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niyad

(113,941 posts)
Tue Apr 18, 2017, 02:39 PM Apr 2017

What I have learned from five years of Everyday Sexism

What I have learned from five years of Everyday Sexism

To be a feminist is to be accused of oversensitivity and hysteria. But in the face of the abuse the project uncovered, the strength, ingenuity and humour of women has shone like a beacon


Laura Bates: ‘I became aware of the sheer force of hatred that greets women who speak out about sexism.’ Photograph: Linda Nylind for the Guardian


In spring 2012, a week after setting up a website to catalogue experiences of gender inequality, I asked Lady Gaga for her support via Twitter. Keen to raise awareness of my newly created Everyday Sexism Project, I hoped she might spread the word among her millions of followers. The next morning, I sleepily reached for my phone and saw more than 200 new notifications. I clicked eagerly on the first message and stopped cold. It wasn’t, as I had hoped, the first of many new entries from women who had suffered harassment or assault. It was a brutally graphic rape threat – and the moment I became aware of the sheer force of hatred that greets women who speak out about sexism. The threats continued to flood in. The sheer tenacity was startling. Who were these men, who could spend days, weeks – years, even – bombarding a woman they had never met with detailed descriptions of how they would torture her?

Over time, things became clearer. I met men who opposed feminism in different settings, and began to recognise their varied tactics. In some ways, the online abusers – who hurled hatred from behind a screen – were the least threatening. The repetition in their arguments (if you can call “get off your high horse and change your tampon” an argument) made it clear that their fury was regurgitated: rooted in a fear of that man-hating, society-destroying “feminazi” of online forum fantasy.



. . . . .




Another joy was being part of a burgeoning wave of feminism, standing alongside others tackling everything from media sexism to female genital mutilation. Perhaps the most important lesson I learned was how closely connected the different forms of inequality are. It is vital to resist those who mock and criticise us for tackling “minor” manifestations of prejudice, because these are the things that normalise and ingrain the treatment of women as second-class citizens, opening the door for everything else, from workplace discrimination to sexual violence.

To be a feminist, I have learned, is to be accused of oversensitivity, hysteria and crying wolf. But in the face of the abuse the project uncovered, the sheer strength, ingenuity and humour of women shone like a beacon. The dancer who performed for hours on the tube to reclaim the space where she was assaulted. The woman who waited five years to present her contract and a salt cellar to the careers adviser who had told her he would eat her paperwork if she ever became an engineer. The pedestrian who calmly removed the ladder of a catcalling builder, leaving him stranded on a roof.
. . . .

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2017/apr/17/what-i-have-learned-from-five-years-of-everyday-sexism

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What I have learned from five years of Everyday Sexism (Original Post) niyad Apr 2017 OP
Very Good Article Leith Apr 2017 #1
"Now that I'm happily turning into Maxine from Hallmark Cards" NCTraveler Apr 2017 #3
good for you. I have always been Maxine, from my earliest days. niyad Apr 2017 #5
K&R NCTraveler Apr 2017 #2
K&R sheshe2 Apr 2017 #4
. . . niyad Apr 2017 #6
K & R ......for visibility..nt Wounded Bear Apr 2017 #7
thank you! niyad Apr 2017 #8
K&R smirkymonkey Apr 2017 #9
K&R ismnotwasm Apr 2017 #10

Leith

(7,814 posts)
1. Very Good Article
Tue Apr 18, 2017, 03:04 PM
Apr 2017

What the author should have done was to create a link off her main website to the vicious and overly sexist reactions she got. Let them then try to excuse them and keep insisting that sexism is no more.

I am a veteran of more than 5 decades of sexism. Now that I'm happily turning into Maxine from Hallmark Cards, I have no trouble rebuffing the nonsense.

 

NCTraveler

(30,481 posts)
2. K&R
Tue Apr 18, 2017, 03:11 PM
Apr 2017
Another joy was being part of a burgeoning wave of feminism, standing alongside others tackling everything from media sexism to female genital mutilation. Perhaps the most important lesson I learned was how closely connected the different forms of inequality are. It is vital to resist those who mock and criticise us for tackling “minor” manifestations of prejudice, because these are the things that normalise and ingrain the treatment of women as second-class citizens, opening the door for everything else, from workplace discrimination to sexual violence.


snip

That’s why I can honestly say that the experiences and lessons of the past five years have left me more hopeful than despairing. I can’t celebrate this milestone, exactly, representing as it does a collective outpouring of grief, anger and trauma. But I think of the resilience, the solidarity, the resistance, and I can’t mourn it either. In five years, I have learned that the problem is immense, but the will to fight it is greater still.
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