad when I first married because he did most of
the cooking, and the way women who are thought to be promiscuous
are called sluts but men are admired for it, and the way it always
seems to be so much more important for woman to be good looking
than it does for men.
Anyway, I just wanted to point out that even women who never wanted
to be engineers, or join an all-male football team can feel pretty
oppressed at times.
Lorna
|
394.15 | I do not think that it is age | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | Truth is Beauty, Beauty is Truth | Fri Jul 17 1987 17:02 | 14 |
|
I am 39 is that young or old. Am I a "hardcore" feminist? Or just
a mud mixer?
_peggy (-)
| The Goddess knows I am the same vocal person
I was 25 years ago - and probably be so in
another 25 years.
I think that was was born wearing glasses and sprouting feminism
diatribes. (Just ask my mother.)
|
394.16 | Activist ? | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Fri Jul 17 1987 17:19 | 9 |
| I think I was much more activist in my twenties. I remember getting
very upset about a lot of issues, not only feminist issues, but
civil rights and ecology issues. I made some life choices to marry,
to adopt special needs kids, to buy an old farm, to work...that
were the out growth of those issues. Now I think most of my emotional
energy goes into handling the results of all those choices....which
is why I feel I am less of an activist....but no less a feminist.
Bonnie
|
394.17 | Other Factors | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Fri Jul 17 1987 18:38 | 19 |
| Yes the young women of today have had many of our battles fought
for us; we have been able to do much without thinking about whether
or not a woman _should_ do these things. This often leaves us with
somewhat less of the black anger we see in our older sisters.
But there is another factor: as we age, we experience more. I have
been through more today than I had yesterday, etc. I have had more
opportunity to be discriminated against than I had when I was still
in school. I think these have given me a cumulated anger: adding
straws to this camel's back. Thus I am angrier today than I was
five years ago.
Furthermore, I was raised to EXPECT, to ASSUME that I was OF COURSE
an equal. Every incidence of sexism I encounter is a slap in the
face, perhaps more so than for a woman who is suprised to learn
that she, indeed, is capable of living without a husband and work
as an engineer/whatever.
Lee
|
394.18 | set irrelevant on... | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Fri Jul 17 1987 18:54 | 23 |
| What follows is tangential (and probably frivolous).
Reading this note reminded me of slam books. Did anyone else ever
read or write in slam books in junior high school?
The basic form was to get a stenography notebook, leave the first
couple of pages blank for people to sign in, and then write a question
on the top of every page all the way through. (A forerunner of
notes!!)
People signed in at the beginning, and then answered every question.
I think the name slam books came from some of the meaner varieties
like "Don't you hate so-and-so" and "Who is the ugliest person
in our school". Mine had a lot of questions about girls'
rights and lack of privileges (there was a girls' wood shop club, 8th
grade only, called the *termites*--ugh!)
My slam book wasn't mean.
Anyway, I had a great fantasy about making a "slam book" for a
womannotes party and finding out who the hardcore feminists are
and are not, how old they are, and what they went through that made
them what they are today!
|
394.19 | | LASSIE::A_FRASER | Sandy's Andy. | Fri Jul 17 1987 22:09 | 12 |
| Just had this idea for some t-shirts.....
"The best Woman for a job is a Man!"
"When the Goddess created Women, He was only joking!"
"The more I know Women, the more I like my dog!"
In and with humour,
Andy.
|
394.20 | New attitudes.. | VICKI::BULLOCK | Living the good life | Mon Jul 20 1987 09:40 | 28 |
|
It's funny, but the way I was raised (only child in the '50's),
I didn't think much about "men-jobs" and "women-jobs". My mom taught
me how to clean a house, cook, and organize closets and drawers;
my dad taught me how to change tires, use a jacknife safely, light
matches and start a good campfire. If I was faced with something
I didn't want to do, or was afraid to try, I didn't have the luxury
of "wimping out" because it wasn't a "girl's thing to do". I was
told, "C'mon, try it--you can do it".
Now that I am older (36), and teach a lot of teenagers at night,
I am noticing how girls are in the 80's. Oh, there's still the
same silliness and brainlessness we all went thru; but I hear more
and more about their plans to BE somebody and do what they want.
I hear less about the man they want to marry and the kind of wedding
cake they'll have. I like to see the progress.
This morning on the way to work I heard that the first EVER black
girl had been chosen as "Miss Mississippi"--"..not because she's
black, but because she was the best contestant." I said, 'Yeah,
RIGHT' to myself, but it is a landmark of sorts--however small.
Progress in most things comes at a snail's pace, but it comes, thank
God.
Jane
|
394.21 | Bring back the 60's | VINO::EVANS | | Mon Jul 20 1987 14:44 | 52 |
| WEll, speaking for us dyed-in-the-wool baby-boomers (you don't get
any more baby-boomer than 1946) - mostly me, but maybe others out
there shared the experience.
The following factors probably have to do with our being more vocal,
or whatever....
1. I really felt in high school that my carrer choices were teacher,
nurse (ugh), or social worker.
2. I was involved in athletics in high school. There were no girls'
interscholastic teams because "it was unladylike" (there's that
WORD again)
3. The boys carried their books down at their sides. The girls had
to carry them in front, cradled in their arms - much less confortable
and bad for the back to boot.
There were many of these stupidities in life, and many of us began
to notice that it plain wasn't fair.
Then too, it was the "sixties" when "issues" and "protest" were
the thing to do.
In addition, it had become easier to attend college and there were
generally no problems in finding jobs on graduation. The competition
was less, and if you graduated you were pretty much assured of a
job. So- more time to protest the current issue, get involved, etc.
Times have changed. There's a lot more pressure to get the marks,
get the job, compete in the workplace, etc. Women DO have more choices
today, and younger women don't realize that things actually were
WORSE. (Just as we older women don't realize what it was like not
to be able to vote)
There was a "Kate and Allie" show on last year in which Kate was
disappointed to realize that a young woman (or maybe a group thereof)
were not interested in the "issues" of the day - working for women's
rights, minority rights, etc. She assumed, as I did, and as a number
of us seem to be....that the young are the "radicals" and we ol'
fogeys have done our bit and can sit back.
She realized, as I did, that whoever feels the strongest has to
do the work. If that's us older folk, well, fine....'long as SOMEBODY
does it.
These things go in cycles. If I live to 80, I'll probably get to
see the new crop of radicals in fashion. Which isn't to say we're
not around now, we just aren't "in vogue" as we were in the 60's.
DAwn
|
394.22 | A nit that needs to be picked. | HPSCAD::TWEXLER | | Mon Jul 20 1987 16:57 | 17 |
| RE 349.21)
Dawn, you said
>"Just as we older women don't realize what it was like not to be
>able to vote"
This is a small tangent, but didn't the 60's make it possible for
Blacks to vote, in fact, as opposed to in theory? So, the statement
above might more correctly state:
>Just as we older (WHITE) women don't realize what it was like not
>to be able to vote.
Am I wrong?
Tamar
|
394.23 | Consider the nit picked | VINO::EVANS | | Mon Jul 20 1987 17:21 | 15 |
| You're right, in principle. Still, didn't male slaves "officially"
get the vote before we did?? (I'm no historian, so I'm not sure)
I was thinking after I wrote my previous reply - women did not have
the right to vote when *MY MOTHER* was born!!!
DO you remember hearing women say they voted the way hubby did,
or they didn't vote because hubby voted (essentially) for them both?
Seems kinda similar, tho' I think many women abdicated their
responsibility in the interest of not offending hubby, keeping peace
in the family, whatever - while the attempted destruction of the
Black vote was inposed from without.
Dawn
|
394.24 | The youngsters seem different to me | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Tue Jul 21 1987 00:53 | 39 |
| I wrote (a reply which I thought I posted to this discussion,
but it is no longer here. I may have failed to notice that the
write had an error or the file may have eaten it.
It said, basically something like...
A couple of months ago I hired a young lady who is one heck of
an engineer. (Actually, I are just a project leader--I didn't
actually hire her. I just stood on my supervisor's desk until he
hired her.) She is a recent college graduate, and thus of a
distinctly differnt generation than I. Of late we have discussed
a number of issues that have come up in this file, and her
reaction has often been surprise that we old fogies are so
concerned about some of the things that she takes for granted.
Her basic approach seems to be that she assumes that men and
women work together and that is just another fact of life.
Another fact that she recogizes that there is a good deal of
sexism in the world, but she treats it as an anomoly that has to
be fixed. If I understand her correctly, she seems to assume
that things work and that when they don't she fixes it.
Inferring solely from this one young lady I would say that the
younger generation seems extremely willing to demand that
problems be fixed, that the system be fair, but don't seem to
either expect it to fail or to look for problems. From this they
seem to be less angry and less "active" than their older
sisters. Although less active they are quite forceful when they
are reactive, when the system is broken. They seem to have
benefitted from those who have gone before them.
I pointed out that I was active in getting her hired because her
approach is very much the kind of approach I think is most
useful, and with which I have most sympathy. It is therefore
very possible that my sample as well as being small (N=1), it
may be biased. That her views and basic style are similar to my
own may not be a coincidence.
JimB.
|
394.25 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | waiting for an idea | Tue Jul 21 1987 10:21 | 15 |
| Re .21, I don't mean to nit-pick either but I found your comment
about the difference between the way girls and boys carry their
books to be surprising. I never thought of it before. Do you really
think anybody would have minded if a girl carried her books the
way boys do? Personally, I think it's more comfortable to carry
them in front female style.
That business about husbands wanting their wives to vote the way
they do IS something I've thought about. My ex-husband and I had
a big fight towards the end of our marriage because I refused to
vote for Ray Shamie. He was really mad that he couldn't tell me
who to vote for.
Lorna
|
394.26 | the "test" | BANDIT::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Jul 21 1987 17:21 | 23 |
| re .21,.25:
when I was in 7th or 8th grade, (~1970) there was a "boy/girl test"
going around. There were various mannerism that were classified
as either male or female. Some that I remember are:
- carrying books (boys by the side, girls in front)
- hand on hip (fingers in front was one gender, thumb
in front the other)
- standing up,look at bottom of shoe.(looking over shoulder
was girl, putting shoe on opposite thigh, was
boy)
The theory I heard why girls carried their books in front was because
holding them to the side would make their skirt ride up on that
side
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
394.27 | hips | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Tue Jul 21 1987 18:03 | 33 |
| Re: the books digression
> The theory I heard why girls carried their books in front was because
> holding them to the side would make their skirt ride up on that
> side
I think it is much simpler than that. Girls have hips. If they
held their books straight down the books would run into their hips.
Boys don't have this problem.
I did not carry my books at my side like the other boys in highschool
and I caught some flack for it. I always carried too many to let
them hang by my side and I used to like to move fast through the
halls so I wanted to keep the books away from my legs. I carried
my books on top of my forearm set at 90 degrees to my body.
Ever see a paper boy with the strap of his bag going over the top
of his head and the bag on his back? I guess you never saw me on
my paper route.
It is one of the freedoms of being an outcast. You can do anything
you want without any fear of being cast out, you already have been,
they can do no more to you.
Re: .0
If there is a difference due to age it is most likely an artifact
of the times. Kids are more conservative these days. They are looking
to make a buck rather than change the world. The college degree
of choice used to be liberal arts...now it is engineering.
MJC O->
|
394.28 | OH BOY! A Rathole!!! | VINO::EVANS | | Tue Jul 21 1987 18:15 | 23 |
| Well, regarding books - I would've been much more comfortable carrying
them down at my side. I *DO* have hips (yes, indeed), and I still
would've found that more comfortable.
Gad, there were a whole BUNCH of things that differentiatied girls
from boys, none of which had anything to do with ...uhm...hormones..
(Maybe THAT's what ticked me off to begin with) ANother one was
standing up straight with weight equal on both feet, vs. leaning
kinda over on one hip, compensating with the shoulder. I guess this
gave one a Veronica Lake/Lauren Bacall come-hither look, but it
sure as hell ain't good for the back. (This doesn't negate the male
leaning-against-wall-with-one-bun, cigarrette-dangling-from-corner
of-mouth. But that was a sometime posture, not the "Expected" way
of standing)
Geez, kids today probably carry backpacks or something sensible.
Better yet, from my teaching day, they probably forego the books
altogether.
(Anybody remember Green-on-Thursday?)
Dawn
|
394.29 | and shirt tabs were fruit loops | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Mudluscious and puddle-wonderfull | Thu Jul 23 1987 03:21 | 9 |
| < Note 394.28 by VINO::EVANS >
-< OH BOY! A Rathole!!! >-
< (Anybody remember Green-on-Thursday?)
Oh yes, I remember that. I grew up in the midwest, was this
silliness more widespread than that? How do these things get
started anyway (I know it wasn't the Enet back then) liesl
|
394.30 | Janis Ian knew what she was singing about | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | waiting for an idea | Thu Jul 23 1987 11:02 | 19 |
| Re .26, guess what? According to your test I'm a "girl"! Well,
now I know for sure.
Re .27, I, too, have been familiar with the freedom of being an
outcast at certain times in the past. Strange how it did have some
advantages (even if I didn't always realize it at the time). I
do appreciate the perspective it's given me at times.
Re .28, in my school it was red on Thursday and it meant you were
"queer", which at the time I had absolutely no idea what it was
supposed to mean. What it really was was an excuse for other kids
to be mean to you.
As for carrying books, I'm not sure I DID have any hips in high
school I was so skinny then. But, I needed both of my skinny little
arms to carry all my books. They were too heavy for one arm.
Lorna
|
394.31 | why thursday? | BANDIT::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Jul 23 1987 11:32 | 7 |
| In my school, it was "Purple on Thursday".
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
394.32 | if you don't know who hilbert is | 3D::CHABOT | May these events not involve Thy servant | Thu Jul 23 1987 12:02 | 35 |
| When Lee got to MIT, maybe by then the rumors had vanished that
if you wore a skirt to 3.091 lecture, you'd be called down to sit
in the front row. (I never verified this--I took the easy :-) way
out with organic chemistry.)
When I was 8 and wanted a responsibility and heard that a paper
route was open, I called but was turned down (I had to interrupt the man on
the phone after he said "Well, son"; I had introduced myself as
"Lisa" which has had me wondering for years how many boys named
Lisa he'd met). My littlest sister, who's 12 years younger, got a
paper route with no problem, when it was her time.
I headed east for school, because it was the one I'd wanted to go
to ever since I'd first read of it (in a book from one of the Time-Life
series, "The Engineer"). I've always been surrounded by engineers
so being one too just seemed right. I didn't know any female role
models in engineering, although I my family had women who worked
with engineers, and nobody really condemned any partiality for
technical subjects in my behavior. [My mother did mention her dropping
out of trig class in high school because she was the only young
woman and was somewhat ostracized; things were better in
my high school.]
Am I old? Gee, I don't think I'm anywhere old *enough*. Certainly
not to have earned the honor "Old". I've not proved myself worthy
yet.
But things aren't done yet. Leadership positions are still
overwhelmingly populated by white males; even freshmen enrollment
in technical fields doesn't match population percentages. Because
these still aren't seen as as viable careers for others, because
some people need more support from role models, because many are
still told "No" or are urged to develop more "natural" talents.
Nonsense. We've only just started.
|
394.33 | | NEBVAX::BELFORTI | Another week of Mondays! | Thu Jul 23 1987 15:54 | 1 |
| No, No, No...... it's Black and Red on Friday.
|
394.34 | kids pass these things on... | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Thu Jul 23 1987 16:17 | 18 |
| Yellow and brown on Thursday!
This is a bit of a rathole but I personally believe that there
is something like a communications net work with children
and teenagers that spreads these things down the generations
from older child to younger.
I was amazed when my children started coming up with the same
jokes and games and taboos that I had had at the same age....
and they all learned them from the older kids and passed them
on the younger.
and did you all know that the rhymic chant "na, na, na nay, na"
is found among children all over the world different syllables
but always as a "put down".
Bonnie
|
394.35 | Why always Thursday? | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | I haven't lost my mind - it's Backed-up on tape somewhere | Thu Jul 23 1987 22:15 | 2 |
| No, it's wearing *YELLOW* on Thurdsay.
|
394.36 | ????!!!! | VISHNU::ADEM | | Fri Jul 24 1987 13:09 | 7 |
| RE: .19
Sorry, but I do not see any humor in your statements. In fact I
am confused (where is the joke?) and angry (your remarks seem to
imply a hatred for women). Did I miss something???!!!
Melanie
|
394.37 | | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Noto, Ergo Sum | Fri Jul 24 1987 13:16 | 3 |
| Turnabout is fair play. All the statements in .19 were reversed
from 'feminist' bumper stickers. Which weren't terribly funny,
either.
|
394.38 | | EUCLID::FRASER | Andy Fraser, PAGan. | Fri Jul 24 1987 15:02 | 8 |
| RE: .36, .37, [RE:.19] -
No, I didn't think they were too funny either, but figured that
the reaction to their reversal might be interesting, which was
why I tried to indicate that humour was involved here, and
*not* antipathy or hatred!
Andy.
|
394.39 | say something new | 3D::CHABOT | May these events not involve Thy servant | Fri Jul 24 1987 16:57 | 2 |
| On the contrary, things like .19 *are* considered very funny: it's
a reason I don't read net.jokes.
|
394.40 | Steinen Says... | GIGI::TRACY | | Mon Jul 27 1987 17:27 | 24 |
| Red knee socks on Thursday (Catholic school).
In Gloria Steinem's book, she talks about the "younger generation"
of women (those of college age, specifically) not being very radical.
(I'm writing from memory, so please bear with me...) I believe
that it was when she went to her college reunion; anyway, some of
her contemporaries were lamenting that young women were not as radical
as they were and it concerned them.
Steinem wasn't too worried. As she pointed out, men are likely
to be at their most radical in college, then they "outgrow" that
as the "establishment" hands them things on a "silver platter."
For women, they may get involved in "causes," but life for them
personally is about as "equal" as it's ever going to be. As women
get older, they start getting smacked with sexism surrounding the
"working world," the institution of marriage, health care, pregnancy
and child-rearing, credit, single parenthood and so on...and THEN
they become feminists.
Made (makes) sense to me.
Tracy
|
394.41 | | AKA::TAUBENFELD | Almighty SET | Sun Aug 09 1987 14:58 | 12 |
| An interesting quote I found in the July/August BusinessWeek Careers:
"A lot of women in their midtwenties assume older women have won
most of the battles, but it's not true. Their attitude is that
older women have been the shock troops, and all younger women have
to do is climb over the prone bodies. But I think what has happened
in the corporate world is that younger men are even more resistant
than their predecessors. So young women will be zapped two ways:
by their own higher expectations and by their male peers."
Paints a grim picture...
|
394.42 | | NEVADA::HOLT | Rattus Occidentalis Excavator | Sun Aug 09 1987 15:04 | 6 |
|
I haven't necessarily seen this to be true. If anything the younger
males are more empathetic, and more likely to view women as true
co-players than older men. I wonder where they are getting their
samples...?
|
394.43 | | CRAVAX::SECTEMP | Debra Reich | Mon Aug 10 1987 11:38 | 11 |
| As a young woman planning on entering a male dominated field, I
can say that I have found the men my age to be accepting of women
in equal positions. However, they still "joke" about women being
inferior (mostly to get a reaction). This concerns me because I
am hoping that one day those jokes won't even come up. When it
gets right down to it, though, EVERYBODY respects ANYBODY who works
hard and gets things done.
Debra
|
394.44 | Some younger men emulate the older men though | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Mon Aug 10 1987 14:42 | 10 |
| re last few:
While I have seen more acceptance by younger men of women in industry,
there is at the same time a good percentage of young men who seek
to emulate older males (very understandable), but they sometimes
take on the old, undesirable ways and those women they treated as
equals in college don't seem as "equal" once they're all in the
business world together.
-Ellen
|
394.45 | The answer to your question... | AKA::TAUBENFELD | Almighty SET | Tue Aug 11 1987 00:57 | 28 |
| re .42
This is what they say about younger and older men:
"You may think men your own age are different, and men under 30
are freer of sex-role stereotypes and speak more in terms of equality
than those in any other age group. But they don't always live up
to what they say. They expect their dates or wives to have careers,
but they also expect those careers to take a second place to their
own. They expect to find women as collegues in entry level jobs,
but many still become angry or fearful when they have to compete
against them.
Most older, successful men find it hard to accept women in the business
world because they grew up when that world was truly male. You'll
find that many are more genuinely supportive of your hopes and
ambitions, however, because it takes a man who is relatively sure
of his own competence, his own masculinity to feel and behave
positively about women's quest for equality."
The author of this article is Anthony Astrachan who wrote 'How Men
Feel: Their Response to Women's Demands for Equality and Power'
I agree to this in the sense that ANY person who is confident with
their own abilites will not be threatened by others, be it man or
woman, younger or older.
|
394.46 | Some explanations? | TSG::BRADY | No good deed goes unpunished... | Tue Aug 18 1987 13:14 | 26 |
| < Note 394.45 by AKA::TAUBENFELD "Almighty SET" >
re .45
Yes, sometimes the acceptance of the woman's career is just
lip service or because it's now 'cool' for 'your woman' to
'be something'; men are even competing about *this*, now.
> Most older, successful men find it hard to accept women in the business
> world because they grew up when that world was truly male. You'll
> find that many are more genuinely supportive of your hopes and
> ambitions, however, because it takes a man who is relatively sure
> of his own competence, his own masculinity to feel and behave
> positively about women's quest for equality."
It's also easier for the older/senior-position male to mentor
a female because it's still an *unequal* relationship, and in most cases
she is not a candidate for *his* specific position. There's also an
established, comfortable father/daughter paradigm in the society whose
rules can be applied.
Also, among the younger generation, the demographics/economics
of the baby boom have made competition for everything - jobs, promotions,
houses, good daycare - more intense in general.
|