The Nuanced Discussion
Here is the promised dialogue. The subject is sexist epithets: how bad are they, are some worse than others, if they are bad then in what way are they bad, does it really matter, is it reasonable to think they are a bad thing, if so why?
James Sweet
I have accepted Ophelia’s challenge. Am I qualified? I am a male, and this is my real name. I do fancy myself a liberal, and would like to think of myself as a feminist, to the extent that men can be. So: how do I feel about sexist epithets?
Well, they’re bad. Usually. But like so many words, the degree to which that applies varies depending on context and intent. I don’t like the idea of any word being completely taboo. And while I think avoiding sexist epithets in most contexts is simply “the right thing to do” most of the time, I am skeptical of the social constructivist notion that it has a significant effect on reinforcing the undeniably huge institutional biases that persist against women.
I’m not fond of ERV’s infamous “Twatson” slur. Elevatorgate is a tricky issue for feminism in our community already, and to insert an inflammatory sexual insult into the discussion seems to me to be counter-productive at best. Then again, the ERV blog has a humorous, irreverent, youthful tone to it. ERV’s shtick is to blend serious topics like politics and gene research with the unfiltered language of youth culture. And I hate to break it to you, but the kids are still saying pretty much whatever they want whenever they feel like it.
Humor is how we explore the ugliest and nastiest parts of the human experience without completely losing our will to live in the process. We laugh so we don’t constantly cry. The slur against Watson wasn’t all that funny, in my opinion, and probably hurt the quality of the debate. But it’s not going to stop me from reading her blog, nor do I think it disqualifies her from being a feminist. I say, let her know some of us feel that sort of language is damaging, and move on. Hey, maybe someday she’ll even change her mind!
Ophelia Benson
It’s true that ERV specializes in a rowdy, funny, raunchy, say-it-all style, which is one that I like a lot when it’s well done (and Abbie Smith does it well). But that doesn’t commit me to liking everything of that kind, much less to thinking everything of that kind is good. (Good in what sense? For the purposes of this discussion: not harmful, not worrying, not inimical to certain liberal values, not politically dubious.)
I never, for instance, liked “Mooneytits and Cockenbaum” as nicknames for Mooney and Kirshenbaum, and I never used it. I thought it was gratuitously sexist. A commenter at ERV coined it but ERV adopted it and then adapted it to “Tittycocks” – which, again, is just gratuitously sexist all around. Why tits? Why cock? No reason, except mockery. I like quality mockery, but not mere abuse. A humorous, irreverent, youthful tone can turn into a nasty bullying one all too easily.
The oddity that this kind of mockery reveals is that some kinds of epithets and nicknames are acceptable while others – even to raunchy say-it-all types – are not. “Bitch” and “cunt” are considered edgy and funny while “nigger” and “kike” are not. People who would never use racial epithets are happy to talk about bitches. Why is that? What is the difference? Racism is taken seriously while sexism is not; why is that?
James Sweet
Though Jane Curtin’s character gets laughs with “pompous ass” every time, that one famous line from the classic recurring SNL skit is what everybody remembers. Curtin’s character’s behavior is unexpected and defies the audience’s expectations, thereby tickling their funny bone; but it’s not until Akroyd’s character lets loose with what Ophelia has been calling an “identity epithet” that social convention is shattered and the audience becomes truly affected. The bit also works because it’s pulled off with excellent comedic timing, and even tries to actually say something of value — in this case about the escalating incivility in television debate shows (if Curtin’s opening remarks seem tame, remember they didn’t have Fox News in the late ’70s). But still, the SNL bit simply could not have worked if it weren’t so deliciously offensive.
Unfortunately for purposes of debate, I have to agree with you that “Twatson” and “Tittycocks” are just not all that funny. But I guess for me the fact that erv was at least nominally trying to be funny makes me less inclined to get bent out of shape about it. I felt similarly when some commenters at Ed Brayton’s Dispatches blog started using a pun on Orly Taitz’s name which seemed to me to be not very funny and that held misogynist overtones: I avoided using the epithet myself, but I pretty much ignored it when others did because I know there was no misogynist intention, and as stated earlier I am skeptical about the magnitude of the sociological impact.
I would very much like to explore the parallel with racial epithets, continuing this idea of funny vs. trying-and-failing-to-be-funny, but alas I am rapidly closing in on my allotted word count already. That potential powderkeg will have to wait until the next round.
Ophelia Benson
But was ERV trying to be funny, even nominally? That is, was she (even nominally) trying to be funny and nothing else? Were the commenters at ERV trying to be funny and nothing else? If I had thought that, I don’t think I would have gotten bent out of shape about it either. I wouldn’t have admired it, but I could have ignored it.
The reason epithets are fraught is that they express hostility, not to say rage and hatred. Of course there’s a jokey element to the torrent of insults at ERV, but it’s only an element. It’s combined with truly virulent anger and loathing – and not all of it has even an element of joking.
I wonder how and if the ERV discussion (to give it that honorific) would have been different if Rebecca Watson were black as well as female. I wonder if that would have inhibited some of the sexist epithets, and I wonder if there would have been an equivalent barrage of racist epithets. We can’t know, but my guess is that there wouldn’t.
Let’s treat the guess as right for purposes of argument. Why would that be? Why are racist epithets more taboo than sexist epithets? Why is racism taken with the utmost seriousness while sexism is often treated as a joke?
I don’t know the answer, but I suspect and fear that it boils down to Phil Molé’s point in “The Invisibility of Misogyny”:
It’s not just the fact that misogyny is invisible that we need to face – it’s also the fact that this invisibility is a large part of what makes it the enormous problem it is. We cannot begin to properly address misogyny and the harm it causes unless we start being able to see it.
James Sweet
I might flippantly reply that, no, of course if Watson were African-American there would be no racial epithets punned into her name, because there are no racial slurs (that I am aware of, at least) which rhyme with Watson. But I suppose that’s a cop-out.
There’s a short sketch in the cult classic Kentucky Fried Movie where the punchline is a white guy screaming “nigger” at a half-dozen black men. I thought it was edgy and funny and not at all racist. Michael Richards’ notorious rant was not so funny, but I also don’t think it was particularly racist, or at least not intended to be so. Richards practices a caustic brand of hate-the-audience comedy, and I’m sure in his mind he was merely extending that paradigm. I daresay it almost worked on that level, if it hadn’t left such an awful taste.
But these are both a far cry from the pun on Watson’s name. Using an epithet to target a specific individual raises the bar of acceptability even higher; I get that. Even still, I might point to this example of racial stereotypes being used to attack a specific individual — I suspect most readers of B&W would find that both acceptable and hilarious. I don’t mean this to be a direct parallel, but rather to show that, at least in principle, language that would be blatantly racist in one context can, in the context of humorous criticism, become indispensable.
Though it will once again disappoint those hoping for a genuine opponent, I must concede that overt sexism is still tolerated far more than racism, both in comedy and in serious discourse. As to how best to change that, I’d rather focus on gradual consciousness-raising, rather than making a scandal out of one instance.
I prefer this not only for tactical reasons, but also because it’s ultimately a judgment call. We both agree “Twatson” crossed the line, but we might find other examples where we disagree. Perhaps some would say the Michael Steele bit crossed the line. I just can’t bring myself to do more than issue a simple, “I think that’s in bad taste,” and then move on.
Ophelia Benson
Gradual consciousness-raising and making a scandal out of – or, to put it another way, taking a close look at – one instance are not mutually exclusive. As a matter of fact they’re more synergistic than exclusive. Taking a close look at particular instances is one way of raising consciousness.
Arguably that’s part of what we’ve been doing throughout this broader discussion (meaning the one at B&W and elsewhere, not just this exchange). I think some people have said they’ve modified their thinking as a result of the discussion; that would be another word for consciousness-raising. (No doubt some have modified their thinking in what I would consider the wrong direction; is that consciousness-lowering? Well, if it’s convinced them that they should do more and nastier epithet-mongering, I would say yes. If it’s a matter of heightened attention, whatever the outcome, I might say no.)
Taking a close look at habits and customs and ways of talking is what consciousness-raising was always about. That’s not really the same thing as making a scandal of something. It can lapse into that, no doubt; it can become just some kind of Higher Gossip; but anything can become anything. Part of the point of setting up a Nuanced Discussion was to try to get away from the scandal/gossip aspect.
At any rate, a disadvantage of gradual consciousness-raising is that it doesn’t always happen, that is, movement is not always inexorably upward or forward. In some ways feminism has lost ground recently, or rather, feminism has always been losing ground in some places while it gains some in others. It’s never been and isn’t now on some unstoppable glide path to perfection. We (those of us who think it’s a good thing) have to keep nudging it along, in a variety of ways.
Corwin Sullivan
Thanks for inviting me to step in at this point. My perspective on “sexist epithets” (a term I don’t especially like, but will stick with for now) is that they’re loaded with much less inherent sexism than you and many others have been arguing. They can certainly be easily used to express misogynistic opinions, but then so can “woman” when said with the right scornful emphasis. Tone and context are everything.
Taking up arms against words like “bitch” and “cunt” is in my opinion a simplistic, knee-jerk way to combat sexist attitudes. Even if you win that battle, you may be left with a bunch of embittered sexists who have changed their vocabulary but not their thinking. There’s also collateral damage, because many of those same epithets are punchy, expressive words that come in handy sometimes and can be used in basically non-sexist ways. The English language could get along without them, but they add spice and colour.
Finally, and to address something that came up earlier, I actually do think there are good reasons why sexist epithets tend to be perceived as less serious than racial ones. The main one is the point that Ken Pidcock made in comment #34: racial epithets are more likely to be perceived as attacking the whole group, rather than one individual. Call a man a “nigger”, and you’re saying that you despise him just for belonging to a group you hold in contempt. Call a woman a “cunt”, and you’re saying that you despise her specifically. Some of the vitriol directed at her may splash over and end up spattering womankind in general, but in my view this effect is both secondary and very context-dependent. Would you agree?
P.S. Apparently my spell-checker doesn’t even recognise “cunt” as a word. It’s a feminist conspiracy!
Ophelia Benson
I don’t think I’ve been arguing that sexist epithets are loaded with inherent sexism. If I have I take it back. I’ve meant to be arguing that they’re loaded with contingent sexism (and that they’re just loaded – but still contingently). I don’t think there’s anything magic about the arrangement of the letters n, u, t, c in a particular order that causes them to radiate sexism; I just think that in this world at this time the word is sexist (with possible exceptions for regional variation), just as in this world at this time some words are racist, when used as epithets. I agree (of course) that tone and context are highly relevant – lovers can use the words very differently; so can friends. (On the other hand if they use them around other people, things become less simple – but tone and context matter there, too.)
I think the embittered sexists who have changed their vocabulary but not their thinking are an unlikely scenario, because in fact they won’t change their vocabulary unless they change their thinking. They won’t change their vocabulary unless they become persuaded that, at least, the antagonism isn’t worth it. That’s a start.
Many of the epithets add spice to the language – but I’m not talking about dozens of words here! I’m talking about three or four, really – cunt, bitch, twat, and maybe pussy. Do we feel as if the language is bland and spiceless in the absence of “nigger”? I doubt it. Mind you, “bitch” does have a lot of uses…but I’m hitting the word limit.
I don’t agree with your last claim, and even if you are right about it, that just re-states the same question over again – why does “nigger” name a group while “cunt” names a particular individual? I don’t think that’s the case, and if it is, why is it?
James Sweet
I agree with Corwin that at least some uses of what we have been calling “sexist epithets” are not inherently sexist, nor do they even carry the “contingent sexism” that Ophelia refers to. The classic example for me is the use of the verb “to bitch” as in “to complain excessively”. While the colloquialism clearly has misogynist origins, the modern perception of it is so divorced from its etymology that I see no problem with it. I’ve made a personal decision to avoid it, but I have absolutely zero problem with somebody using that particular “sexist epithet” in that manner.
“Bitch” as a noun for a mean or vindictive female is more problematic, as is using “pussy” to indicate weakness. “Bitch” is disproportionately applied to women, and “pussy” to men, which indicates that our contemporary sensibilities about the words’ meanings are still deeply intertwined with their gender-relevant origins.
The words “twat” and “cunt” present a conundrum. If one were willing to completely ignore cultural context, one might convincingly argue that it was no different than calling someone a “dick”. However, my feeling is that within a cultural context where female sexuality is too often seen as something nasty and sinful, in dire need of being repressed (compare the respective connotations of the words “slut” and “stud”), using a word for the female genitalia as an insult is treading into dangerous territory.
On the flip side, I wonder at times if by avoiding these words we are inadvertently reinforcing that same negative image of female sexuality. “Oh, you can’t call somebody a ‘cunt’, that’s dirty.” I suppose this is why I have adopted such an ambivalent stance: Each individual use of “cunt” as an insult probably contributes to negative attitudes, yet paradoxically, strictly avoiding these words altogether may be even worse.
Corwin Sullivan
To some extent, embittered, vocabulary-conscious forms of misogyny are already with us. Just take a look at Angry Harry, a website that avoids those dreaded epithets but features articles with titles like “Feminism causes traffic congestion” (he’s not kidding, either). Equally, do you really think that Abbie Smith is misogynistic? One can’t tell misogynists from non-misogynists simply by keeping track of who likes to toss around words like “cunt” and “bitch”. Policing language in that superficial sense is no substitute for taking the time to understand what people are actually saying.
Returning to the distinction between “nigger” and “cunt”, I think they simply evolved differently and have non-analogous meanings. “Nigger” just means “black person”, with a strong connotation of hostility and contempt. The difference between “black person” and “nigger” is not unlike the difference between “sex worker” and “whore” – the alternative terms refer to exactly the same set of people, but one is a neutral descriptor whereas the other conveys loathing for everyone falling in that set. “Cunt”, as an insult, doesn’t just mean “woman” – it means a particularly bad woman, a woman whose behaviour or persona is somehow deeply objectionable. Or actually, it means a bad person, considering that “cunt” is quite often directed at men. It fits women better, and seems more forceful when directed at a woman, but is that really enough to make it a sexist word?
James:
The comparison between “cunt” and “dick” is interesting. In my experience, “cunt” is normally seen as a more serious insult, and I think this has to do with negative perceptions of female sexuality (and, conversely, a traditional sense that referring to the naughty bits of women somehow violates their purity). I agree that scrupulous avoidance of “cunt” might have the effect of reinforcing those perceptions.
Ophelia Benson
Again, “tossing around” words like “cunt” and “bitch” is one thing, because as you said, context matters. But as I said, epithets of that kind used in anger are a pretty good index of misogyny. Of course policing epithets is no substitute for understanding what people are saying, but that’s a false dichotomy; one can do both, and if people are using epithets, one may well have to.
Nigger hasn’t always had a strong connotation of hostility and contempt, actually. It used to be just the word for black person. Of course, it was the word for black person in a world where hostility and contempt for black people were simply normal. That’s why the connotation of hostility and contempt became more obvious as that world shrank and went on the defensive. It was no longer just normal to use a dismissive slang word for black people. To the angriest misogynists, all women are bitches or cunts, and that’s why the words have the aura of hatred that they do.
I think James is probably right about total avoidance. Corwin told me of an amusing use of “cunt” by a woman he knows (I hope he doesn’t mind if I steal it): she called the uncomfortable seat of her bike a cunt-buster. If women can reclaim the word that way, that’s good. No one uses “female genitalia” as an epithet, and various slang words have been adapted and adopted over time; maybe current epithets will be future nicknames. Fine. It’s just that we’re not there yet.
Corwin Sullivan
I think it’s time for a couple of partial concessions. First, I accept that there probably are some men out there who think of all women as bitches and cunts, and that when used in this sense the words function a lot like “nigger”. However, I’ve never heard anyone talk like this, and I suspect it’s an extremely rare mindset – limited, as you say, to the angriest misogynists. I’d rather not let the snarlings of such people influence how the rest of us express ourselves.
My second partial concession is that I agree that frequent use of “bitch” and “cunt” in anger should be a bit of a red flag. The hypothesis that someone who did this was a misogynist would deserve careful consideration. But before declaring the hypothesis proven (or adequately tested and not rejected, for any Popperians out there), I would want to look at the specifics of how the person was using those words, and at other aspects of his behaviour towards women. More to the point, I wouldn’t consider occasional use of those words to describe women who really were being horrible to be an indicator of misogyny at all.
The upshot is that I don’t think it serves any sensible purpose to toss the words we’re talking about in a box labelled “sexist epithets – never use as insults”. Maybe a box labelled “gendered epithets – use with some care” would be reasonable. “Bitch” and “cunt” are gendered in the sense that they refer literally to a female animal and a female body part, and function differently depending on whether they’re directed at a woman or a man. But no matter how hard I try to see actual sexism in calling, say, Lady MacBeth a cunt, I just can’t come up with anything convincing. Can you?
Ophelia Benson
I don’t think it’s possible to prove that any particular person is a misogynist, or that that’s what’s required to make a convincing case for the badness of using sexist epithets. It’s also not really the point; the point is more that the use of the worst sexist epithets scatters misogyny around, the way a wet dog scatters drops around when it shakes itself. That’s the work that epithets do – they spread hatred or contempt or both from person to person or to group.
I can’t prove this either, but it seems to me to be something that belongs on the shelf labeled “common knowledge.” Of course what we think is common knowledge can often be wrong, and part of the point of this discussion is to question exactly this common knowledge – but to me it’s still a strain on credulity to think that epithets don’t work that way. Explain it to me. Explain why epithets don’t do what most people think they do.
Isn’t that why parents try to teach children not to use them? Isn’t that why adults don’t use them in various formal or professional contexts? Of course epithets can always be used ironically among friends, but when they are used “sincerely” – when they are meant, then their point is to express contempt.
I don’t know if I can come up with anything more convincing than what I’ve already said, to convince you that calling Lady Macbeth a cunt would be sexist. I think it’s just a matter of how the word is used at this particular moment in time: it’s used as a dire insult; it’s the harshest name one can call a woman; it refers to the female genitalia. I have a hard time seeing how, given all that, it could be anything but sexist.
Corwin Sullivan
You seem to be agreeing that ironic use of epithets among friends is pretty much okay. Is that really your position? One implication, I would think, is that if enough groups of friends start doing this then ironic use of epithets will become pretty much okay in society at large (in the kinds of informal settings where one might currently say “piss” or “damn”). The UK may already be there, at least with “cunt” among younger people.
That leaves us with non-ironic use of epithets as insults, which is of course the hardest case from my point of view. It’s probably worth talking at this point about what properties, specifically, would make an epithet sexist. In my opinion, a sexist epithet is one conveying the idea that one sex is somehow inferior to the other.
I may return next time to Lady Macbeth (I apologise for inserting an unwarranted capital B into her name in my last post), but for now I’d like to propose a rough two-dimensional framework for thinking about insulting words in the context of this discussion. One dimension is severity, and the other is level of sexism. “Blockhead” would score low on both, since it’s a mild insult that can’t be taken to refer to either sex. “Shithead” is at least somewhat higher on the severity axis, but still non-sexist. I would put “chicks” high on group offensiveness, since it’s a mildly disparaging synonym for women in general (or maybe young women, but not women who behave in some particular way). However, it’s low on the severity scale.
I would definitely put “cunt” way above “prick” on severity, but I would put both rather low on sexism. You’ll have to guess my reasons (and you probably can), since I’m out of words.
Ophelia Benson
Yes, that’s really my position. Yes, I think that could happen, and that would be a good thing. It could happen that “cunt” became an endearment generally, as opposed to in private, and then it would become pretty useless as an epithet, so it wouldn’t be used as one any more, and that would be a good thing. The UK isn’t there yet as far as I know, because the epithet use hasn’t been rendered feeble.
It doesn’t seem very likely that that will happen though, because people who like the epithet-use will keep it alive.
I have a different idea of what sexist means, which is that it draws on an existing and entrenched idea that one sex is indeed inferior to the other. I think your “somehow inferior to the other” is interesting, because it’s surely not a secret “how” women are seen as inferior to men, is it? Women are supposed to be stupider, weaker, more passive and manipulative, less ambitious and talented, and so on.
I think we agree on the severity dimension, so that leaves the sexism one. It’s tricky apportioning sexism because it makes a difference that only one sex is generally, historically, semi-officially considered inferior. In a sense “prick” and “putz” and the rest are sexist, but in another sense they’re really not; they’re more like epithetty (to coin an adjective). “Cunt” doesn’t work like that. In another world it could, but in this one it doesn’t. Maybe some day in the future it will, but at this time it doesn’t.
Corwin Sullivan
The comparison between “prick” and “cunt” may deserve more exploration. I’ve always thought of the two words as working in approximately the same way, though with different degrees of potency. They both literally refer to sex organs, and when used as insults they accuse a person of being unpleasant, even destructive. Hurled angrily, they work better against one gender than another, although I would argue that “prick” is the more sex-specific of the two. When did you last hear a woman called a “prick”? I wouldn’t dispute that “cunt” acquires a little extra force when used against a woman as opposed to a man, or that calling a woman a “cunt” is a much nastier insult than calling a man a “prick”.
But why exactly is “cunt” the nastier of the two words? I’m sure there’s something to your insight that “cunt” draws on an entrenched (though hopefully fading) idea that women are inferior. However, I don’t think this does more than add a small amount of sting. Surely the idea of female inferiority is fading. More to the point, I don’t think “cunt” really references weakness, stupidity, manipulativeness, or any of the other stereotypically female qualities that you mentioned. I connect it more with behaviour that is simply unpleasant and damaging. I think a bigger reason that “cunt” is nastier than “prick” is that female body parts are seen as more taboo than male ones, which in turn has more to do with female purity than female inferiority.
The reason I suggested that a sexist epithet would have to imply that one sex was “somehow inferior” is that I wouldn’t call a word genuinely sexist unless it had connotations pointing to some inferior quality. The word “chick”, as I’ve always understood it, does this job by carrying a mild implication that women are not worth taking seriously (a classic stereotype). “Cunt” just implies that someone is being a real pain in the neck, and lord knows that men and women can both do this perfectly well.
Ophelia Benson
Ah, why indeed. I wonder, actually (and some expertise would be useful here) if “putz” is closer to the nasty-value of “cunt” than “prick” is. I had always thought it was interchangeable with “schmuck,” but I read somewhere fairly recently that “putz” is considered vastly worse – which promptly made me wonder how many times I had inadvertently used a much harsher insult than I had intended to. (Probably not all that often; I don’t get out much.) Maybe English just doesn’t happen to have a putz-equivalent while Yiddish does, in which case maybe the disparity is just random and there is no “why.” That would be consoling, in a way.
I wouldn’t say that the idea of female inferiority is exactly fading though. It’s losing territory, but not fading – where it still rules, it’s virulent. It’s probably more virulent now than in the past, because feminism really pisses people off if they already hate women anyway.
You could be right about female body parts, which could have as much to do with anatomy as it does with ideas about purity – vagina dentata, fishy smells, all that. An outy is less scary than an inny.
“A real pain in the neck” isn’t right, surely. It’s much worse than that. It’s not an irritation-word, it’s a hatred-word, a rage-word. And I think it is sexist, probably because women aren’t allowed to be that kind of bad. There’s something about the combination of being physically smaller and weaker and being the-cunt-kind-of-bad that is worse – more disgusting, more engraging – than a man being that kind of bad. Women like that are figures of horror – literature is full of them: Clytemnestra, Medea, Lady Macbeth as you mentioned, the evil stepmothers of fairy tale. They’re seen as sinister in a way that men seldom are, no matter what their crimes.
Corwin Sullivan
Your point about women not being “allowed to be that kind of bad” is really interesting. A lot of people seem to experience some dissonance when thinking about a Medea or a Lady Macbeth, but does it really arise just because women tend to be physically smaller and weaker? Or does it also have something to do with a traditional view of women as weak and passive, but also virtuous? We’ve looked at the notion of “sexist epithets” from several different angles now, and I keep coming back to the idea that they interact with gender in ways that are much more complicated than tapping into some straightforward notion of female inferiority.
This complexity is a big part of my reason for not wanting to just dump those words into a “do not use” box. Taking them away from misogynists also takes them away from people who may want to deploy them in more interesting and nuanced ways, and I would consider that to be an unacceptable level of collateral damage.
More broadly, however, I would suggest that railing against the use of any supposedly offensive word entails attacking the symptom rather than the disease. Complaining about the vocabulary used to express an idea becomes a distraction from confronting the idea itself, and also leads to pointless arguments with people who simply don’t appreciate constantly being told to watch their language.
The other problem with trying to make a word taboo is that it unavoidably helps to invest that word with power. We’ve been talking about why “cunt” is perceived as being worse than “prick”, and I think we’ve come up with a couple of good reasons. But maybe “cunt” is a more potent insult partly because, well, people get more upset about it.
Let me close by saying that I’ve found this to be a fun and thought-provoking discussion. Thanks for inviting me to participate.
Ophelia Benson
No, I don’t think the dissonance arises just because women are on average smaller and weaker; I think it’s complicated, and that there are a number of reasons. Women are the mothering sex, so hardness, coldness, anger, aggression all seem more threatening in women. There’s also the familiar sexual ambivalence – women who say no are bitches, women who say yes are whores; in short, lose-lose. We both think it’s complicated.
I haven’t actually said “never say ‘cunt’ no matter what” – I’ve said “don’t use sexist epithets.” I think that leaves plenty of room to use the words in more interesting and nuanced ways.
I partly agree with you about taboo and power; I think that has happened to me to some extent just because of this discussion. On the other hand, I think that has not happened socially with “bitch” despite years of trying to “reclaim” it; it seems to be more harsh than it was, not less.
I too have found this both fun and interesting. Thank you and James very much for participating.
About the Author
Corwin Sullivan is a Canadian vertebrate palaeontologist based in Beijing.
I think ERV is not one of those people, as she said this:
“Its not about defending women. Its about language snobbery and a bunch of ivory tower twats looking down on the common folk who *do* say ‘bitch’ and ‘nigger’ casually in conversation (yes, ‘jungle bunny’, I get that too from racists of the black and white variety).”
So ‘nigger’ is fine, too. I thought it might be relevant since you’re both talking about her.
I know, I saw that – but as far as I know, there aren’t great long threads full of “nigger” and the like.
By the way, my plan was that James and I wouldn’t comment here, because it would make the word limit seem silly. I’m amending that to “we can do short explanations like the above” but that’s it.
So, if a person is offended by jungle bunny, or a woman by twat, they should just suck it up because Abbie and the common volk use it casually? Is that the point?
I’m hoping round 2 will focus more precisely on where the disagreement (or argument) lies, now that some initial background info has been laid out.
I don’t know– even womanist gives white middle class word-worried people her permission to say nigger. That counts for something, right?
http://www.womanist-musings.com/2009/01/go-ahead-say-nigger.html
White people are so hung up on words over actions, and think words ARE actions…then they go out and lynch people–rhetorically, of course–because actual lynching is outlawed these days…
hush now!
Let the good lady and sir have their argument. The more they focus on us the less they can focus on responding to each other.
Ha! In many, many situations in places all over the US racism is NOT taken seriously. It’s only given lip service.
Jose @ 1: she’s ascribing those terms to *racists*. And falsely claiming that people like me (that portion of the comment was specifically in response to me, btw) are concerned about ‘bad words’ at the expense and exclusion of bad actions. False dichotomy.
yes, she’s giving people ‘permission’ to say the word who want to say it and are pissed that they can’t say it *because they are racists*!
You’re not exactly helping your case here.
We’re working on that. :) There’s unfortunately not a huge divergence here, but I will try to push it a little bit in the next reply.
The whole point of that article was, “if you’re the type of person who wants to say ‘nigger,’ you shouldn’t bother to restrain yourself. Hiding your racism behind politeness when you’re around black people is missing the point.
I’m liking this exchange already. Given that I always post under my own name anyway, I’d like to throw in a few cents of my own.
The assumption here is that the ‘badness’ of terms like ‘nigger’ are indicative of the notion that racism is taken seriously.
I don’t think that’s necessarily true.
I think that being branded a racist or being associated with racist views is taken very seriously. But that’s not exactly the same thing as taking racism seriously.
It’s the difference between not wanting to hit someone and not wanting to be punished for hitting someone.
In my view a large part of the a sense of discomfiture and condemnation that is raised by racial slurs is often a dodge to avoid dealing with the underlying issues: Who, me? I’m not a racist! I never say any racist words and always condemn those that do! So you can go pester someone else, Mr. racial-equality activist, and leave me alone to soldier on in blissful, privileged ignorance of the real racial issues that are undermining my society and all the myriad ways by which I personally benefit from this, thankyouverymuch.
On the other side of the coin, I don’t think that the relatively free-er use of sexist terminology indicates that sexisim is regarded less seriously than racism. It only indicates that being branded a sexist or being associated with sexist views is not taken as seriously as the racial equivalent.
Which is all doom and gloom from me, because I think that neither racism nor sexism are treated with anywhere near sufficient seriousness. While it might be possible to cut the hair between them to determine which is taken more seriously than the other, I think that both are so effectively low that it would serve no useful purpose to do so.
Back on the subject of ‘Twatson’ and elevatorgate: I was genuinely surprised and a bit dissapointed with Abbie’s use of ‘Twatson’ – but that was overshaddowed by the fact that I was far more dissapointed that she (as well as many others in the community *coughDawkinscough* – didn’t come out in favor of Rebecca straight away.
It looked like an open-and-shut case: Reasonable woman told a true story about a creepy guy, and made a reasonable request for any guys in the movement that might not see a problem with that to please get the message and not be creepy. All totally fine and proportional to the situation. I greeted it with a ‘duh, yep, of course that’s creepy and guys shouldn’t do it, good call’ and then carried on expecting business as usual.
But then THE INTERNET WENT INSANE.
It seemed like coming to Rebecca’s aid in that was the obvious thing to do… But that’s not what happened. People I like and admire were actually telling Rebecca off. Abbie was one of them.
I was more worried by the fact that Abbie made an attack on Rebecca than I was by any of the language she used to do it. Abbie made the same essential points and comments in a refined and formal manner… That would still bother me just as much, I think.
(I should point out that even as much as the ‘Twatson’ thing bugged me, it would take a lot more than a mere strong disapproval of a particular sub-section to get me to stop reading one of my favorite blogs in their entirety.)
Conter to Ophelia’s last point in the OP, “Nigger” is sometimes used well by Dave Chappelle and Chris Rock, among others.
Ummm…This is a bit ridiculous isn’t it? It’s like a priest who decides to debate whether atheism can be correct. He marches into his church on Sunday and picks someone in the front pew to take the atheist point of view (this guy is known to think that atheists have some good arguments). Someone mentions that Christopher Hitchens lives a block away and is available. The irate priest replies that Hitchens and other atheists are banned from his church and front pew guy will do just as well in defending the atheist cause. But just to be sure nothing goes amiss, he gives himself editorial control of what pew guy says.The debate takes place and the priest and his view is declared the winner by the congregation. Everyone pats themselves on the back and feels good about winning another debate about atheism.
That would be silly, nicht wahr?
It would, indeed, be silly. However, it’s not particularly relevant here since that’s a deeply flawed analogy.
People here repeatedly proposed ideal candidates that fully disagreed with Ophelia on the subject. It was an open invitation. None of them took her up on it. Russell Blackford, who inspired the whole thing, even came by the thread, and wouldn’t do it. Some ERV regs came by and discussed the issue in the comments, but that was the closest it got. No one said James Sweet would do “just as well.” In fact, the whole selection process has been filled with disappointed caveats. And re: editorial control, did you even read the purpose, or the boundaries of it? Do you really feel it would serve either side in this debate if it was just completely no-holds-barred, if, say, the discussion descended into utter, hostile nastiness, and Ophelia posted it anyway, billed as the “nuanced discussion”?
And regarding this portrayal of Ophelia as the evil censor, ask yourself this: do you find value in public, structured debates, a la Intelligence Squared? Or should IQ2 start just opening the floor to anyone and everyone to shout themselves silly over the topics at hand?
B&W isn’t 4chan, or the local pub. Those places have their own value as discussion goes, but I don’t think you’d be telling debate moderators that their rules in the interest of things like civility and brevity are censorious and awful.
Or would you?
It’s 1 AM here and I’m just heading for the sack, but just a couple of points: Russell frigin’ Blackford does not support using sexual epithets, so he would not be a good candidate for the opposing side. Does he get all hot and bothered when someone else uses them? No, probably not. I’m sure he’s able to ignore the epithets and look at the argument being made. And most debates I have seen, including IQ2 don’t set up one of the debaters as the moderator. That would be, as I said, silly.
This.
Since I’ve been a lurker/casual reader for much, much longer than I’ve been a participant, I can’t really speak with certainty here. But the impression I’ve gotten from weeks of “WTF?” consternation, is that there was just a whole lotta hate and/or contempt for RW simmering beneath the surface. The incident with Stef McGraw was just a convenient pretext for bringing it front and center.
You didn’t like “Mooneytits and Cockenbaum” and never used it. OK, but I can’t help but remember you tolerated it. Here’s ERV using the epithets, and you’re right below in the comments, supporting her.
http://scienceblogs.com/erv/2009/08/erv_on_ig.php
Ah [having looked]. So I am.
Well I was wrong.
About #s 13 and 14 – I should confess that I did get a volunteer who is more opposed (to put it simplistically) than James – but I didn’t see his message until after I’d closed with James. Cue anguished cries of “how convenient!” Think so if you like, but that’s what happened. Maybe we should do both. First the guy in the front pew, then Hitchens.
As for the evil censorship – I said I plan not to moderate, and that if I do see a need to edit anything I won’t do it without the other party’s permission. Either we agree on an edit, or we start that round over, or the discussion ends – in the unlikely event that I see a need to edit anything.
i have myself fallen foul of ophelia’s high standards in this respect in the past and have had no problem apologising for doing so; i’m not here to upset anyone that doesn’t deserve it, after all. i wouldn’t use the “n-word” myself, as i’m not sensitive enough to the nuance, but i do from time to time enjoy its robust use by the sort of people who are – such as chris rock (see his hilarious routine on “when is a white person allowed to say it?”) or, indeed, ice-t (see the lyrics to “straight up nigga” i think it’s called, on his “original gangster”), but then again, he is prone to pushing the envelope in this respect. i can also confirm that “twat” is not nearly as offensive in the uk as it is in the us – probably because it sounds like “twit”, which is insulting, but not very. i never use it around americans. the main problem with “twatson”, it seems to me, is that it’s just not that witty. it might have passed muster when we were 14, but not these days.
i also think i should mention that i am highly amused (as i can be somewhat juvenile) by the word “tittycock” and will now be using it in everyday conversation. i am also highly amused by malcolm tucker, in much the same way that i like listening to speed metal, despite the fact that i have in the past compared at least one pantera track to the sound of a man being mugged by a dentist on a busy construction site. it’s not everyone’s cup of tea, but then again what is? i also very much enjoy the language of father jack hackett, everyone’s favourite senile alcoholic maniac priest, in the award-winning satirical comedy “father ted”:
DRINK! FECK! ARSE! GIRLS!
it’s not like you’re meant to think he’s *clever*. i use a picture of him to convince my daughter she ought to brush her teeth, or they’ll end up like his.
i would also hazard a guess that ophelia is not terribly keen on trey parker and matt stone, despite the general hilariousness of south park, at least as far as i’m concerned. i also would refer all of you to gary johnstone’s climactic moral speech in “team america: world police”, which i also think sums up much of this discussion.
nonetheless, i have enjoyed this discussion and, i think, probably relearned some stuff that i had forgotten, so thank you all.
b’shalom
bananabrain
» Ophelia: The subject is sexist epithets
I am honestly wondering what you are thinking about this. The way you phrased this would suggest that you are not trying to have a discussion about whether or not certain words are necessarily sexist but only about whether somebody would come out to explicitly endorse something that has already been found to be sexist. The former I would think might make for an interesting discussion (if it is a sincerely open one), the latter I can’t really see serving any purpose. What am I missing?
Peter, I don’t think you’re missing anything. Mind you, the other party can always dispute the term. But fundamentally, you’re right; I’ve framed the discussion as about whether and why people accept sexist epithets, not as about whether there are such things. That’s interesting to me, apparently not to you; that’s not necessarily “missing” anything.
Which is what I find confusing. Because AFAICS it would mean one of two things: that you say you are interested in the reasons why people intentionally use something they accept as sexist, when lots of people dispute the very premise (at least potentially allowing you no insight into the reasons you want to investigate); or that you think that words ‘just mean’ certain things (which I would hope nobody these days seriously believes). Either way, it seems to me that you have pretty much excluded the possibility that you might be mistaken (in assumptions and/or conclusions). I have always thought you were explicit in setting some store by that—which is why I suspected I was missing something.
As I said: the other party can dispute the term, hence I haven’t excluded the possibility that I might be mistaken.
As was I, for whatever it’s worth. I remember thinking ‘ew…really?’ at the time, but certainly wasn’t overly fussed about it. What I can’t remember, however, is whether a similar level of vehement, sexist abuse directed at Sheril (or Chris, for that matter) was poured on in the comments there. If so, it certainly didn’t register on my radar with the background of all the smut on the Intersocktion at the time. I fully admit that I may have missed or even overlooked such goings on at ERV. If it was there and I missed it, I regret it. I also have to admit that I have clarified my thinking on this issue quite a bit in the ensuing years. Overall, I think that’s a good thing.
Ha!
And people were worried this would be a dogpile on whoever disagreed with OB.
James – FWIW, I think it’s worth examining the underlying assumption that, if it’s funny, it’s permissible (at least at some level). While I don’t want to go completely OT, I’d like to illustrate with a situation that I’ve had to grapple with personally: fat jokes.
As background: I currently work in the amateur bodybuilding/fitness community. Fat acceptance activists would say that I have “thin privilege” – I’m built a lot like a teenaged boy, and – even in my 50’s – maintain a lean and muscular physique without undue hardship and privation. Like many people, I’ve laughed at fat jokes – including those made by obese/overweight actors and comedians. In general, these jokes reflect our attitude that fatness as a matter of “choice” – if all those gluttons just stopped fressing, they could get lean too!
Contempt for the overweight is so pervasive, it’s invisible. Like the old Palmolive dishwashing liquid ads, we’re soaking in it. Needless to state, it’s especially prevalent in the fitness community.
After studying the reality behind the obesity epidemic, however, I’ve had to question and uproot this internalized notion. Yes, there is an element of choice involved, but basically, the playing field simply isn’t level. Not everyone can get thin, nor should they aspire to. And while I don’t see 100% eye-to-eye with fat acceptance activists, I get why they’re angry. Fat jokes cause real people real pain. When people laugh at them, a lot of larger folks take it personally – and for good reasons. They contribute to an atmosphere of overall contempt and self-hate.
Point being, “sizeism” is a lot like sexism, IMHO – it’s socially sanctioned and is strongly defended by a number of “nuanced” and “objective” arguments. Thus, people of all sizes laugh at fat jokes, since the notion of fat-person-as-uninhibited-glutton is deeply internalized. Sexism is internalized, too: something that’s clearly visible in the SNL clip. the two actors are trading insults – and she’s the one who started it. Thus, it’s “natural” for Akroyd’s character to return fire, and to so in the deepest, most insulting way possible. He has to go for the “win” – which means reaching for the most devastating insult possible – a sexist one.
Men and women can both laugh at it, because we grasp the situation he’s in. War is all hell, doncha know, so anything goes. It’s the internalized sexism – even beyond the words used – that made it a good joke: the bitch got what she deserved.
As such, I think the use of sexist epithets in jokes – because they’re successful – have the potential to cause real pain for real people… just like fat jokes. The humor legitimizes and reinforces their use – which is why they’re also used in so many “trying-but-failing” situations. To put it another way, just because something is widely considered to be funny, doesn’t make it benign – even under the specific circumstances that it’s being used.
@ 26 –
That’s really not the plan. Because the discussion is billed as nuanced, and because the other party is invited, and because we take time to think about our entries, I expect tempers to remain calm. I set it up that way and I think it will work.
Elly, thanks for the thought-provoking comments. I’ve been asked not to respond to specific points in the comments (since this would underline the word limit) but I’ll just note that in an effort to have this actually be a “debate” of some substance, I am omitting a lot of the balance from my opinion on this subject. As to the extent that size-ism is a serious issue, I have yet to make up my mind fully. But I definitely do not dismiss it out of hand, be sure of that!
James, no, I amended it to “we can respond briefly to specific points” – as I’ve been doing! – just not at length to all points, as we might on a blog post. Do respond to specific points if you want to.
@James (#29): I grasp that – it was meant largely as “food for thought” vs. something to specifically address. “Sizeism” was an analogy that occurred to me, since fat jokes are legion. This isn’t the time/place to discuss it, of course (my intent is not to derail or divert the discussion at hand), but the pain they contribute to is quite real.
Another reason, I think, that sexism is given more of a pass than racism (at least in the US; in the UK, the position — in the wake of the riots — may be in reverse) is an unpleasant double-standard in, of all places, international relations.
South Africa treated its black population about as badly as Saudi Arabia or Iran treats its female population, but (perhaps with the memory of abolition and the civil rights movement), the world chose to isolate South Africa diplomatically, economically and in sport. Unfortunately, we haven’t been willing to do the same thing with the Islamic countries that indulge in similar behaviour with respect to women. There are, I think, two reasons for this:
1. South Africa isn’t floating on oil. Gold is valuable, but not that valuable.
2. There has been a loss, world-wide, in the belief in universal values that inspired the anti-apartheid movement. We are much more willing, these days, to tolerate various forms of discrimination in a given country or among a given group because ‘that’s their culture’. This impacts most directly on women, but there have also been smaller versions of the same thing when it comes to race: it was plain for all to see that much of the appalling behaviour in Sudan was white (Muslim) against black (pagan and Christian), but the world was frustratingly slow to act.
Dealing with 1 is going to be very, very difficult. Western countries are horribly dependent on oil. Dealing with 2 — considering how difficult, in a globalised world, managing mass immigration is proving to be — may be impossible.
Funny you should bring up immigration. I’m starting to suspect just how close we’re having to come to so many foreign people is sort of making us more amicable (or at least tolerant) of those crimes you’re mentioning. Humans (or at least we in the West) seem to gravitate toward whatever middle we imagine lies between us and the people we know. Fine when it what you need is compromise. Counterproductive when dealing with gross abuses and behavior.
Understanding that explanation is not justification, I think the question is worthy of consideration.
Race is not a clear category. It’s even fair to say that, outside of a population genetics perspective, race has no meaning beyond what one chooses to assign it. Consequently, someone using a racist epithet is both insulting another person and trying to assign that person to a group that the speaker holds in contempt. You’re a nigger just like every other nigger.
Gender, on the other hand (speaking outside of a cultural studies context), is pretty clear. Gender-specific (what OB is calling sexist) epithets do not necessarily carry the same expression of group contempt. People tend to think of them as insults that just use gender as a marker to make the insult that much more harsh. You’re a cunt but my sister isn’t.
People are wrong, of course. Incorporating gender into an insult is unacceptable, more so in a sexist culture. But I think I get why people treat the classes of epithet differently.
(Actually, race, inverted, can also be used as a marker. Many years ago, an exasperated student called me a stupid white motherfucker. He wasn’t saying anything about white people; that was just for effect. Had I been dark-skinned, he would have called me a stupid African motherfucker.)
I didn’t see it, but I’m going to guess ‘Oily Taint’ or something along those lines? Which is gross and insulting, to be sure, but not in a gendered way–taints are like assholes, in that everyone’s got ’em, right?
Feel free to point out how I’ve got it wrong.
Seems to me that one of the main unresolved points is the matter of where the true gendered insults get their power from and whether the knowledge of that derivation, or lack thereof, makes a difference. Loads of people have argued from UK rules, i.e. that ‘twat’ is never used to describe genitalia and that a large number of people who use that word don’t know it’s original meaning in the first place; ‘cunt’ is only ever used on men, in a way synonymous with ‘bastard’, maybe? etc. etc. For my part, I don’t find a lot of solace in that. I don’t think the user has to has to have sexist intent, per se. If the words he or she uses connote an identity insult, isn’t sexism still being perpetuated, however passively, unconsciously or insidiously?
A few years ago I heard the word ‘berk’ used by Anglos and thought it was pretty cute–until I discovered its etymology and though ‘well, crap, can’t use that one’. Word origins really do matter to me, particularly if the words in question are as loaded as these are. But perhaps I am in the minority here?
Jen, close, but not quite right. Not “Taint.” Think. :- )
Ugh, really? Come on! ‘Taint’ would have been so much better*! And to bypass the obvious and reach for the gendered insult, well, that says something, doesn’t it?
*For limited values of ‘better’, I guess. :-/
Actually no, not that one – the other one! Tits. Less ugh but still gendered. Progress! :- b
Gotcha. I’m obviously very bad at the insulting name game.
And all under the heading of ‘The Nuanced Discussion’. LOL.
@Elly (#16)
I’ve actually had thoughts along similar lines.
I like and admire Rebecca. And for a while I didn’t understand why other people who like similar bloggers as I do (Jen, PZ, Greta, etc) don’t also like Rebecca.
It was a puzzle from even before the latest hoo-haw.
My thinking at the moment is that Rebecca is a woman who talks down.
Jen and Greta are both great writers and strong women. But they also try and be scientific in their approach to argumentation. They hedge a lot, and in the fluffy personal bits they mug at the reader self-deprecatingly. Here, look of this photo of me behind a pillow fort, I’m not really that big and scary an intellectual after all, see?
But I don’t think I’ve seen Rebecca do this. She doesn’t deprecate or hedge. She’ll snark and irony your ears off, but no hedging.
So Rebecca talks down, where Jen and Greta talk across or up.
Now, this of itself doesn’t seem to be a problem when men do it. PZ talks down. Hitchens talks down. Dawkins talks down. And so on. And that doesn’t actually get noticed, because men taking strong and opinionated and authoratative and non-self-deprecating positions on controversial topics is normal and expected behavior.
But when a woman talks down in the same way, that’s out of character enough to get noticed. And (most) people don’t like getting talked-down-to, it ticks them off.
So I’ve long had the impression that Rebecca’s style of delivery itself was rubbing a lot of people the wrong way.
I’ve pieced together this view from asking a few why they didn’t like Rebecca’s videos. “Snarky” and “up herself” and “thinks she’s better than everyone” came up a lot (in between other sexist slurs like “bitch” and “uppity cunt” I’m sad to report).
So I’m surprised the action has been this strong (and that it has gone on for so long)… But with that framework in mind, I’m not entirely surprised that the general reaction was negative.
Note that this isn’t that I’m suggesting Rebecca is wrong or should change her practice… The deadpan snark and lecturing tone is actually one of the things I like about Rebecca. And more importantly, she shouldn’t have to change. It’s fine for Hitchens to talk down at people, but not Rebecca? I call sexist bullshit on that.
Well… If I’m right, anyway. I could be wrong (he said, self-deprecatingly).
Daniel – erm – not to be an egomaniac (don’t take this the wrong way…) but where do you place me on that spectrum? I’m curious. I think I’m some of each.
Then again you’re probably just talking about the big famous woman atheists.
Hmm…
Personally I would put you further to Rebecca’s end of the spectrum then Jen’s. In my subjective and probably unjustified opinion, I’d map it something like this:
Rebecca > Ophelia > Greta > Jen.
Although that’s shouldn’t be read as being a proportional scale… I think the gab between Rebecca and yourself would be larger than any of the other three.
<strong>However</strong>, I might not be entirely impartial when it comes to evaluating yourself.
Story-about-me time!
A few years ago I started listening to some Rhetoric 10 lectures from UC Berkeley by a guy named Daniel Coffeen. I don’t need to go into detail – suffice to say that the lectures weirded me out and called into question the whole concept of the importance of truth. I also didn’t understand about 80% of what he was saying, and that drove me nuts.
It also drove me to do a round of book buying on Amazon. I got hold of a whole bunch of books from the class reading list he’d recomended in the lectures. But I also wanted to get the view contrary to his own, so did a search for books that gave the concept of truth a staunch and favorable defense.
One of the books that came up in that search was Why Truth Matters. Which I read, and loved, and then put on the shelf. And for a year or two, that was pretty much it. I remembered the title and the gist of the book, but the name of the authors faded from memory (note: this is normal for me – I read for the content not the author, so I usually forget the names of authors – which makes book shopping very difficult sometimes when I’m trying to find that elusive last book in a series).
Anyway, a few years pass and I start getting interested in the online atheism thing, started commenting on a few blogs.
I started out okay, and most of the time people agreed with me. So I branched out a little and started commenting on some of the feminism-related blog posts. Let’s just say I’ve learned a lot in the few years since then, shall we? I had some learnin’ to do.
Anyway, out of the blue, this woman named Ophelia Benson comes along and smacks down one of the more embarrassing comments I had made. And she did a damn good job of it too.
“That’s weird,” I thought. “I think I know that name.”
A bit of Google searching later I worked it out. I even went and took Why Truth matters off the shelf and checked the names of the authors just to be sure.
Then I cringed, curled my toes in embarrassment and didn’t comment anywhere on the internet for at least a month.
So in <em>your</em> case? I’m a little bit scared of you. And that might shift my evaluation a bit. ^_^
I’m also struggling to remember what that comment was or where it was posted… And for the life of me I have no idea. So no linky. Sorry.
I don’t have a problem with Rebecca’s style, either. She witty and sharp, and generally comes across well in the vids I’ve seen.
But part of the problem may also lie in her lack of conventional accomplishments. PZ, Hitchens and Dawkins are people (ok, men) who’ve earned their status in the usual way(s): PZ and Dawkins are academics & researchers; Dawkins and Hitchens are published authors; etc.
On the flip side, various folks who don’t like RW are quick to point out that she was a communications major (often with quotes around “communication”). She’s also young, and made a name for herself through various media: blogging, podcasting, radio. So – once again, I’m speculating – but I imagine that some might think of her as an upstart, who lacks the credentials and gravitas to represent skepticism.
@Elly (#43)
Hmm… There could be a point in that too.
Not a good point, obviously. Arguments should be judged independantly of the credentials of the people delivering them.
But that could have something to do with it as well.
I’m trying to think of a <em>male</em> activist that has a talking-down style of delivery and no academic credentials… I can’t personally think of one, but that doesn’t mean they don’t exist. Does anyone here know of any?
Also: When it’s put it that way it’s actually pretty impressive that Rebecca has established such a name for herself in the time she’s had available.
Agreed. IMHO, skepticism needs spokespeople who can connect with the public, broaden its appeal, and are interesting to listen to. RW does this well. I also like the fact that she reaches out to teenagers.
It’s a big tent, with room for lots of people… so the more the merrier.
James Randi is the only one I can think of, off the top of my head, who has no academic cred… but then again, he’s been around for a long time, is a published author, MacArthur fellow, etc., so he probably doesn’t count.
Also, from what I’ve seen of Randi’s performance persona, he comes over plenty deprecating.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWE1tH93G9U
I especially like the way he taps his foot to ‘keep count’ as if he hasn’t already memorized the whole performance.
Another one that springs to mind is Tim Minchin. He’s very careful to play the status game. He takes the high-status piano and subject matter of his routine but presents it in an extremely self-deprecating way, barefoot and messy haired and fumbling with language and umms and aaaahs all the way through.
Imagine a Tim Minchin performance where he adopted Rebecca’s tone? Very different, methinks. I don’t think that would go very far.
Daniel @ 44
Penn Jillette pops to mind. He is, of course, accomplished in his field, but this doesn’t translate over to speaking about science and philosophy. He can be brusk in his manner and yet people seem to listen and respect him, perhaps because he is male and famous. Or maybe it’s because they agree with him. I know he rubs people the wrong way when he talks politics.
Which makes me think that it is not the sex or the approach, but whether you agree with what they are saying. Hitchens is an abrasive jerk to theists, a wonderful orator to atheists. Hillary Clinton is an intelligent, well-spoken woman to liberals and a ranting shrew to conservatives. It’s all perspective. I think that if Watson stuck to atheism, no one would complain about her manner of speaking. If she includes feminism in her talk, then she offends some people who now find her manner of speaking repulsive. I’d have to admit though, using this premise, that women are probably attacked more readily for their personality than men. Not that men aren’t, just not as often or as quickly.
Hmm… That’s a good point too.
Some good food for thought here.
Daniel,
In my experience, that’s pretty much the explanation. This whole kerfuffle reminds me so much of cases on a few message boards I’ve been on, where you’ll have, say, an atheist or couple of atheists who tend to liberally lace their replies with insults. They always start against theists, and so they’ll get cheers from the atheists in the peanut gallery– even those that don’t insult — over their clever and great “refutations”. If anyone challenges it, you get the standard responses that were given to the accommodationists. But eventually, it always happens that at some point the insulting atheists end up disagreeing with those more moderate ones, and unload on them in the same way as they unloaded on the theists.
The moderate ones never take it well. They also don’t generally take “Now you know how it feels when they do it to us” well either.
Now, my experience is from boards where atheists are more dominant socially, but I have no doubt that it occurs when things are the other way around. In general, people tend to appreciate insutls against those they dislike/disagree with, and don’t appreciate insults when it’s against people they like/agree with. This whole kerfuffle really seems to be that sort of case, complete with attempts to rationalize why it’s worse in this case than it would be in the other cases.
If the other opponent I’m told is waiting in the wings would like to jump in, today might be a good day. I’m unlikely to be able to post a response until tomorrow (possibly late afternoon, but don’t count on it).
Daniel – well, whatever it was, I apologize!
The funny thing is, I think of Rebecca as fairly self-deprecating. Maybe I’ve seen the wrong selection of videos – I’ve seen only a few, for the usual reason: I don’t really like the medium all that much. But in the ones I’ve seen, her whole manner seems to say “I’m just a person talking.” She self-presents as opinionated but not authoritative. That’s where the wheels came off, actually: the stuff about ignorance and feminism 101 sounded too authoritative. Maybe I’m just wrong about how she self-presents, but that’s my impression. She kind of said the “authoritative”-sounding things in a non-authoritative manner.
Oh damn, I’ve just remembered my own “no extended comments by the dialoguers” rule. So I’ll stop.
@Ophelia (#51)
Nah, no worries.
Whatever it was, I’m pretty sure you had me bang to rights.
I’m only a little bit scared of you. Its not pathological or anything. ^_^
(#52)
After the discussion above I’m now reconsidering… And I’m not done thinking yet.
My primary experience of Rebecca’s style of speaking, the part that stands out because it keeps me laughing the whole way through her videos or grinning through her blog posts, is her irony.
Irony is funny when it’s deployed against someone else… But less funny when the iron-er sets their sights on yourself. Allan and Mordacious have a good point there.
So yes… I’m getting all thoughtful now, and I’m not nearly as certain as I just was, so I think I’ll stop talking now until I’ve had time to think some more.
OB @ 52
You’re right about how Watson can be self-deprecating, in fact that is when I feel she’s at her best. There was one video that was responding to youtubers who had commented on her appearance…where she discussed how her sister held her down when they were kids and shaved off her uni-brow. That video was very effective and was hilarious. Posters have described her talks as “snarky”. I think sardonic would be more apropos…and I’m big on sardonic.
I just sent an entry to Ophelia (if she feels a 3-way conversation won’t be too confusing) and it’s 300 words on the nose — so I guess it’s cheating to respond to the following paragraph by Ophelia, but I just want to make a quick comment on it:
I think the “embittered sexists” scenario is realistic in a context of true censorship (e.g. all blog comments that use the word “bitch” get deleted), but if it’s simply a case of “You ought not to use that word, it’s offensive” — with the person totally free to reply with “Whatevah! I say what I want, bitch!” — then I agree with Ophelia that it’s unrealistic.
Sorry, one more “cheat” comment:
What about “slut”? I’m all for “taking back” that word, BTW, but it’s no doubt a problematic word and in many (probably most) uses it’s clearly misogynist.
Okay, one last cheat: I just want to say, it was the right time for Corwin to enter the discussion, because Ophelia’s last entry before his… I simply cannot find a single word I disagree with. I’m really trying here to find something, because I wanted to keep dialog going. But it’s just totally spot-on.
I think a triad is fine, James (as does Corwin). I’m just catching up a bit and then I’ll get to your entry.
I think that too many of the comparisons aren’t really comparing apples to apples. For example, while a lot of time has been spent talking about “bitch”, rarely has “bastard” been discussed, even though it seems that the term is used the exact same way except that it applies to men only. And “dick” is a male-only term (generally) while “cunt” at least more often can be applied to both genders. I think it’s difficult, say, to argue that “bitch” is sexist but “bastard” isn’t, or that for any reason other than strength “cunt” is worse than “dick” if you note those features.
James,
Well, think about this joke that I was unduly fond of when someone talked about “sluts”:
“There’s nothing wrong with a good slut”.
Am I being misogynist there, the opposite, or just neutral?
Allan, the points you raise in #59 are potentially valid in a vacuum, but in a context of historical and ongoing institutional bias against women, I think that case fizzles rapidly. I hinted at that in my final two paragraphs — I’ll try to address that topic more directly in a future entry.
It really isn’t. (Or, more accurately, isn’t in my experience.) Compare ‘You fucking bastard!’ to ‘You fucking bitch!’ Not only does bitch carry a lot more weight, it is more readily used and almost exclusively used where other insults would convey a similar feeling. Bastard would almost always have to be replaced with asshole to convey the necessary disdain (may just be the people I know, though. I’ve heard bastard used maybe once ever) and when used would be so far removed from what made it an insult in the first place I doubt either the speaker or insulted would register anything but ‘you don’t like me’ 9 out of 10 times.
Maybe in the UK and elsewhere. I’ve heard dick and cunt applied about an equal number of times to the opposite gender. But, again, may just be the circle I travel in.
Do you recall the Seinfeld episode where the Texan businessmen affectionately call each other “bastards”? I can’t really imagine the same thing with “bitches”…
Allen #49,
Don’t mix in accomodationism. Accomodationism as I understand it, is not about insult or tone. As I understand them, accomodationist don’t want certain opinions voiced however gently and politely done because they think these opions in themselves are a barrier for certain religious people to accepting evolution.
This is interesting (but tangential, so I’m not going to waste part of an entry on it – that Angry Harry that Corwin linked to, who hates feminism –
Ok for him, the height of evil for feminists. I see.
Well, I’ve just now noticed that this discussion was published! I’m not entirely sure how it works… will there be more additions from here? When will it conclude? Perhaps you guys haven’t even decided yet? ;)
One thing that stands out to me about the discussion is the dearth of data presented (by both sides). Does anyone have any scientific data that would help make this discussion more fact-based and less philosophy-based? For example, information on what types of people (demographics, etc.) use which epithets? Survey data on opinions regarding certain epithets? Anything of that sort? Making prescriptions without first understanding the facts is generally a bad idea. (Certain people seem to have a penchant for this when it comes to language.)
My second point, and this is related to the first, is that a lot of the premises being put forth are unsupported by any evidence. Ophelia says certain epithets are sexist. First of all, can somebody define ‘sexist’? Second, what would falsify that hypothesis? What observations about the world would allow one to conclude that a word isn’t sexist? I asked this question several times in the “invitation to a discussion” thread, and no one seemed willing to answer.
This interests me, this idea that James seems to think there is a value to avoiding using this word, but that other people shouldn’t bother. Obviously, it is possible to find value in things other people don’t–for example, those who like pecans in their ice cream, but concede that it is all right if not everyone else does. But is this really an issue with that kind of subjectivity?
Some follow-up:
Here is an example of what I mean by data (in this case, dealing with the word ‘fuck’).
More importantly for this particular discussion is a paper linked to in this post. It deals primarily with racist epithets, but looks like a valuable resource. For one thing, it describes the difference between the semantic and pragmatic theories of how epithets work. At first glance, it seems that the two sides in the discussion here differ mainly in which theory they subscribe to, but I won’t have time for a few days to look at the paper in detail. I hope in the meantime others do, and find it useful.
There are also some further references in the comments at that post, and also good discussions of epithets in general under the “Taboo Vocabulary” category at that blog.
C Mason – yes I had that thought too, but decided not to go into it. But I’ve made the same personal decision, and I think in my case it’s to avoid that little flinch that at this point in history any iteration of the word causes in me. I suspect James’s reason is at least related (he can correct me if not), and if that’s true, he may be wrong about “absolutely zero problem.” Maybe he has just a very small amount of problem.
Tim Martin, why is that second paper “data”? It says right at the top
It’s expertise, to be sure (and presumably), but how is it data in the sense you were talking about? It looks like more of what you were saying we should have less of.
@Ophelia: *looks at paper more closely*
Yeah, it’s not the type of thing I was asking for, though I think the paper would still be useful.
:- )
Yes; useful and interesting. I’m all for expertise. But I also wanted, at least at the beginning, to go with arguments for our competing folk views or intuitions about the subject. People don’t consult linguists before using epithets, so I think we can talk about them before consulting linguists. (Besides, I know of at least two linguists who are probably reading, and might correct us if we talk total nonsense.)
That’s the last entry.
ORLY? What I consider to be an unacceptable level of collateral damage is the cover given to true misogynistic behavior when nice, friendly people persist in using these words in interesting, nuanced ways. And I have to say, the reluctance in giving them up–in the face of many many people saying ‘please, think about the unintended consequences’–on the grounds that they are fun and colorful to say is difficult to accept. These are not comparable levels of collateral damage. One is causing people to be more thoughtful about the impact of the words they use. The other begets unintended marginalization of an entire gender. Do these seem equally weighted to you?
The ‘reclaiming’ experiment is slow, at best, with an uncertain chance of success. Blacks have been working to reclaim ‘nigger’ for several decades now and while terms of ‘acceptable use’ (with many caveats) seem to fall along racial lines, it’s still an extremely charged and delicate work in progress, I’d say. And we’re nowhere near that point with the gendered slurs.
I realize I am in the minority camp on this, and that nothing I’ve said will likely change anyone’s mind about using these words whenever the mood strikes them. I have enjoyed the discussion, as far as it went, though, and I thank all three authors for contributing their time and opinions.
“There’s also the familiar sexual ambivalence – women who say no are bitches, women who say yes are whores; in short, lose-lose.”
Actually, no, it’s more like “women who say ‘No’ are prudes or frigid or lesbian, women who say ‘Yes'” are whores, women who say ‘No’ in a way that humilates you are bitches.” Some people do mistake a polite refusal for it being in a way that humiliates you, but that’s not the intent. Which leads to …
“I haven’t actually said “never say ‘cunt’ no matter what” – I’ve said “don’t use sexist epithets.” I think that leaves plenty of room to use the words in more interesting and nuanced ways.”
But then how do we tell the difference? Is it any case where it’s used as an insult, focusing on the “epithet” part? That doesn’t seem all that reasonable. So could we separate sexist from non-sexist epithets by appealing to the intent? Then, to return to the original use that started this, ERV didn’t use a sexist epithet since it seems most reasonable that she didn’t have a sexist intent there. But if you won’t consider the intent of the utterer, you’re left with the “epithet” part, and then the question of when you can say that any epithet is acceptable.
I can only be brief, but that was an excellent read.
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