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9 responses to “Defining feminism and destroying the joint (recovered)”

  1. The Kittehs' Unpaid Help

    Good grief, I’d hate to have Gina Rinehart used as an example of anything but Obscenely Rich Wingnuts.

  2. tigtog
    Feminism is the struggle against masculinsed violence and feminised poverty. Or, the acknowledgement that physical violence is enacted disproportionately by men and poverty is experienced disproportionately by women. That’s it, really.

    I’m going to leave the arguing of this point to the book learning feminists because I don’t have an answer for this. I think it is incomplete but can’t say why.

    Well the reason my Feminism 101 blog only does Feminism 101 and not further is because I’m not a book learning feminist either, but it strikes me as a crucial omission to overlook the role of microaggressions and double standards in perpetuating masculinised violence and feminised poverty.

  3. tigtog

    I do understand how the surname debate can be seen as something trivial, but for me what I see in surname-changing conventions is the systemic constraint of what is considered “acceptable” in women’s choices, and I’m pretty sure that constraining women’s choices is a HUGE part of how poverty is feminised.

  4. tigtog

    BTW, some valid criticism of the limits of the Bechdel-Wallace test (as one of the micro-matters versus the macro-matters) has been mentioned on LP, and I responded there with some thoughts:

    Re the Bechdel/Bechdel-Wallace test, I do agree that it’s been widely misapplied/overextended but I still contend that it holds up a spotlight on a narrative imbalance – it’s a low bar to hurdle to have female characters talk about aspects of their lives which don’t involve being reliant upon men or male approval, and that’s still a bar which a whole lot of films just don’t manage. It’s very possible to have films with wonderful female parts that do not pass Bechdel-Wallace, but it’s still a huge part of the human experience which is being erased.

    P.S. as part of a totally unrelated (to this post) discussion with spouse, I have come to hypothesise that part of the popularity of slash-fiction amongst heterosexual women is at least partially an inverted aspect of Bechdel-Wallace – some of the appeal lies in how male characters are narratively more fully rounded characters, whereas women so often are narratively adjuncts/objects.

  5. Orlando

    We waste enough energy already explaining to trolls that it’s possible to care about more than one thing at the same time, without having to say it to other feminists, too.

  6. Helen

    Yes!!!!

  7. Helen

    Orlando, may I swipe your comment as the title for my next post? I’ll attribute.

    Unfortunately it’s rife at the moment. The Tumblr bloggers who are somewhat to the left of me do this constantly. Then they’ll do a post about some pop artist or whatever. HEY MOTE BEAM THING.

  8. Orlando

    Sure, go for your life. I really should sit down and write a proper response myself.

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