"I'm starting to think that a burka is a far more appropriate (and feminist) form of dress than a g-string bikini or leather hot pants."

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Point raised by toraneko on the sex is evil / down with Christina thread. So, is this true? Is the fate of Amina Lawal preferable to the fate of Shannyn Sossamon? Did the women under the Taliban have it too easy? Um, I'm thinking no, but who knows, I might be wrong (I am American!) Speak up - Ladies especially! (or not - after all it's far more 'appropriate' for women to not have a voice at all, right toraneko!)

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 6 October 2002 19:16 (twenty-three years ago)

http://www.mertonai.org/amina/ (toraneko: she's got it easy, she could be forced to watch a Madonna video like us poor Australians)

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 6 October 2002 19:18 (twenty-three years ago)

after all it's far more 'appropriate' for women to not have a voice at all, right toraneko

haha james' blunt never failed me yet

mark p (Mark P), Sunday, 6 October 2002 19:55 (twenty-three years ago)

Feminists who say that you shouldn't be taken seriously/aren't feminist enough yourself if you don't dress in baggy pants/docs/ whatever are a dud. Women get enough shit as it is, you should be free to wear whatever you want without judgements getting made on what you look like.

This is a really touchy topic for me, so I'll try to keep from really ranting, but- after wearing a skirt & heels to a big technical meeting once, I had someone come up & say to me afterwards that they thought I was a admin assistant b/c I was "dressed too nicely to be a programmer." A boyfriend of a friend once told me that the only reason I was offered an internship at a company was because I was young & they wanted some office decoration, and another friend told me that I took unfair advantage of the fact that it was easier for me to call in favors from other teams- I could go on with these stories. It hurts hearing these from some guys, but I just can not believe it when I hear it from other women. I'd like to note that these were all from companies that I'm no longer at, and probably indicitive of bigger cultural problems, but still.

Hiding the fact that you're a woman is not feminist to me, it's someone who has issues with their identity. nb: I've not read the sex is evil/down w/ Christina thread. So I might be reading this incorrectly.

</rant>

lyra (lyra), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:15 (twenty-three years ago)

Toraneko has a point. we can have singers (from pop idol or whatever crap 'reality' TV show is going on right now) covered up in burkas and then we'll judge the singers on the voice! justice will be served by this and you know it!

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:17 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't have a problem with my identity, but I don't go to work dressed like Britney. I wear clothes that I think are flattering, comfortable and affordable (the last is always hardest to achieve).

In a perfect world we could all wear feather bikinis and be judged on our professional expertise or whatever. But at present when I am working it is more important to me to be seen as capable than to be seen as a woman so I dress appropriately.

isadora, Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:28 (twenty-three years ago)

"we can have singers (from pop idol or whatever crap 'reality' TV show is going on right now) covered up in burkas and then we'll judge the singers on the voice! justice will be served by this and you know it!" - how 'bout we just shoot Elvis from the waist up (justice = celibacy).

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:45 (twenty-three years ago)

i didnt take toranekos post to be sex is evil at all. more that the amount of videos that use sex to 'sell' is getting a bit out of hand.
it has always been this way im sure in advertising etc, using womens bodies/ sexual allure to sell objects, which has pissed me off since i was old enough to understand it.
but denying your 'womanhood' or covering up your body in huge bagginess is not an answer to this issue. the whole thing is wrapped up in how women are perceived by men and other women depending upon how they dress.......ie:lyras problems when she dressed in skirt and heels.
some people claim women ask for harrassment if they dress in such and such a fashion, others say women should be able to dress how they want without fear of abuse etc.
in my view it is a thin line we all tread, what to wear without being picked as either a slut or a rabid feminist or a sex object, which incidentally is a bit hard to deny since we are designed to attract just by the way our bodies are formed / made.
it is incredibly difficult to get away from the syndrome of 'dressing for sex vs dressing for the office' esp with the ( still unbelievable ) attitude of some people who want to label you accordingly.
i have worked in both offices of large corporations and in clubs / pubs,and found the attitude to be pretty much the same in each- you are a woman so you are a target for those men ( or women )who think they have a right to harass you if you wear anything other than a shapeless sack.
this is so wrong, and so f..king annoying i got into many 'fites' over the whole issue.
women being forced to wear burkas is another thing altogether, not simply being a dress code but a whole belief system which is designed to remove any rights a woman has as a human.

donna (donna), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:47 (twenty-three years ago)

yeah shoot elvis...only problem he's dead now.

i'll talk to a couple of my friends in the physics department. they might have a time travelling machine available. I'll tell 'em its for 'research' purposes.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:49 (twenty-three years ago)

"those men ( or women )who think they have a right to harass you if you wear anything other than a shapeless sack." = toraneko?

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:50 (twenty-three years ago)

"we can have singers (from pop idol or whatever crap 'reality' TV show is going on right now) covered up in burkas and then we'll judge the singers on the voice! justice will be served by this and you know it!" - how 'bout we just shoot Elvis from the waist up (justice = celibacy)

the roundabout reverse racism implication is silly and you know it james

this is not a sexuality issue -> its a gender issue

mark p (Mark P), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:50 (twenty-three years ago)

but 'seriously' now. a pop group consisting of singers wearing Burkas is perfect! It might just chart and it can't be worse than the stuff going on at the moment can it?!

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:53 (twenty-three years ago)

mark p: okay, how 'bout we just refuse to air the Christina Aguilera video uncut (Mtv stateside at least). Are gender issues or sexuality issues at the root of Mtv's decision?

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:55 (twenty-three years ago)

ie. Is because they won't show that much of a women's ass or they just won't show ass period?

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:56 (twenty-three years ago)

And I like how me drawing a comparison between Elvis on Ed Sullivan and Christina Aguilera on Mtv is outrageous but saying that women under the Taliban had it better than American women is valid (and just! I know this (apparently)!)

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 6 October 2002 20:58 (twenty-three years ago)

?

donna (donna), Sunday, 6 October 2002 21:00 (twenty-three years ago)

you sound like you need some time alone with that christinal video Blount.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 6 October 2002 21:02 (twenty-three years ago)

james i just burned the fuck out of my finger on a steaming hotttt lasagne and thusly cannae type well

i will get back to you

mark p (Mark P), Sunday, 6 October 2002 21:06 (twenty-three years ago)

Italy has it's revenge!

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 6 October 2002 21:07 (twenty-three years ago)

james stop refusing to see the point and get over the burka comment


mark p (Mark P), Sunday, 6 October 2002 21:13 (twenty-three years ago)

neither toraneko NOR i ever said on that thread that sex is evil. i am really fukkin sick of the way on this board if you say one word about the way women are portrayed on tele you are andrea dworkin. i don't think there is anything wrong with women being sexy. i am probbly the last person on earth who would have a problem with women being sexy. but i'm damn well sick of having to OUTRIGHT STATE THIS everytime a thread like this happens. what i have a problem with is
a) almost all female pop stars are scantily clad in their videos. while it may not CAUSE people to view women in a certain way it DOES reinforce some archaic attitudes about gender.
b) the idea that the only way for a woman to be sexy is to look young, thin and underdressed which is pretty much a prerequisite for a woman to get any kind of recognition in the media. (i don't wanna hear "oh but what about so-and-so" - of course there are exceptions)
c) the idea that any feminist woman who criticises these trends is somehow anti-sex.

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 6 October 2002 21:38 (twenty-three years ago)

Yay Di! :-) Now that's a post and a half. :-)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 6 October 2002 21:44 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't see how one mode of dress is intrinsically more feminist or better than another. The issue is surely an objection to the use and objectification of women's sexuality by a male power structure. Whether that is why Christina as an individual dresses how she does (i.e. appallingly, generally) is of little interest, and I have no idea, but surely the fact that female sexuality is so much more foregrounded than that of men, so much more used in advertising, is an obvious symptom of a society that is still sexist.

One interesing point is a recent ad for Ash's hits comp, I think, with actor James Nesbitt showing his arse in a way that I've not seen from a woman in an ad - but, and this is both urgent and key, it's comedy when we see his bum, but imagine switching him with any of the actresses from Cold Feet (the show for which he is best known), and it's not comedy, it's titillation. We are still far from equality.

I'm not sure how big an issue this is, in some ways, but it doesn't seem to me completely unconnected with the kind of thinking that leads some men to think that women are supposed to be available; or that a woman in a short skirt is somehow inviting and authorising any sexual behaviour on a man's part. It's not the ground which I'd particularly choose to make a stand, to fight these battles, but I think it is something that still has plenty of room for improvement.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Sunday, 6 October 2002 21:52 (twenty-three years ago)

The problem with dressing in a very noticeably undressed manner in situations where that is not the norm is that almost all people are going to notice is how much skin is bared, and there ought to be more to a person's public face than that (if they're attempting to be more than a porn star that is).

I'm not saying women who get raped "deserve it for wearing tight clothes" or anything like that, not at all, because that is not asking for it and there's no defense. But women who are looked at sexually - just, simply, visually looked at - while wearing tight, short clothes basically can't expect not to be unless breasts and asses somehow cease to be sexual body parts, which would be sad. And isn't that the point of tight clothes anyway - to highlight these? I don't think it would fix society's sexism for women to be able to wear thongs wherever they feel like it without being sexual objects, I think that would ruin sex because people's bodies would have to cease being interesting. It would be better if people would just keep parts of the body that are obviously sexual parts (breasts, asses, crotches, etc.) somewhat covered in situations where they do not want them to be noticed. This doesn't mean dress like men, but there are basic limits people observe for different social situations.

Maria (Maria), Sunday, 6 October 2002 22:05 (twenty-three years ago)

Di I agree but I think sometimes the criticism comes from a wish to blur natural bilogical urges in the name of andrgonism -it attempots to somehow dimish that fact that in terms of not only physical appearnace but brain structure/hormones/genes etc we are very different. The whole message seems to be social conditionong and patrirachical(sp)society are the only factors at play here.

I think that would ruin sex because people's bodies would have to cease being interesting.

need a thread feminity/masculinity (sp) does it still exist?, how is it expressed, why is it expressed etc.

Kiwi, Sunday, 6 October 2002 22:22 (twenty-three years ago)

apologies for spelling

Kiwi, Sunday, 6 October 2002 22:25 (twenty-three years ago)

I think sometimes the criticism comes from a wish to blur natural bilogical urges in the name of andrgonism

is anything "natural" though? sure - women and men have different bodies and they operate differently. most feminists would not deny that one iota. but the point is: what these gender differences mean is getting exaggerated for the sake of defending the status quo.

re: dividing it all up into one or the other - what about differences between womens bodies? they don't get emphasized - pretty much minimised as if women are all the same (haha except the unsexy ones). what about differences between mens bodies? why are they not emphasized? what about people who fit neither category?

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 6 October 2002 22:39 (twenty-three years ago)

Yes lets judge those singers who impress us by not conforming to existing pop standards on the eh, what's it called again, oh right the voice!!!!! the voice yeah that's it. This is such a subjective issue, massively so.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 01:53 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah, there aren't any male popstars/actors who get by solely on the basis of their looks and/or physiques. What power structure is the career of Ryan Phillipe serving? And am I actually the only one who thinks the comment in big bold letters might possibly be bullshit? How come noone's answering my questions with anything other than "Get with the program" and "Come off it James"? C'mon - reeducate me! Don't just say "How dare you accuse our attacks on displays of sexuality to be anti-sexuality!" When Jerry Falwell attacks this video what makes his line of reasoning different from yours since the rhetoric is nearly the same?

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 01:59 (twenty-three years ago)

And it seems to be accepted wisdom that these mega-popstars resort to these brazen displays of sexuality to sell records, but the numbers don't bear it out; see: Mariah Carey, Janet Jackson circa The Velvet Rope, Madonna circa Erotica/Sex/Body of Evidence, Britney Spears circa Britney. Doesn't the possibility exist that these displays are rooted in self-expression instead of marketing? Does it matter?

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 02:05 (twenty-three years ago)

Actually to be less glib to Di and co, cos I feel I was earlier and I like you guys, what way can a woman dress without reinforcing some archaic attitude? Except perhaps how she wants, and it's all a bit in the eye of the beholder. That is to say how you dress is not how you are perceived, noone can control that can they.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 02:11 (twenty-three years ago)

Ronan: I think that how you dress contributes a lot to how you are perceived by most people. I am very surprised that anyone does not find this to be the case.

James: I guess I can attack Britney Spears' portrayal of sexuality without thinking that I must be anti- all or any displays of sexuality because I don't believe that it is a true representation of her sexuality/identity.

Instead I think it's a parody, a kind of lowest common denominator of sexiness probably designed to make money.

isadora, Monday, 7 October 2002 02:32 (twenty-three years ago)

When Jerry Falwell attacks this video what makes his line of reasoning different from yours since the rhetoric is nearly the same?

Not to cause problems but has Mr. Falwell ever taken young scantily clad women who aren't Madonna (since she used explicitly religious imagery in her videos, I don't think she counts as someone who raises the ire of the Falwells of the world solely on her wardrobe choices) to task?

I do think that Di's post was a pretty succinct summation of why seeing the parade of navels—and if you think we're just talking popstars here you're being naive and haven't looked in your local bookshop/magazine store/new york times magazine photo spread lately—is so dismaying to those of us who might not fit the physical profile. And yeah, there are male bimbos too now, hooray for equality? Why do I feel like so many of the repercussions of feminism are great leaps back for everyone involved in humanity?

Also James in response to your 'but it doesn't bear out in sales ergo the move towards overt sexuality must be 'authentic'' idea: The fact that it doesn't bear out in sales doesn't mean that record labels don't enjoy the gobs of ink image changes like this spurt out. Or have you forgotten the old line about there being no such thing as bad press?

maura (maura), Monday, 7 October 2002 04:32 (twenty-three years ago)

I like videos of thin girls with scanty clothing.

Also, I don't view this as a "norm" and think that viewing it as such is destructive and leads to bad self-image issues etc. Also, I think that that isn't the ONLY way to be sexy (though damn it's sexy sometimes) and its as much the display of sexuality (telegraphed through, among other things, scanty clothing but also dancing, etc.) as the body-type which is appealing.

I don't think that appreciating thin near-naked sexy chiXor and respecting women as people and not expecting them all to look thin and near-naked all the time are mutually exclusive. Also, I think the preponderance of these images and lack of mainstream dealing with the rest of it can be v. bad and make holding both views more difficult/rare than it should be.

Also, I think that the combative rhetoric vs. these sexy chiXor is sometimes less than helpful. sample reason why.

militant feminist: those scantily clad perky sizeable breasts aren't sexy, they're perverse and scary!

dude: no way, they're totally sexy! go breasts!

Also, it tends to make girls dealing with these body image issues less able to. "militant feminist person tells me that that isn't sexy, but she's clearly wrong since guys dig it. and I do want guys to dig me, so I guess I should try to look like that..." as opposed to putting the two in balance and understanding that a guy should ALSO want you for the rest of you, but that doesn't mean that denying you have a body or sexuality at all will get you very far -- for yourself even.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Monday, 7 October 2002 04:54 (twenty-three years ago)

If I take the question literally, the answer is "no," insofar as the less feminist form of dress is whatever someone else dictates to you, whether it be the Taliban, record company press and publicity department, or the ILx massive.

Personally, I think Britney and P!nk look darn good in their videos and find their outfits no more risque than those in the average fashion editorial. There has always been strong cross-fertilization of pop music and fashion, and some aspects of fashion have always been about sex and flaunting your body. P!nk in particular is very clever about combining designer clothing with street style, which I think IS feminist, since she does not exactly have model proportions.

When I turn on the television, I want to be entertained. I find eye candy of any sort very entertaining. (Have you seen how tight those baseball pants are?)

With respect to dressing in the real, non-music video, world, lyra is OTM.

felicity (felicity), Monday, 7 October 2002 05:21 (twenty-three years ago)

maura - I don't doubt that marketing is a factor in brazen sexuality but I don't think it's the only factor, "the move towards overt sexuality must be 'authentic'" - no, but the move towards overt sexuality isn't necessarily 'phony' either (and I'm still not sure it's a bad thing if it is); Madonna clearly had an agenda beyond marketing, Janet Jackson's forays into kinkiness were genuine, and Mariah Carey didn't let out the Long Island skank until she got away from her handlers (with the results pretty much confirming her handlers advice, although the songs didn't help). Britney and Christina are clearly a bit more craven, but I do think these moves are driven by them, I'm sure of it with Christina - her mom was clearly setting her up to be a younger Celine Dion, early 90's Mariah-type. I think the motives for Britney's working with the Neptunes are the same motives for her getup in the 'Slave' video, and they weren't nearly as sales-driven as Steve Earles' radicalism. Do I go 'ick' at the thought of Hooters restaurants or Maxim magazine? Yes, but the context is different there; the comment above was prompted by popstars and the overt sexuality of Britney, Christina, and Pink (and I have no idea how Pink got included in there) so that's what I'm commenting on. All the same, and maybe it's just me, but I don't think the objectification of women is worse than the complete enslavement and dehumanization of women, which is what the quote in bold at the top of the screen basically states, and I don't think the objectification of women = the complete enslavement and dehumanization of women. I don't think Britney Spears (or even Jenna Jameson) has it worse off than Amina Lawal. Call me crazy.

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 05:21 (twenty-three years ago)

Also posted at Scanty Clothing in Vid clips - P!nk, Xtine, Britney & others but maybe here's more appropriate:

It's proved by the fact that when wearing a burka you almost can't judge a woman on/value a woman for her physical attributes (other than height & bulk), you have to judge her one what she says and does.
The problem is that so long as people feel the need to objectify women and obsess over them physically, when burka-ed her voice and the way she moves would become more open to sexual interpretation - like the way ankles were in Victorian times or how women's eyes and hands are in cultures where they are all that is revealed.

The problem is that we a programmed in such a way that when we see a woman's body we are distracted by it to the point that it affects everything about how we perceive that woman, her ideas, her behaviour etc.

It doesn't happen so much with men's physical presence on either a social, sub-cultural or individual level.

The arguement is that it is not inevitable and natural, rather that it is a result of our society/culture/upbringing/religion/media or whatever and that by reducing the structures, language, media (and art?) that perpetrates the current response to and influence of the female form all women will be released from the currently imposed burden of having a female body.


-- toraneko (torakoneko@hotmail.com), October 7th, 2002.

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 05:40 (twenty-three years ago)

I would think that taking away clothing as a possible means of creative expression would be an admission of defeat, rather than a triumph of feminism.

I mean this in the nicest possible way, but give women some credit. Why is having a female body necessarily a burden? It's pretty easy to distinguish men who are attempting to engage your chest in conversation from those who are actually talking to you.

felicity (felicity), Monday, 7 October 2002 05:49 (twenty-three years ago)

toraneko - I so knew you weren't exaggerating for effect!

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 05:51 (twenty-three years ago)

Having a female body shouldn't be a liability but some of the time it feels like it is.

A few things I've noticed from personal experience:

The hotter a woman is, the less confidence she has in herself physically - due to the fact that she knows that she is being valued for how she is physically and so if her body or face (or what's currently in fashion) changes, she will no longer be valued.

The hotter a woman is, the lower her self-esteem is, regardless of her intelligence, expertise and personality - due to the fact that she is aware or thinks she is aware that she is being valued first and foremost for how she is physically and that should her body or face etc. change she will no longer be valued - despite her lovely personality and/or her intelligence & expertise.

The hotter a woman is, the more likely she is going to display false self-confidence and bravado in public and the more likely she is actually hiding depression, eating disorders, drug use, phyically abusive boyfriends and a history of sexual abuse.

If a woman dresses sexily, she will be harassed by those guys who respond to her overt sexiness.

If a woman dresses dowdily, she will be harassed by those guys who think that she's an easy target because she lacks confidence/doesn't know she's attractive or that she'll be flattered by them noticing(harassing) her, that they'll be doing her a favour by noticing(harassing) her etc.

If a woman dresses like a boy, she will be harassed by those guys that respond to this as a threat or a challenge or think they are special for seeing through the boyness to the femininity underneath.

If a woman dresses as "normally" as possible - nothing too sexy(tight/short), dowdy or masculine, wears a small amount of make-up, has mid-length hair (just below shoulders) usually worn tied back etc. (works best if you're tits aren't too big) then she is almost invisible and will only be harassed by that small number of guys who respond totally to and obsess completely about the girl next door type.

The last option is the least likely to induce harassment but unfortunately when it does, it is of the most obsessive, stalker type.

Other girls might have different experiences than I've had but I'm at a loss as to how to stop guys from harassing me.

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:06 (twenty-three years ago)

Opening your mouth and talking should do the trick.

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:08 (twenty-three years ago)

What because they're put off by intelligence? There are some guys out there that see that as an added bonus - they actually like talking to girls as well as fucking them.

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:13 (twenty-three years ago)

i would just like to share with you all a quote from my ex........."why are all the smart women ugly, and the 'honeys' so fucking dumb"
this is one example of what we are up against.

donna (donna), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:14 (twenty-three years ago)

donna, good thing he's your ex. Are the men in NZ just Neanderthals or something? not all men are that bad.

felicity (felicity), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:20 (twenty-three years ago)

Okay, that was a little too hostile/glib, but sincerely simply saying (in the words of Onyx) 'bacdafucup' to these guys should do the trick, unless they're just incredibly obnoxious (and then the trick is 'don't go to those bars', your obnoxious frat types tend to herd together). You might be called something rude but you can always respond in kind (I have no doubt you could outtalk any guy who couldn't take a hint) and in any case he'll be off your back. Pepperspray does the trick also.

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:26 (twenty-three years ago)

actually he is an australian :-)

donna (donna), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:29 (twenty-three years ago)

well I am happy that neither of us is up against him, wherever he is located :)

felicity (felicity), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:32 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm a bit over sensitive on this issue but it's not the guys in bars that are the problem because like you say, I just 'don't go to those bars' - it's fellow students, it's teachers, it's the security guards at uni, it's the rubbish collectors, it's guys sitting in parked cars as I get out of mine, tradesmen I have to walk past working in the hallway, it's friends' friends, guys working in shops, landlords, driving instructors, bosses, fellow workers, the mechanic, friends' fathers, guys that pull up next to me at the lights (and sure, if I kept the windows closed and didn't look at them, I wouldn't have to know about it - but sometimes it's hot and I don't have air-conditioning and I would like to drive my car with the window down without being propositioned!)

It's that horrible feeling of having to run the guantlet of leering, sniggering and sexual thoughts. It just gets me down - and most of all because there seems to be no escape from it. And I'm not saying it happens every day, but it happens every week and that's enough for it to be a problem.

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:41 (twenty-three years ago)

driving instructors! (A lot of those people you listed you could get fired over this, or at least you could in America).

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:44 (twenty-three years ago)

toraneko, i am quietly amazed at the amount of 'harassment' you seem to get troubled with.
not wanting to be rude ( i do sort of agree with the central points you make ) but do you think you may be a little paranoid?
not every man on every corner is lurking there with the express purpose of leering / sniggering or having sexual thoughts about you.

donna (donna), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:49 (twenty-three years ago)

I also wish I could think you were exaggerating here, but I've seen enough dumbfoundingly boorish behavior from men (always in groups, for the benefit of the group) towards women they don't even know, to know that this probably isn't the case. I'm also guessing most of the propositions run more towards "hey baby, wanna fuck" than "would you like to have a cup of tea with me sometimes".

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:50 (twenty-three years ago)

yes james i know the group mentality you are talking about, but i have to admit even with that in mind i dont believe it is such a gauntlet to run all the time with every male in public.

donna (donna), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:54 (twenty-three years ago)

I am guessing that most of the propositioning is nothing more than the occassional sidelong glance and simple requests for dates.
This is gonna sound kind of mean, but Toraneko you either need to develop far thicker skin or you need to move to a land where no one is ever going to openly convey any sort of attraction/physical interest in you (and don't ask me where this is. . . it sounds like you would get hit on in Vatican City). Wearing t-shirts or having bumper stickers that say "I said DON'T FUCKING TALK TO ME" might help too. But you are living in a dream world if you think women in burkas are really exempt from the sort of objectification that disturbs you.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 7 October 2002 06:58 (twenty-three years ago)

hey i might get a t-shirt that says that!!

donna (donna), Monday, 7 October 2002 07:02 (twenty-three years ago)

Part of the problem is that clothing is generally agreed upon as a way of expressing ones personality but that there's no 'dictionary' or agreed-upon code for interpreting clothing so personality double-meanings are inevitable. A less gender-charged example might be:

Tom turns up to work in a T-shirt and scruffy trousers with odd socks. Tom thinks this expresses the fact that he's a creative type and focussed on the job in hand not the trappings of office culture. Tom's boss thinks it expresses that fact that he's a lazy slob.

And the more gender-charged example:

Christina turns up to work in a crop top and ass chaps. Christina thinks this expresses the fact that she's a modern girl comfortable with her body and sexuality. Christina's boss thinks it expresses the fact that she's a bimbo.

And of course the examples needn't be in the workplace. I think the question boils down to - Is it reasonable to judge other people in part by what they wear? If it isn't then clothing as a means of self-expression becomes redundant. If it is then complaints about judgements seem out of place.

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 08:55 (twenty-three years ago)

I had understood toraneko's points to be that (1) it is not generally agreed upon among all cultures that clothing must be an expression of one's personality and (2) whether the use of clothing to cover rather than reveal women's bodily attributes might, in fact, focus more attention on their personalities.

felicity (felicity), Monday, 7 October 2002 09:22 (twenty-three years ago)

Don't just say "How dare you accuse our attacks on displays of sexuality to be anti-sexuality!"

james you are still missing the point. no-one is attacking displays of sexuality.

this thread is just making me feel depressed. toraneko, i can completely relate to yr harassment. and no matter how much i shave my head this does not change, so i guess ronan in a way you are right, no matter what i do, people will always view me in accordance with what they already think about gender. but i really don't think any video associating femininity with crotches and breasts is going to help matters.

donna i didn't know you are from nz. that guy sounds like a cock-knocker. but he sounds pretty typical.

di smith (lucylurex), Monday, 7 October 2002 09:47 (twenty-three years ago)

"but he sounds pretty typical"
Im not saying Im not a cock-knocker but I really think you gals are being a tad harsh. generally speaking.

Kiwi male, Monday, 7 October 2002 09:53 (twenty-three years ago)

Hmm, I don't think of my skin as being thin - it's not like I burst into tears everytime a guy whistles at me. I do find it depressing and oppressing though, to be continually bullied by guys and appraised on my physical attributes in a verbal/leering manner.

Take a situation from work last year. The floor I was working on was being rewired. For three days there were two workmen working in the hallway between my office and the kitchen, toilets, lifts & stairwell. Everytime I wanted to go to the loo, get a drink/eat, leave the building or visit someone on another floor I had to walk past these guys. Everytime I walked past them they stopped what they were doing, kept their eyes on me and started whistling a tune just as I got past them.

Now, I can stare them down, I can ignore them, I can smile at them - but only for so long. Eventually I just felt trapped. I didn't want to leave my office so I just stayed in there all day.

Writing this now it's easy to think: well why didn't I just start chatting to them, that would have stopped the staring and whistling. But I don't want to have to establish a chatty relationship with guys who leer or whistle - in fact I don't want to know those guys at all - and I certainly don't want to feel obliged to talk to them everytime I walk past because if I didn't the staring and whistling would start again. Part of it is the manipulation thing - the ultimatum of either you come over and be our friend (i.e. flirt with us, let down your barriers, let us establish the rules of this playing field) or we'll harass you.

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 10:19 (twenty-three years ago)

I like how di smith responds to "Don't just say "How dare you accuse our attacks on displays of sexuality to be anti-sexuality!" with "I will to!" Respond to my questions with something other than 'get with the program' and I'll do so. Saying 'no matter how many time I shave my head guys still think I'm attractive! woe!' isn't selling me. In fact what it seems to imply is a lack of correlation between the Christina video and the notion the feminimity = crotches and breasts since no matter what appearance is put forth the typical guy equates women with something to fuck, and who knows, by your logic maybe the 'typical' woman is (if humanity's so degraded - woe! - then that includes women as well as men). Were women more empowered in Victorian times than they are now? Not as empowered as they were under the Taliban, right?

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:40 (twenty-three years ago)

Toraneko did you ever think they might have been as much afraid of you as you were of them. ("no mom, you're thinking of bears").


Seriously though, what you describe sounds as though they were trying not to appear to be leering. I mean the whistling a tune part sounds like they were a bit intimidated to me.

I mean I wasn't there and I'm not defending guys who do leer and whistle, but can you be so sure? What would be the appropriate reaction from the guys? I'd genuinely like to know...

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:47 (twenty-three years ago)

it's idiotic — not to say dishonest even as a critique of islam — to keep saying "burka = taliban", james (or to say toraneko = xtian fundamentalist for that matter, given her stated beliefs on dozens of other threads)

neither di nor toraneko are anti-sexuality, in this argument or elsewhere, and yr initial frenzied response was a huge and rather silly overreaction

mark s (mark s), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:48 (twenty-three years ago)

I demand that this thread be filled with images of attractive women in g-string bikini's and leather hot pants.

Andrew (enneff), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:50 (twenty-three years ago)

Whistling a tune is what guys do now that it's against the law to wolf-whistle.

Carrying on with their work and their conversation would be a pleasant lack of reaction.

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:51 (twenty-three years ago)

mark: what they're saying is 'women shouldn't be allowed to dress like Christina Aguilera. They should wear burkas'. How is this different from your run-of-the-mill religious fundamentalist (other than 'they're good people, really')?

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:52 (twenty-three years ago)

You can't actually believe that any guy who whistles a tune is doing it instead of wolf whistling. Jesus Christ loads of people whistle while they work, they wrote a song about it.....

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:55 (twenty-three years ago)

They don't need to react at all.. but whistling a TUNE? Who cares? I presumed they were wolfwhistling.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:55 (twenty-three years ago)

that's NOT what they're saying james: why don't you actually — for example — read read the sentence you cut and pasted to start this thread, and stop overreacting to yr own hysteria?

mark s (mark s), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:55 (twenty-three years ago)

Oh, right, too slow. Sorry. What IS IT w/workmen?

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Monday, 7 October 2002 11:56 (twenty-three years ago)

" after all it's far more 'appropriate' for women to not have a voice at all, right toraneko!" where did THIS come from? it isn't even faintly implied in ANYTHING toraneko said (as for it's being di's opinion, hahahahahahaha!!)

"we feminists choose the burka as an appropriate mode of dress" = the taliban have won??????!!!!!!!!!!?????

an equivalent jump wd be to translate yr line, james, as "OK, ladies, we all know you have trouble with logic, why don't you let us MEN do the thinking now, that';s the best way to ensure yr freedom and empowerment (btw nice rack)"

mark s (mark s), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:02 (twenty-three years ago)

Also in any walk of life, anywhere, like if Ronan is having a conversation with a friend anywhere and someone walks through the room, it's not unusual to go quiet. It really isn't.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:06 (twenty-three years ago)

i have to say my kneejerk solution to this has been the radical sexualisation-objectification of the MALE body as well, but the main effect that i can see there is that Gay Male Culture also now has a big blodge of v.tiresome Body Fascism stuck right in its heart, and fuck you if you don't fit the mould, waistwise, hairwise

mark s (mark s), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:10 (twenty-three years ago)

Rapidly spreading into straight male culture. Turnabout = fair play but does anyone honestly think that the six-pack gym bunnies objectify less than the fat builders' mates? (This touches on one of the unspoken things for both genders - "I want to be looked at by people I want to look at but not the other ones": is this tenable? What's a better strategy for women - abolish the 'male gaze', imitate it, or claim rights over it?)

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:17 (twenty-three years ago)

Ronan, if you truly believe that the example I gave was illustrating normal and acceptable behaviour (a pause in conversation when someone enters a room, whistling a tune as you work) then you are demonstrating just how much more work is needed before sexual harassment is stamped out.

They made wolf-whistling illegal because it is sexual harassment so now guys who would once have wolf-whistled make sure that they whistle a "tune" to protect themselves.

Which bit of leering and (no-longer-wolf-)whistling is it that you don't consider to be harassment?

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:36 (twenty-three years ago)

I just think to suggest anyone whistling a tune is doing so instead of wolf whistling is to throw any grain of common sense out the window and have a fucking mardi gras celebrating how insane things have become.


I mean for fuck sake it's possible for people to be intimidated by you also. It is pretty common I think for people to go quiet when someone walks through the room they're having a conversation with, this does not mean they are paying any attention to the person, or even if it does it doesn't mean they're leering.

I did mean to put an addendum on my posts saying that I felt that now I've argued with you I'm part of the problem by default but I didn't want to be that cynical. I should trust my instincts in future.

They made wolf-whistling illegal because it is sexual harassment so now guys who would once have wolf-whistled make sure that they whistle a "tune" to protect themselves.

I can't understand how any sensible human being could believe that anyone whistling a fucking tune is doing it instead of wolf whistling, this is all gone very David Icke, I call you paranoid and you say "oh you're one of them", but fuck it.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:42 (twenty-three years ago)

of course gay porn pages now also feature "bears" = plumper older fellas w.grizzly beards (porking skinny teenagers w. stupid hair obv)

mark s (mark s), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:42 (twenty-three years ago)

If they make whistling tunes illegal will coughing become the new wolf whistling? And then will smiling politely? I better go to a mens meeting and discover just what the latest coded actions for sexual harassment are and then we can all get smashed down the boozer and shout purple monkey dishwasher at each other every time a woman walks by.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:44 (twenty-three years ago)

ronan *you* are being paranoid: leering is leering, and the whole point of the whistling toraneko's referring wd be its deniable NON-innocence => ie YES YOU COULD TELL THE DIFFERENCE BCZ THE WHISTLER WANTS YOU TO

the point that harassment takes subtle forms, ie is forced "underground", is a perfectly reasonable one to make

mark s (mark s), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:50 (twenty-three years ago)

also, to pick up on yr other point ronan, of course many men who harass or molest women are intimidated by them: that's why they don't form actually human acquaintanceships with them

mark s (mark s), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:53 (twenty-three years ago)

It's not exactly harassment if you don't notice. If somebody starts whistling just as you pass, and you turn back to see them leering at you, then that's pretty safely harassment, isn't it?

Andrew (enneff), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:54 (twenty-three years ago)

Ronan, I don't assume that any male who is whistling is doing it to harass me. Did you actually read what I wrote above? Everytime I walked out of my office, for three days, these guys stopped what they were doing, stopped talking if they had been, followed me with their eyes until I was out of site and commenced whistling just as I walked past them - as soon as I was far enough past that eye-contact had been broken, if it had been established.

Yes people look at other people when they walk into a room, down the street, where-ever. There is a difference between leering/staring and glancing at someone. There is a difference between casually whistling a tune and whistling a tune AT someone as a substitue for wolf-whistling.

You know this - you would have seen people stare, leer, whistle, make thinly veiled suggestive comments. You know they can say "I was just looking/whistling as I worked/She misinterpreted what I said" etc. There is a skill to sexual harassment - if it's done too obviously (as in "Show us ya tits!") then it is not gotten away with.

Why are you trying to deny what I am saying? Are you trying to achieve something? Do you think that if we stop talking about sexual harassment it will go away? Do you think that it is only a problem because we (women that is) make it a problem by talking about it?

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:54 (twenty-three years ago)

The sad thing is that, chances are, if Ronan and Toraneko would step out from behind the rhetorical battle lines they've drawn and actually talked to each other, they'd probably agree.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:57 (twenty-three years ago)

Coughing is already the new wolf-whistle in many instances. The only real difference is that whilst both serve to call all other male spectators' attention to the woman in question, the whistle is executed even when there are no other men around to view the woman whereas the cough isn't.

The thing about this sort of behaviour is that when described in words it can come off as sounding innocent. If caught on video there would be absolutely no question of the malicious intent.

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 12:59 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm not trying to deny what you're saying or shut you up or something, and I resent the way you're suggesting I have some agenda like this here, it's pretty unnecessary.

There is a difference between casually whistling a tune and whistling a tune AT someone as a substitue for wolf-whistling


What is the difference? Isn't it all infuriatingly subjective?

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:01 (twenty-three years ago)

Oh come on Ronan you can surely tell the difference between something done and something done ostentatiously.

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:03 (twenty-three years ago)

Ronan, are you honestly saying that you can't possibly imagine two different situations, both consisting of a man whistling in the same room as a woman but one with her being whistled at? You can't picture the look on his face? In the eyes? In his body language? You really can't imagine that?

Andrew (enneff), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:03 (twenty-three years ago)

Of course if someone does it ostentatiously then yes but it was never described as being done ostentatiously in the first place, of course I can picture the way the man would look if he's doing it maliciously. But if it is so fucking obvious then why does even Toraneko say that it sounds innocent to describe it, half of you are saying it's subtle and underground and the other half are saying it's flagrant and obvious. I don't think the example Toraneko gave was really an obvious one, but correct me if I'm wrong.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:08 (twenty-three years ago)

The thing about this sort of behaviour is that when described in words it can come off as sounding innocent. If caught on video there would be absolutely no question of the malicious intent.


That's the sentence I meant, and I'm not using it to criticise Toraneko either, but the impression I got was that this was quite subtle stuff.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:09 (twenty-three years ago)

Toraneko's original post:

Everytime I wanted to go to the loo, get a drink/eat, leave the building or visit someone on another floor I had to walk past these guys. Everytime I walked past them they stopped what they were doing, kept their eyes on me and started whistling a tune just as I got past them.

This sounds completely ostentatious to me.

She's not suggesting it's innocent, she's suggesting they're using 'plausible deniability' i.e. they can boomerang things back on the person calling them on it. You can see this happening in a non-gendered way on ILX all the time e.g.

Tom: I think student Bill Hicks wannabes are twats.

Ronan: How dare you call me a twat?

Tom: Oh for goodness sake Ronan, I was speaking generally I didn't mean you.

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:13 (twenty-three years ago)

I would have preferred if you called me a twat to be honest.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:15 (twenty-three years ago)

I can imagine your own psychology having a fuckload to do with your interpretation of the world around you. Let's not pretend non-verbal signals are an incredibly sound form of communication. (In fact, I've been cat-calling you all for months and no one's responded!)

bnw (bnw), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:15 (twenty-three years ago)

It's proved by the fact that when wearing a burka you almost can't judge a woman on/value a woman for her physical attributes (other than height & bulk), you have to judge her one what she says and does.


Maybe I'm a bit late. I can't help but feel like this is quite fucked up/offensive. Women who are forced to wear burkas are treated terribly and are most likely not judged on what they say/do - well not in a good way anyway, more judged on what they don't say/do. Women in other countries would love to have the freedom to dress that we have and all the other priveleges people take for granted. Even if the burka fits yr ideas, remember the oppression it can and has been used for.


As for the male harrassment thing. I'm rather surprised by how much it happens to you toraneko. I really don't find it happening to me all that much and I don't feel threatened by workmen etc. Maybe it's just me, or maybe yr just better looking or whatever. It's really getting late I hope I make sense.

Elisabeth (Elisabeth), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:18 (twenty-three years ago)

Yes Ronan but thats the point. If I'd called you a twat you could then have done something about it, whereas as it was I could deny it. Similarly as Toraneko says if they say hey great tits then they can be busted for harassment and 'lose'.

(I can't remember now if you were actually being a twat or not by the way!)

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:21 (twenty-three years ago)

I really like how people can't seem to make the distinction between choosing to wear a burka and being forced to wear a burka. I also like Tom's cunning analogical trap.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:23 (twenty-three years ago)

Is there not a strong possibility when this sort of harassment becomes an issue (and presumably it has) that very little is innocent anymore, or can be percieved to be? Isn't this the big problem with sexual harassment cases, the ambiguous nature of gestures etc anyway? I hate to appear like mr fucking harassment defender here cos I amn't, but those who are actually guilty of this type of harassment are surely breeding a certain amount of paranoia, distrust in men, etc. Perhaps this is the common ground Dan talked of.

(Also Tom I was pretty insulted by that post, I meant I'd prefer if you actually did call me a twat, because the example seemed to be calling me (real life actually calling me) a.....I don't even want to type it but it's pissed me off quite a bit

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:29 (twenty-three years ago)

(And the trap misfires!)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:31 (twenty-three years ago)

(wait were you referring to aftermath of the last massive thread like this? if so then I get it but you could have mentioned that)

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:31 (twenty-three years ago)

I thought I had made the distinction. What I was attempting to say was that I think it's fucked up to talk about choosing to wear a burka when women have been forced to.

Elisabeth (Elisabeth), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:33 (twenty-three years ago)

(Yeah sorry Ronan I was referring back to an actual real life ILE incident. To clarify: i) I don't think you're a twat, ii) I genuinely do think that bar-room student philosophers who come on like Bill Hicks run a very big risk of seeming like a twat, iii) When I said this way back it was in order to deniably attack you, iv) This was in itself the action of a twat, many apologies, v) I liked the parallel with the situation discussed)

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:37 (twenty-three years ago)

(Oh yeah and vi) I can't remember exactly what you'd said which sounded Bill Hicks-ish back then either. It was on the should-we-get-offended-by-disability-jokes thread.)

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:41 (twenty-three years ago)

Gee, all the women who choose to wear a burka, hijab, niqab, chador etc. will be really pleased to hear you say that.

Women have been forced to have sex - should we stop talking about them choosing to have sex?

toraneko (toraneko), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:46 (twenty-three years ago)

Well thanks but I wish you hadn't mentioned Bill Hicks either, it doesn't exactly do my argument or myself any good in this context does it?

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:47 (twenty-three years ago)

I think Bill Hicks woulda looked better in a Burka.

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:50 (twenty-three years ago)

Doesn't it? Why not? I mean Bill Hicks doesn't have a reputation as having been a terroriser of womankind surely? And you're not acting anything like that on this thread.

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:51 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't think I am either, but it opens the door to that kind of dismissal. Also in a thread where I'm already thinking about whether or not I am "demonstrating just how much more work is needed before sexual harassment is stamped out" I don't think an association with Bill Hicks who's pretty insensitive and laddish at times does me much good really, especially because I don't think what I was saying had anything do with him, it undermines it all a bit, to me.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:55 (twenty-three years ago)

But don't worry about it to be honest, I'm just pretty stressed and a bit miffed today with other stuff.

Ronan (Ronan), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:58 (twenty-three years ago)

Well OK then sorry for mentioning him! I wish I'd gone with my earlier example of the deniability-strategy in hot ILX action now but I thought I'd go with the one that only implicated me (or so I thought).

HEY EVERYONE RONAN IS NOTHING LIKE BILL HICKS

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:58 (twenty-three years ago)

OK ronan but now yr frustration at being misrepresented is a good DO-YOU-SEE mirror for someone being called pro-taliban for raising this issue in this way

mark s (mark s), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:59 (twenty-three years ago)

Oh OK. Back to the thread!

(Mark most of the pro-Taliban stuff wasn't coming from Ronan tho)

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 13:59 (twenty-three years ago)

yes sorry i am getting confused: there are now so many lines-in-the-sand being denounced as slippery-slopes that i can no longer distinguish my erse from my elba

mark s (mark s), Monday, 7 October 2002 14:04 (twenty-three years ago)

Going back to the top
"dressed too nicely to be a programmer."

Just wanted to point out the standard holds male or female. If any of our programmers come in wearing suit & tie the "job interview?" jokes come flying. Though currently Im enjoying it as it allows me to disregard the dress code thats strictly enforced on the business types.

Recent story from the boardroom is at a presentation for a prospective client, the rattiest person there wasn't buying a word of it, kept shaking his head at the apropriate moments. But they kept on going assuming he was a programmer or tech advisor, turned out he was the SVP, so we aren't expecting to hear back from them.

Mr Noodles (Mr Noodles), Monday, 7 October 2002 14:12 (twenty-three years ago)

Mark: I'm overstating and overreacting fair enough (not hysterical though, I tend to save that for the baseball threads), but what I would like is someone to actually answer one of my questions instead of merely attacking me for daring to ask them, and to explain why women in burkas = victors, women in hot pants = victims since it's apparently conventional wisdom. Maybe I'm wrong (and apparently I'm wrong about everything, I like how people that rave about the Christina Aguilera video on other threads are outraged at my suggesting that it's not a crime against humanity) but I suspect that the likelihood a woman wearing a burka was forced to wear a burka is greater than the likelihood a woman wearing hotpants was forced to wear hotpants.

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 15:39 (twenty-three years ago)

i just want to know why my ilm thread didn't provoke this rather than what it did?!!

jess (dubplatestyle), Monday, 7 October 2002 15:42 (twenty-three years ago)

People don't hate you! (Athens, Ga = black hole of irritation ILx universe)

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 15:47 (twenty-three years ago)

i feel like these are the types of arguments that no one can ever win, because -- to nick a phrase -- the political and the personal are so tied up with one another that it's near-impossible to look outside how you feel about things ('i'm not a sexist!' 'i'm not against sex!') and gather any sort of empathic for the other side of the argument.

and i'm totally including myself in this description here because i can't fathom how a) people can make the leap from people expressing uncomfortable feelings about this to the whole humorless anti-sex characterization and b) of course the decision to be sexual is in part motivated by personal choice -- sexuality, even the slightest hint of it (see wolf whistling stories from up above), gets attention, and if there is one thing that's good when you're a popstar it's exactly that. are all types of attention equal? if you keep the crowds far away enough, sure.

maura (maura), Monday, 7 October 2002 15:55 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm not completely oblivious to everyone's arguments (although, again, I would like to see someone actually answer one of my questions) I've never completely bought the post-feminist 'a real feminist wears hotpants', I've had female friends who were strippers and they would feed me the 'I'm the one in control / stripping = empowerment' line and I would answer 'you may think that, but to most of the guys who are watching you you're a piece of meat'. That said the burka comment struck me as being a little too similar to the 'women in America have it worse than women in Afghanistan' line I heard bandied about last fall. And who knows I might be wrong in thinking that was absurd as well (I'm sure everyone will let me know).

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:10 (twenty-three years ago)

And toraneko I do sympathize with whatever boorishness you've had to put up, and I don't doubt that stuff that appears harmless in print can be overbearing and obnoxious in practice, but what would be a proper way (and enviroment also, since workplace clearly isn't it) for a guy to express romantic interest in you? How were the romantic relationships you've been in initiated?

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:15 (twenty-three years ago)

what would be a proper way (and enviroment also, since workplace clearly isn't it) for a guy to express romantic interest in you?

Ooh, look at that shiny box! I think I'll open it...

Pandora (Dan Perry), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:18 (twenty-three years ago)

I ain't afraid of you motherfuckers!

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:22 (twenty-three years ago)

Do you guys realize that what Toraneko said is what pretty much every Western Muslim who still covers her head might say? Leave aside the issue of treatment of women under Islamic law: the central motivation behind the veiling of women in Islam is the idea that men are incapable of dealing with female sexuality, that the open display of the female body tempts men to idiocy and immoral behavior, and that men should relate to women purely through their personalities, their intellectual capacities, and their voices, not their appearance. Muslim schools in America are full of teenaged girls, fully exposed to the Britneys and Cristinas of the world, who will tell you that they find this a perfectly sensible argument.

All Toraneko said -- and it seems to me that she said this out of simple frustration -- was that she's "starting to" see the value in this particular way of looking at the world. Which is why so much of the beginning of this thread is so patently idiotic: Toraneko says she can see the point of one element of the whole of Islamic theology and suddenly the anti-Islamic knee-jerk revs itself up.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:22 (twenty-three years ago)

To put James out of his misery -- Toraneko is a lesbian.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:23 (twenty-three years ago)

This part still applies: How were the romantic relationships you've been in initiated?

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:24 (twenty-three years ago)

Part of the problem is that "burka" has become this big scare-word over the last year and so we get all the pro-Taliban stuff. Another part of the problem is that Toraneko and the (caricatured) Mullahs ARE sort of in agreement as I see it, i.e. the Mullahs say "Women should wear the burka because men are horny beasts and will harass them for showing off flesh and the burka stops this." and Toraneko is saying "Yes actually they are and it would".

But that DOESN'T mean Toraneko is agreeing with anything else the Mullahs might say i.e. that the inflammation of male passions is women's active fault and men are 'just like that' i.e. blameless; let alone the other stuff about the position of women in Islamic society.

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:26 (twenty-three years ago)

aka What Nabisco Said. Heh.

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:28 (twenty-three years ago)

Tom makes valid points and I agree with them, but right now I have a vision of someone walking into a crowded room and shouting "BURKA!" and watching everyone flee in terror. Hopefully sharing this vision will defuse some of the tension in this thread.

(James, I think the reason no one's answering your questions is because they are completely ludicrous when read at face-value and I don't think anyone has/had the energy to decode them to figure out what you actually meant.)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:31 (twenty-three years ago)

Nabisco - as I said above, I read the use of the terms 'burka' and 'hotpants' symbolically in the sense of women under Islamic law are less oppressed than women under the sway of American pop culture (which toraneko has stated on other threads to be one of the great evils of the world - it's destroying Australian culture, right?) I regard this statement to be ludicrous. You're post is the first one I've read that in any way attempts to answer any of my questions (although you still couldn't resist the 'you're an idiot - do you see?' convoy) So, granting that I overstated, overreached, and exaggerated (no shit - I don't actually believe that toraneko believes Amina Lawal has it better off than Shannyn Sossamon, even if she comes right behind me and posts 'Amina Lawal has it better off than Shannyn Sossamon'), am I the only person on ILx who thinks a burka isn't a far more appropriate (and feminist) form of clothing than a g-string bikini or leather hot pants?

And Dan: clearly some of the questions are ludicrous, but shouldn't that make them easier to dismiss with the obvious answer instead of just going 'you're an idiot'? And so, the only one I really want answered (because I don't believe a woman who chooses to wear a burka is a victim any more than a woman who chooses to be a housewife) the one question I would like to see answered - why is it unfathomable that an attack on an individuals expression of sexuality could be considered anti-sexuality?

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:47 (twenty-three years ago)

I think my problem, James, is that I don't see any reason for you to have assumed that those words symbolized what you thought they symbolized. As to whether or not I agree with Toraneko, here's what I was about to post:

You know, the core issue to what Toraneko's said is the following. If we assume that at the present date there really is an element of men responding improperly to female sexuality -- and obviously there is, though I imagine Toraneko and I would disagree about its prevalence -- then which is the more "appropriate" and "feminist" response of women: to (a) take on the potential "burden" of hiding themselves, avoiding those improper responses by adapting themselves to the negative behavior of men, or (b) refusing to hide themselves and telling men to get over it and quite acting like idiots.

The danger of (a) in the Muslim world has been that it only justifies the bad-male behavior, and removes responsibility from men -- suddenly it's the role of the woman to hide herself and adapt herself and not incite urges that men aren't expected to have any duty to control. As such, it can never change that behavior. So I essentially disagree with Toraneko -- the burka strikes me as an admission of defeat, a very decision that men are inherently this way and that there's nothing for women to do but armor themselves and hang on tight. And the essentialism behind that decision doesn't strike me as helpful, either: looking again to the Muslim world, the rigid separations of the sexes meant to solve this problem in some places has only resulted in generations and generations of men who have no understanding of women, no real contact with them, no capacity to sympathize or empathize or see women as anything other than Other.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:49 (twenty-three years ago)

Lots of typos in there. And I don't mean to use the Muslim world as a strict case study for one single element of Islamic theology, as there are obviously lots of other factors involved -- but I think in certain cases it can point to the end results of lines of thinking that aren't inherently wrong-headed.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:52 (twenty-three years ago)

Nabisco - as I said above, I read the use of the terms 'burka' and 'hotpants' symbolically in the sense of women under Islamic law are less oppressed than women under the sway of American pop culture (which toraneko has stated on other threads to be one of the great evils of the world - it's destroying Australian culture, right?) I regard this statement to be ludicrous.

That statement might be ludicrous but nobody has said it and Toraneko herself has clarified the statement so why are you still arguing about 'your reading' when nobody else is? Toraneko might have been using the words for shock value but she was also using them for their practical meaning re covers-everything/covers-nothing.

Tom (Groke), Monday, 7 October 2002 16:52 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't think the statement even needed to be clarified: the statement was made in a thread about clothes, not a thread about geo-culture and theology.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 7 October 2002 17:06 (twenty-three years ago)

The statement was made in a thread about a Christina Aguilera video.

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 17:08 (twenty-three years ago)

No, James, it was made in a thread whose title began "Scanty Clothing in Vid clips."

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 7 October 2002 17:17 (twenty-three years ago)

There's so many threads about that damn Christina video I got confused *ducks*.

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 7 October 2002 17:20 (twenty-three years ago)

A few points:

It would be illuminating to see how the workmen in question behave towards people other than Toraneko. There's a temptation to see certain kinds of behavior as fundamentally anti-female/misogynist because of the form they take, but there are plenty of people in the world who will simply fuck with you on any grounds they can find -- gender, race, age, culture, speech patterns, weight, or anything else -- and to assume that their key motivation is based on hostility for the group in question would be a mistake: it's far more undifferentiated than that, and sometimes comes more from a desire to "test" people, to bust their balls a bit and make them prove that they can stand up for themselves. I'm not saying that this is the case here, but I think it would be a mistake to see it in binary terms, too -- i.e. my guess is that there's probably an element of it, and on some level these workmen may well want Toraneko to best them, to come up with a putdown scathing enough to earn their respect, which is something they don't give anyone by default.

(Or they could just be total assholes who are undifferentiatedly hostile to people/women/non-SWCMs, who knows.)

The other question that's not getting asked is: what is it that has led these men to want to act this way? To put it differently, this kind of behavior strikes me as expressing a lack of belief in a good-faith relationship between the sexes. Why do these men see the male-female relationship as an adversarial one? From their point of view, why are they acting the way they do?

My own theory on this is simply that desire thwarted becomes rage at worst, and resentment at least: for most people in the modern era, the experience of sexual awakening is one of desire that's continually excited, but never fulfilled -- men because they're continually told "no", and women because they're told "don't". The dominant public expression (through the media) of this experience is one that necessarily depends on the commodification of sexuality, and casts men in the role of pursuers, and women as pursued -- a relationship of overt aggression vs. passive (covert) aggression, and one that breeds resentment on both sides because it turns sexuality into a power struggle. Each ends up believing that the other is acting in bad faith, and so we end up with threads like these.

The anti-modernist impulse in Islam is designed to do an end-run around this problem, but it will never work, of course, because it runs from the key issues rather than confronting them (as Nabisco points out). The only solution that will ever really work involves the more-or-less complete renunciation of power on both sides -- which, as it happens, is something that (I believe) happens in every loving relationship between equal partners -- but I have no idea how that would take shape on a social/national level. I'd like to think that in a world of perfect contraception and health, things would be promising, but I've really no idea how to keep it from turning into Brave New World. I don't think a "less heterosexual" world would solve these problems; it might ameliorate them in some ways, but the problems of aggression, power, and desire transcend gender. Similarly, a world in which gender inequalities in the law, the workplace, and so on were remedied would probably do a lot to reduce the powerful resentment which I suspect many women must feel, and which no doubt fuels this conflict. But again, I think this is a human problem at root, and I think as long as we as a society lack the critical and emotional resources to resist the messages we're being sent -- a resistance which would probably stop the messages, for want of an audience -- then the problem will continue.

Phil (phil), Monday, 7 October 2002 18:37 (twenty-three years ago)

The only solution that will ever really work involves the more-or-less complete renunciation of power on both sides

Or, in any event, brokering a contract that works for both parties. A relationship of equals is what I want, and have always wanted, but I don't necessarily believe that all relationships in which both parties happily agree to a power imbalance are pathological (though many of them probably are).

Phil (phil), Monday, 7 October 2002 18:41 (twenty-three years ago)

Totally.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 7 October 2002 18:42 (twenty-three years ago)

for the record, i never stated on this thread or any other thread that i thought wearing burka would be more feminist than wearing hotpants. for pretty much the reasons nabisco out lined above. but i most certainly do think there is a problem with the way female sexuality is getting viewed by a lot of people and yes i do think music vids contribute to this. (that is, contribute, not determine).

di smith (lucylurex), Monday, 7 October 2002 19:00 (twenty-three years ago)

I would like to see someone actually answer one of my questions

James, I thought you began this thread with valid points but your hyperbole and selective reading ability is quickly eroding your credibility.

lyra, isadora, donna, maura, Elisabeth and I are all "ladies" who have spoken up and responded to your questions as requested. And surprise! we all had different things to say from each other and from di and toraneko.

You had said upthread "Opening your mouth and talking should do the trick." But if you don't appear to be interested in listening and responding to what we say -- even in internetland where clothing isn't an issue -- what makes you think this "talking" trick will work any better in real life?

felicity (felicity), Monday, 7 October 2002 19:33 (twenty-three years ago)

Haha radical islam wants to "respect women for their minds" so then if they cheat on their husband they are stoned to death! Also note that there is a bride price and women are more literally bought, sold, commodified, and thus objectified, than elsehwere. Also note the logic is really all about woman's fidelity to men --> they can manifest sexuality to their husband (who probably BOUGHT them) but to nobody else. Nor can they, for example, learn to read! "I resepect you for your mind, so shutup don't read and cook me dinner!"

So bullshit bullshit bullshit and all this stuff about radical Islam's respect for women is crap and just coz girls might actually buy these post-hoc justifications doesn't make them right anymore than I can respect roman catholocism for teaching us that sex is dirty and constraception is bad or hell the "positive" qualities of Aztec human sacrifice.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Monday, 7 October 2002 20:14 (twenty-three years ago)

Sterling, I am glad you have triumphed over positions no one has taken on this whole, tortured thread.

felicity (felicity), Monday, 7 October 2002 20:31 (twenty-three years ago)

This thread should be retitled "Strawmen: Classic or CLASSIC?"

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 7 October 2002 20:48 (twenty-three years ago)

How dare you say that I am a straw man, Dan! This is political correctness gone mad!

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Monday, 7 October 2002 20:55 (twenty-three years ago)

nabisco says: the central motivation behind the veiling of women in Islam is the idea that men are incapable of dealing with female sexuality, that the open display of the female body tempts men to idiocy and immoral behavior, and that men should relate to women purely through their personalities, their intellectual capacities, and their voices, not their appearance.

isn't this interpretation (esp the last bit) only a modern rationalization by liberal westernized muslims? isn't the motivation in most of the islamic world, and the likely original motivation, the idea that women's bodies are property to be owned by their husbands?

artiste, Monday, 7 October 2002 22:23 (twenty-three years ago)

This is just getting stupid. I'd explain myself properly but I'm sick and I can't really be bothered but here goes.


Gee, all the women who choose to wear a burka, hijab, niqab, chador etc. will be really pleased to hear you say that.

What i was trying to say was I don't really agree with choosing to wear a burka when it's not yr religion/culture etc (maybe it is, what do I know.) just as a "feminist form of dress". I don't know. I give up. This whole thing just makes me feel uncomfortable anyway.

Elisabeth (Elisabeth), Monday, 7 October 2002 22:31 (twenty-three years ago)

i have a question for james: do you think that the depiction of female sexuality in the christina aguilera video is the ONLY depiction of female sexuality possible? because this is what you imply when you say that someone who attacks this depiction is anti-sexuality and anti-sex. my problem with that depiction is that it is the predominant one and at the same time it is one that emphasizes a lack of agency on the female part. (we know this cos we know that interest in the video is not about christina's talent but the way she looks, a look which has been fashioned in accordance with what SHE thinks WE WANT to see - hardly any self-definition in that) why can't we see portrayals of female sexuality which emphasize our agency? why can't we see ones where its not all about skinny teenagers whose breasts and/or butts and/or crotches are not the POINT of the video? why is this the case when there is SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO much more to female sexuality??!!

di smith (lucylurex), Monday, 7 October 2002 22:43 (twenty-three years ago)

portraying sexuality is always intimately bound with portraying what others see as sexual.

also, I was responding as artiste was (more coherently) to nabisco's position on islam's central motivation behind veiling of women. the historical roots are in women as property, and the current manifestations may have RATIONALIZATIONS behind this, but those rationalizations tend to be dud too. I have a pamphlet with this stuff around my house called "Islam and the liberation of women" or something passed out by Muslim Student Unions around the country and other "awareness groups" and it specifically justifies why the "division of labor" in traditional family forms -- i.e. man brings home the bread -- is "more liberating" because it frees up women's time. Not all 1950's housewives (who are partly a post-hoc invention anyway cf. "The Way We Never Were" by Koontz) thought they were oppressed by playing to gendered roles, just as not all chiXor who emulate Xina to day think but thad doesn't mean they necessarily *aren't* anymore than some gal in a veil who tries to convince me that it liberates her. Howabout equal employment for equal wages and free childcare for liberation instead? much more real.

also what is this about sexuality being more than just breasts/butts/crotches? well, sure there's more but its that too. If there was a wave of foot fetish videos coming out, ppl. would complain about that just as much.

also why has nobody taken Torenako up on this:

"What because they're put off by intelligence? There are some guys out there that see that as an added bonus - they actually like talking to girls as well as fucking them."

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 02:43 (twenty-three years ago)

(Let the record show that I have ALWAYS said that Christina Aguilera has a great voice. She doesn't always know what to do with it, but she's got chops to spare.)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 02:53 (twenty-three years ago)

Ha, I mostly PREFER talking dude!

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 03:10 (twenty-three years ago)

Or this:

"I think most people would agree that as far as their faces go they've all got substantial bow-wow factor anyway"

I think people have been a little harsh on james. I appreciate toraneko's subsequent clarifications, but the way she phrased her point originally:

What's the deal with the near-nakedness that is going on in so many video clips?
Is it meant to be part of the war against terrorism or something? Is it the American media flaunting their country's "freedom" to the world?

I'm starting to think that a burka is a far more appropriate (and feminist) form of dress than a g-string bikini or leather hot pants.

was (hem hem) provocative and i thought obv contrasting the social contexts in which women wear burkas vs. where women wear hotpants. i realize this is a bit of a dead issue now; i just didn't think it was fair that one person get reamed for their flippancy while another person got commended for theirs.

ch. (synkro), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 03:17 (twenty-three years ago)

Aren't these videos about SEX rather than sexuality tho? A person's sexuality is pretty elusive/specific to them etc, it'd be hard to represent it in a video that appealed to a wide audience. Or wouldn't it? I mostly hate videos anyway.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 03:21 (twenty-three years ago)

Im still deeply scared from first teaching experience at a girls only high school, actually thinking about it working as a office admin temp I copped constant shit from all the female dominated work places I ended up- talk about sexual agression sheesh I was terrified(in a nice sort of way).

I just dont think a large group of *working class* young men in public- workmen who in an occupation with a culture and history of boorish behaviour ( I sure spent enough time on building sites with Albanians and Irishmen) is good reflection on all men or even most men. Toraneko seems to equate workmen= all men and thus have a paranoia of men that I think is a bit over the top.

We dont often find large groups of *working class* women working in public areas like men do. Not that I can think of anyway? Would they behave in a similar way- quite possibly Im not sure though.

Again I can see Dis basic point I just think there is so much more to male sexuality than is being expressed here. ie all men are slobbering pigs.

That said I mentaly undress most most young women I see but Im not about to feel any guilt about it- lord knows Ive got enough of that to deal with already.

Kiwi, Tuesday, 8 October 2002 03:22 (twenty-three years ago)

andrew, i think that's toraneko's point: by appealing to the lowest common denominator, they're detracting from the ways in which sexuality can be personal and diverse. i'm not sure how you can separate sexuality from sex anyway.

ch. (synkro), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 03:32 (twenty-three years ago)

You can divorce SEX from sexuality easily though, it seems. Yeah I never know when T's being sarcastic etc, sorry.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 03:43 (twenty-three years ago)

how?

ch. (synkro), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 03:46 (twenty-three years ago)

Sorry I meant one's PERSONAL sexuality, ie Christina's, can be easily divorced and made into T&A for a video, ie her body and just that no more, ie SEX. As in basic biological type sex.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 03:52 (twenty-three years ago)

ok, but that feeds back into di's point that the problem is the lack of female agency in this kind of portrayal. the implication behind the kind of separation that you're talking about is that the idiosyncratic sexuality of the person who's being presented should - or at least can - be suppressed and disregarded. In order to be sexy, the girl has to become a basic biological sex-type object that conforms entirely to the viewer's standards. In a way, it's the exact opposite of the burka: both start from the premise that men's lust is what needs to be either titilated or denied, then molds the woman accordingly.

ch. (synkro), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 04:03 (twenty-three years ago)

i don't mean that YOU SPECIFICALLY are saying this; just that it can easily follow from the separation as you're presenting it.

ch. (synkro), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 04:04 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah, I know. But is the intended audience for these videos male? I've been wondering about this for a while. I know very few men who but pop singles. Besides, this is just marketing, y'know? How else could a woman/anyone present herself on a level that could have mass appeal?

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 04:20 (twenty-three years ago)

Also, more female construction/maintenance workers would put a stop to this pretty soon as men stop behaving as much as pigs when they have female co-workers who they respect (granted, women who take these jobs have to put up with/combat a bit of shit before they get that respect)

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 04:23 (twenty-three years ago)

actually, it could almost be worse if the intended audience isn't male. if we assume that the intended audience is teen & pre-teen girls (who are the steretypical consumers of this kind of music - i don't know if they're the biggest consumer or not), then what these girls are being presented with is an image of what men are supposed to find sexy that avoids having to deal with men at all; again, sort of the flip side of what nabisco (i think) was saying above about burka-clad societies being ones where men aren't compelled to actually confront women as people. this isn't total speculation - the fifth grade girls i used to work with all idolized britney and tried to dress like her (when they could get away with it). it's an age where having to deal with real boys IS scary, so a lot of these issues are mapped out in their perceptions of the media.

i think what philmasstransfer said is very wise, but the power issues are complicated by the fact that the sexual power games most of these girls played seemed to be trying one-up EACH OTHER (i.e., they weren't really interested in the boys themselves at all - 'boy attention' was just a particularly effective type of social cache).

ch. (synkro), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 04:51 (twenty-three years ago)

this is exactly the reason why i did not specify the audience as male or female.

Again I can see Dis basic point I just think there is so much more to male sexuality than is being expressed here. ie all men are slobbering pigs.kiwi core blimey, you are making the same ridiculous leasps of logic that james was earlier. any acknowledgement of the harassment and leering women face from some men = attack on men, cf. criticism of christina's video = attack on christina, sex and sexuality.

di smith (lucylurex), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 05:33 (twenty-three years ago)

Again I can see Dis basic point I just think there is so much more to male sexuality than is being expressed here.ie all men are slobbering pigs

Di Um backtrack grovel... I didnt really mean you directly I just feel the general tone of the thread seemed to be saying this. thats not clear from my words though. thinking about these type of things is all a bit new to me- womens studies has never been top of my priorities- as if it wasnt obvious(Lincolon Uni moleskin boy). Where do people find the time to post here all the time(im jealous)- does anyone ever do any work?

Kiwi, Tuesday, 8 October 2002 07:45 (twenty-three years ago)

Other points on burka as such: it is not "traditional" but relatively modern and *only* in use in Afghanistan really. Other places have the veil etc, but not head-to-toe covering such as the burka. Also it is an artifact of the Taliban and Mujahadeen. Prior to their insurgency Afghanistan, most women in the cities didn't wear any sort of religiously mandated clothing but rather modern dress, scandalous miniskirts and all.

Also, they picked up the gun and fought a civil war to defend their rights.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 15:07 (twenty-three years ago)

Cor Sterling is that true? So the people I see in London wearing the burka (not loads, but some: two or three a week) are all likely to be Afghan are they?

Tim (Tim), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 15:17 (twenty-three years ago)

Tim: are you quite sure you know what the Burka is? It is head-to-toe and made of horsehair and doesn't even have a real slit for the eyes, but a mesh covering. You look like you are covered in heavy black drapes.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 16:33 (twenty-three years ago)

Okay Sterling but in not-taking-Toraneko-literally news I read "burka" as meaning not burka-burkas but just the general spectrum of woman-veiling practices, and I don't think that's at all an odd way to have read her statement.

nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 17:49 (twenty-three years ago)

then which is the more "appropriate" and "feminist" response of women: to (a) take on the potential "burden" of hiding themselves, avoiding those improper responses by adapting themselves to the negative behavior of men, or (b) refusing to hide themselves and telling men to get over it and quite acting like idiots.

there's an in-between ground when it comes to dress, there are more options than just burka or hot pants, so women don't HAVE to hide but it's just stupid to flaunt their bodies and then go "oh no i'm being LOOKED at!" Hot pants are flaunting and when you dress that way you are setting yourself UP for being perceived as a sexual object, which is fine if you're looking for sex or a date or something but there are social boundaries that people need to be responsible for following. Sex doesn't need to be in everyone's faces all the time. If you go out in a miniskirt and a blouse that shows all your cleavage you really can't expect that men won't look at you and think of sex (although if they harass you about it, then yes, that is not your problem, it's theirs). And having the only women in the public eye for the most part (people like Marilyn Albright not being pop-culture heroes) dressed in thongs is putting forward a bad public perception of women.

Maria (Maria), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 20:44 (twenty-three years ago)

on the topic of burkas....i lived in a mainly arab-populated suburb of sydney just prior to leaving australia, and most of the women in my street wore the traditional burka - fully wrapped in black with mesh face veil etc.
they also walked behind their menfolk, on the street, in the supermarket, i never saw one driving or even purchasing anything actually, as the men did that. these women just tagged along... behind.
the men in my apartment building would not look me in the face, they looked away rather than look directly at me if i spoke to them, which incidentally was rare as they avoided contact of any sort.
i was told this is because they believed looking at a woman was sinful especially if she was not covered 'properly', which i obviously wasnt.
the women did not speak to me apart except if my neighbour happened to be in her laundry which was outside my door. she would often be uncovered at those times, and say hello but that was it. if she was wearing her full gear she would turn away from me.
the women in my building were beaten by their men, as i was witness to on a daily ( nightly ) basis. i rang social services and police a few times, but each time they came to check it out the women were not allowed to speak to them. the men would answer on their behalf and nothing ever happened.
the boys ( children ) around the area were insolent towards me, refusing to give way on the pavement if i was approaching with bags of groceries. they had no fear of 'adult authority' and would do as they pleased with their mothers powerless to stop them.
this whole environment seemed designed to crush the women into subservience. no sign of feminist ideals.
i wouldnt like to think of the consequences had one of those women tried to resist.
anyway, just a side-line really, but indicating that the wearing of cover-up clothing does not beget respect for women necessarily.
this is a religious ideal, not one chosen by women to keep from being harassed.

donna (donna), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 21:27 (twenty-three years ago)

it's just stupid to flaunt their bodies and then go "oh no i'm being LOOKED at!"

you are right maria in that there is nothing wrong with being looked at, but there is a difference between getting checked out and getting leered at. leering is foul.

di smith (lucylurex), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 21:58 (twenty-three years ago)

Sterling, I guess you know better than I, because I have no idea what material those pieces of garb which I thought were burkas were made from. I understood burka to refer to the more generalist head-to-toe covering, but evidently I was wrong. Sorry. What would I call a head-eyes / to-toe veil without the mesh over the eyes / not made of horsehair? (I'm not trying to be difficult or smart, btw).

Tim (Tim), Tuesday, 8 October 2002 23:28 (twenty-three years ago)

I understood burka to refer to the more generalist head-to-toe covering, but evidently I was wrong.

No, that's a hijab. Hijabs are very common in my community, but I think I've only seen an actual burka once.

Nicole (Nicole), Wednesday, 9 October 2002 00:19 (twenty-three years ago)

nabisco are you going to respond to me?

artiste, Wednesday, 9 October 2002 00:33 (twenty-three years ago)

chador (sp?) is just the head covering without the veil, and this is quite common in these parts, and also what the muslim population in Turkey mainly wears (& on the flipside, even that sometimes brings in anti-muslim discrimination although many Turkish women are ardent nationalists because they see the worse-off conditions of women throughout the rest of the former Ottoman and think "there but for the grace of ATATURK go I.").

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Wednesday, 9 October 2002 03:29 (twenty-three years ago)

I was using Burka to mean a thing that covers the whole head & face & body with just eyes exposed - with slits for the hands.

Here are some definitions I found:

Niqab: The face veil; styles of dress that involve veiling the face.

Hijab: The modest dress of the Muslim woman; the word is sometimes used to refer only to the headscarf.

Burqa: A veil that covers the face and entire head but with a place cut out for the eyes

Afghan Burqa: Covers the entire body and has a grille over the face that the woman looks through. May have slits for the hands

Chador: A type of outergarment that covers the head and body comes down to the ankles or the ground. May have slits for the hands

toraneko (toraneko), Wednesday, 9 October 2002 05:50 (twenty-three years ago)


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