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Article written by blue milk

blue milk is the mother of two and a partner to one. She yells a lot less than you would think. blue milk mostly writes about feminist motherhood. You can read more about her at her own blog, blue milk.

5 responses to “And now, fatherhood as the path to feminism”

  1. Sheryl

    This will be helpful input into a family discussion about the rapper’s lyrics turnabout, which kicked off with one of my teenage daughters saying “yeah like how come it took something that important in his personal life to make a difference – shouldn’t he always have had better manners?”

    Thanks!

  2. Sandy

    It didn’t work for Tony Abbott. Or maybe he would be 10 times worse had he had sons instead

  3. Mindy

    That is a really frightening thought Sandy.

  4. elaine

    IMO this comes back to non-feminist men still viewing women as chattel.

    women only become important when they/we are “their” women.

    I feel a similar dis-ease when people try to fight misogyny with the argument “what if it were your wife/sister/daughter?”. It shouldn’t matter whose wife/sister/daughter she is!

  5. Feminist Avatar

    This is interesting though in that it does suggest that these fathers are actively imaging their daughters as people who should achieve equally to men. I don’t think this would have historically always been true. Plenty of fathers in the past expected their daughters to have restricted social roles, educated them in subordination, and even actively limited their education to keep them in their place. And I think such men were as likely just as motivated by love of their daughters as fathers today. So, in many ways, this is a success of feminism that such possibilities are wanted and desired for daughters.

    I am kind of intrigued about what this says about their relationships with their partners though, that such ‘awakening’ took the birth of a daughter.

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