T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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475.2 | | SHAPES::SMITHS1 | | Wed Oct 24 1990 10:10 | 7 |
|
Personally, if my man hit me it would go a long way to showing me that
he wasn't a "real man". I would also start packing my bags *very*
quickly.
Sam
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475.3 | NOT YOURS! HIS! | PCOJCT::COHEN | at least I'm enjoyin' the ride | Wed Oct 24 1990 10:45 | 7 |
| re: -1
Your bags????? I'd start packing HIS bags..... actually, maybe a
garbage bag with holes in it would be better!
Jill
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475.4 | Irresponsible Posting | RAISSA::TAKATS | | Wed Oct 24 1990 10:55 | 16 |
| This posting seems somewhat inappropriate in a responsible forum
such as this one. It gives no source, the details are very general,
and even ambiguous: are the 75% who were beaten over 50, or were all
those surveyed over 50? how is beating defined? who, where, and when
was the survey done? (Southern Italy is many years behind in women's
rights, for example.)
I could comment on the validity of the survey from personal experience
(see my recent intro), but it would be much more responsible to first
clarify the facts.
Ciao,
AndyT (in Rome)
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475.5 | go to the source | WMOIS::B_REINKE | We won't play your silly game | Wed Oct 24 1990 11:50 | 7 |
| Well, I invited the man who entered the basenote into the Sports
file to enter the note himself into =wn=.
I suggest the first line of business would be to write to him
and ask him for more information.
Bonnie
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475.6 | Sports? | SANDS::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Wed Oct 24 1990 12:04 | 3 |
| I'm afraid to ask why it was entered in the Sports notes file.
Kathy
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475.7 | | ASABET::RAINEY | | Wed Oct 24 1990 12:06 | 11 |
| RE .4
I won't argue appropriateness, it's a matter of personal opinion.
I find it uncomfortable to read about women who enjoy abuse, and
I agree it would be beneficial to find out more about the boundaries
of the study.
As for packing bags, if I could afford it, I'd pack and leave so I
couldn't be found... if broke, he's gone with a restraining order.
Christine
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475.8 | not avoiding facts | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Wed Oct 24 1990 12:30 | 8 |
| Reading about women who enjoy abuse does make me very
uncomfortable, yes, but I don't think that avoiding the issue that
there *are* women who support male violence is very helpful.
I'm not sure what is helpful. I'm still trying to get over the
creepy feeling. But.
--bonnie
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475.9 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | We won't play your silly game | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:05 | 8 |
| Kathy
He entered it in the Sports file becuase, he was disturbed by the
article and Sports was a file, or the only US file he followed.
The note was forwarded to me and I suggested to the author
that he'd get a more serious response in =wn=.
Bonnie
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475.10 | what _can_ they be thinking? | NAVIER::SAISI | | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:17 | 8 |
| Let's see...glorification of sex roles - it is a badge of honor
that her husband can dish it out and she can take it.
Living through him to the extent that she takes pride in his
abusiveness. Belief that negative attention is better than no
attention at all (he cares enough to hit me). Masochism (not to
be confused with the practice of s&m) - didn't Freud say that all
women are masochists?
Linda
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475.11 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:18 | 3 |
| I forgot one, actually believing that physical violence is an
expression of love.
Linda
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475.12 | right | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:23 | 5 |
| He hit me and it felt like a kiss . . .
from a song by the Motels, a band I otherwise like very much.
--bonnie
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475.13 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Wed Oct 24 1990 15:02 | 4 |
| Re .12: Originally (?) from "Carousel", when Billy-as-angel slaps his
daughter...
-b
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475.14 | | ICS::STRIFE | | Wed Oct 24 1990 16:54 | 11 |
| I always question the validity of surveys. Who did they talk to? How
big was the sample? How were the questions worded?
I have a hard time believing that anyone enjoys being hit but
if violence is an accepted part of someone's reality (culture etc.) then
the answers to questions regarding her husband hitting her might be much
different than most of ours.
Remember the movie "The Color of Purple" when the much abused woman
played by Woopie Glodberg advises her stepson to beat his wife?
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475.15 | ugh! | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Wed Oct 24 1990 19:56 | 21 |
|
While we can argue the validity of the survey - statistically - we are
probably correct in assuming that a number of women responded as
indicated in the base note.
I feel sort of sick when I think about *any* woman who is abused, and
even worse if she likes it.
Most of us have known for a long time that the European norms of
male/female roles are different (in our minds, actually backward) from
those in the US. And the Italian stereotypes are extreme in my mind.
But in a society sector that seems to value very "feminine" and very "male"
roles as the norm, this violence is especially disturbing. Even in our
own fifties model of Donna Reed and Mrs. Cleaver lookalikes we did not
revere violence against women. Is there something wrong with us, or
with "them"?
-m
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475.16 | one more | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Wed Oct 24 1990 19:59 | 12 |
| re: .11
You forgot another - having a man is the most prestigeous role in life.
Even one that beats you.
I once spoke to a woman who was beaten by her husband, and her reply to
the counselor when asked why she put up with it was : "At least I
*Have* a man, not like some people I know." The counselor was a
single woman.
-m
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475.17 | No,They Don't Like It | USCTR2::DONOVAN | | Thu Oct 25 1990 01:03 | 10 |
| I don't think many women who are beaten enjoy it. Many tolerate it be-
cause of low self-esteem. Because they've convinced themselves that
they deserve it. Because they love him. Because of financial security,
a roof overher head, food and clothing for the children. Because of
what the neighbors will think. Because she believes she's made her bed
and now has to sleep in it.
It's very sad.
Kate
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475.19 | | STKHLM::RYDEN | Dr of Comparative Irrelevance | Thu Oct 25 1990 10:19 | 13 |
|
<<< Note 475.15 by COOKIE::CHEN "Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing" >>>
>>Most of us have known for a long time that the European norms of
>>male/female roles are different (in our minds, actually backward) from
>>those in the US.
This is an uninformed American point of view. Europe consists of several
*different* states with *different* cultural profiles, including
male/female roles.
Sigh...
Bo
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475.21 | mistake | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Thu Oct 25 1990 16:29 | 7 |
| re:.18
sorry about grammatical errors - it's a good thing no one else saw that
:)
|
475.22 | enough! | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Thu Oct 25 1990 16:47 | 18 |
| ok ok ok
I did not intend to generalize all Europeans into the Italian "state",
with similar or stereotyped norms - neither did I intend to imply that
all Italian women agree with the survey. None of this is relevant to
the real content of either the base note or my reply.
Just think, folks, this note topic is serious. Let's stop giving
geography/sociology lessons. I thought we were discussing the violence
of men (who happen to be Europeans from the Italian state) against
women (who also happen to be Europeans from the Italian state), and the
opinion of those women about the violence they have experienced.
From a woman who happens to be from Webster Groves, Missouri, U.S.A.,
and who does not write grammatically correct notes replies.
-m
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475.23 | Philosophy and things. | HOO78C::VISSERS | Dutch Comfort | Fri Oct 26 1990 15:20 | 31 |
| Madeline,
Not about implications or to say the basenote topic isn't important,
but I do think the cultural differences may cloud this. I think if you
were to conduct a survey in one of the fundamentalist Islamitic
countries, you'd be able to come up with even more alarming responses
to questions like this. On the whole it's true that in Europe you'll
find more traditional role patterns, especially when going south or
asking older people and the survey did just that. It's not surprising
to see that these women don't see a "good spanking" (which is probably
what we're talking about!) as abuse, more as an appropriate reaction
from a 'real' man to a 'bad wife'. After all, these role patterns are
well defined and give a safe handle on what is right and wrong,
whatever you and I may think of it. Once they feel it as abuse
themselves, it's something different entirely. Notwithstanding the
opinion I offer in other notes, but I'm not so sure how to handle this.
Ad
PS: In my more active times in the left-wing-pinko-politics I came onto
a very difficult discussion point with an older fellow "party animal"
when it came to the question: Once you make someone conscious of the
fact (s)he is in a repressive situation, how do you handle your
responsibility from there? Provided you can't end the situation
immediately, you'll leave them in it with that difference that they now
*know* they're being repressed. If this situation isn't easily changed,
they now have to fight something they were initially comfortable with
in order to regain that original peace of mind. Is that fair? Then
again, if you don't do anything, nothing will happen. I've never really
been able to answer that, and this topic reminded me of that, hence
this note. Now back to the regularly scheduled program :-)
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