Women – and men – still need feminism

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/aug/23/hermione-hoby-feminism-edinburgh-festival

Young women today believe the battle for equality is long over. They 
couldn't be more wrong

Hermione Hoby
23 August 2009

In 1985, my mother's bare breasts got her into the Sun, though not in 
the way you might think. Roughly of the same generation as Germaine 
Greer, she is a feminist, albeit one whose wave-making was on a more 
modest scale. In fact, we were both in the paper: her decision to 
feed me as baby while teaching at a girls' school was not, in her 
eyes, a radical act of defiance. It was simply common sense. Yet when 
it comes to the position of women, common sense was then, as now, in 
short supply: breast-feeding in public still, ludicrously, causes a fuss.

Watching Trilogy, a play now in its last week at the Edinburgh 
Festival and billed as a "celebratory venture into modern-day 
feminism", I was reminded that my generation needs feminism just as 
much as our mothers did. With performances culminating in audience 
members joyfully singing "Jerusalem" naked on stage, Nic Green's 
remarkable show is rightly the talk of the town.

Many, though, seem to be discomfited by its second segment, based on 
the landmark 1971 debate on women's liberation in New York, a 
blustering affair featuring Greer and, chaired, bizarrely, by that 
arch-misogynist, Norman Mailer.

I imagine it was this footage, including the high jinks of Jill 
Johnston, the Village Voice writer, rolling around onstage with 
girlfriends, that afterwards prompted a woman my age to say: "Aren't 
we past all that?" The answer ringing in my head, more loudly than 
ever after watching Green and Co, is: "No."

We may be past all "that", if the "that" is being able to shave our 
armpits and wear sexy shoes without fear of betraying the sisterhood. 
We are not, however, beyond the need for feminism. Like Green, I'm a 
woman in my twenties and though my mother probably suffered more 
sexism than I will, women (and men) of my age must carry on where our 
mothers left off. We've come a long way; the distance we feel from 
the entrenched sexism of Sixties America, for example, is largely 
what makes Mad Men such compelling viewing, yet there's just as far left to go.

 From the bothersome ageist double standards of TV executives, to the 
simply horrifying – more than one in four believe that a woman is 
totally or partially responsible for being raped if she is wearing 
"sexy or revealing" clothing – to the comments last week from 
Gosport's Conservative Association's chairman that he'd only select a 
female MP if they were attractive – we're deeply mistaken to think of 
this as a post-feminism era.

When I was five and watching PMQs (no doubt waiting for Sesame Street 
to come on rather than displaying political precocity), I apparently 
asked why everyone on TV was a man. Nineteen years on, I could ask 
the same question: Britain has just three full cabinet ministers who 
are women; only 126 of 645 MPs are female.

Can anyone seriously believe these figures are dictated by merit? 
Women still do not have the equal opportunity to play an equal part 
in society. My generation needs to embrace the sort of feminism that 
has nothing to do with man-bashing and everything to do with Green's 
good-humoured and simultaneously deeply serious outlook.

It bothers me greatly that we aren't all calling ourselves feminists. 
As television presenter Lauren Laverne asked last week: "How stupid 
do you have to be to say, 'I believe in gender inequality?'" More 
stupid than a five-year-old, I'd say.

. 


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