T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
180.1 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | fantasia | Wed Jun 06 1990 11:22 | 6 |
| libraries may carry the magazine (many have regular subscriptions)....
you could glance there
-Jody
|
180.2 | Stupendious Idea | POBOX::SCHWARTZINGE | I'd Rather Be Shopping | Wed Jun 06 1990 11:33 | 10 |
| Thanks Jody, that's a stupendious idea!
I hope that there are some women out there who have read it, because it
has made some every interesting conversations on the talk shows. Also,
many women who called in said they subscribe to Equire because of the
articles (intelligent) they publish about women....guess they blew it
this time!
"j"
|
180.3 | it stinks | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Jun 06 1990 14:24 | 11 |
|
I glanced at during lunch and all I can say is, regarding my recent remarks
in the porn string on How the Media Use Women's Bodies for Patriarchal
Purposes, I rest my case...
I'd say the patr. has sunk to a new low. (Gee, I wonder, could it possibly
be getting desperate?)
;-)
D.
|
180.4 | How about an example? | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Wed Jun 06 1990 14:35 | 5 |
| Can someone give me a *hint* as to what the issue is about and what is
degrading about it? Is it the advertising, or pictures, or articles about
women's inherent infereriority or what?
D!
|
180.5 | | FDCV01::ROSS | | Wed Jun 06 1990 14:41 | 6 |
| D!, maybe it's just a rumor. :-)
BTW, in today's Globe, there's an Op-Ed article on Cosmo's selection
of Madonna for its 25th Anniversary cover issue.
Alan
|
180.6 | think this was it | SKYLRK::OLSON | Partner in the Almaden Train Wreck! | Wed Jun 06 1990 14:46 | 10 |
| D!, I was in the library magazine section a few days ago and if
I remember correctly, the June Esquire is about "The Wife".
Specifically, the wives of wealthy executive male Esquire
readers. Page after page, feature after feature of what their
sports are, what their clothes are, what charities they support,
where they vacation, how they entertain, etc, etc. I didn't
see the term "trophy wives" used but that was my impression of
the entire issue.
DougO
|
180.7 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Jun 06 1990 15:01 | 4 |
|
Cover shows woman divided into four quadrants, normal attire and
exposed bra on top, apron and schematic diagram of internal plumbing on
bottom...it's like that.
|
180.8 | kidding, folks | LEZAH::BOBBITT | fantasia | Wed Jun 06 1990 15:06 | 9 |
| What, they didn't show a cutaway of the mouth area to show the glass
therein?
And I suppose the legs are shaven under the apron....*sigh*
;)
-Jody
|
180.9 | Don't Buy It, Rent It! | POBOX::SCHWARTZINGE | I'd Rather Be Shopping | Wed Jun 06 1990 15:14 | 16 |
| Also, from what I heard, there is a "Doris Day" type women cleaning the
toilets with rubber gloves and saying I use comet, etc. Also from the
talk shows, it shows women as possessions, not persons.
"The 12 virtues of being a good wife, why can't she be more like a boy
scout" is the name of one article.
I just phoned my library, and since it is the most current issue you
can't check them out, but seeing as how I have some "pull" the
Children's Librarian will drop it off at my house to nite and I will
drop it back in the AM before I go to work! Just by her naming some of
the names of some of the articles, I know I'll be mad after I read it!
I know this Chicago woman doesn't like it at all!
"j"
|
180.10 | This may be *just* what we need! | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Wed Jun 06 1990 15:59 | 14 |
| Sooner or later, women are going to end up boycotting marriage, (it's
already starting), and the architects of this sick society will have no
one to blame but themselves. As soon as women as a group believe they
can survive economically on their own, even with children, they'll
begin to wonder why in hell they choose to legally bind themselves to
people who think so little of them. I hope this issue IS as incendiary
as it sounds. I can't wait to read it. In their desperate quest to keep
us beholden to them, (and keep us scornful and unsure of womanhood), men
are driving us away NOT from each other, (as women have traditionally
responded), but from them.
This may be THE catalyzing issue - a real eye-opener. Dig your graves.
The pen may be mightier than even the phallus.
|
180.11 | *ell hath no furry like... | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Wed Jun 06 1990 16:23 | 5 |
| re .10
Aw, you're just jealous :^)
fred();
|
180.12 | a reality dose | GIAMEM::MACKINNON | ProChoice is a form of democracy | Wed Jun 06 1990 16:40 | 56 |
|
re -1
"As soon as women as a group believe they can survive economically on
their own, even with children, they'll begin to wonder why in hell
they choose to legally bind themselves to people who think so
little of them."
I don't get this statement at all. None of the women I associate
with feel they NEED men to live. In fact, I know several single-
mothers-by-choice who are doing quite well. All of the women in
my family have succeeded without the help of a man. My Mom married
and alcholic who was removed from the house and later died. My
Nana married a career Navy man who was hardly ever home. Two out
of the three aunts hold very high corporate positions, one is a
vice president of a major bank in Boston. I am a successful engineer
who is involved with a man. We are talking about marriage, but
we are approaching it as a business deal. Our reason to get married
is because we love each other, not because I need him to live or
vice versa.
We are not looking at marriage as a free ride. We both know each
of us will have to work fulltime to support "us". I have accepted
the fact that I will not be able to be a stay at home mom due
mainly to financial reasons. I have already shattered the myths
of marriage I was brought up to seek. It is a partnership where
one person may have the upperhand one day and the next the situation
is reversed. But in no means is it taken as a free ride by either of
us.
I think that the mothers of today have got to stop telling their
little girls to grow up and find the knight on a white horse
because they just do not exist. They should prepare their
girls to believe in themselves as people and instill in them
a strong self confidence that they will be able to achieve
whatever goals they seek. I was raised to be a very self-reliant
individual who was always told I can be whatever I want as long
as I work hard to get there. However, I was also raised to
find a man to marry and take care of me. This part has got
to stop.
The world has changed so much since our moms were kids. Most
women today are forced due to economic reasons to work. The
days are gone when one paycheck can support an entire family.
Expose the children today to what it really is like to be married.
Stop telling them it is all peaches and cream because it isn't.
It is hard work maintaining a good marriage, and anyone who
thinks otherwise is just fooling themselves.
I get so angry when I keep hearing that women today still
believe they need a man to support them. Frankly, I think
it is pure bs.
Michele
|
180.13 | rock breaks scissors, paper covers rock, scissors cut paper | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Wed Jun 06 1990 16:46 | 24 |
|
Re: .10:
Why would this be an issue to men on anything other than an ego level,
unless they want children (and close contact with them)? I mean, why
would the average man, with his statistically higher salary, choose to
bind himself to someone who will/may be economically dependent (insert
appropriate qualifiers here, to acknowledge that income disparity that
is statistical, not universal, and the fact that a higher salary leads
to the ability to maintain a higher standard of living, but not the
necessity to do so), and perhaps leave him in the lurch at some point
thereafter, taking the kids, house, and a large chunk of his future
salary? In other words, why aren't *men* boycotting marriage already?
If you're saying that the women would refuse to marry men, but still
seek out their company, companionship, and help in raising children
(which the woman must support, since legally they may not be his),
I'd think that at least some of the 'architects of this society' would
be patting themselves on the back for it.
Isn't this a lot of what "the feminization of poverty" is all about?
Sharon
|
180.14 | | CADSE::MACKIN | It has our data and won't give it back! | Wed Jun 06 1990 17:22 | 18 |
| Although I haven't read the Esquire article, I've got no problem
believing its every bit as offensive as described here. But I don't
see any movement whatsoever on women's part to boycott marriage, as
Sandy suggests will start happening "sooner or later."
Actually, that statement reminded me of other feminist stands which
only the radical/separatist feminists believe and the rest, dare I say
overwhelming majority, of the women couldn't care a bit about. This is
strictly my opinion; I have no data to back it up one way or another.
And given the current state of affairs between men and women, with
women going back to husbands who beat them or denigrate them etc., I
can't even imagine the other 99+% of women taking any action whatsoever
based on media presentations of women such as the Esquire article.
After all, sometimes having something there is better than nothing at
all...
Jim
|
180.15 | Wives work very hard, it is not a demeaning job! | SYSTMX::HACHE | Life is like an analogy | Wed Jun 06 1990 17:59 | 17 |
|
slavery is a bad thing
child abuse is a bad thing
nuclear war is a bad thing
wanting to be a housewife, work for charities etc. is not a bad thing
writing about women who do so is not a bad thing
unless the article has particularly repressive things to say about
women in general, an article profiling wives of executive men who
choose not to be high-powered executive women themselves is not a
bad thing.
Taking away people's choice about what they want to do with their
lives is a bad thing!
dm
|
180.16 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | another day in paradise | Wed Jun 06 1990 18:02 | 21 |
| Well, I took quite a glance at the magazine at The Paper Store here
in Maynard at lunch today, without buying it. But, I think I may
buy it. Parts of it looked very humorous to me, and I can always
use a good laugh. There was one section that described 4 horrendous
sounding wives, a full page each with amusing photo, and the caption
said, "If you still believe in these stereotypes, you deserve to
be stuck with one." I thought that was pretty funny myself. Another
section had 4 colored full page photos of supposed couples in their
wedding attire. One humorous one, that made me think of some Dec
folks, showed a short, nerdy looking guy marrying a tall, thin,
pretty blonde, and the caption read, "Revenge of the Nerd." Another
one depicted an older man with a younger woman and advised him how
to dress for the wedding so no one would confuse him with the father
of the bride instead of the groom. Still another, my personal
favorite, showed an older woman with a gorgeous much younger hunk,
in wedding attire. There may be some offensive stuff in the issue,
maybe a lot, but I got the impression at least some of it was meant
as humor.
Lorna
|
180.17 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Wed Jun 06 1990 18:15 | 84 |
| Well I'm no "separatist", (I like guys a lot!), but I boycotted marriage
a long time ago. Ask a few high school and college females what they
think about marriage.
re .12 GIAMEM::MACKINNON
> None of the women I associate with feel they NEED men to live.
> All of the women in my family have succeeded without the help of a man.
> Two out of the three aunts hold very high corporate positions, one is a
> vice president of a major bank in Boston. I am a successful engineer
> I was raised to be a very self-reliant individual who was always told I
> can be whatever I want as long as I work hard to get there
I believe you, but I believe it's a very unusual situation and not the
norm at all. I wasn't addressing everyone's individual situations.
> I think that the mothers of today have got to stop telling their
> little girls to grow up and find the knight on a white horse
> However, I was also raised to find a man to marry and take care of
> me.
So you do agree that this is the party line the majority of females
are *still* brought up with, even those who turn out to be exceptions,
yes? That's all I was referring to.
re .13 COBWEB::SWALKER (love your personal name!)
> I mean, why would the average man, with his statistically higher salary,
> choose to bind himself to someone who will/may be economically dependent
Beats me! But when you ask men, (most people actually!), why they marry,
they generally give vague reasons like "love", which of course, doesn't
require marriage at all. Whatever reasons they have for marrying, it's
my opinion that making fun of the women who marry them doesn't seem to be
in their best interests, that's all. Would you make public fun of your
lover? Your kid? Your boss? Why a wife? Why always a wife?
> In other words, why aren't *men* boycotting marriage already?
I think a lot are - a lot more than women. The rise in prenuptual agreements
is an indication of man's growing reluctance to be "traditionally married"
and many of them simply state flat out, "no". C'mon, women, you all know men
or women who know men who won't marry! What are all these books about, like
"Men Who Won't Commit", "How to Get a Man", "Why Do I Think I Am Nothing
Without a Man" and practically every article in Cosmo et al? I'm not
imagining this, here!
> If you're saying that the women would refuse to marry men, but still
> seek out their company, companionship... I'd think that at least some
> of the 'architects of this society' would be patting themselves on the
> back for it.
It would seem to be on the surface, but I hold a basic belief that men will
always want/need to be a part of women's world. I've stated before that I
believe the sexist aspects of organized society were intentionally engineered
in to insure that. I think men do fear that women might simply go off
without them and defusing women's power to do that is the whole point of
sexism, of porn, of rape, of abuse, and mags like this issue of Esquire.
It's my belief, you don't have to believe it too if you don't want to.
> Isn't this a lot of what "the feminization of poverty" is all about?
No - I think it's the extreme result of societies where the system is set
up for men and women are expected to interact with the system only through
men. Those who don't, or can't for whatever reason, can fall to this ex-
treme. Our schools don't want to educate women in the consequences of
sexuality, (get married and there won't BE any consequences!), our highest
leaders don't want abortion available, (get married and you'll be ABLE to
raise the kid), don't want birth control available, (get married and your
husband will be willing to practice rhythm with you unlike the boys on the
street), rapists slip through the system like quicksilver, (what was she
wearing? why was she there anyway?) single mothers are financially penalized
for getting a job to get ahead, (get a husband instead and you won't
need welfare). What was the derogatory name Silber used to refer to pregnant
teenage girls?. The feminization of poverty is the result of the masculini-
zation of the system.
And the June Esquire issue is the result of a long-held fear of women that
sexism has allowed men to hide and feminism is forcing them to come to terms
with. It's a backlash, pure and simple, like the rise in porn in everyday
media, like the increase in wife beating and killing. It's an increase in the
desire to show women who's boss, (you don't have to show June Cleaver who's
boss - she already believes Ward is!) and increase in the trivialization of
that which is feared - women who may no longer believe men are boss by default.
|
180.18 | | CADSE::MACKIN | It has our data and won't give it back! | Wed Jun 06 1990 18:41 | 16 |
| I see men not committing to marriage and men boycotting marriage
for the implied reasons stated as two very different, unrelated,
things. The first is readily documented and fairly well established.
Its also, given the marriage statistics, is probably a small minority of
men.
I also don't see a connection between the rise in prenuptual agreements
and men "boycotting" marriage. They're still getting married. And I'd
suggest that much of this shift, if it is even statistically
significant, is among middle-upper class individuals and not really
representative of the population at large. I might be wrong on this,
though.
BTW, what on earth is a traditional marriage? The "Cleaver" family?
Has that *ever* been a majority of the marriages in America? Or just
a media/government fabrication of how it *should* be?
|
180.19 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Wed Jun 06 1990 19:23 | 29 |
| re: .17 (Sandy)
I think you misunderstood my "feminization of poverty" argument.
Specifically, I have heard this refer to the fact that women (and
children) are overrepresented among the poor. So, unless the current
economic disparity between men and women changes, an unmarried woman
with 1 child would have to support two people on a salary that is
approximately 70% of the father's (which must only support one person).
Therefore, the lower woman's salary must go further, and the men have
more and more disposable income relative to everyone else. So, women
boycott marriage (but still have children), and the men use their
dependent-free incomes to cultivate a higher standard of living, and
grow huge investment portfolios. The result: women become an underclass
to the men who own more and more of society. I don't see the
"patriarchitects" rolling over in their graves over this one...
I understood your original argument as stating, roughly, that women
will begin to boycott marriage in part because it is economically
feasible to do so, but I am arguing that marriage will still carry
economic incentives for women, as well as all those "vague reasons"
you usually hear from people, unless there are other widespread changes
in society that would render such a "boycott" superfluous.
I don't see it happening. We have the evidence that men are still
getting married despite all the "logical" reasons against it. And I
think women will, too.
Sharon
|
180.20 | ahem | SNOC02::WRIGHT | PINK FROGS | Wed Jun 06 1990 21:02 | 20 |
| RE: .17
> C'mon, women, you all know men
> or women who know men who won't marry! What are all these books about, like
> "Men Who Won't Commit", "How to Get a Man", "Why Do I Think I Am Nothing
> Without a Man" and practically every article in Cosmo et al? I'm not
> imagining this, here!
Just a small point, the book "Men Who Won't Commit" is not about how to
get a man or how to keep a man or anything remotely like that. It is a
book directed at woman who have had problems with men who were
seemingly committed and then just up and left. It is to help women
recognise certain things about a man she may be involved with to help
prevent heartache. I have a copy and it helped me greatly when I
needed it.
Holly.
PS. the actual title is "Men Who *Can't* Commit".
|
180.21 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Thu Jun 07 1990 09:38 | 29 |
| I see it all as the same thing. Trends are more important than
absolutes. And I see the *trend* as heading in the direction where
marriage becomes quaint and pretty much obsolete. I wasn't separating
out the state of things right now and dissecting it, I was seeing the
things that are happening right now in terms of the way they were in
generations past and extrapolating it to the future. Just the fact
that the concept of prenuptual agreements is now well understool by
everyone, (even the middle classes), is an indication of the *direction*
things are headed.
Prenupts started with the moneyed classes, but are becoming *in-
creasingly* used by people in the mainstream. Eventually, there may
only be business deals as marriage has often been in the upper classes.
And it's my belief that poking public fun at marriage and specifically
those who marry, betrays a shift in the public attitude. Where once
it regarded marriage, (and married women), as honored, venerated,
exalted, hailed and something women should aspire to is now
trivialized and laughed at - in a mainstream, respected magazine. This
is not Mad Magazine or the National Lampoon we're talking about here.
And I think it will open the eyes of some who've been comfortable in
believing that marriage is still the respected institution it once was
and realize that it, and those women who engage in it, (it doesn't
really address the married men, does it?), are now considered fair game
for ridicule - even by their own husbands! The Donald and Ivana show
also contributes a lot to making marriage, (and married women), look
pretty foolish. I think the Esquire issue just crystallizes all of this.
like the current issue of Esquire does, will only
serve to hasten its demise.
|
180.22 | Sandy...how did you get there? | AKOFIN::MACMILLAN | | Thu Jun 07 1990 12:08 | 30 |
| .10 (Sandy)
Sandy you've said some very interesting things and have prompted
some excellent discussion around marriage. It's obvious to me you're very
insightful and intelligent.
May I flesh out some of your thoughts a little? I'm not trying to
be argumentative here...to prove it I won't question any reply you might make
any further. I'd just like to see the underpinnings of some of your ideas so
as to understand them a little better. If you are not comfortable with it then
let this pass.
When you note about the architects of a sick society; who do you mean.
Who are these architects? How did you learn to recognize them?
Do you believe our society is mostly sick? How did you mean sick?
When you mention the 'desperate quest to keep us beholden to them', I
assumed 'us' refers to women and those questing are men. Is this assumption of
mine correct? Is marriage how men keep women beholden?
Who were you referring to when you noted 'dig your graves'...and did
you mean to say that the end of marriage is somehow death to those digging?
Death in what sense?
-D-
|
180.23 | Necessary Myths | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Jun 07 1990 14:04 | 22 |
|
Well folks, I changed my mind. I believe the June Esquire has done us all a
great service. I especially like the "owner's manual" to wives, and the
cute asides in the table of contents such as "batteries not included," etc.
Not to mention the 2-page spread of the contents of a woman's (wife's)
purse, with the insets of four multiple-choice questions for each item so
husbands can try to identify it (is it a pencil? eyeliner? tampon? hard to
be sure.). And all the stuff on removing the mystery of "why it takes her
so long to get ready" to go out, because of all the things she has to do
to make herself beautiful.
In thus objectifying women and especially in emphasizing the Mystery of
Womanhood (Wifehood), Esquire reminds us all that Woman is forever the
Other, the Alien, amongst us. Just like the old joke (entered recently if
I'm not mistaken in the feminist humor note) on "What Men Know About Women"
-- followed by a large blank (in book form it's followed by a book of blank
pages). Keep those women mysterious, different, inscrutable, Not Like Us.
In case anyone should forget that the male is the Norm around here. After
all, it's in the interests of our national security.
D.
|
180.24 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Thu Jun 07 1990 14:23 | 16 |
| re:22 - so as not to derail this discussion, I'll send you my answer
via mail.
I have a copy of the June Esquire in my hand right now. It opened
to two facing pages - one depicting a May-December marriage where the
obviously older gentleman sported a cute young bride. But the facing
page, supposedly the counterpart, showed an attractive and not so old
woman as the Decmeber component! And her groom was, in a word, a
bow-wow and didn't even look that young. Typical geeky, greasy-haired
male model type. These two couples are HARDLY a comparison! But I
suppose the thought of Bea Arthur marrying Johnny Depp is too frightening
for the editors, ("If that's all HE can get, what about us??? Waaahhh!")
although of course they think nothing of an old man marrying some cute
chick, ("Ah, here's hope for all us groovy guys!").
Typical self-centered stuff.
|
180.25 | | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Thu Jun 07 1990 14:46 | 19 |
| Marriage has changed from generations past, many people now don't
understand it, what's expected of them, what's expected of a marriage.
The rules have been blown, both men and women feel like their out in
the middle of an ocean treading water, not knowing which direction to
swim. And when you don't understand something you poke fun at it.
It took me a long time (and meeting the right man I might add) to make
peace with marriage. I am married, have been for eight years. I could
state all the current popular platitudes about "you have to meet the
right guy, you have to make your own "rules" about your marriage,
communication is key," and blah, blah, blah.
But I guess I don't see any "trend" away from marriage. I still see
couples taking the plunge and doing their best to stay afloat. Yes,
some men/women are boycotting marriage, but hasn't that always been so?
I think that having children is the really tricky part about marriage.
That's when women truly take risks of losing ground in their carreers,
because they usually carry the burden of raising them.
|
180.26 | Misc. Comments | JUPTR::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Thu Jun 07 1990 15:46 | 31 |
| < <<< Note 180.24 by GEMVAX::CICCOLINI >>>
<
< re:22 - so as not to derail this discussion, I'll send you my answer
< via mail.
Sandy,
Please enter your comments here (or in a new string). I doubt that I
am the only person interested in how you got where you are and
interested in .22's questions!
I, too, do not see the events you mention as a *significant* trend that
will affect the majority even in my lifetime. (But maybe I'm
old-fashioned -- we're celebrating our 28th wedding anniversay this
week-end.) Actually, I see more evidence than I like in the direction
of women returning to more traditional roles, and this disturbs me.
BTW, the increasingly-common separation of *ALL* marital money into
"his" and "hers" concerns me (note the word "concerns," not "disturbs"
or "alarms" and note that I'm not objecting to *some* separate funds).
One couple I knew did not even combine their record albums until
they had been married quite awhile! It was as if they were prepared to
throw in the towel and run away. It seems to me that marriage should
represent a *real* "for better or worse" commitment and that so many
regulations water down that commitment to the point that --IF those
regulations are so necessary -- then perhaps the couple should not
really marry.
Ramblingly,
Nancy
|
180.27 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | another day in paradise | Thu Jun 07 1990 16:13 | 16 |
| re .24, Sandy, I guess some things will always remain a matter of
personal taste. :-) I thought the younger man in the older woman/
younger man scenario was pretty cute myself, and I thought the older
woman while *mildly* attractive looked at least 50, while the guy
looked around 24, 25. (of course, in my mind, I superimposed my
face with that of Matthew Broderick) Seriously, I think any woman
who marries a much younger, good looking man is looking for trouble
somewhere on down the road, when she gets really old and he's
attractively middle-aged. Much better to just have an affair so
you can drop the towel and run when you need to!
I've only been divorced for 5 yrs. and the thought of getting my
record collection mixed in with someone else's appalls me! :-)
Lorna
|
180.28 | Side note | HARDY::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Thu Jun 07 1990 16:38 | 6 |
| <ahem> Lorna, dear: "at *least* 50"!?!?!? Careful - it won't be long
before 50 is Still Quite Young, eh? :-}}}
--DE_who_thinks_that_those_of_us_over_forty_better_watch_what_we_say
;-)
|
180.29 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | another day in paradise | Thu Jun 07 1990 16:41 | 5 |
| re .28, in ten yrs. 50 will be Still Quite Young, and not before!
:-) (well, 9 1/2 yrs.)
Lorna
|
180.30 | :-) :-) :-) | HARDY::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Thu Jun 07 1990 16:48 | 1 |
|
|
180.31 | Humph! ;-) | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | J & J's Memere | Thu Jun 07 1990 17:14 | 1 |
| 50 is young....
|
180.32 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | another day in paradise | Thu Jun 07 1990 17:19 | 5 |
| re .31, oh, Joyce, I forgot, of course it is! I'm sorry! What
was I thinking of??? 70! 70 isn't young! That's it.
Lorna
|
180.34 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Fri Jun 08 1990 12:02 | 20 |
| .27
Sigh.
"...any woman who marries a much younger, good looking man is
looking for trouble somewhere on down the road, when she gets
really old..."
This makes me feel really sad; women get old and worthless....men
get more attractive with age. I find this prevailing attitude
insulting to both women and men...first the obvious, that women
get old and therefore, awful to look at, and therefore, no longer
have any worth, and second, that all men want is a good looking
woman and that if she loses her looks, they no longer will want her,
that all there is in life and love is good looks...
I'm not flaming you Lorna; this attitude is pretty common I'm afraid.
|
180.35 | Two to nothing | HARDY::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Fri Jun 08 1990 12:11 | 10 |
| RE:.34
Yeah...this is a real double-header slam. It gets women because it
reinforces all the stereotypes about older women being "unattractive",
and it gets men because it reinforces all the stereotypes about men
being so shallow that they pick women by "good looks" only.
*thwack* *wham* - got 'em both! Good job, Esquire!
|
180.36 | which kind of humor is it? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Jun 08 1990 13:08 | 11 |
|
If the Esquire June issue is humor, is it (using categories that have
been set up in this file)
humor about women, or
humor that denigrates women?
Or is there any difference,
D.
|
180.37 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | another day in paradise | Fri Jun 08 1990 16:12 | 7 |
| re .34, that's just the way it is. Sometimes I actually do struggle
to come to grips with reality. I believe there's an occasional
exception, but I wouldn't want my life's happiness to depend on
it.
Lorna
|
180.38 | yes but... | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Fri Jun 08 1990 17:37 | 6 |
| Well, yes, but then do we simply accept it? If that is the way it
is, if women get old and ugly and men want women only if they look
good, if this is in fact true, does it make it correct and acceptable?
Or can I use this to somehow, start making some changes?
Maia
|
180.39 | What Other Choices Are There? Force Men To Want Unattractive? | FDCV01::ROSS | | Fri Jun 08 1990 17:52 | 11 |
| > if women get old and ugly and men want women only if they look
> good, if this is in fact true, does it make it correct and acceptable?
For those men who do desire young and attractive women, there is
nothing *incorrect or unacceptable* about it. That's what they want.
> Or can I use this to somehow, start making some changes?
Well, Ponce de Leon *did* try to discover the fountain of youth.
Alan
|
180.40 | Looong term solution | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Jun 08 1990 18:05 | 17 |
| Maia,
I think what Lorna means is that she is accepting that this is
the way it is *now*. Beyond that, she doesn't say.
I'd say that the best way to approach it is (as with anything)
to assume this thesis is correct, but always be prepared to entertain
the idea that it's wrong. Then, look into the dynamics of *why*
women are perceived as ugly-when-they're-old[er]. Do not get
sidetracked into the nature of *how* women-look-ugly-when-they're-old[er].
That is a rathole.
You have to understand why something is the way it is before you
can make the most effective change to it. This process is a real pain.
And I don't expect to see the end of it in my lifetime.
Ann B.
|
180.41 | the ultimate terror... | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Mon Jun 11 1990 09:43 | 13 |
|
*Why* are women perceived as ugly-when-they're-older (or, as .39 so
succinctly puts it, "unattractive")?
I believe one reason is that older women remind many men a bit too much
of their mothers.
Maybe we need another Crone topic?
Then again, maybe the topic, like older women, isn't worth much
attention... ;-)
D.
|
180.42 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | another day in paradise | Mon Jun 11 1990 11:07 | 12 |
| re .41, I think there has been a lot of confusion in this file
between inner and outer beauty. I think very old people can have
inner beauty. But, when I referred to older women as being
"unattractive" I was referring to physical beauty *only*. I, also,
think that very few older men have any physical beauty left either.
In general, I think the human race *looks* the most beautiful during
youth. The same is true of other things. What looks better, a
rose about to bloom, or one that is withered on the stock? But,
this does not mean that there is no value in age.
Lorna
|
180.43 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Mon Jun 11 1990 11:22 | 42 |
| I believe it's merely demographics. Viet Nam killed off a lot of men
who would be partners of the women of my generation. Now we have an
oversupply of women in our age group. Naturally, it allows the men to
become more selective and forces the women to become more accomodating.
Everyone wants the ideal, men have no special psyche that makes them
hopelessly in need of young, fresh meat. They're just lucky enough to
live in a culture and a generation that offers lots for their perusal,
and little for women's. The generation coming up behind us, however, is
male-heavy, (time for another war!), and you will soon see the reverse
situation where women are doing the demanding and men doing the
accomodating. So in a sense, those men will be forced but not to prefer
the unattractive, to settle for it, as women are often forced to do
in our age group. We've rationalized our paltry pickings by telling
ourselves and each other that we prefer the personality, the inner
qualities, the deeper person but I believe that when the demographics
change and women have the upper hand in mate selection, they will
suddenly find themselves preferring a gorgeous face, a perfect body and
a large wallet and will search for those "deeper qualities" only among
those who pass that test! That's what I think men do now. They don't
"just" go for a pretty face and a great bod, but they don't often look
deeper for the other qualities they say they value if that first test
hasn't been passed!
I agree, Dorian, that there's a little of the mommy image in an older
woman. But why would that make men shudder? Why do they fear and/or
hate it? Is it because our society laughs at mothers, wives and older
women? Actually only young women, ready to conceive, are the only
women taken seriously by our society, and the best are "sanctified"
in soft porn, surrounded by the symbols of their "ripe & ready" status.
Once they marry or give birth, they're supposed to move over, (into
joke territory), and let the new crop of "ripe & readys" take over in
the media image and the public eye.
In a different society that didn't hate women so much, (except of
course for the ripe & ready status of some of them), might an older
woman, (a mother and/or a married woman), be seen instead as a symbol
of comfort, of a "returning", as beautiful and loving? But right now,
women are seen only in terms of their sexual significance to men and
the older ones signify a man's lost youth and dwindling sexual
powers which takes precedence over whatever good she really is
or has.
|
180.44 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Mon Jun 11 1990 11:33 | 12 |
| re: .42 I've saved and dried roses long after they've "gone by"
because I thought they were very beautiful.
I know what you were trying to say, Lorna, but I'm sure you know
that dried flowers can be beautiful. Antique lace tablecloths,
Old oak china cabinets, etc. A sunset can be more exquisitely
beautiful than a sunrise specifically because it represents an ending
rather than a beginning. Autumn most definitely rivals spring in its
beauty and grandeur. Spring apple blossoms are pretty but a tree heavily
laden with fruit in early September is awsome in its beauty and power.
Except for women in sexist societies, young is *not* automatically
always more beautiful than old.
|
180.45 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | another day in paradise | Mon Jun 11 1990 11:43 | 7 |
| re .44, okay, Sandy, I give up! Fine. Why don't we get together
Friday night and cruise some old age homes to see if we can whip
up some fun with the over 80 set? :-) Don't let those wrinkles and
bald heads get to you! Those old guys have a lot of wisdom to share.
Lorna
|
180.46 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Mon Jun 11 1990 12:18 | 3 |
| Nah, let's cruise the highschool instead. Personally, I'm one of
those shallow ones who goes for looks first. I can read books to
benefit from people's wisdom! ;-)
|
180.47 | | SKYLRK::OLSON | Partner in the Almaden Train Wreck! | Mon Jun 11 1990 14:28 | 35 |
| > I agree, Dorian, that there's a little of the mommy image in an older
> woman. But why would that make men shudder? Why do they fear and/or
> hate it?
I also agree, and those are good questions!
> Is it because our society laughs at mothers, wives and older women?
Errr...I think that these are the same thing, and one doesn't motivate
the other; both are motivated by something a little deeper, a little
more personal. Speaking personally, as a young adolescent I had the
classic struggle for independence from my parents; but from my mother
it took the form of her attempts to repress my sexuality (she was/is
Catholic and remains afraid of her own body even today.) In a large
part I still see my independence and sense-of-self directly in
opposition to her attempts to suppress and control me, and I still
find myself feeling defensive when I remember those years and the
guilt patterns she tried to instill. Returning to the larger picture
then, I don't know how well my experience maps to the society in
general; but I'd bet that more men have memories of their parents not
handling their (child's) adolescent sexuality well, and memories of
fighting against that stifling control, than men who learned their
awakening sexuality with support and the assistance of their parents.
Which is why *I* think that men don't appreciate (or, one could say,
do act fearful or are afraid of) anything that reminds them of their
mothers in a sexually intimate relationship. Those memories are too
painful, and we are still too insecure years later to risk reopening
that battle again by putting ourselves into a relationship with some-
one who reminds us of mom.
DougO
PS- It is also possible that the Freudian interpretation applies, but
the more I learn the more hokum that all seems.
|
180.48 | No comprendo | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Mon Jun 11 1990 16:57 | 23 |
| Why aren't men attracted to older women if they remind them a wee bit
of a "mother"? Because you dan't have sex with your mother!
My opinion - men who are attracted to women half their age are stuck in
adolescence. They haven't grown beyond that need to have the
highschool "prom queen" beauty hanging on their arm to impress "the
boys". Talk to a psychologist, there's a theory there. And quite
frankly I have never seen the attraction to an "older" man - they're
just as wrinkly, flabby, saggy gray as any older woman. What they
often DO have however is "deep pockets". And that can be quite
attractive to a young female particularly those that have no identity.
This topic gets me livid for some reason. Perhaps it's the realization
that many males are incredibly shallow and immature when they go for
the looks, IMHO. I don't mean all males. And it IS reinforced in this
world that if you're not thin and beautiful you're worth very little in
the eyes of most males. Oh, thin, beautiful and YOUNG I might add.
A relative of mine has been steadily seeing a woman about 27 years
younger than him, and I cannot comprehend what exactly she sees in him,
other than money. He's no great shakes to look at. Oh well, your's is
not to reason why...
|
180.49 | Gee, maybe the guy is NICE! Or SMART! Or FUNNY! | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Mon Jun 11 1990 17:46 | 25 |
| > A relative of mine has been steadily seeing a woman about 27 years
> younger than him, and I cannot comprehend what exactly she sees in him,
> other than money. He's no great shakes to look at. Oh well, your's is
> not to reason why...
Whoa!!! No comprende indeed!
One minute you were decrying the men of the world for being too shallow, and
being only interested in looks, and for considering a woman who is not young and
beautiful to be worthless.
And the next paragraph you say that you can't figure out why this woman
is dating your relative, since he is not young and beautiful.
Could it be, by off-chance, that this woman is *not* shallow, and happens
to be interested in more than looks? What a mind-boggling thought! Or
maybe you just have no respect for this particular relative, and think that
even his *personality* has no redeeming features?
Or maybe you are so cynical that you believe, that while shallowness is a
negative trait, that it is so common you can't comprehend how someone could
be without it?
D! who has always been attracted to older partners and is tired of having to
explain why, and fend off accusations of being a gold-digger!
|
180.50 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | A Legendary Adventurer | Tue Jun 12 1990 02:45 | 7 |
| Of course, it depends on what it is that makes a woman beautiful.
Katherine Hepburn is in her 80's, and I think she's more beautiful
then many women a third her age. It's because those features that
made her beautiful in her prime (those magnificent cheekbones, for
one) are not things that vanish with age.
--- jerry
|
180.51 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Tue Jun 12 1990 14:18 | 15 |
|
Back to Esquire for a moment:
1) Esquire prints a magazine overflowing with more-than-ususally sexist
photos and articles.
2) Lots of women get pissed off over it.
3) The male establishment gets yet another juicy chance to bash
and discredit "feminists" for being over-sensitive.
I think I see a pattern here.
|
180.52 | Yuk. | ASHBY::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue Jun 12 1990 14:30 | 5 |
| I just obtained a copy of the offending magazine.
It stinks. Literally.
Lisa
|
180.53 | Oh well... | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Tue Jun 12 1990 14:37 | 10 |
| re .49
No, I am decrying MEN being only interested in looks, youth etc. and
women only interested in money! I grant you, it is a broad
generalization. And yes, perhaps I am reacting to this particular
situation (which is more complicated than I went into in the last
note). Basically she's married, and has been "stringing" him along for
about 6 years saying she'll leave her husband etc. Everyone can see it
but him, naturally. But, it's really his business, his life.
|