27/03/03
Msinformation
Professor Christina Hoff Sommers
American Enterprise Institute
I have been labelled a non-woman
March is Women's History Month, but hard-line
feminists in universities and major women's groups are deciding who counts as a
woman. I have been labeled a non-woman. An angry critic once referred to
Margaret Thatcher and me as "those two female impersonators." Why? Because in my
books and articles I have questioned the basic premise of contemporary American
feminism.
For instance, I do not believe that women in
American society are oppressed, or members of a subordinate class. It is no
longer reasonable to say that as a group, women are worse off than men. The
truth is that American women are among the freest in the world. And yet hearing
me say that, there are women who wish to excommunicate me from my sex!
we've got political correctness, victim politics and
male-bashing.
Feminism in this country has become a parody of
itself. We need a forward-looking movement, guided by common sense and fairness.
Instead, we've got political correctness, victim politics and male-bashing.
There's the women's studies professor who has renamed her seminar an "ovular." A
feminist musicologist at UCLA claims to have discovered themes of rape and
sexual assault in Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.
What happened to the "equity feminism" bequeathed
by our feminist foremothers? Equity feminism demands for women what it demands
for everyone--fairness and equal opportunity. From the 1880s, feminist pioneers
such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony and the remarkable
African-American woman, Sojourner Truth, led difficult and even dangerous
battles for emancipation. That wave culminated in 1920, when American women won
the vote. A second surge in the late 1960s and early '70s brought many badly
needed reforms, such as laws making it illegal to pay men and women differently
for the same work. As a result, American women are now among the most liberated
in the world.
More women than men now go to college, for
example. Yet for many women's studies professors and contemporary feminist
leaders such good news is no news. The most vocal among them persist in
complaining that the United States is a "patriarchy" that subordinates women.
They have rejected the original "equity feminism" in favor of a more radical
doctrine best termed "gender feminism."
the more things improve for women, the angrier their
rhetoric grows.
Gender feminists take a very dim view of American
society. In fact, the more things improve for women, the angrier their rhetoric
grows. Harvard psychologist Carol Gilligan, a moderate among gender feminists,
asserts that young women in today's American society undergo a "psychological
foot-binding." One leading feminist text refers to American society as a "rape
culture."
Gender feminists continually spread fraudulent
statistics
Gender feminists continually spread fraudulent
statistics, claiming, for example, that 80 percent of girls are sexually
harassed at school and that "battery is the leading cause of injury to women in
the United States." This is just a small sample of the false and inflammatory
news--call it Ms.information--that women's groups routinely disseminate and the
media happily repeat.
Suppose we got rid of the hyperbole, half-truths
and untruths. Surely, some would argue, it would still turn out that women in
our society are worse off than men? There is simply no evidence for that. In
some ways women are better off. In other ways, men are.
Does it really matter that a small group of
statistically challenged activists and scholars say and believe a lot of false
things about women in America? The answer is that it does matter. Third World
women, many of whom really are grievously subordinated, desperately need help.
But most of our prominent women's organizations are preoccupied only with saving
American women from the ravages of patriarchy.
we will soon be polarized along a fault-line of gender
If feminism is allowed to continue in this
direction, we will soon be polarized along a fault-line of gender. What we need
is a Third Wave of the women's movement, which would revive classic equity
feminism and base itself on accurate information, common sense and fairness.
Instead of castigating the U.S. for being sexist,
the Third Wave would acknowledge that American women are blessed to live in a
society that offers them genuine freedom and opportunity. And it would work
tirelessly to share this blessing with less fortunate women throughout the
world.
The women's movement has been hijacked by a small
group of chronically offended gender feminists who believe that women are from
Venus and men are from Hell. Women who value harmony between the sexes and who
are concerned about the plight of subjugated women throughout the world will
have to find a way to get the movement back.
Christina Hoff Sommers, the author of The War
against Boys, is chairman of the National Advisory Board of the Independent
Women's Forum and a resident scholar at AEI.
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