Rafia Zakaria di altmuslim.com mengritik kaum feminis yang tidak
bergeming melihat hubungan antara pameran tubuh perempuan di satu
tempat dan pengungkungan kebebasan perempuan di belahan dunia lain.

Di Amerika: artis-artis muda tidak segan-segan memamerkan tubuh mereka
demi popularitas.

Di Pakistan: kekerasan terhadap perempuan dan gadis-gadis muda
(disiram asam, dikubur hidup-hidup, aborsi paksa)

Titik temunya menurut Rafia: tubuh perempuan sebagai obyek.

http://www.altmuslim.com/a/a/a/2879/

Reviving feminism
Making a needed connection

Feminists have remained silent and unwilling to make the connection
between exhibitionism of flesh and subjugation of flesh, a commonality
that should be a rallying cry.

By Rafia Zakaria, November 24, 2008
        
As several commentators on American pop culture have noted, recent
years have seen an astonishing rise in exhibitionism among female
stars. With publicity-hungry starlets like Paris Hilton and Britney
Spears leading the pack, what used to be pornography is gradually
making incursions into what is considered mainstream advertising and
acceptable material for many American gossip rags like People and US
Weekly.

One print advertisement for a brand of shoes meant for teenage girls
shows Christina Aguilera as a garter belt-clad nurse holding a
hypodermic needle. Parts of a popular video game — Grand Theft Auto —
were found to contain an explicit scene despite the fact that the game
is marketed to young adults.

While advertising and media content implicitly channel lewd
connections, the actual lives of these starlets provide even more
disturbing fodder for the mainstreaming of pornography, with
supposedly 'secret' tapes of sexual liaisons becoming predictable
releases in the career of any aspiring starlet.

In Pakistan, recent years have seen a spate of crimes against women
that are alarming not only in their frequency but in the almost
competitive nature of their startling barbarity. If the live burial of
five women in the barren desert of Balochistan is insufficient to
shock one's conscience, then the forced abortion and grotesque mauling
of a pregnant seventeen-year-old leaves no question about the
heightened levels of rage and hatred reserved for the female victims
of these crimes. So commonplace is the occurrence of such vengeful
acts of hatred against women that acid attacks, vani and swara cases
rarely get mentions in the popular news media and extract barely more
than a raised eyebrow from the general public.

Juxtapositions of this sort, which position the morally permissive
exhibitionism of American media and pop culture with the bloodthirsty
ravages being imposed on the bodies of Pakistani women and girls,
follow a predictable route. Almost without fail they morph into
discussions of the "better" or "worse" moral stature of one society
that objectifies women through a tacit acceptance of near pornography
in the mainstream media versus another than relegates women to a
status worse than animals in its open bartering and trading of their
bodies.

Better or worse, however, takes us a in a direction different from the
one I wish to explore: one that questions whether these denigrations
of women are symptomatic of the same core problem. Do they both not
objectify women, and continue to view them as little more than a
compendium of flesh and body parts meant to either be paraded or
hidden? Do they both not view women ultimately as vessels of either
male pleasure or male honour, always devoid of an identity or a
reality independent of their bodies?

Beyond these crucial distinctions lies a commonality that could and
should be a rallying cry for feminism around the world, and yet it has
not been so. Feminists have remained silent and unwilling to make the
connection between exhibitionism of flesh and subjugation of flesh.

There are many reasons for their resigned silence, some more pressing
than others. Making such a comparison requires deflecting the argument
of which culture is better or worse. It requires carving a position
which points out the qualitative differences between the two cases —
one in which exhibitionism with fame and monetary gain to the
qualitatively more egregious act of completely destroying a woman by
killing her. The former, however misguided and lacking in self-worth,
is alive and even monetarily rewarded while the other lies dead and
forgotten, extinguished forever. The former is perhaps an indictment
of the cultural pressure to exhibit and objectify but also possibly a
self-styled (if misguided) celebration of sexuality. The latter can
only and singularly be a horrific crime.

Yet there are equally pressing reasons for not abandoning
opportunities to unite feminist discourse and highlight the core
similarity between the two situations. Foremost among these is that it
breathes life into the forgotten slogan needed in centuries past and
today that reminds the world that women are not a collection of body
parts to be paraded, traded, owned or exchanged at the behest of men.

This sadly forgotten adage was the beacon of feminists in days when
women did not have the vote and could not dream of being leaders. The
complexities of nuance, as well as the competing crosscurrents of
imperialism and western hegemony are valid additions to the debate but
they must not be permitted to render feminism (as arguably they have)
a mute and ultimately irrelevant force.

The most debilitating cost of the silence of feminism is that it leads
women around the world to forget how much of their realities are
determined by the fact of their gender, deflecting attention to other
bases of identity such as culture, religion or class. All these may
indeed be legitimate claimants to identity but they do not explain the
aspect of existence that all women experience quite simply by the fact
of being women.

In searching in these alternate identities for the solutions to their
problems, in being faithful to the demands of complexity and to the
arguments for cultural uniqueness, women allow patriarchy to flourish
unquestioned and their own basis of solidarity and global mobilisation
to be sidelined and ignored.

As I write this, rumours have started circulating of nude pictures of
a teenage film star being released; yet another in an unquestioned
series of similar releases in the US. Meanwhile, in Pakistan,
Israrullah Zehri, who defended the burial of five Baloch women, and
Mir Hazar Khan Bijarani, who participated in a jirga that gave away
five young girls as a form of compensation for honour killings, are
both being elevated to the status of ministers in the new government
of Pakistan.

These developments testify to the reality that while feminism,
burdened by its scepticism of anything universal, may be silent,
unabashedly universal patriarchy screams as loudly as ever.

Rafia Zakaria is associate editor of altmuslim.com and an attorney and
member of the Asian American Network Against Abuse of Women. She
teaches courses on constitutional law and political philosophy. This
article previously appeared in Daily Times (Pakistan).

------------------------------------

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