Not a Girl! – - Feminist Blog

Entries categorized as ‘Can only be happy if you're Attractive!’

Six Sexist Things: I won’t be convinced there is no sexism in society until…

October 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

1. “female” and our concept of “feminine” are not considered worse or inferior to ”male” or our concept of ”masculine”. It is as cool, and as okay, to be female and to be feminine as it is to be a boy or to be masculine.

2. Women are equally central to society as men are. This means no more sexist language (eg. using “he” to mean “she or he”. Alternatively use the word ”they” as a gender-neutral singular, or else, half the time say/write the word “she” instead of ”he”). Female characters have as many main roles, and as many good roles, as male characters on movies or TV, and in books. Men and women in general listen to and like music by female singers as much as they like/listen to music by male singers.

3. the hyper-sexualisation, reproduction and consumption of the female body is heavily reduced. The female body is treated a lot less like property. Being hot, attractive or beautiful is no longer so important to women, it is no longer what gives them their value.

4. all degrading and violent porn, and child porn, is made illegal and this is enforced - it is made illegal to produce or distribute this type of porn; and the courts and the police crack down extremely harshly on offenders = first by caring enough to seek out offenders/investigate shops selling porn; and secondly by sentencing all offenders very harshly. Police no longer ignore/turn a blind eye to this type of porn. I include in this type of porn: rape fantasies, gang-bangs, and “school-girl-porn-star” fantasies (eg. where the porn star is wearing clothes that resemble parts of a school uniform).

5. Prostitution is decriminalised only for the prostitutes, and never for the johns. And the police actively search out johns. And the johns face harsh penalties.

6. strip clubs no longer exist.

These are just the bare basic necessities – in my opinion – to work towards a society that is much better for women, and is much less sexist (there are other sexist issues as well that need sorting out, I’ve just listed some of the most obvious and huge ones).  This list is my own opinion. You may not agree with all (or any) of it. I shall give my reasons for each in later posts. Particularly I will focus on the first 2 or 3 issues, as they are they involve the whole of society, and are issues that are hugely important to me.

 

 

 

 

Categories: "Girl Germs!" · Can only be happy if you're Attractive! · Feminine vs Masculine · Feminism · Hypersexualisation of the Female Body · Male Centricity of Society · Pornography · Prostitution · Society is SEXIST · What a Girl Wants · sex industry
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DON’T CALL ME A PRETTY LITTLE GIRL and DON’T ASK ABOUT MY BOYFRIEND

October 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Some very distant relatives came over today. I’d only met them once before. One of them (a friendly old man), after we’d introduced ourselves to each other, asked me,

> “How’s it going with your boyfriend?” (playfully assuming that “of course” I must have a boyfriend, to make me feel good about myself). I replied,

> “What boyfriend?” And he said,

> “How can a pretty little girl like you not have a boyfriend?” Unsure what to say, I just smiled, embarrased. And the conversation came to a dead end.

 

 

FIVE REASONS WHY THIS CONVERSATION MADE ME FUME

1.  he assumed I want a boyfriend (he assumed all young women hate being single and want boyfriends). That we hate being independent. That we can’t enjoy being single/unattached. He assumed that we derive our primarily value from our value to guys (eg. from whether guys are attracted to us, or from whether we have a boyfriend who loves us).

 

2. he assumed that the main (only?) thing that guys consider when deciding whether to ask us out is whether we are attractive. If that is true, it hardly makes me want to date guys ever.

3. he basically told me that my primary value (to society and to myself) and measure of success in life was whether I had “succeeded” in getting a boyfriend (not in eg. my University grades, career…). And he told me that to achieve this success in life I must be beautiful. He told me that being beautiful is what would get me what I wanted in life (and that what I wanted was boyfriend + children).

4. he complimented me on being “pretty”. But I know I am just average looking, and when people comment on how I look it makes me self-conscious. It makes me aware of just how much how I look matters to them, and to society. And to my perceived chance of “future success” in life. Which, to a plain looking lady, is very worrying. I can’t do anything about how I look, but I can sort the more important parts of myself/my life out! How I look is so trivial and meaningless it makes me scared and angry when someone tells me once again how important it is for women.

5. this man would never have asked an obviously ugly young women about whether she had a boyfriend or not. To him, he would see this as pointing out her “unfortunate luck with looks”, and putting his foot in it. So it makes me very uncomfortable that he will compliment me for my plain luck in looking ‘good’. It sets me apart from those who ‘don’t', and emphasises just how important this thing to do with genes and not our hard work is.

  NOT A PRETTY LITTLE GIRL

I also didn’t appreciate the “little girl” after the word “pretty” in this man’s compliment to me. It assumes to be sufficiently pretty to get a boyfriend, one has to be small/slim and young. It assumes we have to be little and “cute”. It seems infantilizing/belittling. I don’t want to be “cute” or a “girl” – I want to be an adult!

This man who had that conversation with me is a nice man. He is a normal man. He was simply trying to be friendly, encouraging, funny and kind. Even a man like that can say things that are sexist (even through trying to be nice, even without knowing his words were sexist).

 I DON’T WANT A BOYFRIEND right now.  I don’t have a boyfriend. I don’t want a boyfriend (at least for now/near future). I am very happy without a boyfriend. I am not miserable or lonely. I hardly think about not having a boyfriend.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Categories: Beautiful · Can only be happy if you're Attractive! · Feminism · My Experiences · Patronising The Weaker Sex · What a Girl Wants
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