Article written by tigtog

tigtog (aka Viv) lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves. You can read more about Viv on her bio page.

5 responses to “Sigh”

  1. mustelid

    Damn, that’s different from the “official” version! And don’t get me started on the whole padding thing. While things have gotten somewhat better in recent years, it’s still damn hard to find a bra in my size that DOESN’T come w/ padding. That isn’t in the preteen section.

  2. Feministe » Sigh

    [...] Until a few hours ago I was panicking a bit about what to write here, but thankfully the news media came through with an oldie but a goodie. This is also crossposted at Hoyden About Town.) [...]

  3. blue milk

    As if feminists don’t have enough to do, do we have to keep assigning valuable energy towards debunking this myth over and over again? Good on you tig tog for taking on the task again, great post. Now if only your post could be printed into leaflets and disseminated across the world. And then if only every critic of feminism had to agree to read the leaflet and desist in reigniting the sad old myth. Everyone got the leaflet? Have you read it? Do you understand it? We’re not against bras per se, we never burned them. Right, next myth. Feminists hate women having children! ‘K (deep breath), let’s sort this out, One. Last. Time.

  4. Adam

    As another reason why there isn’t an equivalence between the bra and these other technologies mentioned above, I could cite Iris Marion Young, who suggests that bras are particularly significant because of the particular significance of the ‘ideal’ breast-as-object in a patriarchal society.

    Young addresses this myth, and suggests that there are a number of reasons why the bra burning image has ‘stuck’. Firstly because, in her alternative, the breast without bra suggests a ‘fluid’ ontology which challenges a phallocratic ontology that the ‘ideal’ breast is a part of. Secondly, because the nipple is a challenge and a scandal to the genital zoning of sensitivity and eroticism and bras tend to conceal nipples. In both of these ways, the myth of bra burning depicts a scandal for phallocentrism.

  5. Renske

    I’m sorry, Adam, I don’t understand. Are you saying (or I.M. Young (great name)) that the bra has a function like a headscarf or a niqaab or another dress that conceals shapes of women? So in that sense that it makes sense that women in the 60s would have burned normal bras? Cause I don’t really understand ““ find the language quite hard to understand, not being an academic and not being English. By the way, no matter how I understand the righteousness of burning of padded bras, I once have had bras like that, and felt damn sexy in it. Weird, since I’ve always found behaviour that had to add to a certain “femininity’ (god, how I hate that word (hope I spelled it right; the Dutch equivalent is called “vrouwelijkheid’)) quite silly. I never wore make-up, pads in my shoulders, or had fake eye-lashes or anything like that, but still I absolutely didn’t dislike the look of the pads in that bra. I don’t understand that paradox in myself. I could guess that it is an old-fashioned fear that I’m not sexy just as who I am, but it didn’t feel as fear…

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