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Friday, 8 February 2008

In the eighties a joke word was doing the rounds: “cattleperkin”. This was a gender neutral version of “cowboy”. Cow, being female, is neutered and becomes “cattle”. “Boy” becomes “person”, but because “person”, to the etymologically tin-eared, contains the word “son”, this has to be changed to a sexless relative, namely “kin”.

 

Wimyn’s groups, with genderless chairpeople, personned the barricades in the fight against male oppression. That is all history – sorry, herstory. An herstorical interlude, perhaps.

 

Harry Mount writes in The Telegraph on “the death of feminism at British universities”:

Quietly, without much fanfare, women's studies has disappeared from British universities.

In the 70s, 80s and 90s, thousands of students across the country took the subject.

Over the last five years, numbers have dropped by 75 per cent and only 35 students are doing it this year. This summer, the last place offering the course, London Metropolitan University, is stopping women's studies altogether.

The main feminist struggles have been won, and the more ludicrous ones - bra-burning, the insistence that all men are oppressors - have been quietly dropped.

I know no man under 40 who insists that his wife give up her job and cook him dinner every night. Who's now surprised to have a female boss or a female doctor? And there's not much point in studying, say, women's politics rather than just politics, when a woman has been the most powerful Prime Minister ever.

With feminist victories absorbed into mainstream thought, hardly anyone calls themselves a feminist these days. It's as dated as drenching yourself in patchouli or tie-dyeing your jeans.

"Women’s Studies" may have run its course. If so, I am not sorry. Most courses with "studies" in the title seem to be second rate. But is feminism really dead?

 

Ten years ago, you would regularly hear women say, “I’m not a feminist, but…” and go on to say something feminist: “I’m not a feminist, but I believe in equal pay,” or “I’m not a feminist, but women have the right to dress as they wish without being accused of inviting rape.” At the time, I would have said that these women were feminists, because I believed that feminism meant equality. To them, however, feminism was a dirty word, meaning hairy, dungaree-clad, man-hater. Men of a certain age never used the word feminist without the epithet “strident”; eventually the “strident” went without saying.

 

I thought this was silly, and until recently proudly called myself a feminist. Now I am having doubts. This is not because I have discovered my inner Stepford wife. Equality of the sexes is not negotiable. Moreover, I am sceptical of the “equal but different” argument. Yes, men and women are different, but “equal but different” is generally used to mean that women are worse; if they are better, then mysteriously they are better at something men don’t want to do, like washing up or changing nappies. No, I haven't suddenly turned into a surrendered woman.

My doubts about feminism have arisen because of feminist attitudes to Muslim women. Erica Jong, so vociferous on the subject of “pink men”, has nothing to say about honour killings, stoning of rape victims, polygamy, divorce by repudiation, and the many other injustices faced by Muslim women. Germaine Greer, High Priestess of feminism, supported the Luton schoolgirl’s “right” to wear a jilbab, and has even said that Westerners should not try to combat female genital mutilation.

 

Islam is the most regressive ideology on the planet, and the principal cause of women’s oppression. Yet feminists remain silent. So I may re-consider my membership of the “feminist” category, not because I don’t believe in women’s liberation, but because I do.

 

Harry Mount glibly, smugly says: “I know no man under 40 who insists that his wife give up her job and cook him dinner every night. Who's now surprised to have a female boss or a female doctor?” He has clearly never been to Bradford, or Tower Hamlets, where Muslim men in their twenties display a chauvinism that our great-grandfathers would have been ashamed of.

 

By the way, did anybody really burn a bra? Is there any supporting evidence?

Posted on 02/08/2008 11:43 AM by Mary Jackson
Comments
8 Feb 2008
Hugh Fitzgerald

Mention of "cattleperkin" leads, inexorably, to thoughts of Perkin Warbeck (or "Warbek"), a pretender to the English throne or, as some might call him, a "false heir." And that is relevant to last week's Weekend Quiz, the answer to which should be put up later today.�The name "Perkin Warbeck" should not, however, lead would-be participants in the quiz to any dramatic (Elizabethan or Jacobean) -- conclusions.

Many real clues have been given, but false trails have also been carefully swept of brush, for easy finding.



8 Feb 2008
Send an emailgreenmamba
Mention of "cattleperkin" leads, inexorably, to thoughts of ... MERKIN.

Women's Studies: I'm still at it, to no avail.

By the way, did anybody really burn a bra?
Yes, but it was an accident, I swear.


Feminism had many good and necessary ideas, but of course attracted adherents indiscriminately and like all movements, grew to the point where it would be incapable of stopping once the original goals were achieved.  It's a bit like government.





8 Feb 2008
Send an emailMary Jackson

Leads...to thoughts of MERKIN

Some are easily led.



8 Feb 2008
Send an emailreactionry
The Palm, Oke & Baywatch
Or: Yellow, Black, "Pinks" & Beyond The Pale
 
Sorry, MJ; I've always been more of an athletic supporter or Jacques Strappe -which is older than "Does Dr. Pepper come in a bottle?", which for all I know was heard by Jacques Chirac during his dozy stint as a soda jerk. Not surprisingly there are around 6 to 8 thousand Google-thwarting hits each for "Erin Go Braless!" and "Wunderbra!"
 
No one is forced to waste their time on Hugh's quizzes and if I were 40 years younger I would not regret what I've learned in such vainglorious (in my case, simply vain) attempts. Now we seem to be led down a trail or false garden path to Mary Shelley.  -Time to put away thoughts that she or even George Eliot was a "false Herr" even if like Herr Hasselhoff, they were "big in Germany," and unkind hopes that Hugh gets stoned (but don't feel so all alone; everyone must get stoned" as wasn't said in the (Bobby) Zimmerman telegram) by the false Herrs* of Life of Brian (see The Beard of Tel Aviv Calling) or even that your inclement climate causes his Moroccan reds to become humid and hectic.
 
*I'm erin' on the plural but they were, of course, male actors pretending to be wymn pretending to be men; stoners; not pretenders to the porcelain throne in an uncrowded Men's bathroom -which kinda' boogles [sic] the mind.


8 Feb 2008
Send an emailgreenmamba
[sic] the mind

Comment, no?

8 Feb 2008
Send an emailreactionry
From Harry To Hairy, From Amurath To Angstrom
 
Comment, yes, which I've made at least once while talking to myself with "[sic sick!]" which gm would have known had he read all of my posts.  Because he has not, it is reasonable to harbor a suspicion that he has a life.  greenmamba came to mind recently after running after the "false hare" or "false hairy" of Updike's Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom (see an engineer's unit (of measurement, that is) smaller than what should be politely called a "merkin hair") because of the memory of the mysterious "Strom Ang"(?) posted by gm many months ago. 


9 Feb 2008
Keryl Kris Reinke
Actually, yes. I clearly remember a photo of a protest at which feminists of the time burned a selection of 'anti-feminist' items ( such as makeup and painful shoes) . A lacy bra was one of the items - although I believe it was burned because it was overpriced fashion - not because it was an undergarment per se.

19 Mar 2008
kim

 The only thing I can offer about the bigshots of the Feminist movement that you write about is they have lost sight of the true meaning of what the struggle was about and has now morphed into the umbrella of "Anti-Bush." 

If one is anti-Bush one is against the war in Iraq and Aphanistan so anything GOOD, like more right s for women, coming out of the war, is and will be over-looked because the war was a "bad" Republican-Conservative- Religious-Right "thing" in the first place.  

A perfect example of "cutting your nose to spite your face."

Good thing Muslim women are trying to get someplace without these ridiculous surrenderers of the American feminist past. 

 



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