next_to_normal: (feminazi)
next_to_normal ([personal profile] next_to_normal) wrote2010-07-31 07:23 pm
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Male Feminists?

So, the other day, [livejournal.com profile] gabrielleabelle made a post questioning the labeling of Angel as a feminist icon. The general consensus, not surprisingly, is that Angel is NOT the feminist icon we are looking for. But it did make me wonder - are there ANY male feminist icons in popular culture? I can't think of any.

Okay. "Icon" is a pretty high bar. How about just a portrayal of a male feminist character? Any medium. How many can you think of?

I'm also including [livejournal.com profile] gingerwall's list of criteria from the same post, just for reference. Your criteria may be different (I expect the third one is particularly difficult to find in pop culture, which might eliminate everybody, lol), but I thought it might be helpful for people who want guidelines.

Here would be my qualifications for the Best Male Feminist Role Model in All of Everything Ever:
- Let the women in his life be autonomous agents and make their own decisions.
- Listen to and carefully consider what women have to say about issues that affect both of them.
- Be aware of how organizations that he is a part of contribute to the oppression of the women in his life and work to change or protest those cultures, all the while getting feedback from those women to make sure he is accurately reflecting their lived experience.
- Encourage the women in his life to defy traditional gender roles and take on powerful positions, even at the expense of his own control and power.

[identity profile] gabrielleabelle.livejournal.com 2010-08-02 02:46 pm (UTC)(link)
What the fuck???

Okay, I was about to give a thoughtful reply to your comment to me, but then I saw this and I just woke up and wow. Dude.

I feel that the dynamics of male/female dialogues when it comes to feminism are going right over your head. Cause you know what? We ain't on equal footing here. You're a member of the dominant class talking to members of the oppressed class. We're the class that formed the theories in order to educate men - like you - about the problems.

Of course men can engage in conversations about sexism. That's fantastic and wonderful. But what man can't do is insist of defining the terms of oppression. That's fucked up beyond belief. If women let men do that, we still wouldn't have the vote and men would be legally allowed to beat and rape us in marriage. Cause you know what happens when men set the standard for sexism? Yeah, we get situations like this where nothing passes muster, therefore, it's not something to worry about.

You get it with racism, too. After the civil rights movement, aversive racism became a hella lot more common because "racism" became such a loaded word. White folks wanted to avoid any sign that they might be racist. But racism still happened, just in more covert - often unconscious - ways. When PoC try to point that out, though, white people react to the "racism" word as if they were accused of killing babies. They can't be racist! They don't wear white sheets and burn crosses! In the absence of substantial proof, the white people conclude that no racism exists and the PoC keep getting fucked over.

But you know what? The PoC live with their oppression every damn day. They recognize the fucking patterns that occur. The way that those racist cultural thoughts manifest in little behaviors - white people crossing the street to avoid walking past them, people locking their car doors when entering the 'bad' (black) neighborhood. Are they supposed to present racist hate-filled journals of the white people to prove this is all due to racism? Fuck no. They're living that shit. I, a white chick, trust them to set the bar on what's racism.

Same fucking thing with women. We're live this shit everyday. Hell, I was at the museum the other day and happily going through their gift shop when I was smacked in the face with "The Game for Boys" full of magic tricks and adventure-y stuff that I would have loved as a girl. But no. It's for boys. Am I required to psychoanalyze the creators/marketers of said game to prove that it's sexism to you? Absolutely not. I know it's sexism because it's the same damn sexist thing I see all the time. Because I know the history of gender roles and I know how they still persist in society today. Because I'm a fucking chick and I live this stuff.

But you get to sit away from it all, waiting for me to submit proof of sexism before you'll deign to consider it? Fuck you.

You get to sit down and shut up and stop trying to dictate the terms of discussion. There's plenty of reading material on feminism for you to go through.

Feminism; You're doing it fucking wrong.
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[identity profile] stormwreath.livejournal.com 2010-08-02 04:36 pm (UTC)(link)
You know what? You're not arguing with me. You're arguing with a straw man you've built up in your head of what you think I'm saying.

I'm not defining anything. I'm not saying "this behaviour is sexist and this isn't." I'm not denying the existence of sexism. I don't disagree with pretty much all of everything you just wrote in your post there. I'm even not saying that Giles's behaviour doesn't match the stereotype in many ways - I said so in one of my posts further up there.

What I am denying, which is what you seem not to accept, is just because something could be X, then it therefore must be X. And now you're trying to end the discussion by making an appeal to authority, saying "It must be X because I say so, and you don't get to argue because you're Y, so shut up."

Yes, if something happens to you a lot, you'll start to recognise patterns that people who aren't in your situation won't notice. That's obvious. The danger comes when you start interpreting every experience you have through that same lens. When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. And if that sounds like the viewpoint of a privileged person who has the emotional detachment to stand back and not get involved on a personal level - well yes, I'm sure it is. But I don't think it's an incorrect viewpoint. Nor do I think it's incompatible with feminism, or anti-racism, or gay rights activism, or anything else. Once you start applying general principles to specific individual situations, you risk blinding yourself to what's really happening, and ending up making exactly the sort of decisions based on stereotyping that you're supposed to be opposed to.

[identity profile] gabrielleabelle.livejournal.com 2010-08-02 05:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh. You commented while I was commenting. Cool. I'm about to hop off to class and then spend time with the boyfriend. I'm tempted to try to derail this whole thing into a grand penguin AU commentfic before I leave just to keep it from going any further (Cause...dude), but I'm not feeling entirely creative enough for that right now. Meh.

[identity profile] gabrielleabelle.livejournal.com 2010-08-02 04:52 pm (UTC)(link)
"If someone (a) doesn't have a pattern of sexist behaviour in the past, and (b) doesn't make it clear that they're acting out of sexism in this particular case - then yeah, I'd say it is impossible to prove one way or the other. "

This is you setting the standards for sexism in this conversation.

This is me saying your standards are insufficient and coming from a place of privilege. Also, not in line with feminism.

What I am denying, which is what you seem not to accept, is just because something could be X, then it therefore must be X.

What you're telling me is that unless we have explicit proof that Giles' actions are directly linked to sexist ideals, I can't call that sexism? Do you realize how limiting that is? How dangerous that is? That's how men have weaseled out of shit for centuries.

If that's the case, then I should hang my feminist hat up. I can't prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the 'Game for Boys' I saw in the museum gift shop is sexist. It could be. But hey, I don't know. They could have completely pure and gender-blind motivations, right?

Hell, Warren could have been completely egalitarian when he told Katrina "Because you deserved it, bitch" in Villains. He might well have said that even if she were a man. I can't prove that he's a misogynist because he never explicitly said, "I hate and resent women."

And, hey, Mel Gibson has never explicitly said that he hates women, either. So when he tells his ex-girlfriend that she should just smile and blow him, I can't really leap to the conclusion that he's sexist. I mean, he could, certainly. But I can't say for certain, so let's just not discuss it.

Congrats, you've rendered feminist critique completely ineffective. Nothing's sexist anymore. Yay.
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[identity profile] stormwreath.livejournal.com 2010-08-02 06:55 pm (UTC)(link)
What you're telling me is that unless we have explicit proof that Giles' actions are directly linked to sexist ideals, I can't call that sexism?

I'm quite happy with saying that it's typically sexist behaviour, or that it reflects sexist stereotypes. You could even criticise the writers for putting together an episode that reinforces hostile sexual typecasting, although the fact that Buffy turns out to be vindicated in the final act works against that. My hesitation is over saying that sexism MUST be the reason in an individual case, when there are other possible explanations.

Also, for the record, I'm not telling you what you can call anything. I'm saying I will disagree with your opinion if you call it X. Big difference. :-)


Do you realize how limiting that is? How dangerous that is? That's how men have weaseled out of shit for centuries.

Yes, but nowadays, "Oh, those women blame everything on sexism. Men just can't win with them, so why bother even discussing it?" is how modern men weasel out of confronting sexism. That's a big reason why I've been pursuing this discussion instead of just letting it drop, because deep in my heart I don't want that to be true, and it's felt uncomfortably like that that IS what the two of you are arguing.


I can't prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the 'Game for Boys' I saw in the museum gift shop is sexist. It could be. But hey, I don't know. They could have completely pure and gender-blind motivations, right?

It seems unlikely. The act of putting "...for Boys" on the box doesn't sound like a gender-blind action to me. The most you can say in their defence is that their decision might be purely commercial, if market research found that targeting the product specifically at boys brought in more sales than making it gender-neutral. That still mean they're perpetuating sexist stereotypes even if it's not out of personally-held beliefs; they've just decided that pleasing their shareholders is more important than making a better society.


Hell, Warren could have been completely egalitarian when he told Katrina "Because you deserved it, bitch" in Villains. He might well have said that even if she were a man. I can't prove that he's a misogynist.

No, but you can bring forward numerous other examples of him treating women badly or making derogatory comments about them. Eventually the evidence becomes overwhelming. My point with Giles was that unlike with Warren, you can't bring forward a matching number of episodes where he belittles Buffy or deliberately undermines her, to suggest that it's a pattern with him caused by his underlying personality traits rather then being the product of specific circumstances.


And, hey, Mel Gibson has never explicitly said that he hates women, either. So when he tells his ex-girlfriend that she should just smile and blow him, I can't really leap to the conclusion that he's sexist.

Do you not see a distinction between questioning a woman's judgement as a leader in a particular crisis situation, and thinking that her only purpose in life is to shut up and give men blowjobs?


Congrats, you've rendered feminist critique completely ineffective. Nothing's sexist anymore. Yay.

I hope my reply has convinced you I don't believe that. :-) Thanks for the thoughtful post.

[identity profile] gabrielleabelle.livejournal.com 2010-08-02 10:44 pm (UTC)(link)
My hesitation is over saying that sexism MUST be the reason in an individual case, when there are other possible explanations.

And my issue is that this is exactly the type of problem feminism faces every damn time it tries to point out sexism.

Also, for the record, I'm not telling you what you can call anything. I'm saying I will disagree with your opinion if you call it X. Big difference.

Sexism isn't a matter of opinion. [livejournal.com profile] pocochina posted this link (http://shakespearessister.blogspot.com/2008/04/feminism-101-sexism-is-matter-of.html) in the comments to my LJ recently. It's quite nifty.

Yes, but nowadays, "Oh, those women blame everything on sexism. Men just can't win with them, so why bother even discussing it?" is how modern men weasel out of confronting sexism. That's a big reason why I've been pursuing this discussion instead of just letting it drop, because deep in my heart I don't want that to be true, and it's felt uncomfortably like that that IS what the two of you are arguing.

So you're using what you confess to be a weaseling tactic to engage in a dialogue and you're, what, surprised that it's pissing a couple feminists off?

Do you not see a distinction between questioning a woman's judgement as a leader in a particular crisis situation, and thinking that her only purpose in life is to shut up and give men blowjobs?

Do you not see that that's not the point of the example?

Dude, you've been around feminist discourse long enough to know this shit. No event happens in a vacuum. Giles explicitly countermanding Buffy's authority, allying with a horribly biased man in order to carry out what he thinks is the right thing to do, all after six years of building up Buffy's independence as a Slayer and as a woman...

I don't care that there may be a chance that Giles' motives were absolutely pure. It doesn't matter. It's a sexist act because it falls in line with so many sexist tropes. Intent doesn't matter. Giles fucked up in a sexist way. To have you come in here and advocate for him ad nauseum, lecturing us to just give him the benefit of the doubt is fucked up.

It's a feminist discussion. We're looking at things from a feminist lens. A lens that recognizes that we live in a patriarchy and that most people are going to act in sexist ways at some point or another. When one person's actions appear to be sexist? We're gonna call it sexist. To do otherwise is to start ignoring actions that have sexist repercussions that eventually harm women just because the person doing the action doesn't have a history with that or is an otherwise egalitarian guy. No.

When Giles does something that undercuts Buffy's hard-earned authority - a very feminist role for her to be in - he's hurting women as a class. When he does so because he doesn't trust her judgment in regards to a man - a very old and harmful cultural meme - he's hurting women as a class. When he prioritizes the rationale of the man with a grudge over the woman who has consistently made the right calls, he's hurting women. Whether he sat down and thought, "Huh. Buffy's a silly girl who can't think straight. I think I shall undermine her." doesn't matter. What matters are that his actions play into explicit sexist cultural tropes and they have the ultimate effect of harming women as a class.

[identity profile] gabrielleabelle.livejournal.com 2010-08-02 10:46 pm (UTC)(link)
And now I see Eowyn's reply a couple threads down. Whoops. Apologies. I would delete my reply out of courtesy but I just...kinda like it so I'll let it stand.

[identity profile] angearia.livejournal.com 2010-08-02 10:48 pm (UTC)(link)
LOL! ICON ♥

Yes, I've been following this discussion from the sidelines.
ext_15284: a wreath of lightning against a dark, stormy sky (Default)

[identity profile] stormwreath.livejournal.com 2010-08-02 11:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I was going to say "Thanks for replying but eowyn asked me to drop the subject, and I agreed" but you've seen that now anyway. If you want to continue the discussion by email/PM or whatever let me know but at this stage I won't be sorry or surprised to let it go.