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Article written by Lauredhel

Lauredhel is an Australian woman and mother with a disability. She blogs about disability and accessibility, social and reproductive justice, gender, freedom from violence, the uses and misuses of language, medical science, otters, gardening, and cooking.

3 responses to “BFTP: Parenting While Female: “It’s Not About You””

  1. Mary

    I’ve been reading Ariel Levy’s Female Chauvinist Pigs, and while I consider it a problematic book in and of itself, one line my thoughts are going in as a result is the idea of inhabiting one’s own body being revolutionary. In her book, the corresponding act would be having pleasurable sex if and when one wants to, as opposed to doing sexual things to please onlookers, or holding sex at an ironic distance in order to be “one of the boys” and thus needing to talk about it as if one is a patriarchy-approved heterosexual man.

    So nursing is far from an exact parallel, but we have bodies, largely women’s bodies, that aren’t part of the male gaze narrative here too, as in Morgan’s quote.

    I know you’ve covered this in other posts, but there’s also a rather horrible co-opting of infants and young children into the male gaze in the nursing criticism. The male gaze says breasts are sexual, and the male gaze cannot be wrong: therefore, for infants and children, breasts should be sexual, at the same time that they mustn’t be (because children must be innocent). Infants and children must look at breasts the same way a patriarchy-approved man does, and so therefore they mustn’t be allowed them at all.

  2. laughingrat

    Thanks for posting this! It brought together some of the stuff that had been nagging at me around this whole issue and made it “click.”

  3. I wonder if there’s some underlying insecurity too: our culture has a sexual breast-obsession that’s not shared by many other cultures, and I’ve read numerous examples of people from those cultures finding our sexual breast-obsession amusing and sort of infantile, precisely because they see breasts as for infant feeding.

    So maybe some of these men who don’t want to see or think about women breast feeding, just as they want to sexualise the infant’s relationship with the breast because that’s their own relationship, are afraid their sexual attraction will be suspected of being infantile.

    (And some of that could be about comfort and affection, because Real Men (TM) in this culture aren’t supposed to ever be in need of comfort and affection, just Sex (TM).)

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