Feminist Theory & "Women's Issues" Discussion Thread: All Gender Identities Are Encouraged To Participate

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3) while i'd love to further discuss the impact biological gender has (and/or doesn't have) on human behavior, it seems that this probably isn't the best place for it. aok.

― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 15:37 (4 hours ago)

If you start a thread on this I will join in with it.

Also unknown as Zora (Surfing At Work), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 19:55 (fourteen years ago)

you're operating under of a lot unfair assumptions about the experiences of what you see as "paragraph 1" women and their "easier or simpler or less complicated" rides through society. I just think it's really important to bear in mind that no woman has it easy in regards to this stuff and just because their experiences in life may not mirror your own it doesn't mean for a second that they've necessarily been any less trying.

I'm pretty sure no one wants to do this, but there have definitely been posts by...some people that have taken the tack "I've never experienced misogyny/etc in this way so I don't think the philosophy/theory/substantiated thing you're talking about is true or I don't like how you're talking about it."

That's def putting lived experience over ideas that are an accepted and solid part of the general discourse. If you want to know what the terms, ideas, etc are about, either listen in or ask questions or google things or read up. I'm completely stupid on theory, I don't know shit about shit on transgender ish or anything, but I do notice when logical fallacies are being all flounced around about.

one little aioli (Laurel), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:03 (fourteen years ago)

If you start a thread on this I will join in with it.

been thinking about it, tbh. expect it'll just be on gender in general, though (to honor the pattern of gradual widening that's been going on in these threads over the last week or so).

Little GTFO (contenderizer), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:05 (fourteen years ago)

Hey, I am trying to describe my experiences, and why I have emotionally loaded reactions to certain patterns of behaviour. Of course because it is so subjective, it may read as judgemental. I have no right to draw any judgemental conclusions about Paragraph 1, but when it gets into Paragraph 2, those women are *vetting me* for correctness of presentation which is very unpleasant - I'm already feeling how you're describing and my judgement is a reaction against feeling vetted and found wanting.

I'm really being throw by this use of the term "biological gender."

Because my understanding is that the ~biological~ stuff is sex. Like, it's obvious that biological sex has some bearing on gender, but saying "biological gender" is like saying "biological personality." Of course all mental functions are ultimately reducible to biology bcuz we are just chemical bonebags. But it's such a reductive way of looking at what we think of as ~personality~ as to be almost useless.

If you can find some hard science on how biological sex interfaces with gender - by all means, talk about it - that's why I lent you a whole book full of it, Z. I'm just not interested in any more not-backed-up opinions on why "men are the adjective gender because: testosterone."

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:14 (fourteen years ago)

http://cache2.artprintimages.com/lrg/30/3005/P9GBF00Z.jpg

The Cheerfull Turtle (Latham Green), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:18 (fourteen years ago)

xpost

Yes WCC, I really appreciate the book loan. I'm through the intro and the 1st chapter and it's completely fascinating. Also I'm really enjoying it because it supports my own most cherished beliefs about the need to sweep away all forms of assumption w/r/t gender whilst at the same time somewhat frightened by the apparent extent of our malleability.

I would love a thread where I can just chew over the topics in that book with people, and hopefully some more books like it, and I think Con's thread will serve nicely?

Also unknown as Zora (Surfing At Work), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:21 (fourteen years ago)

lol Latham that's an amazing photo what is it!

max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:25 (fourteen years ago)

its Zoe from Dr Who!

The Cheerfull Turtle (Latham Green), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:26 (fourteen years ago)

I'd love to do a reading group on that book (and also Pink Brain Blue Brain) involving ground up rebuilding from Evidence Based stuff!

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:27 (fourteen years ago)

ah - my Dr. Who knowledge doesn't go back that far

max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:29 (fourteen years ago)

I would love a thread where I can just chew over the topics in that book with people, and hopefully some more books like it, and I think Con's thread will serve nicely?

― Also unknown as Zora (Surfing At Work), Wednesday, February 15, 2012 12:21 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark

as it turns out, i think there's already an appropriate thread for this kind of discussion. i posted in it here. it's a generic "gender" thread, max started it a year ago, and it starts off discussing determinism (in a rather lolzy way, but whatever). open invite to anyone who's interested in talking abt that or any other gender-related stuff there.

Little GTFO (contenderizer), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:32 (fourteen years ago)

I apologize for thread derail to Dr WHo companions

The Cheerfull Turtle (Latham Green), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:37 (fourteen years ago)

I'm pretty sure no one wants to do this, but there have definitely been posts by...some people that have taken the tack "I've never experienced misogyny/etc in this way so I don't think the philosophy/theory/substantiated thing you're talking about is true or I don't like how you're talking about it."

I think that because these are sensitive topics, posts sometimes get read incorrectly. I know that I am definitely guilty of this myself. I don't know if the ". . . some people" was meant to mean me but if it was then I once again apologize for having done this in the past. Also, if I've said that I haven't experienced misogyny in the way that someone on board was describing, I didn't mean to invalidate their experience but do understand how it can often feel that way. My not sharing a particular experience, however, doesn’t mean that I haven’t battled related issues of my own including harassment, domestic violence, and rape. I mention these things, which I generally don't talk about very much, to emphasize my point earlier about the importance of not making assumptions about people, esp ones that conclude they've had easier rides.

That's def putting lived experience over ideas that are an accepted and solid part of the general discourse

Isn't lived experience pretty damn important when it comes to these discussions? Theory is great and necessary but I'm way more interested in hearing people's actual stories/experiences than listening to people rehash things they've read in a book or learned in a lecture hall. Not that those are crucial or don't have their place, mind. It's just that they're just way less interesting to me than people's actual experiences esp in the context of a thread on a discussion-based message board.

wolf kabob (ENBB), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 20:41 (fourteen years ago)

So that other thread is gonna be "I can't be bothered to read thd book but do I ever have PINIONS about what it all means" which is p much my gender theory nightmare.

This is why I don't discuss gender with men any more. Failed experiment, tears before bedtime.

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:20 (fourteen years ago)

I'm gonna try and make them read the book and if they don't I'm gonna tie them to a chair and feed them the book one piece at a time. Until I get tired. I get that you've been round this course too many times but I haven't - outside of the sociology of gaming at least - and I'm excited about it, at least for now.

Also unknown as Zora (Surfing At Work), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:23 (fourteen years ago)

I'm not doing this any more. I'm going back to threads about trees and coastline and Cornish grammar and Radiohead records. :-(

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:23 (fourteen years ago)

idk u got sniffy w me for quoting monique wittig. its like also there is not one single syllabus for doing womens studies. there are feminisms.

judith, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:24 (fourteen years ago)

I must've missed it: what book are we talking about?

jaymc, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:27 (fourteen years ago)

"The 100 Greatest Action Films of All Time"

max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:28 (fourteen years ago)

LOL

I like that this and that are the two threads I have posted on today.

wolf kabob (ENBB), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:29 (fourteen years ago)

Thom Yorke's hair is really kinda attractive in a so wrong it's right way.

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:29 (fourteen years ago)

LOLOL.

There's more than one pertinent book but I'm starting with "Delusions of Gender".

<3 Thom Yorke's hair

Also unknown as Zora (Surfing At Work), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:30 (fourteen years ago)

I haven't looked at the Action Films thread b/c I don't generally like action films.

jaymc, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:31 (fourteen years ago)

You don't? What kind of man are you?!

wolf kabob (ENBB), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:31 (fourteen years ago)

Exactly.

jaymc, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:32 (fourteen years ago)

I refuse to read that thread after seeing Con Air anywhere except #1

kinder, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:41 (fourteen years ago)

NO one has the BALLS to mix action films with PR)N!

The Cheerfull Turtle (Latham Green), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:43 (fourteen years ago)

I come back in here and you're talking about Thom Yorke's hair and I'm not even responsible for it.

Melissa W, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 21:55 (fourteen years ago)

Thom Yorke's hair is a constant fascination to me for 18-odd years now. Talk about a guy who has been some interesting places in relation to redefining masculinity. I love Yorke's version of masculinity.

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 22:01 (fourteen years ago)

where do you stand on jonny's version

mookieproof, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 22:02 (fourteen years ago)

I refuse to read that thread after seeing Con Air anywhere except #1

i did my bit :(

dayove cool (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 22:04 (fourteen years ago)

I can't deal w his colour blindness - I always forget that's the deep reason for my disinterest. We're incompatible at a DNA level. (hey maybe my colourblindness is indicative of some deep gender incongruence rather than a double dose of genetic bad luck.)

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 22:06 (fourteen years ago)

I'm still feeling really really angry about this, like there is no discussion that men cannot take away, change the parameters of, and then dominate. While insulting you and blaming you for the schism. This is just so enraging. And then you get blamed and demonised for being made angry by it. There is this huge well of anger over this stuff, and every discussion of it that goes this way ends up really reinforcing that anger.

I'd had such a great day, I saw this amazing art show, had a great conversation and then something like this happens to make me feel disempowered. And I know that no one can make you feel this bad without your permission, but, like, as a woman, it's like there's really only one subject that you're ~allowed~ to be an expert on, that is your own womanhood, and they gotta wrench that away from you too.

And now the splainers will turn up to tell me "that's not what happened" but my god, that's what it feels like. This is where that deep rage comes from. And fuck that.

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:02 (fourteen years ago)

Talk about a guy who has been some interesting places in relation to redefining masculinity. I love Yorke's version of masculinity.

I'm not really aware of any of this! What makes him different from any number of other rock frontmen?

jaymc, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:06 (fourteen years ago)

hey WCC. just wanted to talk abt gender, sex and biology in general terms. got the impression that this thread wasn't the place for it. wasn't intending to hijack the discussion, and the other discussion didn't really go where i'd hoped anyway :/

Little GTFO (contenderizer), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:09 (fourteen years ago)

That's a good question but I think I'm actually still too angry and now slightly too drunk to even talk about my favourite subject of Thomosexuality. (my phone recognises Thomosexual as a word?)

I dunno, he's talked a bit in interviews about trying to find ways to express masculinity without lapsing into rock star cliches of aggression. He comes across as someone who lets himself be very vulnerable but in an open way, not an emo way or a wet, weedy way. The finding other ways to be sexy that don't involve thrusting domination. I'm too drunk / angry to be articulate about this.

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:13 (fourteen years ago)

i just keep thinking how when i read judith butler, judith halberstam and eve sedwick for the first time, it seemed to be about something incredibly important and personal to me. a lesbian, a tranny and probably most shockingly a woman who is married to a man. butler and sedgwick especially went beyond a sensitive deference to the different subjects they wrote about in some of their texts but i'm not the only homo who saw himself and was empowered by epistemology of the closet or bodies that matter. i think it has to go beyond typing about how you feel in ALL CAPS. and also to remind yourself that this idea that "gender is a social construct" is most often attributed to a the chapter in gender studies where she's writing about drag balls. i mean, i think this can be a problem with identity politics in general. to fetishise the subject position. there have to be ways of moving beyond this. undoing the subject position instead of endlessly rewriting it.

judith, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:21 (fourteen years ago)

chapter in gender trouble

judith, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:26 (fourteen years ago)

I've never read Judith Butler. I've read a bunch of books on neuroscience and anthropology and sociolinguistics and lots of analysis of scientific studies of the biological differences and overwhelming similarities between women and men. So that "lay off *these things you have never read*" is a bit of a wrong piece of advice. I don't want opinion and theory about what people think gender is. I'm interested in science and in personal experience of the constraints gender creates.

If ppl want to go create another thread, fine. But to carry on bitching about "omg blowback" bcuz a dude got asked for citation or gtfo on a wild assertion about the link between testosterone and violence? That's just insults.

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:30 (fourteen years ago)

I mean, this is yr gender role subversion right here, that it's the man wants to go on about his ~feelings~ about gender while the woman is saying "show me the science."

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:33 (fourteen years ago)

no one insulted you

max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:36 (fourteen years ago)

Judith that's a great post and the idea of "undoing the subject position instead of endlessly rewriting it" is perfectly stated I think.

ryan, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:36 (fourteen years ago)

i guess i'm about as skeptical of science as being any more helpful or insightful.

judith, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:37 (fourteen years ago)

When someone's going "but testosterone is proof of X" actual science regarding the chemical is very useful for proving that wrong and overly reductive.

White Chocolate Cheesecake, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:39 (fourteen years ago)

But that discussion has moved to a different thread.

emil.y, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:40 (fourteen years ago)

but the condition of science is doubt, it is only in certain contexts that scientific language ever affects certainty.

judith, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:40 (fourteen years ago)

that is a good post like all your posts on this have been plax

kim tim jim investor (harbl), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:40 (fourteen years ago)

But to carry on bitching about "omg blowback" bcuz a dude got asked for citation or gtfo on a wild assertion about the link between testosterone and violence? That's just insults.

hey WCC. i wouldn't describe my response as "bitching", and i've explained the science behind the link i'm drawing pretty clearly, both in this thread and the other. if you'd like to talk to me about it, i'd be happy to. fwiw, i don't believe i've directly insulted you at any point here. if i may, however, your language towards me has been moving quickly in that direction (asshole, butthurt, bitching, etc).

Little GTFO (contenderizer), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:41 (fourteen years ago)

but the condition of science is doubt, it is only in certain contexts that scientific language ever affects certainty.

Hence Forster's (?) assertion of the 'factual' supremacy of fiction

le ralliement du doute et de l'erreur (Michael White), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:42 (fourteen years ago)

butthurt, bitching, etc

was kind of lol'ing at the ironies of the choice of words there myself

max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 23:43 (fourteen years ago)


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