HIGH HEELS AND THE “V” WORD
According
to an AP article this morning, today the British Parliament is debating a
proposed ban on a corporate dress code that requires that women wear high heels
to work. Although British law forbids
companies from discriminating against women, practices such as this fashion
requirement are commonplace. As we begin
Women’s History Month, I am reminded of the “power of the prince of the air,”
the title of last week’s blog. That
stark metaphor from Ephesians 2:2 is a proclamation of the depth of captivity
in all of us in regard to these communal standards and expectations that men
are superior, that white people are superior, that money is the center of life,
that people who love people of the same gender are a distortion, and many
others such as these – the list seems endless.
I am a white, straight, comfortable male, and
thus I have many captivities. Thanks to
many women and men who have engaged me and challenged me and loved me, I am at
least aware of some of the depth of captivity in my own self and in the larger
world. In regard to race, my friend
David Billings calls it IRS (Internalized Racial Superiority) in his fine book
“Deep Denial.” In Women’s History Month,
perhaps we should call it IMS (Internalized Male Superiority). From the image of the “power of the prince of
the air,” it is not only “superiority” that is part of the issue – there is
also the inferiority that is breathed in by the people whom society wants to
oppress and suppress. In regard to
gender, perhaps we should call it IFI (“Internalized Female Inferiority’), and this
intersection of IFI and IMS is part of the root of Women’s History Month. The first demonstration organized around
Women’s History Month was in New York in 1909, in celebration of the
International Ladies Garment Workers Strike of 1908. In 1977 the United States General Assembly
adopted the resolution, and it began in earnest.
I was
thinking about a lot of these issues as Caroline and I went up to Athens,
Georgia, two weeks ago to see one of our friends and church members Bemene
Baadom-Piaro, act in Eve Ensler’s “Vagina
Monologues,” sponsored by Project Safe in Athens. Project Safe is an
organization working to end domestic violence.
Though I had seen sketches from “Vagina Monologues,” I had never seen
the play in its entirety. I was struck
by many things in the play. First was its
adaptability – it seems to be more a work in progress rather than a play set
once and for all. In its earlier form,
it seemed to speak only about white women, but the production that we saw in
Athens had a diverse cast and flavor, and indeed there were two interpretive
pieces written and performed by two of those diverse cast members in the
play. What engaged me in the play,
overwhelmingly, was the refusal of the women to adopt IFI. There was a direct engagement of the “V”
word, of vagina, and of women reclaiming their bodies and their selves from the
oppressive structures of males. It was a
strong celebration of women and their selves as “embodied spirits.” They even sought to get the audience to
appropriate the “C” word for vagina in a positive way, but I only heard a few
call it out when the cast asked us to do so – just too much negative stuff
attached to the “C” word, especially in light of the Presidency of one of the
most blatant misogynists.
As we start
Women’s History Month, with Women’s Day on March 8, let us all, especially we
males, examine the many places where our hearts and imaginations are captured
by the power of the prince of the air in regard to the humanity and equality of
women as human beings. All of us males
suffer from captivity to Internalized Male Superiority (IMS), and we are asked
to come to recognition of that captivity and to seek to move towards
liberation. Let all of us celebrate the
greatness and power of women and to help those women who suffer from IFI to
begin to find their voice. I’ll continue
on this next week, but for now I give thanks for those women who have engaged
me and helped me to begin to find some liberation.
There
are many places to read about these issues - I'd suggest my
friend Marcia Mount Shoop's book "Let The Bones Dance" as an entry
point. For an interesting intersection of high heels, gender, and race, read the book “Hidden Figures,” by Margot Lee Shetterly, upon which the movie is based.
friend Marcia Mount Shoop's book "Let The Bones Dance" as an entry
point. For an interesting intersection of high heels, gender, and race, read the book “Hidden Figures,” by Margot Lee Shetterly, upon which the movie is based.
Thanks Nibs! I had no idea about that British law. Hope you and Caroline are doing well. - Jami
ReplyDeleteThis is a lovely piece, Nibs! I performed in the Vagina Monologues at one of my first jobs at a small college in central PA- it was a mostly student production directed by a black female student and it was one of the most empowering things I have ever been a part of!
ReplyDeleteFor more reading on how race and feminism (and class) intersect, check out the lady who coined the term intersectionality, Kimberle Crenshaw: https://philpapers.org/archive/CREDTI.pdf.
There is a whole article that uses current references to illustrate how white feminism uses racism and privilege to undermine women of color, and references a lot of Crenshaw's work here: http://everydayfeminism.com/2015/01/why-our-feminism-must-be-intersectional/.
Hope you are well- we baptized J on Sunday- it was beautiful and we missed you. Love to you both!
Thanks, Anna! I look forward to reading these items! Congrats on the baptism too!
ReplyDelete