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922.3 | of course this can apply to ANY group/class | SSDEVO::GALLUP | the mirror speaks, the reflection lies | Mon Jan 01 1990 21:44 | 32 |
|
> Why do some people dislike women as a class (a group?) ?
They're scared of women? They're afraid of losing their
"edge" to women? They view women as a threat?
> What are women (collectively or individually) doing that
> result[s] in some people having misogynistic attitides ?
Agressiveness from a group that society is still conditioned
to believe should be 'submissive'? Acheiving in areas they
have not acheived before, leading some people to feel
"tresspassed against"? Feeling that women are "taking
something" from them?
> What are some examples (subtle or otherwise) of people acting
> on misogynist feelings and attitudes?
Derogatory terms (ie, 'honey', 'missie', etc)...simply not
giving as much weight in a professional matter to a woman's
opinion/ideas... There are many very subtle ways.....
Sometimes I feel that people don't MEAN to perpetuate
misogynist feelings/attitudes....but they have been
conditioned to act that way. It's like when I mention the
word "homosexual" to some people, or "S&M", it seems to get a
"preconditioned response."
kath
|
922.4 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | a pawn for the prince of darkness | Mon Jan 01 1990 22:04 | 21 |
|
re: .1 SOFBAS::LIVINGSTONE
> I know this isn't MENNOTES but can't the same questions
> be raised in reverse?
> Why do some people dislike men as a class (a group?) ?
Right -- that sounds like a good topic to discuss in
QUARK::MENNOTES, or in another topic here, but not this one.
I'd prefer to focus in this topic on they reasons for and the
manifestations of MISOGYNY.
...MISOGYNY that we see within ourselves, others, or "society".
(When I wrote .0, I was already concerned that I was asking
too many questions to present a sufficiently narrow
"start" for one topic...)
nancy b.
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922.6 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | somewhere somebody's having fun | Tue Jan 02 1990 08:30 | 37 |
| Nancy, I think that some men hate women because they have been hurt
at some time in their life by *one* woman, and they now blame the
entire female sex for this. An example of this would be a man who
has been unfairly, financially destroyed during divorce. I also
think that women who demand child support payments that are so high
that their ex-husband has to live like a pauper on the remains of
his take home pay, and who go back to court every two years for
more, and who go back to court to get 33 1/3 % of any overtime their
ex makes, and who go back to court to get 33 1/3% of the 2nd wife's
salary, if her ex remarries, is helping to foster hatred of women
as a group. I think women, in general, should start being more
fair in regards to what they demand in divorce. I know that in
the past, many men paid nothing or next to nothing, in child support
and nobody did anything about it, but now the injustice has gone
the other way, and divorce settlements are usually still not fair.
An example of what I think of as woman hating caused by the above
reasons, is when a man *always* blames women for any problem that
exists involving men and women. I know a man, who was treated very
unfairly during his divorce and whose ex-wife appears to be a very
shallow, selfish, manipulative woman. Everytime this man ever hears
of or sees any dissagreement or fight that involves men and women
he *always* immediately assumes that the man (even if he knows nothing
about the individual man in question) is completely innocent and
that the woman is a manipulative rotten human being. In cases where
the man in question has done something horrible, such as the Montreal
murders or in one case where a divorced father killed his son and
then himself, he makes comments such as, "I can understand what
drove him."
Hating any group, whether it's men, women, blacks, Jews, or
homosexuals, is basically just gross generalization, by people who
refuse to understand that every person is an individual, regardless
of what larger group they may belong to.
Lorna
|
922.7 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Can you feel the heat? | Tue Jan 02 1990 09:41 | 24 |
| > An example of what I think of as woman hating caused by the above
> reasons, is when a man *always* blames women for any problem that
> exists involving men and women.
It's really funny watching men and women take sides during inter-sex disputes.
Extremely non-sexist people notwithstanding, it is generally very easy to tell
which side each sex will take. Men usually side with the men; women usually
side with the women- no matter what the argument is about. Though usually the
effects are more subtle than something as blatant as simply "siding" with the
same sex. Most times, it is more a matter of giving the benefit of the doubt.
Women will give the benefit of the doubt to other women even when it appears
that the women in question was in the wrong by saying something like, "Well
maybe... <insert semi=plausible justification here>" And men do precisely the
same thing. It's really quite humorous.
Why misogyny?
Sometimes it starts as a bad experience with a single woman. The bad feelings
carry over. Then it happens again with a different woman. And again. Soon, a
pattern develops. Then the "They're all the same" refrain erupts. It's quite
similar to the series of experiences that women draw upon when reaching the
conclusion that "All men are animals." :-)/2
The Doctah
|
922.8 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Tue Jan 02 1990 10:22 | 21 |
| Hahaha! We shouldn't explore misogyny because many of us are
man-haters? What a laugh!
It sounds like:
"Until you stop hating me, you cannot discuss my hatred of you."
or
"Discussing my hatred of you is very hateful of you so stop it!"
What's funny is that this sounds like a pretty innocent and valid
question but someone went off in a huff because of the "general tone"
of the file or something vague like that. It looks like we just
created an opportunity for this person to say what he/she has been wanting
to say for awhile. Good. Adios. I'm glad that's over with. Now back
to our regularly scheduled topic, the one only hateful women would
even think of discussing!
ps: I never automatically side with the woman. We are just as
likely to be wrong as a man is.
|
922.9 | Pointers | LEZAH::BOBBITT | changes fill my time... | Tue Jan 02 1990 10:23 | 14 |
| See also:
MENNOTES:
105 - What's a Woman Hater
HUMAN_RELATIONS:
418 - Misogyny
WOMANNOTES-V1:
321 - Women Who Don't Like Other Women
774 - Why I Hate Marilyn
-Jody
|
922.11 | Age old reply.... | DEMING::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Tue Jan 02 1990 13:08 | 16 |
| > -< Adios... ladies... >-
> Just my parting .02 worth... I'm just trying to be honest... but I feel
> actions speak so much louder than words.... I don't think we should
> have to try as the adage says twice as hard as men to be judged equal,
> but I'd rather see more action and less words... I think that gets to
> the men and wins them over much more.
Aw, Gee, Whiz.....if I promise to be a good little girl and mind my
manners and all that good stuff, then the guys will be nice to me and
not put me down unconsciously???? WOW!!!! Is that all it takes????
justme....jacqui
|
922.12 | Its really fear, misdirected. | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Tue Jan 02 1990 16:05 | 59 |
| [re-entered after editing to remove a silly assumption, sorry.]
Current musings on misogyny...
> Why do some people dislike women as a class (a group?) ?
I am only going to address half the question, though. I have far
less of a clue about why some women are misogynous as I have about
why some men are that way.
We are all raised with expectations, with role models, with examples,
with words and threats and whippings and lessons and disapproval
and cajolery and other sorts of manipulation; we are shaped to appear
to fit into this society. The shaping affects us on many levels;
most of us are not even conscious of all of the ways we have been
shaped into being what we are.
And the sad part is that the shaping doesn't necessarily fit us
into our society very well, after all. In many people, the wrong
learning methods are applied, and people are shaped with fear, or
terror, or insecurity, or hatred; instead of love, or acceptance,
or a will to understand.
I think that men who hate women are misshaped in two terrible ways.
1- They are taught not to show fear. Men are afraid of other men.
Men know that other men may be bigger, or stronger, and that one
must always be prepared to defend oneself...and that the best way
to avoid needing to defend oneself, is not to show fear; to pretend
fearlessness. Most men even pretend such to themselves. And failing
to acknowledge that root fear, involves a fundamental misshaping
of attitudes...a hiding from oneself, a dishonesty.
2- They are taught to see women as 'other'. The differences of
gender are emphasized, as though we were unthinking animals, instead
of the transcendence of similarity in our rational thoughts and emotional
capabilities. Such men don't see woman as 'the same' (equally human)
as they are. Women are "different".
When one has been shaped like that, I think that the combination
of being unable to deal with (because one is hiding from it) the
fear of other men, and the fact that women are seen as alien or
other-than-(hu)man, erupts into misogyny in some cases. I'm having
a hard time wording this. A man shaped to suppress fear, who has
fear, has an unacknowledged emotional disturbance, with insecurity
and anger as the visible manifestations. I think this gets directed
at women, because its safer than directing anger at other men, and
women are seen as aliens anyway.
> What are women (collectively or individually) doing that
> result in some people having misogynistic attitides ?
This, I think, is the wrong question, except when we apply it to
how young people are being shaped in our society. Once a misogynyst
has been formed, I think that the actions of women serve only as
excuses and justifications for that hatred, not as causes. I don't
think that women are to blame that some humans hate all women.
DougO
|
922.14 | random thoughts | KID2::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Tue Jan 02 1990 20:10 | 26 |
| Well, it could be because society defines a woman as "not-manly", and
"not-manly" is about the worst thing you can be in this society
(traditionally). Like, isn't it the worst insult in the world for
a boy to be called a girl, amoung kids? Really bad insults are things like
faggot (also "not manly"), wimp, pussy, etc -- "not manly" --
"womanly".
When I was a child, I didn't like girls much either, as a class -- because
I was taught they were not the strong, noble, smart, good ones, but
the passive, fainting-and-have-to-be-saved, cowardly ones. It took
years of seeing counter-examples, and raising my consciousness to see
both the attitude in me, that I had been taught, and the brain-washing
still going on that continues to teach it. Years to develop my own
version of what makes a good person (as opposed to the "manly" version).
(And years before my mother and I could talk about it together, about
breaking out finally from the brain-washing.)
I don't think there are individuals consciously trying to teach kids
sex role stereotypes, and that the woman's stereotypical role is
less valued, but I think it's still happening (see the recent movies
notes, etc.) And I think it's one of the roots of misogyny.
(Another root is probably needing someone to hate -- which is
probably rooted in insecurity, which may or may not be partly caused
by not being able to live up to someone's stereotyped role for you.)
MKV
|
922.15 | .13 that was missing in action. ;-) | SSDEVO::GALLUP | a very, very dubious position | Tue Jan 02 1990 22:12 | 41 |
|
RE: .12
>(and though Livingston read it
> differently, the basenoter said nothing that attributes misogyny
> solely to men. He misread Nancy's questions.)
FWIW.....Linda Livingstone is a "she", not a "he", :-) and I
think I understand the point Linda is trying to make. (I
know, this is what you edited out, but I just HAD to put it
in!) ;-)
The point being that it's very very off-setting to see people
talking all the time about how the group "women" are being
descriminated against, when there are REAL, viable groups out
there that are also being descriminated against, sometimes
much more than women are....and it's very upsetting and
nerve-wracking and angering to hear, over and over again, an
agenda that simply talks about equality for women and the
hatred against them.
I think it's important to fight for equality for ALL, not
just equality for women. And the vehement way that some
women (people) fight for "equality for women" comes across,
much of the time, as very narrowminded and very self-centered
to some people.
I'd like to see Womennotes tend toward a more 'equality for
all' approach. I, for one, have a hard time dealing with
equality as a simple "gender-based" issue, and hence, that is
probably why I come across as 'anti-feminist' and why my
notes seem to cause a big stir many times. I perceive quite a bit
of anger in what I read by some of the vocal women noters in
here, and that is very off-putting to me. I don't believe
we can ever hope to bridge the misogyny barrier by projecting
anger, and casting blame...I think it has to come from
kindness and forgiveness (and forgetting) about the past,
and by working together for a new future for EQUALITY for
ALL.
kath
|
922.16 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Tue Jan 02 1990 23:01 | 78 |
| RE: .15 Kath
> The point being that it's very very off-setting to see people
> talking all the time about how the group "women" are being
> descriminated against, when there are REAL, viable groups out
> there that are also being descriminated against, sometimes
> much more than women are....
"REAL, viable groups" (as opposed to women?) Please explain!
Women are approximately 50% of the human population of our culture/
planet, so talking about discrimination against women covers an
*awful* lot of ground (and crosses the boundaries of nearly every
other group you could possibly name that is also a target of
oppression.)
> ...and it's very upsetting and nerve-wracking and angering to hear,
> over and over again, an agenda that simply talks about equality for
> women and the hatred against them.
Imagine - the *nerve* of people talking about women more often than
others in a file called *WOMAN*notes! I can see where that would
be terribly upsetting in a culture like ours.
If we're allowed to talk about ourselves (more than others) *here*,
then who knows what will happen next. This could be dangerous! :-}
> I think it's important to fight for equality for ALL, not
> just equality for women. And the vehement way that some
> women (people) fight for "equality for women" comes across,
> much of the time, as very narrowminded and very self-centered
> to some people.
We can't fight for equality for *anyone* if we aren't allowed to
mention the injustices suffered by particular groups (out of the
fear of being considered self-centered, or out of concern about
angering the groups who *do* have power in our culture.)
> I'd like to see Womennotes tend toward a more 'equality for
> all' approach. I, for one, have a hard time dealing with
> equality as a simple "gender-based" issue, and hence, that is
> probably why I come across as 'anti-feminist' ...
It has been suggested before that the word "woman" be taken out
of the title of this conference (so that the file would not be
slanted so much towards issues involving women, specifically.)
Again, in our culture, it is sometimes/often seen as quite *nervy*
for attention to center around women instead of around men (where
it rightfully belongs, according to the cultural mindset that
accounts for misogyny in the first place.)
> I perceive quite a bit of anger in what I read by some of the vocal
> women noters in here, and that is very off-putting to me.
How do you justify your *own* anger at the anger you perceive in
this notesfile? (Or, doesn't your anger *need* to be justified?)
> I don't believe we can ever hope to bridge the misogyny barrier
> by projecting anger, and casting blame...
...towards men. Right? How about the anger at women who appear
angry at men? Is that kind of "women's anger" more acceptable to
you? If so, why?
> I think it has to come from kindness and forgiveness (and
> forgetting) about the past, and by working together for a new future
> for EQUALITY for ALL.
Are you kind towards women whom you perceive to be angry about
injustices towards women? Or do you fight them? Do you really think
that all the problems of discrimination are strictly "in the past"?
Do you think we can gain equality just by asking nicely for it -
making sure not to say anything that could make men mad at us?
If we *have* to be "nice" at all times to gain equitable treatment, then
what we get in return for our "niceness" will *not* be equality, Kath.
|
922.17 | thoughts | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Tue Jan 02 1990 23:33 | 42 |
| kath,
If women can't talk about very real pain and frustration in re
being discriminated against here, then where can they talk in
Dec? As it is, this file is quite mild compaired to what is found
in feminist groups on the net news groups - the little that I've
seen of them.
Yes there are other groups that are discriminated against, and
many of them have their own notes files. Such as files for
Blacks and Asians and Homosexuals and Jewish people. Should we ask
them not to address their very real problems in their files unless they
also address other kinds of discrimination? I don't think so.
There are files, like Human_Relations and Soapbox where more general
types of discrimination can be discussed.
Some men in Mennotes use that file to vent about bad divorce
settlements and grasping ex wives, yet their right to do so
isn't challenged because they are focusing only on the discrimination
that they have experienced. I think that this is right and proper.
Women need a place where they can talk to each other, where they
can say what happened to them and how it made them feel, and a place
where they don't have to mince words or be 'nice'. Far too often
in my life I have swallowed my pride and 'made nice' so as not to hurt
other people's feelings. There have to be some places where we can
talk about pain and hurt and frustration and all the bad stuff and
connect with others so we know we aren't crazy.
I know that, especially for younger women, some women don't agree with
this or haven't experienced prejudice or discrimination. But it is
real, and it does hurt, and talking about it is a way to deal with it.
One thing I've grown to dislike is covering things up and only talking
nicely because it 'isn't done' to do other wise. I honestly don't think
that is what you are advocating, but to many women of my generation
that is the button that is pushed when we read words like yours.
If I am upset I want to be able to say so, if I am angry I want the
right to be angry, if I see prejudice I want to be able to call it
by it's name.
Bonnie
|
922.18 | it's all the *same* *problem* | DECWET::JWHITE | ohio sons of the revolution | Tue Jan 02 1990 23:37 | 24 |
|
re: last few
i get very tired of arguments of the form, 'how can you worry about
<x> when <y> is so much more important'. examples include:
x=unplanned pregnancies y=starving people
x=the homeless y=nicaragua
x=the oppression of women y=the oppression of anybody else
you know, i *can't* worry about all the x's and all the y's. i don't
have enough time, energy, money, commitment, strength or wisdom.
furthermore, i think it's a waste of what little of those qualities
that i do possess to try to justify why i might choose to care more
one and not another. especially since i truly believe that most
of the problems in our world are all facets of the *same* problem:
not enough love and caring for everyone and everything on the planet.
i *know* that women are not treated fairly in our society. i see it
every day. it is REAL. since i love women, individually and as a group,
their plight pains me, personally, in my gut. it is REAL. thus, i
choose to give women's issues the first priority of what little energy
i can muster. but beyond that, i truly believe that if we can get our
society to deal with our oppression of women, we will have made a major
step in conquering *all* oppression.
|
922.19 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Wed Jan 03 1990 00:22 | 6 |
|
We explore ... by example.
|
922.20 | REs to Suzanne, Bonnie and Joe (?) | SSDEVO::GALLUP | six months in a leaky boat | Wed Jan 03 1990 01:14 | 155 |
| RE: .16 Suzanne
> "REAL, viable groups" (as opposed to women?) Please explain!
other real, viable groups.....(sorry, I knew what I meant)
;-)
> (and crosses the boundaries of nearly every
> other group you could possibly name that is also a target of
> oppression.)
But those women will still be decriminated against in those
groups....
> Imagine - the *nerve* of people talking about women more often than
> others in a file called *WOMAN*notes! I can see where that would
> be terribly upsetting in a culture like ours.
I'm talking about in everyday......not in =wn= only.
> We can't fight for equality for *anyone* if we aren't allowed to
> mention the injustices suffered by particular groups
Where did I say that? I believe I said that other groups
have just as important injustices......and those should not
be ignored along the way....especially if we are striving for
the same thing.
> It has been suggested before that the word "woman" be taken out
> of the title of this conference (so that the file would not be
> slanted so much towards issues involving women, specifically.)
Not by me......I think =wn= is pretty good as it is.....but i
think it could use some more compassion....
> How do you justify your *own* anger at the anger you perceive in
> this notesfile? (Or, doesn't your anger *need* to be justified?)
I have rarely felt "anger" at anything here....more like
FRUSTRATION at not feeling like I'm being listened to and
given a "fair shake."
> ...towards men. Right? How about the anger at women who appear
> angry at men? Is that kind of "women's anger" more acceptable to
> you? If so, why?
No anger is 'more acceptable' to me..........even FROM me.
> Are you kind towards women whom you perceive to be angry about
> injustices towards women? Or do you fight them?
Do I have more choices? ;-) I try to understand WHY they are
the way they are, and I try to help them understand WHY I
feel they are not being as effective as they could
be...(ie, I try to get my opinion across to them).
> Do you think we can gain equality just by asking nicely for it -
> making sure not to say anything that could make men mad at us?
No, and I don't believe I ever implied that. I said I
believe there were alternate ways than anger. And they have
proven effective for me.
RE: .17 (Bonnie)
> If women can't talk about very real pain and frustration in re
> being discriminated against here, then where can they talk in
> Dec?
I never said "shouldn't" and "can't." I said there are other
groups that can be a benefit to the fight for equality for
women by making it a fight for equality for all. And by
adding more compassion toward these groups, more understanding,
I feel we can better win the fight......
"Make love, not war."
> There are files, like Human_Relations and Soapbox where more general
> types of discrimination can be discussed.
I haven't really seen much REAL discussion on equality for all in
either file. I think it's for all groups to address the
issue. And not in a "generic environment."
> Some men in Mennotes use that file to vent about bad divorce
> settlements and grasping ex wives, yet their right to do so
> isn't challenged because they are focusing only on the discrimination
> that they have experienced. I think that this is right and proper.
I think it is too.....But I think there is MORE that can be
added to it.....
> in my life I have swallowed my pride and 'made nice' so as not to hurt
> other people's feelings.
Not "make nice", just not "make anger." Work WITH to
educate, not work against.
> There have to be some places where we can
> talk about pain and hurt and frustration and all the bad stuff
> and connect with others so we know we aren't crazy.
Agreed.....and there is more....
I know that, especially for younger women, some women don't agree with
this or haven't experienced prejudice or discrimination. But it is
real, and it does hurt, and talking about it is a way to deal with it.
One thing I've grown to dislike is covering things up and only talking
nicely because it 'isn't done' to do other wise.
> I honestly don't think
> that is what you are advocating, but to many women of my generation
> that is the button that is pushed when we read words like yours.
You're right, it isn't.....My note has been taken with
negativity, I believe (ie, "you shouldn't", "you can't"),
when the real meaning is positivity (ie, "there is more",
"there are ways to work together", "there are ways to heal
the hurt by working thru it instead of dwelling on it")
> If I am upset I want to be able to say so, if I am angry I want the
> right to be angry, if I see prejudice I want to be able to call it
> by it's name.
And after you do all that.....what do you do then?
RE: .18 (Joe? You never sign your notes, I don't know your name)
> i get very tired of arguments of the form, 'how can you worry about
> <x> when <y> is so much more important'. examples include:
No, rather....
"how can you worry about only <x> when <y> is just as
important" ^^^^ ^^^^^^^
When all the x's and y's are reaching for the same thing...
No, with THAT in mind, please re-read my note (if you want).
> you know, i *can't* worry about all the x's and all the y's
All you have to do is change the word "women" to
"all"...still focus on women if you want, but don't push
aside the "all" part.....PLEASE! It's just as important!
> especially since i truly believe that most
> of the problems in our world are all facets of the *same*
> problem:
EXACTLY!!!!!!!!!! :-)
kath
|
922.21 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Wed Jan 03 1990 02:51 | 72 |
| RE: .20 Kath
>>Imagine - the *nerve* of people talking about women more often than
>>others in a file called *WOMAN*notes! I can see where that would
>>be terribly upsetting in a culture like ours.
> I'm talking about in everyday......not in =wn= only.
Your "everyday" experiences rarely, if ever, jive with mine and
this time is no exception. If I heard women's issues being
discussed everywhere else everyday, =wn= wouldn't be nearly as
precious to me as it is (and I'd be a lot more encouraged about
the state of our culture than I am at the moment.)
As it is, I'm grateful to see women's issues given precedence here!
>> We can't fight for equality for *anyone* if we aren't allowed to
>> mention the injustices suffered by particular groups
> Where did I say that? I believe I said that other groups
> have just as important injustices......and those should not
> be ignored along the way....especially if we are striving for
> the same thing.
Why do you assume that other groups are being ignored in our lives?
Do you know any one of us on a 24-a-day basis? Can you read our
thoughts? How do you claim to know what we ignore or do not ignore
in our hearts and minds?
> ....I think =wn= is pretty good as it is.....but i think it could
> use some more compassion.
What's wrong, Kath, are our feelings "incorrect"? What would you
rather that we feel?
>>How do you justify your *own* anger at the anger you perceive in
>>this notesfile? (Or, doesn't your anger *need* to be justified?)
>I have rarely felt "anger" at anything here....more like
>FRUSTRATION at not feeling like I'm being listened to and
>given a "fair shake."
This statement is an unfair generalization about a notesfile that
is comprised of a diverse group of people (the vast majority of
whom have never done *anything* to you to deserve to be characterized
in this way.)
Do you consider this "listening" and "giving a fair shake" to
others here?
>>Do you think we can gain equality just by asking nicely for it -
>>making sure not to say anything that could make men mad at us?
>No, and I don't believe I ever implied that. I said I
>believe there were alternate ways than anger. And they have
>proven effective for me.
Your ways are effective for you because women/feminists who took
a stand (and were *not* nice) provided opportunities for you that
you would not have had otherwise through the women's movement.
Of course, it's much nicer for you now to disassociate yourself
with those women/feminists (and to have the benefits of what they
did without having to take the brunt of the cultural resentment
for it.)
It's much rougher out on the front lines, Kath, although I'm
certainly happy for you that you *do* benefit from the work of
the women's movement, even though you spend so much time knocking
the attitudes that have accomplished so much for *all* women in
the past 150 years.
|
922.22 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Can you feel the heat? | Wed Jan 03 1990 08:19 | 11 |
| THIS IS THE PLACE to deal with women's feelings, women's experiences, and
women's needs. Of course the women here (and men, for that matter) focus on
gender based discrimination. Why shouldn't they?
In general, Kath, it is indeed the ideal to work for complete equality for
all people. However, in specialized spaces such as =wn=, it is both more
effective and more therapeutic to focus on individual aspects of discrimination.
Trying not to bandwagon-
The Doctah
|
922.23 | Hold your breath and count to 10 people! | ASDS::RSMITH | | Wed Jan 03 1990 08:36 | 35 |
|
WOW! Timeout people! If womman_notes is for people to express their
views, then that means ALL views. I don't believe that such strong
sarcasm is necessary between ADULTS.
I believe that the original subject here was Misogony: what started it,
what encourages it ... Kath has made a valuable point. Anger begots
anger. I, too, have been treated like nothing more than a little girl
playing the roll of her daddy by men in management's boy's club. But
talking down to "younger" women who haven't had that experience, isn't
going to help. What also isn't going to help is holding a grudge by
saying that society owes us, as women, for the roles that we've been
forced into for the past, God-only-knows-how-many, years. Carrying a
grudge and venting anger publically, (outside of this notes file), do
nothing but encourage hate of women in people who already hate women.
On the other hand, we must demand respect and if that ticks people off,
then so be it. I think you are all missing Kath's point and she is
missing your's. Kath is saying don't show the world nothing but anger.
You people are saying, "how do you know that we show anger when all you
see is our replies in WN?" Kath is operating on assumptions but
responding with anger only proves, to her, what she is saying.
Yes, thanks to the first feminists who fought so hard, we have a right
to demand respect and a wage equal to that of a comparible man's. I
also understand that I am lucky. Perhaps more fortunate than older
women who've been in the business world for longer. When I got out of
school 2 years ago, women engineers were not common but at least not
thought to be women trying to be men. I had an easier time than I
would have 5 or 10 years ago. But don't hold that against me or anyone
else.
Rachael
|
922.25 | When is a group not a group? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Jan 03 1990 09:16 | 17 |
| re .15 -
I think the point about "real viable groups" that are targets of
discrimination, and whether or not women qualify as such a group, is
absolutely central to all our discussions here and in other topics, of
how women are treated in our society.
What *is* a real viable group? Assuming, for example, that blacks and
Jews are viable groups in this political sense, what's the difference; why
shouldn't women work, just as blacks and Jews do, for an end to
discrimination against them, without being told they're just being
angry and self-centered? What do racism and anti-Semitism have that
misogyny doesn't?
Dorian
Dorian
|
922.26 | | MOSAIC::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Wed Jan 03 1990 11:17 | 4 |
| > What do racism and anti-Semitism have that
> misogyny doesn't?
men.
|
922.27 | a special place, a special time | SELL3::JOHNSTON | bord failte | Wed Jan 03 1990 11:37 | 56 |
| well, I've held my breath and counted to 10 now [ ;-) ], so I believe I
will respond to several issues raised:
1 - 'looking down on younger women'
----------------------------------
I'm 35 and my sister is nearly 25. The years between my 'coming of
age' and hers saw _much_ change in the attitudes and status of women
here in the US. What I experienced, she did not.
Do I look down upon her for this? No. But occasionally I become a bit
annoyed when she tells me what I experienced didn't happen or doesn't
have any relevance to these modern times. [Today is built upon
yesterday just as surely as tomorrow is rooted in today] But down deep
our hopes for ourselves and future equality are very much the same.
Times change. I also suffered through horrendous cases of measles and
mumps. She did not as immunisations had been found.
Now, I would no more wish the 'dues' or the 'fight' on younger women
than I would wish the misery of mumps upon my much beloved sister. I
do not expect gratitude or respect for having lived and struggled
through either. But I am today a product of my past.
I am not bitter and I do not hate, but I have worked and will work for
the special concerns of women in our society. I truly do see many of
the ills of our society will fading with that betterment.
2 - taking a broader view
-------------------------
This seems to come up in any discussion of the problems of women.
[set mode/mildly miffed]
time without number, members of this file have discussed the
environment, the plight of the homeless, racism, AIDS, censorship, gay
rights, anti-semitism, substance abuse ... and _not_ just in ratholes!!!!
it would seem that many here, who forthrightly state that their _first_
priority is women, already take a broader view toward world betterment.
[set mode/normal]
It would make me very happy if we could return to discussing misogyny
in this topic. [I carry a bit of it buried myself.] Women really do,
as a subset of humanity, have some problems stemming from it. This
does not say that other problems do not exist.
I, for one, would be happy to discuss them in a different note.
3 - for those who have not experienced it
-----------------------------------------
From the bottom of my heart:
Bless you. I sincerely hope you never do.
Ann
|
922.28 | | CADSE::FOX | D. Nyhan: >>Men don't want to know.<< | Wed Jan 03 1990 13:03 | 6 |
| re .26 : Darn it, Catherine, you beat me to it again! :-)
re .27: Thank you and amen!
Bobbi_who's_been_on_marches_rallies_picket_lines,_etc.,_for_all_the_"causes"
_Ann_mentioned(tired? who me?!:-(
|
922.29 | back to the topic, maybe. | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Wed Jan 03 1990 14:15 | 42 |
|
Just yesterday I had a discussion with another woman (she is
about 7 years younger than I am) about my reactions sometimes
to situations where I think that my sense of what the goal is,
is attacked. (This is very difficult to put into words since
I am talking about gut feelings.)
During the course of our discussion I came to the conclusion
that what is happening to me is "survival tactics" get turned
on HIGH. It is much more than simple knee-jerk reaction. Over
the years I have had to fight for every inch of progess I have
made, fight against society, family, friends and myself. The only
way I have made it to where I am is but being agressive about
not giving up any thing that I have gained. When this reaction
kicks in I do not know it is happening, but I have survived and
I have made progress, I have done things that many women from
my generation could not/did not.
It is my feeling that there are a lot of women out there who
have had life experiences that have led to them having developed
similar "survival tactics" that are automatic. It is my belief
that many of the "young women engineers" have not had to rely
on these, YET.
It is not pleasant to be on the other side when I start running
on auto-pilot, and it is usually something trivial. This may
make individuals think that I don't like them - but it is not
a personal issue and just my survival.
Because of the culture we live in all of us have traces of
misogyny and no matter how "good" women are they will never
be good enough to be men. So my reactions are often seen as
man-hating, or being a BITCH, or "not nice" or one of the many
ways women are told not to be agressive, angry or fighters.
_peggy
(-)
|
Misogyny is a form of self-hatred
for men as well as women.
|
922.31 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | we'll open the door, do anything we decide to | Wed Jan 03 1990 14:29 | 26 |
|
I believe misogyny to be perpetuated by many little things that we say and
do without realizing the impact of them.
Case in point (please this is not a direct attack on anyone but rather just
an example)....I just read a personal name that said...
"Men don't want to know."
If I were a slightly misogynic man, reading a personal name like this would
add fuel to my fire....in fact, being the woman I am now, I find it a very
detrimental statement to my reach for equality. Yes, it's simply a statement,
but it reinforces negative feelings in some men.
I believe it's negative reinforcement, not positive. Positive reinforcement, I
believe, goes a long way toward our goal, while negative reinforcement
hinders us greatly.
I can support negative comments in a purely supportive environment in order
to vent anger, display frustration, but in an environment where we are working
to gain equality by working WITH others, I find it to be a great hindrance.
kath
|
922.32 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Jan 03 1990 14:54 | 9 |
| re .31 -
Unless I'm mistaken, that quote, "men don't want to know," is from
David Nyhan's column in the Boston Globe a few days after the murders
of the 14 women in Montreal, in which Nyhan documented the sluffing of
the event aside by the (male-dominated) media.
Would you consider this column another one of the little things
we say and do that perpetuate misogyny?
|
922.33 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Wed Jan 03 1990 15:15 | 67 |
| "Men don't want to know" was written by a man, Kathy. David Nyhan
in a Boston Globe column on the reasons for the relatively paltry
coverage and exploration of the Montreal massacre of women. So
it's a bad example to use.
I get the impression that you believe women's anger and raised voices
are primarily responsible for the continuing of misogyny; that men
are fully willing to pass the ERA but are not doing so because we
have made them, and continue to make them, angry. Have I got it so far?
You further seem to be saying that all we have to do is "work with
men" and "not against them" and that will do it.
Perhaps you don't realize that women *have* "worked with men" and
it just didn't work. We still aren't guaranteed the same rights
and protections under the constitution that men are. Perhaps where
you and many other women in this file differ is not a question of
"working with" as opposed to "being angry at" men, but a question
of *when* is it right to transfer from one to the other.
When, after "working with" men to get the ERA passed, to get daycare,
to get deadbeat men to support their children, to get equal
opportunities to the material goodies in life, and getting merely
cajoled and jollied around, is it ok to begin to get just plain pissed
off? Do you think women were subservient one day and suddenly
became strident one day back in the early 60s? Do you think women changed
from docile June Cleavers into screaming bra-burners once they took
their first birth control pill?
This is what so many younger women fail to see. A woman's role
has always been a deferential one to men and you can bet your
engneering degree that the first stirrings of female desire for
equal freedom and autonomy *guaranteed by the constitution* were
done so "nicely". We worked according to the system but found the
system itself was male dominated and against us. Several hoops
were thrown for women to jump through and they did to no avail.
At what point do *you* get exasperated when the important goals of
your life are thwarted? Never? Have you never kicked anything
in sheer anger? Is 20 years of failure to pass the ERA enough time
for frustration to build? Or, perhaps, you think there really IS no amount
of time - that anger against the policy-makers is *never* justified.
I hope you don't think that. And I further hope that you don't
think feminists are rightly regarded by men as mere spoiled brats
who won't get their just desserts until they "make nice". It's
been done, Kathy. Women have always had to be nice to men. Until
recently, you couldn't pay the rent without them. Now we have the
responsibility of paying the rent, (women single parents are
practically the norm, these days), but we still don't get equal
protection guaranteed under the law. You got into engineering school
but it wasn't because men believed you had the right to. It was
because when women asked nice, and got a pat on the head and a
patronizing chuckle, they got tougher.
There's a great quote that goes, "The only requirement for the triumph
of evil is that good men [sic] do nothing." Be thankful your sisters
are not "doing nothing" because no man would simply hand you the
opportunities you've gotten any more than they'd hand them to any
woman. It was female anger that won what little gains we have made.
And until the policy-making men are willing to respond to reason and
logic, only female anger will fuel the continuing fight for equality.
THEY have a choice. The ball is in their court. Equalilty will
happen because it's the right thing to do, or it will happen because
we are forced to MAKE it happen. It takes two sides to make a "war".
Women are not screaming in a vacuum. And our anger is not a silly
little exercise in how far we can push men. It's an expected human
response to those who would find out how far they can push us.
|
922.34 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | we'll open the door, do anything we decide to | Wed Jan 03 1990 15:42 | 59 |
| RE: .33 (Sandy)
> "Men don't want to know" was written by a man, Kathy. David Nyhan
> in a Boston Globe column
1. How many people read the Boston Globe?
2. How many people read that article?
3. How many people (men especially) in NOTES are going to immediately
equate the personal name with the quote?
4. Is my point made?
The P_N stands alone and is VERY easily open to misunderstanding. I said in
the paragraph BEFORE it that [paraphrased] "that we do things sometimes that
we don't think of the impact it will have on others"
> I get the impression that you believe women's anger and raised voices
> are primarily responsible for the continuing of misogyny;
No, you're not right so far.
The question was raised in .0, "what are some ways women can aid in perpetuating
misogyny" [paraphrased]. Please point out where i said that what I'm presenting
is "primarily responsible". In fact, I do believe I did say "sometimes I
believe that women do..." which obviously disputes your claim that I'm
implying this to be a primary reason for misogyny.
> Perhaps you don't realize that women *have* "worked with men" and
> it just didn't work.
I believe DougO, Doctah, Steve Mallett, and Joe (?) White are living examples
that it HAS worked...and is still working today.
I challenge you to find ONE MAN that was won over to the feminist side because
he felt anger directed at him during a talk with a feminist (and from that
sympathized with her plight), by legislation forcing him to act a certain way,
etc.
>Perhaps where
> you and many other women in this file differ is not a question of
> "working with" as opposed to "being angry at" men, but a question
> of *when* is it right to transfer from one to the other.
Well, when IS it justified? I don't think it is....I think it is a way to
vent frustration, but I don't feel it should EVER EVER EVER be directed at
the group that we are striving for unity with. I always try to direct
my anger at the PROBLEM, not at the persons involved in the problem.
> This is what so many younger women fail to see.
Sandy...right here I am going to point you back to your note of 911.39 in which
you state...
911.39>I don't make the pronouncements of absolute right and wrong
911.39>and I'm really
911.39>surprised that many people react to me as though I had.
At this point I believe I'll stop replying to this note.
kath
|
922.35 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | we'll open the door, do anything we decide to | Wed Jan 03 1990 15:58 | 33 |
|
>You got into engineering school
> but it wasn't because men believed you had the right to. It was
> because when women asked nice, and got a pat on the head and a
> patronizing chuckle, they got tougher.
Sandy, I'm VERY thankful for the past and the things women have STRIVED for
and what they've obtained, and I KNOW there is a long way to go....
But it would be living in the past to think that *I* got into college because of
the fact that women in the past 'got tough.' Perhaps to say that *women*
began to be allowed equal opportunity for college was because of toughness,
but never why *I* got into college.
I got into college because I acheived, and because in this day and age, if
you acheive, you're rewarded....and it's not based on gender. *I* got into
college because *I* acheived and *I* reached for it.
It's the *opportunity* to have the *chance* to get there that was given to me
by tough women in the past.
I'm GREATLY offended at your insinuations that I didn't get into college on
my own merit.........
The mindset is HERE AND NOW.......I base my actions and my thoughts on the
mindset of hear and now. I can never hope to make a difference by basing
it on the past transgressions. Every acheivement is a step, and every
failure is a learning tool to me. Never once shall I dwell on the past
failures, because there will be my downfall.
kath
|
922.36 | Sigh... | PROXY::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Wed Jan 03 1990 16:12 | 12 |
| GEMVAX::CICCOLINI:
(Sorry, can't remember your preferred frm of address right now.)
> Be thankful your sisters are not "doing nothing" because no man
> would simply hand you the opportunities you've gotten any more than
> they'd hand them to any woman.
Read what you wrote. Then decide if you're part of the solution
or part of the problem.
Atlant
|
922.37 | good taste | DECWET::JWHITE | ohio sons of the revolution | Wed Jan 03 1990 16:15 | 7 |
|
re:.34
sorry, i'm sure this seems like ganging up on you, but one of
the first things that got me thinking about feminism was wondering
why this slightly unkempt-looking woman was so *angry* at me for
having liked 'a boy and his dog'.
|
922.38 | pun alert! | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Jan 03 1990 16:19 | 9 |
|
re .34 --
So you're saying that, instead of getting angry, we should -- in response to
misogyny --
massage an ego?
|
922.39 | ahh, to be young again. | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Wed Jan 03 1990 16:34 | 11 |
| re .35
Kath,
I'm not much of a feminist, and I like to believe my success has
been achieved due to my own actions, but even I'm not fool enough
to believe women aren't treated as equal. If you truly have been
able to experience a life without prejudice because of your gender,
then I envy you. I envy any woman who doesn't have to work twice
as hard just to be thought of as equal.
-maureen
|
922.40 | Be *nice*, dear, and we'll be nice back | SUPER::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Wed Jan 03 1990 16:43 | 22 |
| RE: last several
Well, I for one agree with many of Sandy's points, here.
"Playing nice" with the boys hasn't gotten us anywhere. "Playing
nice" with the power structure hasn't gotten any group anywhere,
that I can think of. (maybe you can think of one)
People began to pay attention because of Watts, because of Stonewall,
because of the so-called "Bra-Burners" (and in the previous century,
because of the women who risked death to get the vote). As far as I can
see, "playing nice" hasn't gotten anybody anywhere. And truly, is the
power structure going to give power away voluntarily?
Kath, I'm glad you've gotten where you are totally on your own merits,
not having needed the help of pathfinders/breakers. That you have never
in your life been at a disadvantage because of your gender is truly a
modern success story. I wish 53% of the women in this country had
experienced the same.
--DE
|
922.41 | Ooops | SUPER::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Wed Jan 03 1990 16:44 | 8 |
| RE: .40
Last line should read "53% of the population"...
Sorry
--DE
|
922.42 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Wed Jan 03 1990 17:07 | 113 |
| >1. How many people read the Boston Globe?
>2. How many people read that article?
>3. How many people (men especially) in NOTES are going to immediately
> equate the personal name with the quote?
>4. Is my point made?
No. The fact that people often don't read and don't have the "correct"
frame of reference to interpret what they're hearing or seeing is my point.
Misogyny and women's anger about it would be understood a lot better with a
little reading. How many people do that? Damn few. The underling in
any power imbalance does the learning. The superior doesn't have to.
Therefore, many women read feminist literature and understand women's
anger in the context of history. Most men in the world wouldn't be
caught dead reading it. Hense their all to often "misunderstandings".
> Please point out where i said that what I'm presenting is "primarily
>responsible".
Right here:
>> Yes, it's simply a statement, but it reinforces negative feelings
>>in some men. I believe it's negative reinforcement ... negative
>>reinforcement hinders us greatly.
So in what way are we hindered then?
If you're going to get stuck on the word "primarily", I'll offer that I
have inferred that from your many statements that seem to place much of
the blame on women. "Women have a problem with the objectification of
women..." "[women] reinforce negative feelings in some men" and others.
>I believe DougO, Doctah, Steve Mallett, and Joe (?) White are living examples
>that it HAS worked...and is still working today.
Yeah, that's Joe (!) White ;-). But picking out a few men from a relatively
small microcosm of enlightenment, (young and educated men working in high
tech fields), exemplifies only the possibilities. There have always been
enlightened men. But policy is still made by white males the age of your
father and mine who got to their positions by not rocking the boat built by
their fathers who got there the same way. Enlightened men haven't, as a
rule, been successful in gaining political power. But it doesn't mean
they aren't there. And the ERA still isn't passed. These men are mavericks -
brave guys to stand apart from other men and say "whoa". I want more of
them - so many that some of them actually get to be policy-makers.
>I challenge you to find ONE MAN that was won over to the feminist side
"Winning them over" is not the goal. I want equality guaranteed to me under
the constitution no matter what they personally think. They don't have to
like me. They just have to treat me fairly and equally because I'm a human
too. And when they don't, just like a human, I get angry.
> because he felt anger directed at him during a talk with a feminist
>(and from that sympathized with her plight)
I think we're getting closer to understanding. You see, I don't expect to
have to "get sympathy". I expect to have my rights as a tax-paying
American guaranteed me just like the male tax-paying Americans do. If you
think women should have to "get sympathy" first, then it would appear you
see women as even more powerless than they are or see men as more powerful
then they are. Trying to "get sympathy" from old, white policy-makers who
don't know what the heck you're crabbing about and don't really care, is a
useless waste of time.
>, by legislation forcing him to act a certain way,
THIS works. I don't care if they open doors for me but I want them
FORCED to hire the most qualified person for the job. EVEN if it's a
white male! How's THAT for a radical concept! I don't care if they
stew and steam. Equality is everyone's right. I want it too and as an
American citizen I'm entitled to it.
>I don't feel it should EVER EVER EVER be directed at the group that we
are striving for unity with.
Well, well, well. Here's where I think the flaw is in your thinking.
Most men do not *want* 'unity' with women, whatever you think unity
is. That's why the "nice" methods don't work. And that's why we NEED the
ERA - to guarantee, that no matter what someone's personal prejudices may
be, fairness and equality for all is the LAW!
You won't change a single man in notes. We are just nameless, faceless
words and ideas, mostly radical and distasteful. The only men we can
change are those in our social sphere - the ones who care about
us personally. That's nice, but unless we hang out with legislators,
nothing is going to change, society-wise. If you read about the
increasing honesty male politicians are using to defend their change to
being pro-choice, they invariably cite the women *in their lives*, their
wives and daughters, as the reason. I'm glad we have them, I really am.
Because as a group, the lawmakers still regard women as less than
deserving of complete autonomy - as needing more "control". That's why
laws will work. And I don't care if it's a senator's wife or me that gets
it done. I want it done. And I don't think I should have to kiss ass
to get what men get simply by being born men.
>I always try to direct my anger at the PROBLEM, not at the persons
>involved in the problem.
So you see men as merely "involved"? Who is responsible for this mess
in your mind? Do you see society as a third thing, something separate from
men and women? I see it as a collection of male ideals. Women are "involved"
only to the extent that they are expected to follow rules they are not
allowed a voice in. But not allowed by whom? By random others who are merely
"involved" to the same limited extent?
And I still don't make the pronouncements of absolute right and wrong.
Sexism and misogyny are wrong but certainly not just because I say so.
There *are* universal truths which are independent of everyone. You don't
kill people. That's wrong even if I say it in notes and admit I don't
pronounce right and wrong.
Or do you disagree that sexism, racism and misogyny are flat out wrong?
|
922.43 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Barking Spider Industries | Wed Jan 03 1990 17:11 | 15 |
| re: .34 (Kath)
� > "Men don't want to know" was written by a man, Kathy. David Nyhan
� > in a Boston Globe column
�
� 1. How many people read the Boston Globe?
� 2. How many people read that article?
� 3. How many people (men especially) in NOTES are going to immediately
� equate the personal name with the quote?
I think that in this instance, the liklihood of misunderstanding is
considerably less because Dorian took the time to enter the Nyhan
article into the "Massacre in Montreal" note (888.79).
Steve
|
922.44 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | the strangest twist upon your lips | Wed Jan 03 1990 17:23 | 21 |
|
> I think that in this instance, the liklihood of misunderstanding is
> considerably less because Dorian took the time to enter the Nyhan
> article into the "Massacre in Montreal" note (888.79).
Steve....I don't think so. I don't read all the notes in here and am sure that
many other's don't either. I never saw the quote, and when I saw the personal
name I almost jumped out of my skin.
The point is, taken out of context (which it is as a personal name) and not
having read the quote, I found it to be very insulting toward men....and
shuttered when I read it. In the next reply I will bring up other examples
of the simple point I am trying to make.
BTW....how come when asked for my opinion in this note, I stated it, and now
I'm condemned for it? How come people are not allowed to give their views
on what they beleive without a lot of hassle and condemnation?
kath
|
922.45 | BREF L asserted on pin AR1 (memory refresh) | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Wed Jan 03 1990 17:36 | 16 |
| re: .43 (Steve Mallett)
> I think that in this instance, the liklihood of misunderstanding is
> considerably less because Dorian took the time to enter the Nyhan
> article into the "Massacre in Montreal" note (888.79).
I was beginning to think that I had imagined reading that article
Dorian posted, because no one had yet mentioned that it would be
difficult to misunderstand the quote even if one had never picked
up a Boston Glob when David Nyhan's entire article was posted
here and discussed not that long ago.
Thanks for clearing up the confusion (in my mind :-), Steve.
nancy b.
|
922.46 | I resort to examples as my final statement. | SSDEVO::GALLUP | the strangest twist upon your lips | Wed Jan 03 1990 17:59 | 94 |
|
The following list contains comments made by Sandy in .42 and .33 I use them
as example as to WHY I feel that sometimes some women perpetuate misogyny in
others. I present them as statements made by a woman (really Sandy, this
isn't personal....you've just given me good examples) and try to put yourself
into the position where you were the person they were being said about.
>Misogyny and women's anger about it would be understood a lot better with a
>little reading. [...] Most men in the world wouldn't be caught dead reading it.
>But policy is still made by white males the age of your father and mine
>who got to their positions by not rocking the boat built by their fathers
>who got there the same way
>I want equality guaranteed to me under the constitution no matter what
>they personally think. They don't have to like me. They just have to
>treat me fairly and equally because I'm a human too.
>Trying to "get sympathy" from old, white policy-makers who
>don't know what the heck you're crabbing about and don't really care, is a
>useless waste of time.
>Well, well, well. Here's where I think the flaw is in your thinking.
>Most men do not *want* 'unity' with women, whatever you think unity
>is.
>And I don't think I should have to kiss ass to get what men get simply by
>being born men.
>So you see men as merely "involved"? Who is responsible for this mess
>in your mind?
>Women are "involved" only to the extent that they are expected to
>follow rules they are not allowed a voice in.
>This is what so many younger women fail to see.
>And I further hope that you don't think feminists are rightly regarded by
>men as mere spoiled brats who won't get their just desserts until they
>"make nice". [implying, I think, that men DO feel this]
>You got into engineering school but it wasn't because men believed you
>had the right to.
>Be thankful your sisters are not "doing nothing" because no man would
>simply hand you the opportunities you've gotten any more than they'd
>hand them to any woman.
>And until the policy-making men are willing to respond to reason and
>logic, only female anger will fuel the continuing fight for equality.
===========================================================================
There, I've stated my opinion and I've back it up with examples (unfortunately
Sandy is going to see this as a personal attack, which it is not.)
I find comments like the above to incite frustration in others.....especially
those that are learning to not be misogynic. Many of them are blatent
generalizations about men as a whole, or a major part. Many of them cast
men in a bad light REGARDLESS of whether they are true or not. The point
is, you're not going to get what you want by accusations and generalizations.
I can't remember the last time I 'won' an argument becuase I forced someone
into something, or because I intimidated the person or degraded them. When
you have differences with your partners on ANY subject, do you EVER win by
cutting them down and pointing out their flaws repeatedly??? I *work thru*
my problems and differences. I don't DENY my problem, but I work thru it.
Take a man that is striving to put aside societies past rules and trying to
treat women with equality. Now, throw the above statements at him. Will
he agree with them, or will he feel threatened? Personally, *I* feel threatened by
them and I'm not even a man.
If you wish to discus this matter any further, I'll be available thru mail.
I will not discuss this matter here any further. The question was raised, I
gave my opinion, it was challenged, I tried to support it, it was blasted
now I give examples. I can do no more to support my position. Take it for what
you think it's worth.
Thanks, Nancy....a very enlightening topic for me, I'm looking forward to
reading more replies from others and gaining more knowledge on what *I* can
do.
kath
|
922.47 | Talk to me about this when you turn 50. | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Wed Jan 03 1990 18:36 | 26 |
922.48 | oh well... | DECWET::JWHITE | ohio sons of the revolution | Wed Jan 03 1990 19:01 | 6 |
|
re:.46
sorry again. every single assertion you quoted from sandy's
previous note i find to be obviously true (and non-threatening,
to me; terrifying, i should think however, to the 'establishment')
|
922.49 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Wed Jan 03 1990 19:23 | 60 |
| RE: .34 Kath
> I don't feel it should EVER EVER EVER be directed at the group
> that we are striving for unity with. I always try to direct
> my anger at the PROBLEM, not at the persons involved in the problem.
In other words, we should not direct anger at men because of their
status as the holders of power (and because of our status as a group
who wishes to acquire "unity with" this more powerful group.)
However, it's ok to direct anger at persons who are *not* part of
the group in power (as evidenced by your repeated willingness to
direct *your* anger at the women of =wn=, women who are feminists,
and individual women, such as Sandy.)
RE: .35 Kath
> I'm GREATLY offended at your insinuations that I didn't get into
> college on my own merit.........
[Offered as an example of how comfortable you seem to feel while
displaying anger at a woman. Obviously, such displays are far more
acceptable in our culture than showing anger at a man or men.]
RE: .44 Kath
> I never saw the quote [of the article], and when I saw the personal
> name ["Men don't want to know"] I almost jumped out of my skin.
Really? Why do "possibly negative" comments about men make you so
incredibly jumpy? Are you that threatened by what men might do
to you/us if they become additionally angered at women?
> The point is, taken out of context (which it is as a personal name)
> and not having read the quote, I found it to be very insulting
> toward men....and shuttered when I read it.
If one read the personal name ["Men don't want to know"] without
knowing its original context, what is it about the phrase that is
insulting at all (much less, "very" insulting??)
If I read the phrase out of context, my first thought would have
been "Don't want to know *what*???" The idea of the phrase being
an insult would not have crossed my mind (unless the idea of
"men being insulted" was a pre-judgment I'd *already made* about a
certain group of people, such as women/feminists.)
> BTW....how come when asked for my opinion in this note, I stated it,
> and now I'm condemned for it? How come people are not allowed to
> give their views on what they beleive without a lot of hassle and
> condemnation?
How come so many of your notes amount to reasons why women/feminists
in this file should stop saying whatever it is we are saying?
Do you think that your views should go unchallenged simply because
you have chosen to "side with men" (as you phrased it yourself while
describing your stand in =wn= to the Soapbox crowd)?
|
922.50 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Wed Jan 03 1990 19:37 | 26 |
| RE: .46 Kath
> The following list contains comments made by Sandy in .42 and .33
> I use them as example as to WHY I feel that sometimes some women
> perpetuate misogyny in others.
Looking at the examples (as written by a tax-paying adult member of
our society,) I see nothing particularly shocking about a single
word that you quoted.
> I present them as statements made by a woman ...
Now we get to the heart of your objections. The statements were
made by a woman about men - which, in our culture, is tantamount
to saying that these were statements made by:
A child - about adults...
A slave - about the master...
Workers - about their boss...
Only in *this* sense can any of the statements be considered as
disturbing/offensive as you seem to imply.
It's a simple matter of insubordination to a group of people (men)
to whom we should be showing nothing less than the highest possible
respect.
|
922.51 | speaking of out of context... | KID2::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Wed Jan 03 1990 19:38 | 11 |
| re: personal name "context"
Here's the said personal name, quoted in full, from 922.28:
"D. Nyhan: >>Men don't want to know.<<"
Seems to me it'd be *very* hard to miss that fact that it's a quote
from the Nyhan article, since Nyhan is credited.
MKV (who_doesn't_get_the_Boston_Globe_in_CA_and_still_got_it)
|
922.52 | my thoughts | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Wed Jan 03 1990 19:43 | 11 |
| um, kath, this may be just why you are having problems with
many of the other wommen in this conference. I also find most
if not all of Sandy's statements true to fact and true to my
personal experience. In that you've never experienced the truth
of what she is talking about, this may well be why you don't
understand what many women are talking about here.
tho I personally wouldn't use Sandy's words or style - I can't
deny she is talking about real things that I have experienced.
Bonnie
|
922.53 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Wed Jan 03 1990 20:04 | 14 |
|
RE: .51 Mary Vaskas
> Here's the said personal name, quoted in full, from 922.28:
"D. Nyhan: >>Men don't want to know.<<"
Thanks very much for reposting the personal name in full. (I had
forgotten that the original author of the phrase was cited.)
Even without having read the article, I don't see how any real
assumptions can be made *at all* about this phrase (unless one
has already made some pre-judgments about women/feminists here.)
|
922.54 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | am I going to chance, am I going to dance | Wed Jan 03 1990 20:30 | 92 |
| > <<< Note 922.52 by WMOIS::B_REINKE "if you are a dreamer, come in.." >>>
> um, kath, this may be just why you are having problems with
> many of the other wommen in this conference. I also find most
> if not all of Sandy's statements true to fact and true to my
> personal experience. In that you've never experienced the truth
> of what she is talking about, this may well be why you don't
> understand what many women are talking about here.
Where did you get the following?
That I had never experienced any of this? (I've
fought and won a sex descrimination suit....so
I've been there)
That I don't understand?
First off, I understand EXACTLY the points many women are
talking about. I understand that
1) Women have fought long and hard for what they have
2) Women are still fighting for what they deserve
3) Women have been descriminated against
4) Women are still being descriminated against
5) Many men have a LONG way to go to accepting equality
6) Many men are chauvanist bigots
7) Women have very real, justifiable reasons to be angry
8) Women SHOULD be able to express that anger
9) Many of Sandy's statements are TRUE.
10) Many awful things have happened to women to make them
feel this way.
So far, I am TOTALLY *with* Peggy, Sandy, Bonnie, Suzanne,
and many others, right? I truly believe ALL the above to be
true.
But, I'm talking something different. The following is a
list of what *I* am talking about...the points I am trying
to make. The above list is NOT open for discussion at the
moment, I believe in ALL of thse things, and most ALL of what
everyone is saying.
I ALSO believe that
1) People get defensive when others get angry *at* them
2) People never like to admit that they are wrong (men that
they might be not treating women 'right', women that they
might be fostering that treatment by somethings they do)
3) By dwelling on past transgressions we lose sight of
future possibilities (do bring up every wrong your
partner did to you went you get into a different
disagreement?)
4) The matter at hand is "equality"...nothing more, nothing
less.
5) Cooperation and compromise are essential to every
settlement.
6) It is important to be honest and open.
7) It's important to talk about your anger...to work thru
it.
8) It is detrimental to direct anger at the person you are
trying to get to understand. (see 1.)
9) Attitude will never change with simple legislation alone.
My point is that I feel that presentation can make or break
our 'getting the contract.' I feel that "expressing anger
at a person" instead of "working thru that anger with a
person" is detrimental.
I've not told anyone they should do anything. I've merely
stated what I feel to be detrimental.
Please, let's not condemn me, but rather ADDRESS my beliefs
and work with me thru them. Why are my beliefs wrong? I'm
open to understanding and I'm open to learning. Please, do
not assume I'm implying something, but please ASK. Let's
TALK.
Let's talk about what *I* feel women do to encourage
misogyny. And let's talk about what is right and wrong with
my opinions. Let's understand that I am NOT saying "women
should do this", let's understand that I AM saying that "from
my viewpoint, women are doing this."
This is my last try at TALKING. PLEASE, I ask for TALK! I
ask for EDUCATION! I ask that you at least *understand* what
I'm saying, whether you agree with it or not!!!!!!!
kath
|
922.55 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Thu Jan 04 1990 02:20 | 117 |
| RE: .54 Kath
> This is my last try at TALKING. PLEASE, I ask for TALK! I
> ask for EDUCATION!
Ok, I'll take a try at this - all I ask of you is that you accept
that what I am about to write *is* just talking (and is not meant
in anger or mean-spirited towards you in any way.) Honestly.
> 1) People get defensive when others get angry *at* them
Since women have spent thousands of years having cultures, religions
and yes, MEN angry at us, it is quite human for us to react to it.
It is *also* quite human for us to react to the "backlash" that
we're getting for our reaction to the original hate lodged at us.
> 2) People never like to admit that they are wrong (men that
> they might be not treating women 'right', women that they
> might be fostering that treatment by somethings they do)
Ok, so if men will not admit that they have not been treating women
"right," and it makes them even angrier and more hateful towards us
when we refuse to accept their denials, what are we supposed to do?
Should we lie to them and agree that everything is ok (to keep from
acting in a way that might "foster" additional anger and hate towards
women?) Should it be up to women to "adjust" (for their refusal to
admit they were wrong) by denying our own feelings instead?
Even if such deception ends up making men like us more than they do
now, wouldn't it be like "selling our souls" to have to lie to win
their approval? Would it be worth it? (To me, it would not!)
> 3) By dwelling on past transgressions we lose sight of
> future possibilities (do bring up every wrong your
> partner did to you went you get into a different
> disagreement?)
"Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it."
In the case of women, the danger of moving backwards (to face the
loss of our rights) is always a very real possibility in a society
as prone to change as ours. It is also a fact that women have been
pushed backwards (in terms of education/employment opportunities)
at least twice before. African Americans have experienced the same
sort of setbacks in their own movement (in the last 100 years.)
> 4) The matter at hand is "equality"...nothing more, nothing
> less.
Part of being equal is being free to say what's on our minds without
worrying that we might make more powerful groups mad at us.
As Sandy mentioned earlier, I believe, we can't consider ourselves
equal if we have to kiss the asses of those in power to "win them
over." They should treat us equal whether they like us or not.
Once we are on equal ground, we won't *need* their general approval
any more than they need *ours* now. Only then will we be free to
simply like each other (as groups) without the associated struggle
for power. Until then, I don't personally care whether men (as a
group, in general) like us or not.
Give us equality first, then I'll care whether they also like us.
> 5) Cooperation and compromise are essential to every
> settlement.
The problem is that when one group has power over the other, they
are a hell of a lot less inclined to want (or NEED) to cooperate *or*
compromise with a group that is trying to wrest power away from them.
We can't cooperate or compromise by ourselves if men aren't already
sufficiently motivated to do it with us. So, the choices we have
left are to kiss asses, or fight. Which sounds more palatable to you?
> 6) It is important to be honest and open.
You're seeing me at my most honest and open (not to mention blunt)
right now. It doesn't come out of my mouth any more directly than this.
> 7) It's important to talk about your anger...to work thru
> it.
You're assuming a lot (in error) if you think many/most of us
*haven't* worked through it.
Talking about injustice does not necessarily imply that one is
feeling emotional about it at that moment, in other words.
> 8) It is detrimental to direct anger at the person you are
> trying to get to understand. (see 1.)
You are assuming that we *are* trying to get men (in general) to
understand. Personally, I don't care whether they understand or
not, as long as they start treating women with equality.
Give us equality first, then we can help them understand what they've
done. As equal partners, we'll be in a better position to explain it.
> 9) Attitude will never change with simple legislation alone.
Who cares? Give us equality first (through legislation, if need be,)
then I'll care about their attitudes.
If given a choice between being hated and not being equal, *or* simply
being hated (but having equality!) - I'll take equality! They can
hate us all they like, as long as we're equal first.
We can work on getting them to stop hating us after we're all on
equal ground. Then, there would be very little point in hating us.
> I ask that you at least *understand* what I'm saying, whether you
> agree with it or not!!!!!!!
Kath, I think many/most of us *do* understand what you are saying.
Do you really think you understand what we're saying (and why?)
|
922.56 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Thu Jan 04 1990 02:49 | 35 |
| RE: .54 Kath
> My point is that I feel that presentation can make or break
> our 'getting the contract.' I feel that "expressing anger
> at a person" instead of "working thru that anger with a
> person" is detrimental.
One last thing I wanted to tell you is that I don't agree that
our dealings with men (on a cultural level) should be in terms
of being a company who is trying to "get a contract" with a
customer. I don't think women should be in the position of
trying to "sell" men anything (as sales personnel offering a
"potential customer" the sun and the moon to give *us* the
contract instead of having it go to some other group.)
Women aren't competing with some third gender for the contract
of equality with men.
Women and men must be equal partners. Nothing less than that will do.
If men (on a cultural level) are not willing to negotiate the terms
of equality, then we have no other choice than to use what power we
*do* have to demonstrate to them that it is in their best interests
to work with us (and detrimental to them *not* to work with us) until
such negotiation is possible. "Making nice" for *another 150 years*
is simply not a viable strategy for us this time.
You must understand that I'm speaking on a "cultural level" (and not
about the individual men that we may know or love, in our own lives.)
We can't expect equality unless we refuse to accept anything less
than that, Kath, and I can't think of a reason in the world why we
*should* accept less.
Can you?
|
922.58 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Thu Jan 04 1990 04:00 | 41 |
|
Pertaining to the recent discussion here on ways that
"sometimes some women perpetuate misogyny in others"
and the examples given of how this is done, I recall
something I wrote a while back in the processing topic
about Suzanne Conlon that is applicable as well here:
> 15.509
> < Suzanne Conlon & acceptable levels of aggression in women >
> Suzanne Conlon's contribution to =wn= is quite unique in that she is
> more outspoken, agressive, critical, and blunt then any other woman I
> have read in =wn=.
> I think Suzanne has received some flack for her notes partially because
> her behavior falls out of the norm of what is an acceptable level of
> aggression for a woman.
What I wrote above also similarly applies to Sandy Ciccolini,
Dorian Kottler, Catherine T., etc.
Because of their agression, outspoken nature, appearing "not-nice",
bluntness, (not to mention having razor-sharp intellects and superb
verbal skills) undoubtedly generates a range of responses in
both women (as voiced by several here) and men. Responses that
perhaps range from total understanding to :
[... surprise ... discomfort ... resentment ... anger ... rage ...]
(what's her problem?) (feeling threatened) (how *dare* she?)
(my wife/SO isn't like that...)
While some might describe their behavior as "perpetuating misogyny",
I would describe their behavior as "falling out of the norm of what
is an acceptable level of aggression for a woman" which can result
in the responses above in both women and men towards women.
Would I advocate telling these women to pipe down a little so as
to not risk getting these responses? Never.
nancy b.
|
922.59 | hmmm... | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Thu Jan 04 1990 04:01 | 9 |
| I started this topic after being inspired by Justine Sullivan's
note which caused me to reflect on some of my own feelings that
could be considered a form of misogyny and the ways it can creep
into my conscious actions.
I didn't realize how easily this topic could take on the tone of
"women are responsible for misogyny because..."
nancy b.
|
922.60 | It all started with... | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Thu Jan 04 1990 04:08 | 29 |
| When I was a girl I thought other girls were silly because they
would rather play house instead of with my Tonka trucks and
didn't want to get dirty when I wanted to climb trees. My older
brother was my idol, while my older sister seemed to be
everything I was not interested in (frilly dresses, ballet,
generally being a perfect little girl). In junior high school,
the situation didn't improve a lot. I had a lot more male
buddies than female friends. My older sister was (still is)
absolutely gorgeous, and would spend hours in the bathroom
grooming or laying out for that perfect tan. I thought she spent
too much time worrying about her appearance, and she thought I
spent too much time in the library, and thought I was absolutely
sick to want to go to summer school. (The positive result was a
low amount of sibling rivalry between us.)
How I regarded females didn't drastically change until my first
week at Duke when I met some of the other women on my dorm hall.
What changed my mind? (and I am embarassed and ashamed of myself
for this): meeting/living with a lot of other women my age in one
time at one place that had SAT scores and GPA's as high as mine.
Not only that, but their interests were diverse as well. They
were into sports, music, and other things that I normally would
not associate with a "typical smart high school kid". It was a
much-needed enlightenment as well as a humbling experience.
nancy b.
|
922.61 | and a look at the not-too-distant past | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Thu Jan 04 1990 04:14 | 39 |
| In a technical discussion involving a male engineer, another
female engineer, and myself, I have caught myself waiting for the
man to confirm the correctness or give some sign of approval of a
technical statement made by the woman, even if she's talking
about a board she designed and of which he has little first-hand
knowledge.
I don't experience that too often anymore, but when I first
started working here right out of engineering school I did it a
lot. Why did I have this short-circuit in my brain? My theory:
what *else* had my brain experienced, but that _all_ of my
engineering professors have been male, and all of my T.A.s were
male. When we engineering students (male and female) were
confused, a man knew the answer, a man was *always* right. Gee,
you mean that situation is suddenly different at Digital
Equipment Corporation? That's just not what I had been
conditioned to accept.
Now, I probably would not have looked to the man for confirmation
had the woman making the technical statement been Grace Hopper or
Ruth Goldenberg. But gosh, that really limits the number of
women engineers I can converse with and not need male approval,
doesn't it?
Recognizing _what_ I was doing and _why_, seemed to magically
solve a good part of the problem. Yet I will not deny that some
residual effects of a male-dominated engineering education still
exist.
This is something I thought about after reading Justine's note.
Then I became defensive and thought, "But I'm not a misogynist!"
Yet I recognize what I described above to be a form of misogyny.
{"if the shoe fits, eat it!" credits to either Catherine T. or
Peggy Leedberg :-}
nancy b.
|
922.62 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Death by Misadventure- a case of overkill | Thu Jan 04 1990 08:37 | 37 |
| > I didn't realize how easily this topic could take on the tone of
> "women are responsible for misogyny because..."
If you really feel that this is the current situation, I suggest that you have
missed the point that Kath was trying to make, assuming I correctly understand
it.
re: Ms. Fox and the infamous p_n
I know when I read it, it really bothered me, much more so than when I read it
in Nyhan's column (which I didn't entirely agree with- so anyone who was waving
flags at the sight of his column is not going to see eye to eye with me on
this). I saw it as a slap in the face to any man who cares, to any man who
wants to know. If I sit here and rationalize about it long enough, I can
understand the motivations behind the words, and come to accept what the meaning
is (and discard the parts that don't apply to me.) However, my first reaction
deep in my gut, was hurt. I felt alienated, devalued, and altogether put off.
(This, by the way, is a feeling, and not subject to contention.)
I don't deny the the righteous anger displayed by Ms. Fox. (And I swear, if you
want me to stop noting here, all you have to do is have one person say "Oh, I
guess it isn't proper for a woman to express anger?") That is not the issue.
The issue is alienation.
Look at it this way- if a man was feeling pain and anger about a divorce, how
many of you that read mennotes would react positively to a p_name "Women are
<the c word>."? (Assuming it was allowed.) I posit that very few would be able
to avoid a negative reaction by rationalizing that it was just an expression of
anger. Well, my reaction to the Nyhan quote as a p_name roughly approximates
what I would expect for a reaction from most of you to the aforementioned
fictitious p_name.
Nuff said- too many of you are nodding off or formulating nastygrams already.
Sigh...
The Doctah
|
922.63 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Jan 04 1990 09:06 | 10 |
| <--
Are you saying you think men *do* want to know, or that men don't
want to know but you don't want women to *say* men don't want to
know?
Because if men do want to know, how then do you explain the measly
media coverage of the shootings, that Nyhan cited in his column? Or --
sorry if this sounds like a trick question -- do you think the event
was given the coverage it deserved?
|
922.64 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Thu Jan 04 1990 09:17 | 44 |
| RE: .62 The Doctah
> Look at it this way- if a man was feeling pain and anger about a
> divorce, how many of you that read mennotes would react positively
> to a p_name "Women are <the c word>."? (Assuming it was allowed.)
Mark, I guess I'm wondering why the personal name for women had to
be so much harsher to make the point here. (I'm not disagreeing
with you that some/many women would not react positively to such a
p_name, but I'm wondering why it had to be a much more direct insult
to be an effective illustration.)
How about if someone in Mennotes posted an article about how badly
men feel after divorce, and included the phrase, "Women don't want
to know." Then, what if the man who was bitter about his divorce
used the personal name: "J. Smith: >>Women don't want to know.<<"
Do you think many women would be upset by it? Not to invalidate
your own feelings about seeing the phrase with "men" in it or
anything, but I seriously doubt that it would get a rise out of
almost any woman I know.
The thing is - there are so many worse things said about us nearly
everywhere we turn that saying we don't want to know would be
considered relatively harmless by most of us, I think, which is
why it would take a phrase like "Women are <the 'c' word>" to get
our full attention.
> I posit that very few would be able to avoid a negative reaction
> by rationalizing that it was just an expression of anger.
In my own example, I'd probably just think to myself, "I wonder what
he means by that." If I'd seen the article, I'd probably be inclined
to think,"Well, I suppose some of us don't [want to know.] Who knows?"
> Well, my reaction to the Nyhan quote as a p_name roughly
> approximates what I would expect for a reaction from most of you
> to the aforementioned fictitious p_name.
Can you honestly say that your reaction to the Nyhan quote is the
same as most of us would react to "Women don't want to know," though?
Again, why does the p_name against us have to be so much worse to
make the point?
|
922.65 | Sick of assumptions | ASDS::RSMITH | | Thu Jan 04 1990 09:25 | 30 |
|
I am tired of hearing negative remarks by apparently older women
towards younger women. It has not been all peaches and cream for the
last 2 years in engineering. I appreciate, that relative to what
you'all went through, maybe it has, but don't look down on me because I
am young.
Now, I thank the women who have fought so hard so that I could be an
engineer. However, I don't thank the women who give me a hard time
because I am not their age or because I don't look or act like a
tomboy. I played with dolls AND trucks as a child. I enjoyed both. I
liked to cook with my mom and I also loved to go to work with my dad
to play with the eproms that he'd burned. Yes, I am young but I am
where I am because :
- other women worked hard to make it possible
- I am smart and I skipped a couple of years of education in high
school and college.
- I had the guts to move to a big city like Boston all by myself
from grape country in western Pennsylvania.
ALL of those things enable me to be a professional woman. Not just the
work of older women. If I choose to spend 15 minutes every morning
putting on makeup, that doesn't make me the antithesis of all you AND
*I* stand for.
Please try to give us "younger women" credit. We are not bimbo's who
don't understand what the women's movement is about. Don't assume that
we are.
|
922.66 | <*** Moderator Response ***> | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Thu Jan 04 1990 09:47 | 7 |
| This is a *W*O*N*D*E*R*F*U*L* discussion! Blessings on Nancy for
starting it and on Kath for hanging in through all the flak. Heartfelt
moderator-thanks to everyone for keeping the flames mostly turned off.
Keep it going!
=maggie
|
922.67 | random thoughts.... | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | somewhere somebody's having fun | Thu Jan 04 1990 09:54 | 48 |
| Re .60, Nancy, your reply really depresses me. Maybe because I
enjoy your company now, but realize that had we ever been children
or teenagers in the same school or neighborhood, that you would
have despised me. I hated sports, math and science more than anything
else when I was a kid. I loved playing with dolls and dressing
in frilly clothes. My SAT scores would make you wonder if I had
been born retarded. (unfortunately I'm *not* joking)
Sometimes I really wonder if I'm going to someday come to the
conclusion that the entire women's movement has/had nothing to do
with me. Is feminism only about women who were math whiz's, wanted
to be on the h.s. football team, and went on to become managers or
engineers? Is there any room for ordinary women, with average I.Q.'s,
who maybe don't have college degrees, and who do enjoy some of the
traditional female roles?
Sometimes it seems to me as though nobody really likes women, even
other women. Many men seem to consider women to be less than
themselves, many women seem to think that anything that is considered
traditionally feminine such as lace, the color pink, being a housewife,
or not being athletic or not having a job that only men used to
have is bad. Even Lesbians who like having sex with other women,
so I would think they would like women, seem to prefer women to
be as masculine as possible. It seems hardly anybody really likes
anything that is traditionaly female - except cooking - we all like
to eat. Sometimes I feel as though the women's movement passed
me by because I'm just not the kind of woman it was meant for.
It was really only meant for the women who could do the jobs and
activities that only men were allowed to do before - such as
engineering or lifting heavy objects. It was perhaps never meant
to value the differences that most females have from males.
Personally, I have always liked some things about both men and women,
and disliked some things about both. (Except I have *never* liked
*anything* about boys between the ages of 6 and 16.) When I was
a little girl I liked other little girls more than I liked boys
because the boys all seemed to be too rough, and mean, rude and
nasty. But, as I got older I began to appreciate males, because
they seem to behave more civilly after the age of 16-18, and I realized
that many of them were as much fun or more fun to have as friends
than women. But, I never wanted to be like men. I always wanted
to be feminine. I would just like to see things like trying to
look pretty
and taking care of children be valued as much as sports and math.
Maybe I'm just very confused by this whole topic.
Lorna
|
922.68 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Thu Jan 04 1990 10:03 | 32 |
| RE: .65
> However, I don't thank the women who give me a hard time
> because I am not their age or because I don't look or act like a
> tomboy. I played with dolls AND trucks as a child. I enjoyed both.
Well, I played with dolls and tea sets (and *no* trucks) as a child,
myself, so I don't think the generalizations hold up according to
age.
I also never wore anything but a dress - except for shorts or
bathing suits - until I was well into puberty. My mother dressed
me up like her little doll during my whole early childhood, and I
loved it. I had at least a zillion dolls, and they all had both
first and last names. As Dave Barry would say, "I'm not making
this up." :)
At the same time, both my parents stressed the importance of college
for both women and men. My siblings and I took the message to heart
(and we're all college-degreed now, with excellent careers.)
> Please try to give us "younger women" credit. We are not bimbo's
> who don't understand what the women's movement is about. Don't
> assume that we are.
Please don't assume that we assume this, ok?
One of the most knowledgeable and dedicated women I know (with
regard to the women's movement) is Nancy Bittle, who is 24!
So, obviously, generalizations about age simply don't hold, and
I think many of us are more aware of this than you may have realized.
|
922.69 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Thu Jan 04 1990 10:11 | 8 |
| in re .65
Perhaps you are reading something into older/younger women remarks
that was not intended. I know that when I've mentioned younger women
at all it was only to point out that the difference in experiences
may well contribute to different points of view.
Bonnie
|
922.70 | randon irate thoughts | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Thu Jan 04 1990 10:22 | 21 |
| re .67
Lorna,
I can't help but wonder how many lesbians you've actually encountered.
You might be surprized how many of us are actually "normal" women.
The generalization, however well intended, is not appreciated.
Believe it or not, some of us really can cook, sew, run a household,
dress in a traditional feminine manner, etc. We don't all grow
up playing with trucks, learning to drive same, wearing short
hair, and acting butch. Heck, some of us even like pink!
And BTW- there's more to being a lesbian than sex. I even know
a couple celibate lesbians.
Some of us actually do love women for their entire beings. Perhaps
you can think of it as an extension of the love straight women feel
for each other. And yes, I do believe women do care for each other.
|
922.71 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Death by Misadventure- a case of overkill | Thu Jan 04 1990 10:26 | 46 |
| RE: Dorian
> Are you saying you think men *do* want to know,
Frankly, I have a very difficult time believing that men would want to have
a tragedy such as this swept under the rug simply because the victims were
women. It seems inhuman.
>or that men don't
> want to know but you don't want women to *say* men don't want to
> know?
Whenever I am asked a question like that, I cannot help but feel slapped by the
implied insult. Is there really that much of a double standard? "Sure, I could
care less, but don't let none of them wimmins say so!" I can't imagine anyone
acting that way (I suppose some do, but do you really believe men in general
feel this way?)
> Because if men do want to know, how then do you explain the measly
> media coverage of the shootings, that Nyhan cited in his column?
As it turns out, I haven't had nearly the access to written media that I have
had in the past, so I cannot even make a comparison between this and other
shootings with similar numbers of casualties (which seems to be the metric of
choice). I thought I saw quite a bit of media coverage on TV.
One thing occurred to me, no matter what, whenever a tragedy hits home, the
people most affected always seem to complain that media coverage was
insufficient. For example, a family I knew was burned out of house and home.
The media coverage consisted of a short article on an inside page. They were
somewhat miffed that they had not gotten the same attention that another
family had gotten a few weeks previous.
Quite frankly, I have no idea what causes the media to get a burr in their
butt about any particular story. It usually seems to center around how many
papers they can sell- but is very quirky.
I suppose I could list a litany of possibilities as to why the coverage wasn't
as much as you would have liked to have seen- but you wouldn't buy it anyway.
They could even be real reasons that had nothing whatsoever to do with the
sex of the victims, but I doubt you'd be swayed.
May I simply suggest that there is a possibility that the fact that the victims
were female was not the primary reason for the apparent lack of coverage.
The Doctah
|
922.72 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Death by Misadventure- a case of overkill | Thu Jan 04 1990 10:37 | 25 |
| > Mark, I guess I'm wondering why the personal name for women had to
> be so much harsher to make the point here.
It is a result of intellectual laziness. I wanted an example that would
definitely evoke the desired response, and not get ratholed by "Well, that
doesn't bother me." It didn't HAVE to be harsher. I was just trying to make a
point. (Not make points, as some seem to think).
>Then, what if the man who was bitter about his divorce
> used the personal name: "J. Smith: >>Women don't want to know.<<"
> Do you think many women would be upset by it?
Nope. I wasn't speaking as a spokesman for all men. Apparently, the other men
in this file were not affected by it as I was (or at least didn't feel the need
to say anything about it.) I was speaking for me. It bothered me. Maybe I am
reacting inappropriately- it has happened before (and will certainly happen
again). I am discussing how I felt when I read that; that's all.
> Can you honestly say that your reaction to the Nyhan quote is the
> same as most of us would react to "Women don't want to know," though?
Certainly not- I wouldn't ever say that, either. Hell- I'm, not even saying
that other MEN would react this way.
The Doctah
|
922.74 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Thu Jan 04 1990 10:47 | 4 |
| C'mon Ellen, play fair. My recollection is that Mark has *never*
played that game.
=maggie
|
922.76 | Winning through Manipulation? | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Thu Jan 04 1990 10:59 | 39 |
| Hi,
I've been following this debate with great interest and I think
what I'm beginning to sense (and I may be wrong) is that Kath
may be condoning or encouraging the concept of "winning through
manipulation". [Note please that I'm not trying to put words
in Kath's mouth here, but simply stating what I think I'm
hearing.]
My mother is a great manipulator and has always stressed to me,
that to get what one wants, one must know how to act, what to say
to the other person. For my mother there was no such direct thing as
"I want this", "please give it to me"; rather, she had to think things
through, "if I do or say this, then maybe he will let me do that."
In her world, this was a very smart thing to know; she
has lived most of her life in Eastern European countries, and for
her, learning to manipulate others, was a true survival skill.
During both wars, knowing what to say and how to say it and to whom,
allowed her to live. For example, by bribing a prison guard (with
a pound of bacon no less), she was able to save my father's life.
However, this manipulation skill should not be necessary for most
of us in America. We should be able to be direct in our needs and
wants, we should be confident that we will receive our due just as
others would for a job well done. "I work, you pay me." It should
be this simple but it's not. We should not have to resort to
coyness and cuteness, we should not have to beg for our primary needs,
like child support for our children, we should not have to resort
to coercion, and we should not have to resort to anger.
The way things are today in this country, women will have to continue
to get angry---God we're not angry enough still!---and stay angry
until we are given the same rights and privileges as men. For me,
I prefer anger to manipulation.
Maia
|
922.77 | | DICKNS::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Thu Jan 04 1990 11:00 | 40 |
|
We are all different. We are all special. We have all been subjected
to childhood "conditioning" in order to get us to conform to the
norms of society, of our parents or church or friends. We've all
been hurt and most of us have, somewhere in the course of our lives,
hurt others as well. That is the nature of human existence.
We all hold doubts and fears about our selves, our purpose, our
values and our priorities. And its true that woman damage each
other by refusing to accept each other as we really are. During
the course of my life, I've often found that men will come to accept
me as an equal more easily than other woman. All humans are
uncomfortable with change at first. But the new and different soon
becomes the norm and we adapt.
The pressure to conform, to be "safe" is strong in woman because
throughout thousands of dangerous years of evolution, safety meant
survival. It was fight or flight. Men fought and we flew_:-).
Today we are on the brink of a great change. I truly believe that.
Often in times of change, the opportunity presents itself to put
the past to rest. All we have to do is accept each other as we
are. All we have to do is love and support each other because
(in the final analysis) we are more important to each other than
anything else. No dogma, no tradition, no cultural norm, no
conditioning, no painful past experience is as important as the
individual standing beside us.
Sisterhood isn't about militancy or sexuality or career. Sisterhood
is about justice and freedom and democracy... not just for women
but for all of humanity. Its about courage and determination.
Whether you are drawn to science or sewing, whether you are a lesbian
or heterosexual or hermaphrodite, whether you carry a compact or a
gun, you are my sister and I accept you as you are.
I will defend your rights and freedom as I would my own.
We are family.. all of us and we will persevere.
Mary
|
922.78 | Various | SUPER::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Thu Jan 04 1990 11:19 | 26 |
| RE: .65
If there have been disparaging comments by older women abotu younger,
could someone give me an example? I have been following this string
fairly closely, and I can't remember any such comments. Of course, I
*am* one of the older women, and my...uh...uhm...[wait a minute, I'll
think of it]...ah...OH! *memory* may not be the best. [;-)]
RE: personal name quoting Nyhan
If such a thing gets your attention, wakes you up, makes you think...is
that all bad? IF this quote alienates you, does that mean a man saying
"Men don't want to know" alienates you from women? OR that bringing
such a thing to your attention alienates you? OR that a woman's reprise
of the quote alienates you? Or that you choose to be alienated when you
read such a quote?
[THis isn't directed at you in particular, Doc, although I realize
you're the only one who has voiced alienation due to the p_n.]
RE: WInning thru manipulation
Wow. I hadn't thought of that. Makes sense.
--DE
|
922.80 | | ASDS::RSMITH | | Thu Jan 04 1990 11:33 | 44 |
|
First of all : Yea, Mary! I couldn't agree with you more!
Second : a restatement of what I said/yelled in .65
I jumbled up a couple of ideas :
1. That younger women should be given respect for being capable of
understanding the women's movement.
2. That feminine women should be given respect for being capable of
understanding the women's movement.
What I was reacting to:
1. various comments implying that Kath must be a younger woman
because she 'obviously' doesn't understand the fighting that we must do.
2. the comment about what one liked to play with as a child.
I was (and I'm sure this is a big surprise to you'all) also reacting
based on personal experience with being pre-judged not-a-REAL-feminist
based on my appearance, including my age. So excuse me for my anger
but some of these comments hit a nerve regarding misogyny, women to
women.
Thirdly :
Lorna, It seems that you and I are arguing the same point. I think
that the equality for women means all women. The great thing about the
women's movement should be that we all have a choice as to what we want
to do and when we want to do it. If a woman wants to raise her own
children and has the luxury of having the money to choose, she can stay
home and work, as can her husband. If a woman wants to be a truck
driver, engineer, florist or secretary, she can be any.
So, Lorna, I think the woman's movement was for you too. Although
the people whom are probably the most greatful for feminism are the
women who wanted to work in professions that they would formerly have
been excluded from. Sometimes I think it is implied that to work in a
typically female role is a cop-out. That all women want to be
engineers or truck drivers and that the florists just wimped out.
But I don't think that is intended in true feminism and that is
certainely not what I believe.
Rachael
|
922.81 | on threats and internalized misogyny | COBWEB::SWALKER | Sharon Walker, BASIC/SCAN | Thu Jan 04 1990 11:36 | 35 |
|
We've got another string going in this file where many women are saying,
essentially, "I feel threatened by many pronographic portrayals of women".
Kath is saying here that she feels threatened by some of the remarks
women make about men.
I'm not sure that these two arguments are so different. Although I
wouldn't go so far as to assert that women encourage misogyny, I think
that it is (at least in part; correct me if I'm wrong, Kath) fear of
misogynistic reprisals that motivates Kath to wish some things weren't
said. In other words, if anger against men becomes socially acceptable,
then anger against women does too. This is an interesting point.
I *don't* agree that legislated equality is more important than a societal
understanding of why equality is desirable. *Both* are important.
Legislation may change court decisions, but it won't change the way people
act on a day-to-day basis much. In other words, I don't want to have to go
to court to get my rights, I want them regardless. I don't think this is
the same as "kissing ass" or "making nice", and I don't see it as
manipulation. I call it putting one's foot down, calmly but firmly.
I'm uncomfortable with many pornographic portrayals of women, but I
wouldn't censor them. I'm coming to think, increasingly, that Kath is
saying the same thing about certain types of statements about men.
Her discomfort is as real as mine, and I find it very relevant to the
topic of misogyny.
Why does Kath's discomfort (or her feeling that anger is pointless and
potentially threatening) neccessarily translate into a denial of others'
rights to state their feelings and to fight? Isn't taking her statement
of discomfort as a call to self-censorship a form of the internalized
misogyny Nancy cites?
Sharon
|
922.82 | Inquiring minds want to...buy | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Jan 04 1990 11:58 | 8 |
| <set cynic on>
I think the media mavens are very astute about what men want to know, and
about what we all want to know -- 'cause they know what sells. Dead women,
it seems, sell better in porn and advertising than they do in news stories.
<set cynic off>
|
922.83 | | PROXY::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:00 | 30 |
| This note seems to illustrate that there's a double standard about
things, and that men *ARE NOT* the sole purveyors of this double
standard.
o The infamous personal name, along with some other replies,
have made sweeping generalizations about men, and we've
consumed many replies arguing whether or not those sweeping
generalzations were bad.
o But Lorna St. Hilaire made a generalization or two about
women, and she was quickly shot at.
If anybody's actually taking the poll, I WAS DEEPLY OFFENDED
BY THE PERSONAL NAME, and my realizing from where it comes did
not mitigate my feelings. I just didn't think complaining would
do any good.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Meanwhile, Sharon's reply really cuts to the heart of things.
It certainly seems to be the position of many of these replies
that women's anger at men is okay, even good, the right attitude
to take, but men's anger against women (assuming there is any)
is "MISOGYNY".
And many of you are working just as hard as you possibly can to
put the worst possible spins on Kath's replies.
Atlant
|
922.84 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:05 | 4 |
| <-- -1
Misogyny is not "men's anger against women." It is hatred of women,
by either men or women.
|
922.85 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Death by Misadventure- a case of overkill | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:09 | 36 |
| > If such a thing gets your attention, wakes you up, makes you think...is
> that all bad?
I was already thinking. All it did for me was make me react negatively. Hardly
helpful, in my estimation.
>IF this quote alienates you, does that mean a man saying
> "Men don't want to know" alienates you from women?
Quite frankly, I think it is a rather presumptuous on Mr. Nyhan's part. Perhaps
he ought to reexamine his circle of friends, if he gets this impression from
those around him. Just because it was said by a man doesn't make it valid or
accurate, simply because the subject of the comment is "men."
>OR that bringing
> such a thing to your attention alienates you?
I disagree with the premise.
>OR that a woman's reprise
> of the quote alienates you?
Actually, I'd be annoyed by anyone restating what I consider to be a faulty
premise. But it does seem worse because of the nature of the quote and the
forum in which it appeared.
>Or that you choose to be alienated when you
> read such a quote?
I almost agree with this. But the feelings didn't appear AFTER I thought about
it, they appeared immediately. So I don't think there's much choice involved.
At this point, it seems the rathole has been thoroughly explored. Time to
move on, I guess.
The Doctah
|
922.86 | | SHARE::DHURLEY | | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:18 | 31 |
| I am generally a read only in this file but I found this discussion
to be very interesting and I just wanted to add a few comments of my
own.
If I want to change something in my life there is usually a very good
motivator that starts things for me. Ususally that is that I am angry
about a certain situation. That angry is used to push and push to
accomplish what needs to be done.
I feel that you need to rock the boat sometimes to get things done.
I feel that you need to say how you feel and that it's not ok to take
second best or that we are willing to be quiet, not to take a stand.
I guess I've been told too many times in my life to be a good little
girl and to play the game.
Right now in my life it's too important for me to take control of my
life as a woman and to be strong and to get what I want. And I guess
its that I just will say. This is want I want in my life and my
career.
I applaud all wimmin who are there to help all of us get closer and
closer to equality.
my 2 cents
Denise
|
922.87 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Mail SPWACY::CHARBONND | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:21 | 4 |
| Some general once said that in a war, beating your
enemies wasn't nearly as hard as maintaining good relations
with your allies. I think that's what a few people are trying
to point out here.
|
922.88 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:26 | 6 |
| I would hope, Dana, that our allies are in no doubt about who they are,
regardless of any shotgun expressions of anger.
We do.
=maggie
|
922.89 | Legislation can change behavior | FOOZLE::WHITE | | Thu Jan 04 1990 13:50 | 29 |
| Several notes have either stated that legislation does not
change how people act day to day or asked whether we know
of any case where a man changed his behavior because of
legislation. Well I experienced an important example.
Early in my working life it was commonplace for men to make
unwelcome sexual remarks to lower level women, to put their
hands on them and even to demand sexual favors. It happened
to me many times. I quit my first job when faced with
the unambiguous choice of sex with my supervisor or a bad
performance review.
When sexual harassment became illegal, and then against DEC
policy, men's behavior changed. Many cleaned up their act
immediately; others changed after a few men were fired for
sexual harassment. I have no idea whether all the men who
changed their behavior had an internal enlightenment. I do
know than day to day behavior at Digital and at company
sponsored off-site events changed drastically and fairly
quickly.
This change benefitted all women, secretaries, assembly line
workers, managers, etc. It benefitted a few men as well, those
who also suffered harassment by superiors.
Legislation can change behavior.
Pat
|
922.90 | Strange war - one's allies and enemies are identical | SUPER::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Thu Jan 04 1990 14:02 | 14 |
| RE: Dana
Well, this isn't a war. BUt if it *were*, who one's allies are would be
MUCH clearer. Unfortunately, who one's allies really are can be
A) Unknown and/or B) a subjective judgement (i.e, you see someone as
an ally whom I don't)
RE: changing behaviour
I agree. As the president of the NAACP (I think) said, " I don't care
if you *are* a bigot, so long as you don't *act* like one."
--DE
|
922.91 | The "perpetrator's" response | CADSE::FOX | D. Nyhan: >>Men don't want to know.<< | Thu Jan 04 1990 14:05 | 123 |
| This will be a long reply... but I guarantee that there will be no
cut-and-pastes in it :-)
How Bobbi's Personal_name Is Being Used As A Straw-horse
Old Eastern-European Jewish Folk-tale:
There once was a rabbi (the Berdichever, I suspect) who, no
matter what the question, always had a story that answered that
question. One day, one of his followers asked him, "Rebbe, why
is it that whenever we ask you a question, you always have a
story that answers the question?"
"Ah," said the rebbe, "I have a story that answers that
question!"
"Once upon a time, a king was riding in the forest, and saw
a number of trees with targets painted upon them. In the exact
center of each target, there was an arrow.
"'Hey you,' the king shouted to a nearby peasant, 'bring me
the person that did this.' The peasant did so, and the king was
greatly surprised that the person was merely a skinny young kid.
"'Tell me', the king demanded, 'are you *really* the one who
is responsible for all those arrows in all those bull's-eyes?'
"'Yes, indeed I am, your majesty,' responded the kid.
"'How in heaven's name did you manage to get every single
one of those arrows to hit the bull's-eye?' the king demanded.
"The kid responded, 'It was very simple, your majesty.
First, I shot the arrows, and *then* I painted the target around
them!'"
"So too, it is for me," concluded the rebbe. "I have all
these arrows (stories) already planted, and I just wait for the
paint (the questions)!"
What we are seeing in the /set tact=on discussion /set tact=off surrounding
my choice of a personal_name is nothing more nor less than a group of
people who already have their arrows, and are waiting to paint the target.
In the current case, the use to which those arrows and targets are being
put is what I call "belittlement of a person (or groups of people, or idea)
by use of successive straw horses."
Straw horse number 1:
We see someone taking only *part* of my personal_name, and attacking
that, on the grounds that the person who created the personal_name (my
name is Bobbi Fox, btw) is clearly going to alienate some (probably 99.9%)
men, because it is *quite clear* that it is a statement that slams men.
Huh? as some people pointed out (thanks gyns and guys), "Men don't want
to know *what*?" Further, who is to say that the "men" in the
personal_name is not that "gender-free, inclusive of women" use of the word
"men" that some quarters are so quick to defend?
It is gently pointed out that the entirety of the
personal_name clearly indicates it's a quote, with attribution.
Straw horse # 2:
This is then attacked, on the basis that not everyone knows who D. Nyhan
is. Or
[Straw horse # 3]
that not everyone read the article that Dorian Kottler so thoughtfully
typed in, so therefore not everyone would know the context.
This is disingenuous in the extreme. It would seem to me that, if the
casual reader (female or male), who *did not know who D. Nyhan was, and
had not read "Shhh -- 14 Women Were Slaughtered"* would be *less likely to
be offended* (see Huh? above).
So, I can only conclude that that one of the following categories
can be assigned to each individual attacking my personal_name
(probabilities In My Opinion are assigned):
1. S/he had no idea:
who D. Nyhan is; how to read a quote; or where the quote came from
(probability IMO: 1%)
2. S/he has the quality of (1) above,
with the added qualifier that s/he does not know how to use MAIL from
notes, to ask me to explain the personal_name, therefore having to
resort to attack in order to get clarification.
(Probability IMO: 0.5%)
3. S/he has the quality of (1) above,
with the added qualifier that s/he does not have the courtesy to ask me
what I mean before jumping to conclusions and shooting with both barrels
(Probability IMO: 3%)
4. S/he knew damn well:
who D. Nyhan is; how to read a quote; and where the quote came from,
and is worried that some man will be offended by the very concept
articulated by David Nyhan (a man, I will point out) in the article.
(probability IMO: 49%)
5. S/he has an itchy-trigger-finger knee-jerk response to
any woman who dares to use the word "men" in a sentence without the
all-important "most", "many", "some", or "not all, but some" qualifiers
preceding it, even if to modify the quote would mean being without
jounalistic integrity [not to mention that, in sound written English,
use of a plural noun without article or adjective means "the general
case of {noun}, although there may be exceptions"]. (Probability IMO: 46%)
6. S/he has his/her own ax to grind on the subject of women and
feminism, and lashes out at any convenient point from which to make a straw
horse (Probability IMO: 90%)
7. S/he has a huge net.crush on me, and hopes to draw me out
for the purposes of sweeping me off my feet :-)
(Probability IMO: .00000001%)
I realize these probabilities don't add up to 1, but, since I am using
these numbers rhetorically, rather than empirically, anyone who wastes
net bandwidth pointing it out deserves constant line noise on his/her
modem :-)
BTW, I realize that some people might be legitimately stymied by the fact
that I used double angle brackets ("European Style") instead of quote
marks. This is because notes barfs when I have single or double quote
marks in my p_n and try to mail something out. If any NOTES mavens would
contact me off-line to tell me how to use quotes in a p_n, I would
appreciate it).
Bobbi_who_is_proudly_feminist_and_will_never_forget_Montreal
|
922.92 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | somewhere somebody's having fun | Thu Jan 04 1990 14:26 | 36 |
| Re .70, when I commented in .67 that most lesbians seem to prefer
to be as masculine as possible, I was referring to appearance only.
I wasn't suggesting that there are no lesbians who enjoy cooking
or sewing or taking care of kids. My honest impression has been
that most lesbians do prefer to have a masculine appearance. I
don't see what's wrong with me making that observation. I didn't
say *all*, I said *most*. As to your wondering how many lesbians
I've actually encountered, well, I guess the only lesbians I've
ever encountered have been the women I've met through womennotes
who happen to be lesbians, and the lesbians I see around Provincetown.
I admit that none of my closest friends are lesbians, but none of my
closest friends are gay men or black or hispanic or Asian either.
I haven't planned it that way. It's just the "way the cookie
crumbles" I guess. I'm certainly open to being friends with anybody
I can have a mutually good time with. It just seems as though the
only people who are ever interested in being friends with me are
other straight white women or straight white men. It may have
something to do with the fact that I've always lived in small towns
in N.E., didn't go to college, and don't have a professional job.
We can only become friends with people we have occasion to meet.
*sigh* I didn't mean my comment to be offensive, but I still think
it's true, and I also find it interesting and wonder why.
In regard to why the killings in Montreal weren't covered in more
depth by the press, were they covered in more depth by the Canadian
press? I was wondering if they would have been covered in more
depth if the incident had happened in the U.S. The United States
has always been a self-centered country, and it seems rare that
any news is covered that doesn't relate directly to our politics.
Our papers never seem to report anything that happens in Canada,
anyway. Just a thought.
I was also wondering, is there a word that means hatred of men?
Lorna
|
922.94 | Images | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Thu Jan 04 1990 14:48 | 21 |
| Lorna,
in re hatred of men, it would be misandry - but that isn't a 'real' word.
Some time ago I read an article in Newsweek about the current lesbian
scene on the college campuses. To summarize briefly, there were
two major divisions among the college women, the 'crunchy granola'
lesbians who tended more to jeans, earth shoes and little makeup,
and the 'lipsticks' who wore quite fancy clothes and make up. I have
no idea how this division is reflected in the working world, and I
am sure that it doesn't come close to being describing all the types
of lesbian dress and outlook. I mention it, tho to indicate where
some of the images straights have of lesbians may originate, i.e.
if you've generally met only 'crunchy granola' types you may think
that style of dress is common to all lesbians.
Bonnie
p.s. I hope that the terms that I used are not considered offensive
to anyone, they are, as best I recall the ones used in the Newsweek
article.
|
922.95 | | PROXY::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Thu Jan 04 1990 15:05 | 19 |
| Bobbi:
Perhaps you will direct your remarks to a specific set of persons
whom you believe are using your personal name as a straw horse?
I find your personal name an offensive generalization. I care
not a whit that you are merely quoting someone else. If I quoted
a vile remark of another and said "It's okay -- it's a quote", would
you accept it? Think back to the Doctah's proposed quote.
Meanwhile, I hope you will also consider the broader context in
which I was complaining. There are *MANY* generalizations flying
around here. Are the complaints against them all straw horses,
or might there actually be some basis for the complaints?
(I haven't got the time or will to go back and bore you all
with extracts.)
Atlant
|
922.96 | she recants... thanks for the dose of cheer! | COBWEB::SWALKER | Sharon Walker, BASIC/SCAN | Thu Jan 04 1990 15:07 | 37 |
| RE .89:
Pat,
Thanks for providing an example of how legislation can change behavior.
My cynical viewpoint comes from being told in two job interviews that
my gender was a the overriding negative consideration in their hiring
decision, *despite* the fact that this was illegal. In one case, I was
told explicitly "I'd like to hire you, but my manager doesn't want a
woman in the position."
Did I take the companies involved to court? No, because as a broke grad
student working desperately on my thesis, I didn't have the money for a
lawyer, not to mention the time. And because both were oral statements,
made with no witnesses... and because in the more blatant case (a foreign
subsidiary of a US company), I wasn't at all sure what laws would apply.
In short, livid as I was, I couldn't afford the risk.
I think we should have legislation, too... absolutely! But I don't
think we should *only* have legislation. I think changing societal
attitudes (and what's socially acceptable) is an valuable goal too.
Otherwise women without the resources to fight will continue to be
discriminated against and exploited.
What I said in my note was:
> Legislation may change court decisions, but it won't change the
> way people act on a day-to-day basis much. In other words, I
> don't want to have to go to court to get my rights, I want them
> regardless.
You've convinced (reminded, really) me that the first part isn't true,
that it's more like "...it won't always change the way people act on a
day-to-day basis". The second part still stands.
Sharon
|
922.97 | a few thoughts | MOSAIC::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Thu Jan 04 1990 15:12 | 122 |
| Wow -- when I started writing this there were only a few replies and now
there are almost a hundred. I haven't read all that has passed before
in detail, so this may seem off the track, but I had to respond.
========================================================================
Something that should be kept in mind in this discussion is that
misogyny is not an attitude that men have towards women -- it is an
attitude that men *and women* both have towards women. This means that
if you are born female in a misogynist society, on some basic level you
grow up hating yourself.
This self-hatred is the real trick of successful oppression. An
oppression imposed from the outside by nasty meanies in hobnail boots is
certainly unpleasant, but it is resistable because it can be seen for
what it is. An oppression that flows from an internal sense of one's
own unworthiness requires little maintenance from the outside -- beyond
the occasional reminder of what happens to "bad" girls -- and is very
hard to resist since it seems a part of oneself.
I see a very strong parallel between the dynamics of oppressed groups
in society (we will use misogyny here as a continued example) and abused
children in families. Children will usually respond to abuse by
concluding that they are somehow "bad" and deserving of punishment,
rather than accept that the abuse is arbitrary and has nothing
whatsoever to do with them personally. It is easier on the human psyche
to believe that one is in control of one's own fate, however negative,
than to believe that what you do makes no difference at all -- that you
do not count, and your fate is arbitrary and meaningless.
One of the questions in the base note basically amounted to asking, What
do women do to cause misogyny? The answer is: nothing. What do
children do to cause themselves to be beaten? The answer: nothing.
Even if the child is noisy, sloppy, or demanding, the answer is still
the same. No child deserves to be beaten. Whether she is saintly,
shrewish, slatternly, sluttish, or silly, no woman deserves to be
hated for being a woman. It is our deeply ingrained habit of self-
hatred, a belief in our own culpability, that lets us ask this question.
Abused children are often amazingly devoted to their parents, finding
excuses and justifications for them and refusing to blame them.
Just so when we try to understand a man who commits an act of violence
against women: women have hurt him, women have made him pay lots of
alimony, women have been admitted to the school he couldn't go to, etc.
And what do we say about the woman? What was she doing there at that
time of night? Why was she wearing that dress? Why didn't she fight?
Why did she go with him? These kinds of questions remove responsibility
from the perpetrator (and the system that encourages him) and locate
the blame in the woman.
Women and men alike do this. For women, it can give them a false sense
that they aren't one of *those* women (they don't go there, don't wear
that, wouldn't let someone do that to them), and that if they behave
properly they can avoid punishment. Women who want to feel that they
fall into the "good" woman category can be especially insistent on
maintaining the barrier between themselves and "bad" women in order to
feel safe. Women often join in behavior that will make them feel that
they aren't as "guilty" as the next woman. Putting down other women for
being weak, airheaded, and beautiful, or strident, selfish, and
aggressive are ways of marking out groups of who women who somehow
*deserve* to be punished. If you don't belong to that group, you can get
away with thinking that perhaps you can escape guilt for what Mary Daly
calls the original sin of being born female.
Another way to try to avoid the taint of this original sin to deny in
some way that you belong to the same category as other women. I did this
as a young person -- I was intelligent, "girls" were stupid. I was
interested in science and math, "girls" cared about boyfriends and mushy
subjects. Intellect had no gender, and I was an intellect at home with
other intellects -- who happened to be mostly male. I thought I was a
liberated woman, while at the same time despising the mass of women. It
has taken a long time for me to learn to truly love women, including
this woman, my self.
Yet another way is to deny that there is such a thing as the woman
category. We are all human, but to deny the uniqueness of our
experience as women or men is to erase a reality that is quite vital to
our existence. Erasing it is an act of shame in being what we are.
I find this a very modern phenomenon, a creative adaptation to women
getting out in the world and proving that their ovaries won't shrivel if
they get college degrees. If we identify with the generic experience
of "humanity", perhaps no one will notice we are really only women.
Some of the ways of responding to an abusive childhood result in very
selfless, altruistic behavior. Becoming a nurturing caretaker,
providing for others what you cannot have for yourself, is so much a
characteristic associated with femininity that many folks consider it as
biologically hardwired as growing breasts. However, the thin line
between nurturing and being one of the "women who love too much" is
very, very fine. The woman who loves too much rarely ends up happy, and
usually ends up as a support system for others who have no problem
taking what she is giving and returning very little.
I very much appreciate the nurturing characteristics of women, and have
come to value them more and more as time goes on. There are many ways
in which I feel women learn to be, on the whole, nicer than men, and I had
too much of Catholic childhood not to believe in the value of niceness.
Nonetheless, nice women are often taken advantage of in their families,
jobs, and society. Nice women believe that if they are good enough,
understanding enough, caring enough, then of course everyone else will
be good to them. This doesn't always happen, and when they are
beaten, raped, denied tenure or not promoted they assume its because
they weren't good enough. The trick is, no woman can ever be really
good enough -- misogyny rigs the standard to be always out of reach.
I have learned to love women, but I admit that I do not personally love all
women. There are women who drive me nuts, irritate, infuriate, depress
and frighten me. However, in trying to perfect this art of loving women, I
have learned to always ask myself some questions whenever I have a
negative reaction to any particular woman. For example, women of the
plaid-shirted, glass-chewing variety are often thought to feel
contemptuously toward women of the pantyhosed, lipstick-wearing variety.
Now, it could just be that in a particular case a particular woman is
just a rotten human being, but I have found that with a little probing
there is often some little buried message that says "A woman like *that*
is <something bad>". Those messages spring from our own misogyny, and
they help foster our own self-hatred.
I have said before that all women are survivors of society that hates
them, children of a giant dysfunctional family. We all deserve credit
for surviving, and none of us is in a position to pass judgement on how
another woman has survived. Misogyny has shaped us, but as we become
aware of it and how it works inside of us, we can heal ourselves.
|
922.98 | | ASDS::RSMITH | | Thu Jan 04 1990 16:10 | 24 |
|
Catherine,
Wow! You are SO right. I cant tell you how many times I've said "I
wish I were a man. " or cried and gotten furious at myself for not
"Taking it like a man" or tried to run as far as a man or tried to
lift as much weight as a man or walk or dress like a man.
And I wonder if what you've uncovered doesn't explain a few things in
our society. Specifically, why am I 5'2" and 127 pounds and I feel fat
constantly? Why have I always hated my legs and arms and ...? Why at
the age of 22 and with lots of exercise and lots of encouragement from
my fiance (a man, hmm), am I finally starting to like parts of my body?
Why are diet books and work-out video tapes such hot sellers? Those
really interested in fitness, I think, read more factual stuff. Is
all of this evidence of the self-hatred you mentioned?
And the nuturing instinct you mention. Yes, I nurture other people but
how often do I nuture myself?
Perhaps I've run on but you are so right Catherine.
Rachael
|
922.99 | oops, no I'm not THAT weird | ASDS::RSMITH | | Thu Jan 04 1990 16:21 | 8 |
|
Addendum :
When I say dress like a man, I don't mean in any kind of kinky, sexual
sense. I mean like for 6 months wearing no makeup and only pants.
|
922.100 | | PERN::SAISI | | Thu Jan 04 1990 16:27 | 11 |
| re. Lorna and Bonnie, how many different categories of heterosexual
women can we come up with...hmmm? It seems like some stereotyping
is possibly going on here. If one goes by personal observance,
then only those women who fit the stereotype are going to be recognized
as belonging to the group. As for Newsweek, I have noticed that they
try to be hip in alot of their articles, often using lingo to show
how with it they are, but not backing their little "studies" up with
any good methodology. It seems like with the majority of the gay
population in the closet it would be hard to collect any factual
data. I know that neither one of you meant offense though...
Linda
|
922.101 | | BSS::BLAZEK | songs of happiness murmured in dreams | Thu Jan 04 1990 16:41 | 33 |
|
I have to comment on .92 by Lorna, because I _do_ have a lot of
contact with both lesbians and gays, and I think there are some
extremely unfair stereotypes in .92 that need to be cleared up.
Being a lesbian does not equate being masculine. Period.
I know plenty, PLENTY, of lesbians who wear dresses, lipstick,
eyeshadow, mascara, look as straight as Donna Reed, who don't
even know how to change a tire! Imagine! Some want children,
some worry about being seen in public looking like a wreck, and
some are raising families in loving, nurturing environments.
You'd be surprised at the number of lesbians and bisexual women
you come into contact with. I don't care if you're raised in
Great Falls, Montana or New York City. Lesbians are everywhere
and so are bisexual women, who might confuse you even more be-
cause bi's are very, very difficult to spot. Some are married.
It doesn't mean they're straight. And it doesn't mean they've
got a desire to look butch.
I'd guess you meet a heckuva lot of lesbians whom you probably
assume to be straight women because of their outward appearance.
The lesbians you see around Provincetown are not the only ones
you see. You just don't know it because apparently you expect
them to wear hiking boots, have short hair, and carry engine
schematics in their back jeans pocket.
Sorry for the tangent, but this is one assumption I'm tired of
hearing all the time.
Carla
|
922.102 | Sight for sore eyes | SUPER::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Thu Jan 04 1990 17:08 | 17 |
| RE: dress and outward appearances
It's probably a good thing to understand that the terms "masculine"
and "feminine" as applied to dress have to do with convention only,
and absolutely nothing to do with reality. How one dresses has no
connection whatsoever with one's masculinity (maleness) or femininity
(femaleness). Or one's sexuality, for that matter.
RE: CAtherine
I wish I could tell you how wonderful it was to see your node and user
name at the top left hand corner of my screen.
Well said, (yet again) Catherine T.
--DE
|
922.103 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | somewhere somebody's having fun | Thu Jan 04 1990 17:14 | 34 |
| Re .101, Carla, I am somewhat offended by the attitude and tone
of your reply. I have never said, nor do I think, that all lesbians
know how to change tires, etc., etc. I have gotten the impression
in my life, from my personal experience, that *most*, not *all*,
lesbians choose to dress in a masculine way - pants, flats, no purses,
short hair, no make-up. Can't I even say that this has been my
impression, for God's sake? Without being attacked for spreading
horrible stereotypes?
I can't help it if there are lesbians and bi-sexual women all around
me in my daily life who for some unknown reason never choose to
reveal this to me. I'm sure I could care less, and would I would
even be interested in hearing about it. If any of my close women
friends has ever been bi or lesbian I don't know why they wouldn't
have told me. If anything, I would find it interesting.
Okay. So, now I know. When I go to P-town and see women dressed
in stereotype lesbian clothing I should realize that they are only
a small percentage of the lesbians in P-town at that given moment,
most of them are dressed like me? When I go to a FWO get together
and notice that all of the womannoters who have publicly come out
of the closet are also, to varying degrees, dressed in stereotype
lesbian clothing, I will realize that the majority of the lesbians
in attendance are dressed in stereotype feminine clothes and have
not come out of the closet. (I'm beginning to think there must
be a very small percentage of het woman indeed.)
Now I know that most lesbians don't dress butch. Now I know that
most lesbians look like Donna Reed. Thanks.
I'm sorry. But, I'm pissed.
Lorna
|
922.104 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | somewhere somebody's having fun | Thu Jan 04 1990 17:22 | 14 |
| I honestly sometimes have felt, as a straight, white person, that
it is impossible to say the right thing in regards to either
homosexuals or blacks. No matter what I say it will be taken wrong
by somebody.
For christs sake, I entered two or three very sensitive poems about
lesbians in the poetry topic (without persmission!)
All I originally said was that it seems to me that *most* lesbians
dress in (what our society would traditionally term) masculine clothing
and so far nobody has actually said that that statement is not true.
Lorna
|
922.105 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | six months in a leaky boat | Thu Jan 04 1990 17:26 | 59 |
|
RE: .62, .71, .72 (Doctah)
> I saw it as a slap in the face to any man who cares, to any man who
>wants to know. If I sit here and rationalize about it long enough, I can
>understand the motivations behind the words, and come to accept what the meaning
>is (and discard the parts that don't apply to me.) However, my first reaction
>deep in my gut, was hurt. I felt alienated, devalued, and altogether put off
You know, I was sitting in my therapist's office today, very upset about
this note, and about some other things recently that have happened in my
life that I felt frustrated/angered/upset/etc about, and I'll give you a little
of what he gave me.
1) Anyone can say/do anything they want.
2) You are allowed to take what they say/do however you want to. Your
reactions are allowable, they are real, they are NOT disputable (ie, no
one can tell you that you are not allowed to feel that way)
3) Your reactions (what ever they may be) are JUSTIFIED
Now, I sat there and really THOUGHT about that. Relating these thoughts to
this argument means to me that women are allowed to say whatever they want
to say, and however they want to say it. This also means that men are
allowed to take whatever they hear and reach to it in anyway they find
appropriate (ie, agree, be offended, be neutral).
Also in direct relation to misogyny: Men are ALLOWED to hate women. Women
are ALLOWED to react the way they want to react toward that hatred.
We've reached an impasse', haven't we? If men do not want women to react a
certain way, then I believe that perhaps it is better for them to not
perpetuate misogyny which might result in these reactions.
Conversely, if women do not want men to FEEL the misogyny, then they will
not act in a manner that might result in these reactions.
**Notice, I did not say "cause these reactions", because I firmly believe now
that WE are the "cause" of our OWN reactions. I believe we CHOOSE to react
the way we do, someone does not make that decision for us.
Did anyone catch the circular problem with the above examples. One possible
scenario: If men hate women, then women react with anger toward men, which
in turn caused men to hate women even more.
So, where does this stop? Are both sides conscious of what they are doing
to perpetuate this circle?
Have you ever straddled a brick wall and had a very strong wind come along
and try to sweep you off? I feel that way sometimes when men direct their
misogyny toward me.....and I think some men might feel the same thing when
women direct their anger at misogyny toward them.
I want to straddle that wall between men and women. I want to love both
sides of that wall....I want to be THERE, and I want THERE to be shaded from
the winds.
kath
|
922.106 | Manipulation, the greatest misrepresented word of the week.
| SSDEVO::GALLUP | six months in a leaky boat | Thu Jan 04 1990 17:45 | 40 |
|
.76 (::Buehler)
> what I'm beginning to sense (and I may be wrong) is that Kath
> may be condoning or encouraging the concept of "winning through
> manipulation".
I believe you win the prize!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yes, manipulation, but NOT in the manner you are implying.
American Heritage Dictionary: manipulate (v): 2) To influence or manage
shrewdly or deviously.
shrewd (adj) Synonymns) "this adjective refers to the posssession
of a keen, searching intelligence, combined with
sound judgement."
I believe you are implying the "deceive" part--ie, deceiving ourselves as
well as deceiving others.
"To influence shrewdly", "possession of a keen intelligence combined with
sound judgement."
I always failed to see why the word, manipulation, has a "bad" meaning to
most, because, in reality, it really doesn't. The best arbitrators in
strike situations are GREAT manipulators. They see a compromise that
both sides would settle for, and the MANIPULATE both sides into believing
they are getting what they want....that THEY are making the decisions.
I'm not suggesting denying anything we believe in, or anything that we
wish to express (anger especially), but rather suggesting that I believe
the greatest EFFECTIVENESS at reaching our goal does indeed come from
"influencing others by using a keen intelligence and sound judgement."
And I believe sound judgement include understanding the circular effects
I mentioned in the previous reply.
kath
|
922.107 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | six months in a leaky boat | Thu Jan 04 1990 18:40 | 24 |
|
> I honestly sometimes have felt, as a straight, white person, that
> it is impossible to say the right thing in regards to either
> homosexuals or blacks.
Lorna...imagine how straight white men feel...(adding men to your category,
and women to theirs)
Cheer up bunky......It's just that lesbians/bisexuals are very rarely
distinguishable by their dress and their attitudes, just like het women
aren't easily identifiable.
Just like heavy metal/rock gets a unintentionally stereotyped by people
who haven't "been there."
Just another stereotype (and we ALL carry those around in some form or another,
it's not particular to you, just rather typical within the human race)...
Carla might find it important to just clear up some stereotypes (refer to
my scenario in .105...you're allowed to feel 'pissed', and she's allowed
to feel 'angry') Hey, what goes around comes around! ;-)
kath
|
922.108 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | six months in a leaky boat | Thu Jan 04 1990 18:44 | 17 |
|
PS to .105
I said the following in .105
>Have you ever straddled a brick wall and had a very strong wind come along
>and try to sweep you off? I feel that way sometimes when men direct their
>misogyny toward me.....and I think some men might feel the same thing when
>women direct their anger at misogyny toward them.
I find it more benefical to direct my "wind" at the wall in hopes of breaking
it down.
kath
|
922.109 | Funny what it takes to change someone's attitudes | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Thu Jan 04 1990 20:08 | 35 |
| re: 922.67 (Lorna)
> Re .60, Nancy, your reply really depresses me. Maybe because I
> enjoy your company now, but realize that had we ever been children
> or teenagers in the same school or neighborhood, that you would
> have despised me. I hated sports, math and science more than anything
> else when I was a kid. I loved playing with dolls and dressing
> in frilly clothes. My SAT scores would make you wonder if I had
> been born retarded. (unfortunately I'm *not* joking)
Lorna, I agree. It depresses *me* to think I was like that! But I
would not have "despised" you for being different (I wasn't *that*
rotten!!), I just would not have paid you much attention. I wouldn't
have asked you to play with my Tonka trucks or Nerf football, but
I still would have had a fun time at your birthday party and invited
you to mine (with a request to not get me any silly doll houses :-).
Maybe I shouldn't have entered .61 about why I finally *consciously*
recognized women as fully participating members in society; what
made me overcome my childhood prejudices, because I thought it might
offend, and because it's so embarassing.
BUT, my revelation also happened to many of the guys I was in college
with. The *only* reason I believe that some of them will respect
other women engineers today is because women in their classes were as
smart or smarter than they were, as was measured in some very objective
and quantitative ways all throughout college (engineering exams).
That situation (the women being as good or better academically) made
the dating dynamic really weird, too. It was obvious which guys
weren't comfortable with their girlfriend's academic abilities,
and who were...
nancy b.
|
922.110 | | RAINBO::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Fri Jan 05 1990 01:25 | 69 |
| Lorna,
I don't want you to feel that you are insane in your observations.
I suspect that if you took a hundred women and divided them into two groups
according to whether they looked butch-y or femme-y, you would end up with more
lesbians in the butch group than in the other. Stereotypes are not made
out of thin air -- they usually have some basis in cultural reality.
Although certainly they do not describe all members of the group and
anyone they do describe is not necessarily a member of the group, it
would be a massive reality denial to say that they don't mean anything.
I sometimes think the way that lesbians (and gay men) jump to deny our
stereotypes is an expression of our internalized homophobia -- if
lesbians look like Donna Reed, then being a lesbian wouldn't be
so bad, would it? After all, we are just like normal people.
It can be so embarassing when one is trying to be accepted by society
to have some lesbians insist on acting like, well, you know, dykes.
But that's just a minority, and it's understandable that you wouldn't be
comfortable with someone like that. Most of us wouldn't dream of
wearing hiking boots and playing softball and really want nothing more
than to have a baby or two and keep house just like any other woman. :-}
So... given that I will admit there is some truth to the stereotype of
lesbians looking "masculine", why is it that so many lesbians adopt a
butch style? I happen to think I just like wearing tuxes and ties, but
I had an interesting experience a year or so ago that gave me some
perspective on the issue. I went to a medieval recreational group
event and for various reasons ended up at one point wearing what would be
considered women's clothing -- a long tunic and head covering against
the sun. I realized that I experienced a sense of panic -- I got called
"milady" and men assumed I would want to dance with them. I realized
that without my butch signals I had no way of indicating to any
potentially flirtatious persons of the right gender that I was open to
their attention. Ironically enough, when I ended up wearing something
less authentic but more definitely butch (a short tunic, trousers, and
boots), I felt more comfortable and had a woman come on to me about
how very lonely she was going to be that night. So, even though 12th
century women's clothing is pretty comfortable (and is hard to tell from
12th century men's clothing), I needed to make a statement that the usual
expectations about "femininity" (i.e. that you are interested in a man)
did not apply to me in order to identify myself.
I think that some of the kinds of styles that lots of lesbians adopt
have to do with making that kind of statement. I also think that it has
to do with belonging, the history of the lesbian community, and how we
conceive of sexuality. Whatever the particular icons, you adopt them as
part of claiming your place in the community culture. Lesbians and
gay men are always having to come up with new fashions so we can tell
who we are. :-)
Besides the belonging issue, I do think there is an undercurrent of
misogyny associated with the negative opinions many butch women have of
a femme style. When I went to the women's march on Washington, I wore a
skirt for the first time in years. Thinking about our suffragette
foremothers, I could not help but feel that these women in their long
white dresses, white gloves and high-button shoes were women of
enormous strength, courage, and determination. To be "feminine" is not
necessarily to be weak, and we fall into a serious trap when we think
that is so. I felt very strong, powerful and angry in my skirt, lace
gloves, and straw hat. It was a healing experience and in some small
way I feel like I experienced a victory over my own misogyny.
So... our homophobia is telling us that lesbians all have to look like
Donna Reed. Our misogyny is telling us that anyone who looks
like Donna Reed is a worthless ball of fluff. When we really learn to
love women, it will be completely ok for some women to have moustaches
and drive trucks and some women to shave their legs and answer
telephones. If you're a woman, and it's how you look and what you do,
then it's womanly.
|
922.111 | re .97, Catherine T. ... | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jan 05 1990 08:19 | 1 |
| Brava!
|
922.112 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Fri Jan 05 1990 08:36 | 13 |
| Lorna, at the risk of calling down beaucoup de heat on my own head, I
gotta say that my experience is very like yours: of all the lesbians I
know (maybe 100?), only *one* is a serious, all-stops-out Femme in her
choice of personal style. I won't mention her name (she might disagree
with me) but she is a member of this community.
I know a few others who are more, hmmm, neutral? in their style, but my
experience agrees with yours: most lesbians choose short hair, flannel
shirts, and boots ;') probably for the reasons Catherine illuminated,
namely that it helps to have some visible signals that the usual mating
assumptions do not apply.
=maggie
|
922.113 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Fri Jan 05 1990 09:21 | 8 |
| in re .100
Linda,
Catherine and Maggie have expressed in far better written words what
I was trying to bring out in my note.
Bonnie
|
922.114 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | a cool breeze blowing | Fri Jan 05 1990 09:57 | 18 |
| Re .110, Catherine, thank you for entering this reply. I really
appreciate it and also found it very interesting.
Re .112, Maggie, thanks for your reply, too. It always helps to
know we aren't alone in our overall perceptions.
I was very upset about this yesterday when I left work. I was afraid
I had come across as "gay bashing" or something, and I would never
do that. I respect the rights of others to choose life styles
different from my own. And, besides I have never been bothered
in any way by the fact that some people are gay, and can't understand
why some straights are. At the same time that I was upset, though,
I kept getting these images in my mind of going to Provincetown
in the summer and finding the streets jammed with throngs of Donna
Reed clones wearing shirtwaist dresses, like some weird B movie!
Lorna
|
922.115 | not pissed - but hurt | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Fri Jan 05 1990 10:31 | 50 |
| RE: last couple
I think you're right. We learn to dress in ways that are not
attractive to men. Think of it as insulation - or maybe armour.
If you dress in the traditional feminine manner, you are subject
to the same attention that a straight woman would receive. This
can be quite uncomfortable for some of us. Also, it is interesting
to note that this attention occurs even if everyone in the free
world knows your gay. Take of the dyke uniform and it seems like
you become fair game.
RE: Lorna,
I'm afraid I did take offense at you comments. I don't see
as "bashing", but representative of the viewpoint straight
women exhibit towards lesbians - and it gets tiring to have
fight the attitude of your sisters. What follows is an
explanation of my feelings.
I don't think it's your mentioning the stereotype that upsets me,
so much as how you seem to have lesbians segregated into some
inferior subset of women. "Even Lesbians who..." leads me to
feel that we are less than real women in your eyes. This is
supported by the only facts you accociated with our label is who
we sleep with and "masculinity". How would you like to be defined
by your bed parner? I don't suspect that you'd care for it anymore
than I would care to be viewed as fluff.
I can't help but feel that you think we are somehow "less" than
real people - maybe a curiosity to be observed, but not real
people. Being segregated into a "special" group by your "sisters"
doesn't feel good at all - however "liberally" this segregation
is phrased. This may not relfect your actual feelings, but it
does reflects the impressions I get from them.
You apparently know enough about "us" to make some rather painful
generalizations, but not enough to realize the impact on the object
of those statements. It's not much different than me (a white woman)
making statements about how black people feel. I might ask a general
question to prompt a discussion, but these folks are perfectly capable
of speaking for themselves and I certainly wouldn't presume to make
assumptions on these feelings.
FWIW - I have an entire closet full of feminine clothing that I
enjoy wearing (but not paying for).
-maureen
|
922.116 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | a cool breeze blowing | Fri Jan 05 1990 11:17 | 11 |
| Re .115, Maureen, I'm sorry you were offended by my comments. They
were not meant to offend, I assure you. It has *never* occurred
to me to think of lesbians as "less" than any other women. After
meeting women such as Catherine and Justine I think I'd have to
be a fool to think that, and I hope I'm not that much of a fool.
Also, I really hope you don't include me in the "sisters" you feel
you have to fight. I don't want to fight with everyone who happens
to be different from me in any way. I'd just like to understand.
Lorna
|
922.117 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Death by Misadventure- a case of overkill | Fri Jan 05 1990 11:20 | 20 |
| > I'm afraid I did take offense at you comments. I don't see
> as "bashing", but **representative of the viewpoint straight
> women exhibit towards lesbians** (emphasis mine)
> I don't think it's your mentioning the stereotype that upsets me,
> so much as how you seem to have lesbians segregated into some
> inferior subset of women.
Does anyone else notice the juxtaposition?
>"Even Lesbians who..." leads me to
> feel that we are less than real women in your eyes.
From what I know of Lorna's feelings and attitudes about gays, she does not
think of them as an inferior breed of human nor mere curiousities. I believe
that the use of "even lesbians who..." in that context (which I, of course,
cannot recall right now) was to prove a point about her feelings re misogyny,
not to use lesbians as an example of inferior beings.
The Doctah
|
922.118 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Fri Jan 05 1990 12:10 | 29 |
| .106
Hi,
Yes I know what you're saying re: manipulation. My interpretation
of manipulation is not negative either; again, to use my mother
as an example, she was very shrewd, used very sound judgment
when dealing with the 'enemy' or those people in power in her
world (gestapo, nazi's, bolsheviks, etc. etc.). Her reward
was she was allowed to continue living. So I agree that this
is a skill that can be very useful in life.
What I'm suggesting though is that we American women should not
have to rely on learning manipulation skills; our survival
should not have to depend on what we say or do, who we know, etc.
Yes, my mother, to survive, learned to be shrewd.
But I'm tired. I would rather be able to simply say, 'hey,
I can do this for you, if you will do this for me.' I want to
be able to be honest and direct, without all the other 'behind-
the-scenes' politicking that manipulation requires.
Perhaps I'm being idealistic, but I would love to live in a
society that does not require me to plot, scheme, beg, or bribe
in order to have a successful life.
Why isn't being me good enough?
maia
|
922.120 | | ASDS::RSMITH | | Fri Jan 05 1990 13:20 | 15 |
| I forget how we got on the subject of lesbian dressing styles, but in
defense of Lorna, I have also only known or noticed lesbians in
slightly masculine clothing. Also, I guess I tend to group lesbians as
a subset of women, just as heterosexual women are a subset of women. I
don't think that I think of them as a lesser subset, just a subset that
I don't understand. Perhaps I should start a new note discussing
the lesbian way of life because I always thought that it was just a
sexual preference. (I'm not trying to be insulting, I'm just not
knowelegable on the subject.)
So in any case, I think any insult that came out, was not meant and was
the result of general ignorance on the of homosexuality.
Rachael
|
922.121 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | six months in a leaky boat | Fri Jan 05 1990 14:32 | 32 |
|
RE: .118 (manipulation)
> Why isn't being me good enough?
Ideally, it should be. But the way society is conditioned, you'll never get
it by "just being you", because there are misogynic people out there in
high places that are "just being me" too.
> Perhaps I'm being idealistic, but I would love to live in a
> society that does not require me to plot, scheme, beg, or bribe
> in order to have a successful life.
If you want something that you don't have right now, you have to go out and
get it. Chances are that it's not going to just fall into your lap along
with a silver platter. I've always found it essential to have an efficient
game-plan or my chances of losing are FAR greater.
Do you think football teams going into games with the attitude, "ah, let's
just play, we'll call the plays as we go along, and make decisions during
the time outs." Never. They spend a great deal of time analyzing their
opponent, determining his moves, formulating countermoves.
The point is, I believe that women need a effective game plan or their aren't
going to get what they want.
And I don't mean they need covert operations, to beg, to steal, to bribe, or
to deceive.
kath
|
922.122 | but then i'm crazy... | DECWET::JWHITE | ohio sons of the revolution | Fri Jan 05 1990 14:38 | 5 |
|
i think football (and most other sports) would be healthier and
more fun if it was played <paraphrase> 'just for fun, let's just
wing it'.
|
922.123 | :-) :-) | PERN::SAISI | | Fri Jan 05 1990 15:57 | 1 |
| "We really think we deserve a touchdown, could we have one pretty please?"
|
922.124 | A thought, not in the flow ... | TOOK::R_GRAY | Follow the hawk, when it circles, ... | Fri Jan 05 1990 16:02 | 83 |
|
This is just a thought on part of the base note that I wrote a
few days ago off-line. I didn't get back to noting until today,
so I'm sorry it's out of the flow, but I'll put it in anyway.
.0> Why do some people dislike women as a class (a group?) ?
.0> What are women (collectively or individually) doing that
.0> result in some people having misogynistic attitudes ?
Maybe sometimes it is a problem of transition?
I coach basketball, and one of the difficult things for me
to teach the kids is the "transition" game. When they are on
offense, they know what to do and what to expect for help from
their teammates. When they are on defense, things are just as
stable. However, the transition from one to the other can be a
real problem. If one of the players is still playing defense
when his/her teammate has already made the switch to offense,
then neither of them gets the help they expect from the other,
and the team gets burned.
If I was going to make a "solve the problem in 30 minutes"
TV show about this aspect, the first 15 minutes would look
something like this:
Scene 1:
Our man Harry is in his divorce lawyer's office, listening to the
"you won't get custody of the kids, and you'll have to give her
the house and alimony" lecture. His male polished professional
lawyer is explaining that the traditional housewife of 15 years
can't be expected to get along without considerable help from
him.
Lawyer: "You can't just leave her with half the assets and make
her fend for herself! [...] You need to give this
matter some real thought, and adjust your attitudes
about women before there are serious consequences".
Scene 2:
Harry is in his office, when his manager enters to discuss the
four resumes he sent to her, for the manager position he has
open. She is a polished professional executive, and she is
concerned. She reminds him that Personnel sent him 10 resumes,
five women and five men. The four he sent her are all male, and
8 of the 10 managers that work for him are male. She then gives
him the "women are just as capable and intelligent as men"
lecture.
Boss: "I see my other direct reports as being much more even
handed in these matters then you. [...] You need to give
this matter some real thought, and adjust your attitudes
about women before there are serious consequences".
Scene 3:
Harry is now in the office of one of his peers. She has admired,
(read: wanted to be involved with) him for years and he hasn't
noticed. Now that he is getting divorced, she decides to take a
chance. In the process of going over reports, she reaches for
something on the other side of him, and one of her breasts come to
rest momentarily against his arm. He notices and she smiles,
just enough for him to guess that this was not an accident.
Scene 4:
Finally, Harry is now walking into a conference room, early for
his meeting. He notices that the room is almost full of people
(this is not DEC). There is a great looking woman sitting off to
the side of the room and the first thing he notices is her legs
(she is sitting normally with her legs crossed, not
suggestively). He has a pleasured smile on his face as his eyes
follow the curve of her body up to her face. Oh-Oh. She is
looking right at him and her glare says, "I am not a piece of meat,
who do you think you are!?"
Now we fade to commercial, and the voice over is Harry saying,
"G*d almighty, do I hate dealing with women!"
-------------
I have no idea what happens in the next 15 minutes!
What do you think? Is this close?
Richard
|
922.125 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Fri Jan 05 1990 17:28 | 111 |
| In football, the teams go in as equals, with equal opportunity for
preparation and the reward going to the winner no matter which team
it turns out to be.
In life, women go into the game disadvantaged and disliked. Their
attempts at preparation for the game are discouraged because they
are told they don't have to "win", it isn't "ladylike" and they won't
get a man if they persist. So they prepare for a different game, but
are thrown into the game of life anyway - except now they are dis-
advantaged and if they play it with gusto and style, are also disliked.
And a further insult, if the women win, by some fluke, the prize
will be changed to be smaller.
Manipulation served the woman well who saved her husband with a
pound of bacon. But she was dealing with a hostile enemy. Are
you saying, Kathy, that in dealings with men, women are dealing
with a hostile enemy and likewise should resort to the same tactics?
The woman with the bacon would not likely have "manipulated" her
neighbor to get her husband back. She well might have gone in there
with a gun and started doing a little demanding.
In this light, the women who are angry and demand equal rights NOW
are doing so because they, (we), DON'T perceive an enemy situation.
We are dealing with what be believed are peers - colleagues - equals,
if you will. The anger is in finding out you've been betrayed by
your equal who sets himself up as your superior and then expects
you to act as subordinate to complete the (im)balance. We're
expected to be circumspect, indirect, to qualify our words and to soften
our feelings. To my mind, to do so would be to believe in their
superiority and my inferiority and I don't believe it! Since men
are in power they still have the self-ordained authority to require
their "underlings" to approach them in a certain way, regardless
of the reason behind the approach. Women are expected to approach men
sexually in only certain ways, and the same goes for this situation.
Failure to do so, (as in my stating directly I want the ERA and
I don't care WHAT they personally think of me), is in itself a
transgression and will be used as further justification for
denying my request, a la those endless tired ratholes of "it's
HOW you said it". OK, OK, tell me how you'd like it said and let's
get on with the discussion. But there never is a right way to say
it because it isn't supposed to BE said. No one has ever reworded
such a request "correctly" have they? Not in 30 years has one woman
found the "right way" to ask for equality or the "right way" to
express her anger although I suspect the "right way" is the one
that accomplishes nothing - the one that lets her blow off a little
steam leaving the men unwounded and the status quo unchanged. I find
it hard to believe the fault lies with all these women.
Don't forget that being circumspect, indirect and nice are part and
parcel of manipulation and although we all know being direct is a no-no
for women, there aren't too many men who will appreciate being manipu-
lated. Many men are just as put off by feminine wiles as they are
by feminine directness. So even your answer looses.
But that's what misogyny is all about. Damned if you do, damned if
you don't. Wiles and directness, while used extensively by men to
accomplish their goals, are feared and hated concpets when preceded by
the word 'feminine'.
Don't manipulate but don't be direct. Don't whine but don't get angry.
Don't dress butch but don't spend too much time getting ready. Don't
get too educated but don't talk nonsense, etc. A womanly "style" is
not appreciated by men in negotiations and neither is a manly style
when used by a woman. So there really IS no style that's acceptable
in this kind of thing. That's why we're mired in frustration and
why still, in 1990, we don't have guaranteed equal protection under
the law. We've wasted precious time trying to find the key to make
men listen when in truth, they, (the lawmakers), don't want to listen
and all the "don'ts" are designed specifically to insure a woman has
little opportunity to present a logical and clearly thought out
case for equality.
If we ask nicely for equality we can easily be brushed off. If we ask
directly for equality we can be taken to task for being shrill, strident,
for alienating men. But all these things are beside the point since no
one appears to be interested in how alienated women feel in patriarchies
and how they feel when men are shrill and strident with them, which they
often are. So mere alienation is of little interest EXCEPT when it be-
comes a handy label to silence a woman. That's why I just ignore it when
I'm told that my words may alienate men. Their society alienates
women but nobody seems to think that's a bad thing. That's because,
I suppose, that women are and have always been, expected to do the
adapting. And when you don't, no matter what else you may be saying,
right or wrong, justified or not, it is perceived that you are being
so because you hate men and THAT becomes the central issue to be
discussed. Labels, smokescreens, name-calling, "straw-horses", (great
note, that one!), all are tools used to bamboozle women, deflect
attention from their words to their "attitudes", (as in, "I don't talk
to people with your "attitude") and devalue them as serious and
sincere humans with worthy causes and justifiable points to make.
The MO seems to be - Ignore her until she goes away but if she just
yells to be heard, then admonish her for the fact that she yelled.
It's like tormenting a helpless animal until it strikes out and then
killing it for biting you. We don't live a charmed life and our "masters"
are not kind and benevolent toward women when they make their policies.
And, [in my opinion I believe that], because of that, they have no right
to be surprised, appalled or outraged when they find women becoming
angrier, and angrier.
The bamboozling works in notes, (tho some of us just yell louder, like
men would - you know us, we're the "strident ones! ;-) ), and it
works in life. And it will only stop working once the world is
convinced, (that's men AND women), that women aren't little fluffy
toys to be humored and jerked around and laugh at - when more of us
stand taller and yell louder and generally make life hell until we get
what we want, what we deserve, and what we are entitled to. Until
then, female "niceness" will continue to be the weapon we give to men
to use against us in the battle for equality.
|
922.126 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Fri Jan 05 1990 19:07 | 33 |
| I think a lot of the dynamics I've seen in the last slew of notes have
to do with anger denied expression. A lot of women have had plenty to
get angry about. However, if they start expressing that anger against
men, they are told, "Hey! Don't get angry at me! *I* didn't do
anything to you!" Which might be true. However, if you've spent much
of your life being constrained by men telling you what you may and may
not do, this comes across as yet another case of a man telling a woman
what she may not do. Since this is what you're angry about to begin
with, the "Hey, not me" response doesn't exactly go over real well.
Sometimes I think we'd all be a lot better off if men and women would
just sit back and *let* women get angry. "I've been cheated, I've been
shortchanged, I've been pushed around, I've been humiliated, I've been
patronized, by a bunch of jerk-face men and I've had it up to here
with the scum-sucking slime molds!!!" etc, etc. Eventually they'd get
it out of their systems and could say, "Look, I didn't necessarily mean
you in particular. I was angry and you happened to get caught in the
fallout zone. I'm sorry if anything I said was unjust to you." And
then men could say, "I understand, you were frustrated and needed to
get that out. I'm sorry you had to go through all that; what can I do
to help?"
But of course it never happened and it probably never will. The simple
act of a woman expressing anger is (or was) revolutionary. Ladies
don't get angry; they are always gracious and polite. This means that
the only way that ladies can be sure of getting things done is to get
others to do things for them. In other words, the only power ladies
have is that of manipulation. I prefer not to limit the tools at my
disposal. Different situations require different approaches. In the
"second wave" of feminism, I think the most effective approach will be
less confrontational. I don't know for sure, not having been there and
not having studied recent history, but in the first wave of feminism,
the confrontational approach was probably far more appropriate.
|
922.127 | Strategy | ASDS::RSMITH | | Mon Jan 08 1990 08:23 | 37 |
| re: note 125
Assumptions:
men are in power
men are the enemy. They prevent us from attaining our goals.
men want to stay that way.
Alternative actions:
1. Print "WELCOME" on your face and lie down in front of a door.
2. Yell and scream when the opportunity arises.
3. Yell and scream in response to a specific case of
discrimination.
Problems with each case:
1. Like you'all said "making nice" all the time does nothing but
make us, women, look like fluff.
2. On the other hand, always or most of the time seeming angry
doesn't do much good either. If you meet someone who is often
angry, most people wonder what THEIR problem is. I'm not saying
that we don't have a right to be angry. I am simply stating a fact
of life. People don't like anger. They can understand anger if
there is a specific reason for being angry but if there is no
obvious and current reason for it, the angry person is assumed to
be just that: an angry person. Angry people are avoided, not
listened to.
This, I believe is the point that some people are trying to make.
3. If, for instance, you don't get promoted and a man with similar
experience does get promoted, now is a great time to fight. Or if
your housemate, SO .. decides that it's your job to do X because
you're a woman, then fight. But don't give all men filthy-dirty
looks because some men stare at your body. These are just
examples. The general principle here is be polite until crossed.
Then fight like hell. I don't think that carrying around a "men
are the enemy" attitude will change to situation.
Rachael
|
922.128 | | PERN::SAISI | | Mon Jan 08 1990 09:09 | 6 |
| example of misogyny...
I was parked at a convenience store Saturday and noticed that
the car next to me had a bound and gagged Barbie doll hanging down
from the rear view mirror. Maybe the person was advertising their
sexual proclivities, but it gave me the creeps.
Linda
|
922.129 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Death by Misadventure- a case of overkill | Mon Jan 08 1990 09:34 | 11 |
| re: -1
I knew this woman who had a GI Joe doll that had the head ripped off it. She
attached it to her dashboard, and put a sign on it that said "The Perfect Man."
I thought it was funny.
To me, that situation was analogous to "barbie in bondage." The difference in
our reactions to the situations may well be a reflection of the effects of
misogyny on each of us.
The Doctah
|
922.130 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Mon Jan 08 1990 14:15 | 117 |
| ASDS::RSMITH
> 2. On the other hand, always or most of the time seeming angry
> doesn't do much good either.
I have a bit of a problem with this one since there's nothing to indicate that
women expressing anger here are angry always or most of the time. This is
a vague stereotype many people have of feminists - that they're angry *all
the time*. If a woman *ever* expresses anger, others often assume she is
humorless and/or *always* angry. I think this belief stems from the miso-
gynistic attitude that women are generally mentally scattered and unfocused.
So when they express anger, it is often assumed to be characteristically
vauge and general and, in her emotionally unfocused rage, unwittingly
directed at the innocent. This is pure rubbish.
But if you don't like hearing women's anger, you can play on this accepted
stereotype and find lots of sympathy from many people, (men and women), that
you are the innocent victim of and a mere sounding board for dour, humorless,
pedantic feminists who are just "angry all the time" and/or "at all men".
It's been done many, many times in life and in notes. It's being suggested
right here with the above comment.
> ... but if there is no obvious and current reason for it, the angry person
>is assumed to be just that: an angry person.
One of the hoops women are tossed to jump through in this issue centers
around this word "obvious". If the reasons for women's anger aren't
"obvious" to men, then it can be assumed that women are just angry people
and brushed off. So women are often challenged not to just state their
reasons, (because they could do so much too easily), but to make them
obvious to men. It's a common game where the next play is to discount
every effort at compliance with a mere, "I still don't get it", (when they
do), or, "I don't see it that way", (because they don't want to), or the
biggie, "Your experience is unique", (I understand you but you've just been
unlucky). And that ends the discussion nicely. Her complaints, her
reasons, all the logic in the world are irrelevant because she has failed
to "make it obvious" to her male audience.
Forcing a woman to try to make a man admit something he can simply refuse to
admit to is a nasty little game and a deliberate exercise in futility. I
believe the reasons women are angry ARE obvious, even to men. Few men in
their right minds would live under the restrictions and judgements they
routinely expect women to accept good-naturedly. Few would welcome the op-
portunity to trade places with a woman. They know. The reasons for female
anger are obvious. But to begin negotiations, both sides need to admit to a
problem. So by simply refusing to admit to anything, you can stop all
further discussion. The best tactic is to just assume women's anger
is just vague and unfocused fist-shaking unless they can find the key to
making men in power admit they understand, which they simply don't ever
have to, no matter what. And this is the tactic responsible for the
continued comeback kinds of notes written by women who try to get the
admission, fail, as of course they will, and come back with another
scenario. If a woman does this too many times, (the man of course can
play, "I don't see it" as often as he likes), everyone reading it assumes
she's really digging in, really playing hardball, really being nasty
- another feminist who's angry "all the time" and "at all men". What
began as cool logic has turned into frustrated anger by a male consciously
or unconsciously playing this game of "convince me".
People assumed to be strong and tough don't generally have to prove it.
People assumed to be scattered and fluffy will have to show outrageous
levels of strength and toughness. Women who show outrageous levels of
strength and toughness are thought to be "angry feminists", vague and
scattered anyway. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
> I don't think that carrying around a "men are the enemy" attitude will
> change to situation.
I don't know. A "women are the enemy" attitude helped changed society around
toward patriarchies quite well. See the topic "Quotable Sexists" for the
historic attitudes towards women that helped shape patriarchies and solidify
male power. Since women were initially revered and awed for their child-
bearing capacities, for women in modern societies to be seen as "lesser"
than men, a woman-as-enemy attitude had to prevail among the men at some
point during society-forming. We weren't taught what men were taugh
so that we would be knowledgeable voters, we were simply denied the
right to vote.
And for patriarchies to continue, so must this attitude though now, since
woman-as-enemy is already validated and self-supporting via the various
societal rules and traditons, men no longer have to consciously think of
women as actual enemies. They just have to support the status quo,
(do nothing, admit to nothing), which is built on that premise and claim
ignorance of the premise and/or indifference to the benefits accorded them
through it. Both of these defenses are routinely used in womannotes.
It's the "don't blame me" defense and the "I don't like it any more than
you" defense.
To maintain the economic and social disadvantages of women, the establishment
has to see them as some sort of 'danger', some kind of 'enemy'. But no in-
dividual man has to admit to it or can be held responsible. Quite a nifty
little setup. Patriarchy has no open door policy. It is everyman -
and no man in particular.
Two wrongs don't make a right but also don't believe women should be held to
a standard of goodness that men don't. Maybe because men saw women as the
enemy first, before women saw them as the enemy, men feel they deserve to
rule. That's certainly the impression I get when I read words like, 'that
was the past and this is now', or 'two wrongs don't make a right', or
'anger gets you nowhere', and so on. It all worked and continues to work
wonders for men; anger, (the man in Boston who was let off for killing his
wife because he was angry that she cheated on him), the perception of the
other sex as enemy, (as in not leting "them" vote or more recently, drink
at certain bars or go to certain clubs or use certain doors or hold certain
religious positions or get certain jobs), and two wrongs making a right, (as
in allowing the rape of a woman who is dressed a certain way - that one just
worked recently!!).
Aren't we supposed to see this? Are we supposed to be too dense to see what
works and to use it for ourselves? Sort of! We're supposed to be too un-
focused to really see these things for what they are and even if we do, we're
supposed to be too NICE to actually use any of the techniques that work.
Action, competition, challenge and results - these are not accepted parts of
the feminine ideal. And that arbitrary delineation of what should be male
and what should be female intentionally cuts us out of the race right at the
starting gate. No raised voices, no challenges and no meaningful protest
allowed from women. Misogyny.
|
922.131 | | USIV02::CSR209 | Brown_ro, post-holidazed! | Mon Jan 08 1990 14:18 | 7 |
| I recently saw a car driving down the street that had a home-made sign
in the window the said "Ex In Trunk", and a fake leg, complete with
a man's pants, sock, and shoe, dangling out of the back hatch lid...
-roger
|
922.132 | Misogyny - how it might develop | LEZAH::BOBBITT | changes fill my time... | Mon Jan 08 1990 14:41 | 133 |
|
I guess there's kind of been a reason I've been avoiding this topic a
bit. I guess I didn't want to think about it. This response
supplements a few other replies as to why anyone (particularly a woman)
would have misogynystic tendencies. This is difficult to write. But
it's true. I contain a certain amount of misogyny (well, actually,
it's a kind of fear-of-femininity combined with a twisted form of
elitism). Here's how I think it came about. Please don't debate
this...I'm tempted to delete it before even posting it...it's very hard
to share innermost thoughts...
When I was young, I felt I was criticized a good deal and felt
unpraised (and unpraiseworthy). I became a tomboy, and learned early
on that for some strange reason the things boys did seemed cooler, and
more interesting, and often more valuable (fixing things, doing math,
going places and trying things for themselves) than what other girls
did. So I hung out with the boys. And everything was cool. I didn't
really miss the girls.
Then I went to middle school. The boys still seemed cooler than the
girls, but society seemed to think I should be friends with girls
instead of boys, so I tried. They turned their pert little noses up at
me and found me socially unacceptable. Yet, since it was very outre'
to be friends with the boys, I was friends with other female social
outcasts like myself. It was okay, but I missed the boys.
I went to junior high. I flattered, persuaded, and cajoled my way into
whatever circle of females was cool. I felt twofaced. I didn't like
having to say and do certain things to be with them - I didn't like
having to be somebody I wasn't to be acceptable. Why were girls like
that? Boys didn't make me do that, but it still wasn't cool to be
friends with boys, so I stayed mildly unhappily on the fringes of the
girls groups. I never did (and still don't) have the strength or
self-esteem to say "the #uck with it, I'll do what I want", or "I don't
need anybody to be okay"...
I went to high school. A technical high school, where the ratio was
10:1 (M:F) in the school and 50:1 in my major (electronics). The girls in
high school were primarily cosmetology, nursing, and childcare majors.
The cosmetology majors were interested primarily in their looks, and in
who laid who, and in gossip, and in getting a man. These girls were
interested in themselves and their clothes and their dates. I was
interested in none of these. I made friends with the guys, who didn't
make you change how you were in order to be their friend. Granted, in
order to identify myself with the men (and probably to signal myself as
"not-fluffy-female"), I wore sneakers and jeans and flannel shirts and
swore a lot. I excelled scholastically (which was not terribly
difficult at a tech school). I hung out with guys, I majored in an
all-male shop (not because it was all-male, but because electronics
fascinated me, and I actually enjoyed cosmetology too, but the thought
of spending 4 years in that shop with those girls made me want to vomit
- they seemed so shallow and their priorities seemed totally alien to
me).
I began (as did the males in my shop, and elsewhere in the school) to
look down on the cutesy females. They seemed mere wisps as far as
mentality went (although I'm sure that could have been because they
downplayed it to fit in with all THEIR female peers - they played the
game better than I), and they were totally catty to each other. So I
figured "why bother"? There were some women, strong women, proud
women, thoughtful women, that I really looked up to and these were the
female friendships I sought, but a majority of the women didn't give me
a second glance, nor I them.
Now through this I was very painfully aware of being not-male, and in
my mind since females seemed to be so very much the antithesis of what
I felt I was, I got very down on myself at this point. I felt cursed,
and pained, by the fact that I was inherently flawed in my creation. I
didn't like MYSELF because I didn't like what the women around me had
become, and I feared the same was somehow, to some degree, in store for
me. I buried my femininity, and worked to be as non-feminine as
possible. I subconsciously put on weight (i.e. I didn't stuff myself
with "hey I'll get fat so men won't think I'm a fluffy female" in mind)
so I was less-femalely-attractive. I made derogatory remarks about
other females, joking along with the guys (subconsciously at my own
expense).
I went to college, where the ratio was 7:1 (M:F) in the school, and
12:1 in my major. The women at college were very SMART, but many of
them still seemed eager to make me jump through repersonification hoops
to be their friend. The sororities seemed clique-y, and I really didn't
think they'd ever like me as me so I didn't bother with them. I did
find a few women (mostly outcasts from the past, like myself) with whom
I became good friends, but my friends were mostly male, and I liked it
that way. They didn't play silly head games and didn't try to make you
into something you weren't. They were very take-it-or-leave-it, very
easygoing, pretty honest in their friendships. A majority of the women
either seemed VERY smug with themselves, or very sure of themselves as
man-bait, or they seemed to be workaholics because they were driven by
their parents, or future income, or they were even MORE down-on-women
than I was. My few-but-fantastic female friends were none of these
things, and I saw them playing very few of other people's games, and
admired them for it.
There were parts of myself I hated and cursed as weak, often the softer
female parts that had been buried for so long and refused to remain
buried. I feared if I let them come forth all my strength would erode
and they would overtake me, I would become what I hated/feared most. I
gloried in my intelligence, my ability to figure things out. I stood
by my staunchly male friends, and we grew together. I learned lots
from my female friends, few though they were. They were much like
myself, although they seemed more accepting of and comfortable with
their femininity in many cases.
Now I am working in a world where it is 50/50 (a place I haven't been
since junior high - I have not seen an even ratio in the world since I
was in junior high because high school and college (total of 10 very
formative years) were primarily male dominated, being technical
schools. The women here are different from any women I'd met before.
And I try to be more accepting of all the women, in all their ways of
working, and living, and loving.
But inside me there is something that is terrified of being weak, and
terrified of being female, and terrified of being adjudged a mental
lightweight and a stereotypical, fluffy "girl". I am trying to balance
the contrasts. While achieving mentally I am learning that it's okay
to cry and be afraid, while weightlifting and installing
dimmer-switches and fixing stereos I am learning how to dance, while
wearing pants and sneakers I am learning that turtlenecks flatter me
more than flannel shirts, while trying to grow comfortable and resolve
some emotional issues I have about various things in my life I'm trying
to lose weight and NOT be terrified that I look female.
I do not dislike any woman more than I dislike myself (lord that's hard
to say, and probably not as bad as it sounds). The problem with female
misogynysts is it cuts both ways, inside and out. Since getting to DEC
I have grown and learned and increased my understanding a thousandfold
of the wonderful women that are here. It helps me hope I will
reintegrate my femininity fully, and accept myself as something more
positive than I could ever have hoped.
-Jody
|
922.133 | Misogyny vs. sexism | TLE::D_CARROLL | Who am I to disagree? | Mon Jan 08 1990 15:01 | 41 |
| Some thoughts on misogyny unrelated to the replies up to this point...
It seems that a lot of people equate misogyny and sexism. Many people say
things like "She didn't get promoted because she's female - blatant misogyny." I
don't think the two are the s ame. They go hand in hand, but are not
synonymous, and have to be dealt with differently.
Misogyny is a from-the-gut hatred or dislike of women. It is very irrational
and very hard to combat on an individual basis, and probably the best approach
is to change the society that fosters misogyny. (Which is not to say that
misogyny can't be changed on an indivual level, or that society is the sole
cause.)
Sexism is discriminating against women, regardless of personal feelings for
them. This I think it much easier to attack through individuals - through
education, and perhaps legislation, to prevent intances of sexism. (Which is not
to say that a change in societal attitudes won't effect sexism or that sexism
isn't a product of societal influences.)
The two, of course, promote one another, and a society without one would
probably be without the other, so combatting one *is* combatting the other. But
they aren't the same.
As an example, a have a male aquaintence who is defintely not a misogynist, yet
very sexist. He doesn't hate women, doesn't "fear" them. He just doesn't want
them to gain power, because it hurts him personally. He wants to have power
over as many people as possible, and by nature of his maleness he knows he has a
large amount of power of women as a whole. And he likes it and wants to keep it
that way. He doesn't think women are *bad*, or deserve to be subjugated, or
anything like that, he just see's the situation as being advantageous to
himself, so he fights to keep it the way it is. (I think he is unusual...I think
it is rare to find an individual who is either misogynistic or sexist but not
some of both.)
At any rate, to tie this in with the discussion, as to whether it is best to go
about achieving equality through legistlation or through making men "accept and
like" us, I think both are important. The formerl is primarly important to
combatting sexism, the latter against misogyny. And we won't get rid of one
till we can get rid of the other.
D!
|
922.134 | | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Mon Jan 08 1990 15:59 | 35 |
| RE: .132 Jody.
Thanks for sharing your experiences with us. I found it very
interesting and moving. I am glad that you are working it out. I
think it has been very hard to challenge gender roles and it is my
hope and belief that they are softening a bit. As a boy who liked
both girl stuff and boy stuff (and still does) I can relate.
RE: Misogyny and where does it come from.
Good question. Where does all bigotry come from? I guess you could
point to the first level reasons, it is taught, it is one group
wanting a physical/sexual/economic advantage over another. But where
do these things come from? I don't beleive it is primarily a physical
size thing since there are examples of non-sexist societies and other
forms of bigotry are not size related.
I have to think that at the most basic level, the root cause is a
non-awareness of the connectedness of all things. When under this the
illusion of a permanent, separate self, greed, ignorance, and hatred
arise as the insecurity of this separate self causes a desire to fluff
itself up by taking various advantages over other "groups" that the
mind differentiates. When the basic interconnectness is seen, how can
you ever have or want an advantage over someone else?
How do we fix it? I think there are multiple levels. Working on
ourselves (which is the not really different than working on everyone
else), spiritual, political, raising our children differently,
standing up for what we beleive in (hopefully from a position where
there is space for the other person or group to change). I think how
each of choses to make a difference is something each of us
must answer this question for ourselves and I don't think there is one
right answer.
john
|
922.135 | Quite a note | CADSE::ARMSTRONG | | Mon Jan 08 1990 16:11 | 8 |
| re: <<< Note 922.132 by LEZAH::BOBBITT "changes fill my time..." >>>
Lord, Jody, you've said a mouthful. I felt much of what you say
and I'm a guy. Also now a dad of 3 little girls. I wish I knew
how to help them avoid seeing 'getting a man' as their major
goal in life. I doubt I can have much impact against the tides
of society.
bob
|
922.136 | thanks, Jody | RAINBO::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Mon Jan 08 1990 16:19 | 9 |
| re: 922.132
I'm glad you had the courage to post this, Jody. I can very strongly
relate it to my own life and I'm sure there are lots of other women here
who can, too. Thank you!!
I also want to commend the honesty and courage that others are showing
in this topic -- I think it's one of the most important conversations
we've had in a long time.
|
922.137 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A glint of steel and a flash of light | Mon Jan 08 1990 16:20 | 5 |
| Jody-
Nice note! Thanks for the insightful reply.
The Doctah
|
922.138 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon Jan 08 1990 19:23 | 42 |
| Re: .135
>I wish I knew how to help them avoid seeing 'getting a man' as their
>major goal in life.
I managed to avoid that, I'm not entirely sure how, but I never grew up
thinking about marriage. Part of it had to do with family tradition on
my mother's side that women be able to provide for themselves. My
grandmother was a physical therapist, my mother was a physical
therapist. For a while there I thought it was incumbent upon me to be
a physical therapist (tradition, you know).
I, too, find that I'm more in the company of males than females. I was
generally not part of a social group in school, having grown up with my
nose in a book. I find that I despised the 'typical' teenager even
when I was a teen myself. I think most of that was directed at girls
because of the whole makeup-and-fashion thing -- boys didn't really do
that. Still, a lot of it was based on an exaggerated sense of
intellectual superiority, so I didn't exactly approve of teenage boys a
lot. They tended to do things like wreck their trucks over the weekend
with amazing regularity.
High school did something good for me. As it turned out, about four or
five of the cheerleaders for my class were in my honors English
classes. At least two of them were in my advanced math classes. Here
we had females who were attractive, popular and intelligent. Not as
intelligent as me, of course ..., but by no means dummies. Also, I
knew that I was getting pretty arrogant and I slapped myself around
about it. The older I get, the less superior I feel, which will be
fine up to a point ....
As far as angry feminists go, I'm not surprised to find people
believing it. I don't think feminists are always angry, although I'm
sure some are, just as some men are always angry at the world.
However, I know there are a number of women in this file who are almost
always angry *when they note here.* Their notes are almost always
expressing anger. People's perceptions depend on what they see. No
doubt there are some men who never particularly notice women unless
women draw their attention by doing something as "drastic" as getting
angry. Unfortunately, people can tolerate exposure to high emotion for
only so long. This is one reason why anger/confrontation is becoming
less effective.
|
922.139 | | CRONIC::SCHULER | He's NOT pining, he's passed on! | Mon Jan 08 1990 19:28 | 29 |
| I've followed this conference for a long time but have never replied
before. Now, after finding out one of the most articulate, intelligent
noters I've ever read is leaving, and after having been deeply moved
by many of the notes in this string (which I wound up reading from
start to finish in one sitting) I feel compelled to post something...
I had attempted in another conference to start a similar discussion
(re: .0) Unfortunately it went nowhere, I wish I *really* knew why. In
any event what I've found here has been extremely informative and, also,
somewhat depressing. The more I learn about feminism and the past and
present treatment and status of women, the more discouraged I become.
In my own fairly enlightened circle of friends (and within myself as
well) there needs to be a significant change in attitude before equality
for women will be *truly accepted*, even though most of these people (and
myself) believe it should be a reality in law and action.
All I can say is that the supposedly "strident", "angry", "aggressive",
and/or "mean-spritied" women who note in this conference (people such as
Catherine and Sandy, Suzanne and Nancy, Peggy, Liesl, and on and
on...) are probably doing a lot more good than they may realize. I
truly hope that their detractors one day come to realize this and learn
as well.
I doubt I will reply here often (or even again), but this is certainly
one of the most incredible collections of humanity I've ever
encountered...
/Greg
|
922.140 | If you only knew | SSDEVO::GALLUP | six months in a leaky boat | Mon Jan 08 1990 22:01 | 37 |
| > RE: .138 by ACESMK::CHELSEA
> High school did something good for me. As it turned out, about four or
> five of the cheerleaders for my class were in my honors English
> classes. At least two of them were in my advanced math classes. Here
> we had females who were attractive, popular and intelligent. Not as
> intelligent as me, of course ..., but by no means dummies.
Unfortunately, I've been there.....and the 'smart'
cheerleaders are the one that are left out of every group.
The pop crowd thinks you're a brain and the brain crowd
thinks you're a pop.
I graduated fifth in my class (out of 453) and I STILL was
treated by the other femme brains like I "wasn't as smart as them"
and the other cheerleaders NEVER asked to me do anything with
them.
Consequently.......I found my acceptance with the guys who
accepted me at face value. Only *one* femme friend
throughout high school and she was in the same position I was
in (except she was a PomPon girl). Male friends? Too many
to count......
Yes, I'd have to say that these femme attitudes did quite a
bit to mold me into the twisted person I am today....like
Jody, it's hard to learn that I CAN have friendships with
women...that I don't have to resent them all the time, but
I'm learning......
and I know that accusations and anger is not the way to
accepting/loving myself.
kath
|
922.141 | But he's not a *really* bad murderer, he just... | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Tue Jan 09 1990 08:08 | 36 |
| Last night on CNN's Crossfire, Buchanon and Kinsey were debating
the issue of how to punish violent criminals.
In distinguishing the difference between the *really* violent,
incorrigible murderers that need to be locked away from society,
Pat Buchanon started with something like, "Well, if a guy just
kills his wife..." as an example of the "other" type of violent
criminal. I thought I might have heard incorrectly.
But a few moments later, Kinsey chimed in with a similar
statement which was another attempt to distinguish between the
"real" violent criminals and the ones that just need to have
their hands slapped when he started with, "Well, if a man just
blows up his wife..."
Funny, it was one of the rare times when I heard the conservative
Buchanon and the liberal Kinsey agree on anything.
Also ironic was that the newsbroadcast earlier concerned the
sentencing of the man who
WARNING: DESCRIPTION OF GRAPHIC VIOLENCE AHEAD
murdered his wife and put her body through a wood chipper.
Nah, he doesn't need to be punished *really* severely; after all,
he just murdered his wife.
What is this a result of - misogyny, sexism, or is it just a
general statement on the value of women/wives ?
nancy b.
|
922.142 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Jan 09 1990 08:23 | 6 |
| re .141, "just killing your wife..."
I dunno, Nancy. For what it's worth, I noticed that in this past
Sunday's (ever more notorious) Boston Globe, the front-page articles
on Charles Stuart's murder of his wife were all continued in the Sports
section...
|
922.143 | take it one step further, and ... | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Tue Jan 09 1990 11:30 | 11 |
|
re: .142 (Dorian Kottler)
> in this past Sunday's (ever more notorious) Boston Globe, the
> front-page articles on Charles Stuart's murder of his wife were
> all continued in the Sports section...
Darn, if they had pictures as well, it could be "Sports Illustrated".
nancy b.
|
922.144 | how the "beauty myth" keeps women "other" | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Jan 09 1990 12:47 | 81 |
|
I thought this passage from *Beauty Bound*, by psychologist Rita Freedman,
might be pertinent here. In her book Freedman analyzes the unequal
standards of beauty as applied to women and men, how and why our culture
goes about imprisoning women in impossible expectations of beauty and what
this does to women:
"Never quite what she should be, woman must be revalued. She is, after all,
needed for the very life-giving functions that make her so profane.
Although assigned a separate and unequal place in society--generally
excluded from the world of politics and power--woman cannot be exiled too
far or too long. In the end, she is needed to do the work of nature.
Therefore, she must be drawn back into man's world for mating and
mothering, for lunch and laundry. Beauty confers added value on the
devalued sex. It makes woman worthy of joining man's life, of sharing his
bed, bearing his children, and wearing his name....
"Beauty clearly distinguishes woman as different, as a member of the other
half of the community. A bride senses that idealized love is ephemeral;
that it is only a matter of time before she will be discovered as just
another woman. Similarly, beauty is only a temporary equalizer. Ultimately,
it exposes the fair sex once again as the other sex. For the symbols of
contrived beauty--the lacquered nails, the crimson lips, the strawberry-
blond hair--exaggerate gender differences. They elevate woman onto a
pedestal while paradoxically defining her separate role. In lieu of equality,
beauty serves as a kind of prop, or consolation prize. In the end, props
and pedestals make poor equalizers. They cannot substitute for full
personhood.
"The conflicting attitudes that result from contradictory myths are
revealed in a study that found two major types of prejudices in men. One
form of bias stereotyped women as fragile, naive, and pure. Men holding
this attitude placed women on a pedestal and wanted to be chivalrously
protective of them. The second form of bias defined women as emotionally
and intellectually inferior, therefore deserving of subordination. Many men
expressed both these attitudes at once, for in this case contradictory
biases support each other.
"Women internalize the same conflicting attitudes and often feel
confused....
"When myths are conflicting, they portray woman as mysterious and
indefinable. Throughout history people have 'knocked their heads against
the nature of femininity and failed to understand it,' claimed Freud. The
'enigma of woman' remained Freud's great unsolved puzzle, perhaps because
preserving the enigma was essential to preserving his concept of female
deviance. As long as woman remains a faceless enigma, distanced by
difference, she is harder to know but easier to ignore. As long as woman
wears her beauty as a disguise, she can be seen as both more and less than
she really is, more beautiful and less normal. Attempts to discover the
secret essence of femininity will invariably fail, explains de Beauvoir,
because it simply does not exist.
"The myth of woman as the fair sex perpetuates the feminine mystique.
Petticoats and veils, padded bras and packaged bodies, everything that
accentuates difference confirms woman as the 'other.' Recall the scene when
Cinderella arrives at the ball. Even her stepsisters fail to know her, so
blinding is her beauty. Camouflaged as a lovely enigma, she becomes
unrecognizable. Unknown and unknowable, she is all the more desirable. Like
Venus, a goddess of beauty but also a planet wrapped in steamy clouds, her
core is hidden in a romantic mist. Beauty maintains the erotic mystery of a
woman by concealing the human being beneath."
Incidentally, the photographs in this book of different manifestations of
the "beauty mystique" in our culture and others are really compelling.
Included are a Chinese woman's bound foot; an emaciated Karen Carpenter
(the singer) before she died of anorexia nervosa at 32; a group of
three-year-old girls all dressed up for a beauty contest; the fallen Miss
America, Vanessa Williams, who taught us that "the demands of beauty and the
taboos of pornography require a balancing act that often throws women off
balance as admiration turns to exploitation"; the Dallas Cowboys'
cheerleaders kicking us the message that "good-looking girls belong one
step out of bounds, cheering the guys on to victory"; AND...
Georgia O'Keefe, who always just looked like herself, beautiful as herself
-- young and old -- with a lifelong expression of "serene determination"
(could that explain why some people say they think she looked like a man?).
|
922.145 | | FSHQA2::AWASKOM | | Tue Jan 09 1990 14:10 | 17 |
| re .141
I would like to think that the comments about 'just his wife' in
reference to the appropriate punishment for murderers, relates to
a perceptual difference in how much of a threat *to society* the
murderer is. Someone who has killed a random stranger is more
threatening to society as a whole than someone who has killed an
identifiable individual against whom a grudge is held. It is entirely
possible that killers of family members (wives, husbands, children)
have a different pathology than killers of strangers.
This is not to say that *any* kind of killing is 'ok', nor to deny
that it is very unsettling to hear 'just a wife' in this context.
But sometimes there is more than one reason behind a particular
comment.
Alison
|
922.146 | just his dad? | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Tue Jan 09 1990 14:23 | 2 |
| I wonder if they would have been as comfortable saying "just his kids".
Mez
|
922.147 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Tue Jan 09 1990 14:40 | 17 |
| In re: .145 -
> Someone who has killed a random stranger is more threatening to
> society as a whole than someone who has killed an identifiable
> individual against whom a grudge is held.
No, No, or, at least, only in the sense of perception.
Far more people are killed by relatives and friends than by strangers.
When people hear of a stranger-killing, they think: "it could just as
well have been me." When they hear of a spouse killing they think:
"s/he clearly wouldn't have killed me instead; no threat." Instead,
they MIGHT (but rarely do) think: "it might instead have been my spouse
killing me." That would indeed be an uncomfortable association. Yet it
is (in general) the statistically most probable alternative, and
clearly the greatest threat to society in the sense of causing death.
|
922.148 | two possibilities | SA1794::CHARBONND | Mail SPWACY::CHARBONND | Tue Jan 09 1990 14:59 | 16 |
| a) A person who loses his temper with a stranger and kills him
would be more dangerous than one who kills an SO. Why ?
The situation with an SO has a much longer time to build
up to a breaking point. One who loses his temper in a short
time is clearly more of a threat to society.
b) A person who kills an SO is more dangerous than one who
kills a stranger. Why ? Because his loss of temper is so
violent as to overcome his love for that person. One who
loses his temper to such an extent is clearly the greater
threat to society.
hmmm.... a contradiction. Both of these make sense.
Anybody want to refute one or both ?
Dana
|
922.149 | | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Tue Jan 09 1990 15:45 | 14 |
| Copied from a letter in today's Boston Globe (without permission):
"The recent explosion of the Stuart case illustrates in a clear way the
racism, sexism and classism that pervade our society.
From Oct. 23, 1989 to Jan. 4, 1990, we witnessed the ugly face of a
racist society responding to the murder of Carol Stuart. Now we are
witnessing the sexism that allows no mention of men killing their wives
to surface amidst the sensationalism."
I proved her point by thinking, after I read this letter, "Huh? What's
it got to do with wife-killing? ... Oh!"
Nancy
|
922.150 | More on women and anger | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Wed Jan 10 1990 02:07 | 62 |
| Some very enlightening (to me) concepts have been formed in this
topic on the subject of "women and anger". The subject continues
to be discussed in other topics as well.
I recall picking up something at Reading International in Harvard
Square about "women in therapy", which said [paraphrasing]:
--------------------------------------------------------------
- "Depression in woman *almost always* goes hand-in-hand -
- with anger turned against herself." -
--------------------------------------------------------------
The rationale behind that was that there is no real socially
acceptable way for women to express anger. Therefore, women must
compact the anger _inwards_, or channel that anger so that it
manifests itself differently (through chemical dependency,
overeating, and other self-destructive behaviors).
People won't go so far as to say that anger _in and of itself_ is
bad, but, for one reason or another, a woman's expression of it
is always *inappropriate to the situation* at hand.
Even in WomanNotes, it is frequently said that we shouldn't be so
angry here. My reaction to that is: Where in the world is there
a more *appropriate* place (as readily available to me) to
express the anger I feel? Why isn't the anger and resentment
considered the first natural result of being members of a gender
that is looked upon as innately inferior to the other? There
are _lots_ of other places where I can be happy, warm, caring,
and loving (heck, I can just walk downstairs to Steve Mallett's
office and I won't stop laughing for an hour or so afterwards:-).
Kath, a while ago in 896.5 (the topic about "Still trying to
understand" the Montreal massacre) you said something quite
unsettling:
> I have felt backed into a corner like this. I think I know
> the ultimate helplessness feeling and frustration and anger
> that could cause this kind of violent.
> Fortunately, my violence has been directed internally.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
That was said right after describing about how your boyfriend hit
you in anger over his grades, and since then you've mentioned
being raped twice and being involved in a discrimination suit.
Kath, you have a LOT to be angry about.
I see your encouraging other women here to not express anger as
an outgrowth of your own decision to direct it internally.
Be angry, Kath.
Do it here, or in therapy, or wherever you are most comfortable.
Yes, there's the danger that some guy will reject you, or not
send you approving mail messages because of your anger.
We will not. Take the risk.
nancy b.
|
922.151 | grrrr... | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Jan 10 1990 08:18 | 3 |
| re .150 -
Well said!
|
922.152 | huh? wife-killing? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Jan 10 1990 08:26 | 3 |
| re .149 -
You mean there's a dead woman in all this someplace?!
|
922.154 | | CLUSTA::KELTZ | | Wed Jan 10 1990 10:46 | 20 |
| re .150 (Nancy) "people won't go so far as saying anger itself is
bad"
Yeah they will -- at least, that's what my church taught me. Anger
is a "sin", which in my church's definition meant it is EVIL. I was
taught that Anger is a character flaw, another sign of our "sinful
human nature", just another name for Pride. If we were truly
Christians, we would never get angry but would be able to "turn the
other cheek" no matter what anyone did to us or to anyone else. (By
the way, this is a large, mainstream denomination which really can't be
dismissed as inconsequential numbers of the "lunatic fringe".)
And, before anyone else asks the question, they explained Jesus'
behavior of violently "rearranging" the tables in the temple as
"Oh, that's *different*. That was *righteous* anger. We aren't
allowed to have *righteous* anger because we aren't perfect. Only
God can have *righteous* anger and not have it be a sin."
Lovely, huh?
Beth
|
922.155 | Let's be righteous and sinful! | SYSENG::BITTLE | to be psychically milked | Wed Jan 10 1990 12:20 | 16 |
| re: .154 (Beth Keltz)
> And, before anyone else asks the question, they explained Jesus'
> behavior of violently "rearranging" the tables in the temple as
> "Oh, that's *different*. That was *righteous* anger.
Geezums. Where would we be without organized religion? (rhetorical q)
Sinful and angry all the time I s'pose.
> Lovely, huh?
Pretty ugly. That church should be held liable for psychiatric
treatment of it's depressed members.
nancy b.
|
922.156 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | six months in a leaky boat | Wed Jan 10 1990 13:12 | 58 |
|
RE: .150 (Nancy)
Perhaps we have different interpretations of 'internally.'
When I channel my anger, I channel it at the problem at hand. Nothing more,
nothing less. If I am sexually discriminated against by a man, my anger
is channelled toward *that* man, and *that* situation. *Not* internally
into myself. I do *not* stifle that anger, I do *not* feel that I "should not"
be angry.
Instead, I channel that anger AT the specific problem where that anger can
do some good.
Were I to channel my anger at this situation toward the supportive men in my
life, I feel that I would be unjustly accusing them of something some other
man did. For example, I would *not* say, "Men are chauvinist pig b*st*rds!"
because, simply, they are not.
THIS PARTICULAR man *would* be what I would consider to be a chauvinist
pig b*st*rd, and I would have no bones about telling him this. I would have
no bones about directly my fury at him like a ton of bricks.
> I see your encouraging other women here to not express anger as
> an outgrowth of your own decision to direct it internally.
I'm *NOT* encouraging this at all, and after 150 replies, it really saddens
me to see people believing that I am.
In fact, I'm not encouraging anyone to do anything, I've been, all along, simply
stating that *FOR ME* it is so much more effective to channel my anger
*where it belongs* and *toward whom it belongs*.
I find it a detriment to me to direct anger at those that did not incur the
anger.
Hence, I avoid saying things like "Men are ---", "Men really ----", "Women
are treated --- by men." Etc etc etc.
I'd wager to say that not a one of us enjoys being accused of something they
did not do. Why do we do the same to men when we don't enjoy it ourselves?
So, you see, Nancy, I *DO* get angry, I *DO*, also, channel my anger so that
it is effective in my fight for equality. I keep my supporters around me,
not put them on the defense.
What works for me might not work for others. I'm not suggesting that anyone
do what I do. I've only wished all along to state that other women's
agendas work against mine.
Does mine work against theirs? I don't know....to this point no one has
seemed to understand my agenda, so when they do, I would be happy to discuss
how I work against theirs.
kath
|
922.157 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Wed Jan 10 1990 13:46 | 13 |
| re .156 (Kath)
>Hence, I avoid saying things like "Men are ---", "Men really ----", "Women
>are treated --- by men." Etc etc etc.
I agree it's a good thing not to lump *all* of one group
together, because of individual differences.
>I've only wished all along to state that other women's
>agendas work against mine.
I guess that sentiment doesn't apply to *women* though, right?
|
922.158 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | changes fill my time... | Wed Jan 10 1990 13:54 | 26 |
| re: .156
>Instead, I channel that anger AT the specific problem where that anger can
>do some good.
Hey - if anger's going to go anywhere positive - that's the place!
re: .157
>>Hence, I avoid saying things like "Men are ---", "Men really ----", "Women
>>are treated --- by men." Etc etc etc.
>
> I agree it's a good thing not to lump *all* of one group
> together, because of individual differences.
>
>>I've only wished all along to state that other women's
>>agendas work against mine.
>
> I guess that sentiment doesn't apply to *women* though, right?
I think that remark seems unwarranted. "other women" isn't "all
women". When noting it's important to give the other noters the
benefit of the doubt, if there is any.....
-Jody
|
922.159 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Wed Jan 10 1990 14:05 | 6 |
| re .158:
Well, my apologies if my understanding of "other women" is wrong.
It sure sounded to me like it meant all other women, because there
was specifically *not* a "some" qualifier in from of the "other".
|
922.160 | What are the symptoms of a sick society? | SUPER::EVANS | I'm baa-ack | Wed Jan 10 1990 16:46 | 22 |
| If a man kills 100 women, he is a nut case and is (hopefully) hunted
down by The Authorities.
If 100 men kill 100 women whom they knew, it's not a problem. AFter
all, they knew the women. Therefore, the women must have done something
to deserve being killed.
Men know these things. They understand when a woman is acting
improperly, and as her (ex)spouse/lover, it is their job to protect
society from such dangerous women.
If women were killing men at the rate men are killing women, something
would be done. But then, women don't understand about proper behaviour
and the consequences for not being nice. Besides, it's not their job to
protect society from dangerous men. There *are* no dangerous men; only
misunderstood ones.
I suppose I should note that this reply includes a certain amount of
sarcasm.
--DE
|
922.161 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Wed Jan 10 1990 17:41 | 24 |
| I don't know if this is representative of misogyny or human nature, but
men frequently blame women for "advantages" that women have but did not
choose. What brought this to mind was a juxtaposition of this note and
the note on women in combat, which brings us to our first example.
1. In the Soapbox version of "Women in Combat," a number of notes were
resentful of the fact that women weren't drafted. Someone asked how
come *women* weren't registering for the draft -- like they had a
choice. What august body decided to put the registration into effect?
How many women are seated in that august body?
2. Men blame women for depriving them of child custody during divorce.
In a number of cases, women are automatically granted custody over the
father. Why is this? Probably because men are regarded as
breadwinners and women are regarded as domestic creatures whose duties
involve raising children; child rearing is a "natural" duty of women.
Who decided who was going to be the breadwinner and who would be the
one to stay at home and raise the kids?
[Actually, it's only recently that women have been granted custody by
default. In the past, women had far fewer grounds for divorce than
men, so it was frequently the man divorcing the woman. In those cases,
the grounds were such as to make her an "unfit mother" so the man got
custody automatically.]
|
922.162 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | Got the universe reclining in her hair | Thu Jan 11 1990 00:37 | 17 |
| > <<< Note 922.157 by ULTRA::GUGEL "Adrenaline: my drug of choice" >>>
>>I've only wished all along to state that other women's
>>agendas work against mine.
>
> I guess that sentiment doesn't apply to *women* though, right?
Oops. Thanks for catching that. It should read "I've only
wished all along to state that some other women's agendas
work against mine"
Sorry, after this many late nights working, words start to
blur.
kath
|
922.163 | re .162: thanks, Kath | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Thu Jan 11 1990 10:57 | 0 |
922.164 | misogyny & me | SELL3::JOHNSTON | bord failte | Thu Jan 11 1990 14:48 | 136 |
| What follows is a result of numerous attempts. Some of it will appear
to be at variance with much I have written elsewhere in this
conference. But appearances can be misleading. I will gladly clarify
if asked. This is difficult to write to the desired effect ...
understanding and sharing, rather than recrimination, blame, or sympathy.
Ann
==========
In the Beginning...
-------------------
The origins of my internalised misogyny are not hard to find. My
earliest memories include acceptance of the 'fact' that girls were
lesser beings than boys.
There has never been a time I didn't know that I was a planned and
wanted _son_. I had no name until I was 10 days old because I had
the bad taste to be born a girl. This wasn't hidden from me -- my
parents still tell a cute little story about it at parties. And people
still laugh.
If I had had any doubts, they were all dashed away when I was five and
my younger brother died. At that time I was told that my thriving
existence was a punishment from God. There is no grey area in a
statement like that. Although it was made in an excess of grief, it
has been repeated more than a few times since.
[I believe that my mother's self-hatred is immense -- she wanted _only_
sons and refers to my sister and myself as the 'two losers.' While
she feels pride in our accomplishments, she still harbours shame at
having produced us. At some level she feels that she has failed to
redeem herself by only reproducing herself in like units.]
The bright spot in this sweeping rejection is that it was also made
clear to me that I would never, _could_ never, be a boy; hence, I
never tried to 'be like the boys' to gain approval [_anyone's
approval].
Growing up
----------
My earliest playmates were boys. [There were no little girls in my
neighborhood, and I wasn't bussed out until age 5.] We all knew I
wasn't a boy and mostly ignored it except during snow-writing
exhibitions. I wasn't precisely a tomboy, but I enjoyed myself.
Pictures from that period of my life reveal a very untidy little girl
with scraped knees and fly-away curls wearing absolutely filthy white
pinafores with hand-made lace. [no one ever fussed at me for being
dirty, they just bathed me frequently] I wore DRESSES DAMMIT -- I
found out very early that they are not nearly as confining as
trousers. [no one bothered to tell me that my underwear were 'naughty'
objects so modesty was not a factor]. If the gang didn't want to do
what I wanted to, I was perfectly happy to do my own thing in my own
space.
Then I went to day-school and was exposed to massive doses of other
little girls. At first, I was enchanted. Then I made a fatal error
-- a dressed a Barbie doll in the 'prettiest' dress I could find,
which happened to be a silvery prom dress, and had her climb Pikes
Peak [the coat rack]. Lord help me, but all hell broke loose then.
_Girls_ didn't climb mountains... _girls_ didn't get dirty... _girls_
never allowed anyone to glimpse their undies, but made sure everyone
knew they wore them.
Well, I knew I wasn't a boy, couldn't be a boy, didn't _want_ to be a
boy. [and the boys had never minded] Now it would seem that as a
girl I was a _very_ flawed specimen. [and girls seemed to mind
terribly] In light of the ridicule I suffered at the hands of little
girls [and their mothers], I really didn't think much of them as a
class of human being.
Unfortunately, once there were girls around the boys seemed to expect
me to play with the girls -- you know, the ones who thought I was pond
scum personified. And something snapped.
_I_ decided that I was not pond scum or lesser or evil. I decided
that I was pretty and special and gifted. I decided that I was going
to be myself.
By a strange twist of fate, it was Catholic convent schools that
proved to be the saving of my sanity. Once I was in an all female
environment, where the watching eyes and helping hands of men and boys
were absent, I was able to come to terms with my differences from
other girls. Women _did_ climb on things and change tires and cook
and clean and sew and ... and most girls were not as anxious to
enforce, or live out, strict conformity. We found our own levels and
gifts -- we didn't have to be either 'ladies' _or_ 'tomboys'. Oh, I
know that many will argue that that was not the intent and that they
are probably right. But such was its effect upon me.
Then I went to college. Because, even in 1971, young women were a bit
of an oddity in civil engineering I was treated both as a freak and a
treasure -- frequently by the same people. One of the benefits of
being one of 500 women in a total student population of 17,000 is that
very few women see each other as any great threat -- there's plenty of
male attention to go around. Another is that, being such a valuable
commodity, you don't find yourself tinkering for acceptance ... that
came later.
My best friend in college was a man -- most of my friends were. But
as time went by I came to value women more, because I was encountering
them as individuals and not as a class. I found vast diversity in our
experiences, but strong threads of commonality. I saw nothing to hate
in women [even if were were still many that I disliked] and little to
hate in myself.
And now ...
-------
So, I began first by having doubts about my own validity as a person
and then having an extreme adverse reaction to others of my gender
based upon experiential input. I was in a class of the 'not we.'
I am still not free of the effects of my early indoctrination. I
still find myself saying and thinking dumb things about 'women' rather
than '<name>' when I see a women do something I have no patience with.
Yes, on some level I attribute 'gender blame' to women, but not to
men. [and, oh yes, there's tons of stuff I blame [a] man for doing].
This perpetuates misogyny in me. I am aware and I am actively trying
to change, but it takes time.
I cringe inside when someone says, 'too bad the first child couldn't
have been a boy' or 'I just hope this first one's a boy' or 'we'll
keep trying until we have a boy' because I hear in this '_real_
children are boys; but once you've bagged one, girls can be OK too.'
I view this as indoctrinating misogyny in both sexes from the cradle.
I do not subscribe to the notion that I as a woman can call down hatred
upon all women by my actions. I believe that we perpetuate hatred
against women by our actions against women and against ourselves in
perpetuating _self_hatred or contempt.
Ann
|
922.165 | Hugs from across the oceans | GIDDAY::WALES | David from Down-under | Thu Jan 11 1990 16:56 | 19 |
| G,Day,
Re: .164
Ann, that would have to one of the saddest stories I've read. I can't
believe that this sort of thing happens in America. I know it happens
in a lot of poor countries (to the point of killing off the girls!!)
mainly to ensure that the family name does not become extinct. Now
that's a pretty poor excuse but at least it is an excuse. From what
you have written it seems like your parents, your mum (mom?) in
particular, had no excuse at all for what she did.
I don't know how you get along with your folks now but if that sort of
attitude persists from them today then if it were me I don't think I
would be seeing too much of them at all.
David.
|
922.166 | thanks, but [very gently]... | SELL3::JOHNSTON | bord failte | Thu Jan 11 1990 18:04 | 33 |
| re. David [and to those who have sent mail]
Thanks for the hugs. They never come amiss.
Apparently, much that I edited out should have been left in. I was not
an unhappy child or an unloved one, merely an undesired outcome. I was
given all the best [to do less would have been dishonorable] and there
were many, MANY special people that loved me -- my grandparents spring
to mind and one very special aunt as well as numerous cousins, both
here and back in Ireland, Scotland, & Wales, not to mention the
housekeeper who told me I was an angel sent straight from heaven...I
didn't but _that_ either.
To my mind the tragedy lies not so much in what happened to me as it
does in the fact that there are people who actually _laugh_ when they
here a story of how the doctor finally said, 'Why doesn't that Scots
lady name the thing Annie Laurie and be done with it?!' [my name is
Annie-Luise, for my two grandmothers Annie Stewart & Luise-Siobhan
McGarra].
I mean, what's so darned funny about _anyone_ wanting a son so bad that
for nine entire months a name for a daughter _never_came_up!!? It's
not really _me_ I'm talking about here.
Am I making any sense? Should I try again?
Ann
[p.s. as for my parents, I am not welcome in their home. you see I
married a software engineer, I work outside the home, I have no
children, and -- most damning of all -- I'm a politically active
feminist liberal type ... gee, except for the children this describes
my aunt mentioned above ...]
|
922.167 | | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Fri Jan 12 1990 09:13 | 3 |
| Thanks *SO* much, Ann for your sharing!!
Nancy
|