I am somewhat reluctant to comment on this issue as it is so
controversial and also ultimately far too complicated to be dealt with in less
than a book length attempt. And I am sure that whatever I say will be widely
disputed by many, perhaps everyone. But throwing caution to the wind I will
proceed.
I don’t believe the “problem” is basically about abortion or
birth control. It is more fundamental than either of those two issues and has
to do with the attempts by men in all societies to control women. The problem
with women, through no fault of their own, is that they are women, and women,
by virtue of their very being, are, I suspect, however unconsciously (or
consciously) perceived by men as
threatening the social solidarity of human societies. It is not the existence
of female sexuality itself, widely enjoyed by males everywhere, but, rather,
the fact that women, both sexually and in other nurturant and loving ways, can
and do come between men. There are few things that have the potential to come
between brothers, clansmen, and even fathers and sons, more than females. In
many if not most so-called “primitive” societies fights over women are fairly
commonplace, and it is clear that even in our more “advanced” industrial
societies men continue to sometimes fight over women. It is not only the threat
women pose to the relations between men that is disruptive, but also the fact
that women often also destroy marriages. Think of all the men who run off with
their secretaries or divorce their loyal wives of many years for the “trophy
wife” or the “younger woman” and so on. This is not the fault of women but
simply the facts of life when there are two distinct genders or sexes, and
especially when there are expectations of “masculinity” and “femininity.”
I doubt, for example, that most men are particularly
troubled by Lesbians, except perhaps because they are not available to them.
I’m pretty sure that if a man’s wife leaves him for a woman it does not affect
him as much as if she leaves him for another man. I even doubt that most men
are particularly offended by the love-making of two women, indeed, I know they
will often pay for the privilege of observing such sexual activity. Aside from
perhaps homosexual men, I doubt most men would pay for the privilege of watching
two men engaged in sexual activity. I suspect that women kissing each other does not bother most
people, both men and women, as much as two men kissing each other (something
becoming more and more common these days).
Obviously sexuality plays an important role in the overall
relations between the sexes, but there is much more involved in relationships
between men and women. Both men and women, for example, often are attracted to
members of the opposite sex that cannot be perceived as merely sexual attraction,
people do not fall in love and stay married primarily because of sex. Often it
is not at all obvious why two people “find each other,” hence we often hear that “opposites attract,”
or I don’t see what he or she sees in her or him, and so on. The fact is, men
and women are attracted to each other for many reasons and unfortunately often
in ways that disrupt the social order, cause trouble and even in some severe
cases lead to jealously, unhappiness, murders and suicides. The basic
biological and psychological differences between men and women, while
delightful in their ways, can also be disruptive of the social order.
It is obvious that historically and even now to a different extent
in different cultures the behavior of women has been controlled to a greater or
lesser extent by men. Most societies have been primarily patriarchal, women
have had a lesser voice in political and other important matters, and even in
societies where descent is reckoned through females the effective control of
those societies is in the hands of males (mother’s brothers, for example). It
is interesting to contrast extreme examples of societies in which women are
dressed from head to toe in burkas with those in which they go virtually naked
in tiny bikinis and such. I suspect the presence of women as threats to society
are not as different as we might suppose and the bikinis do not represent
female freedom from male dominance as much as one might suppose. One could well
argue that the wearing of bikinis only reinforces the image of women as sex
objects in basically the same way the wearing of burkas does. It might be true
that in some ways women have “come a long way, baby,” but in some very basic
ways “things change but stay the same.”
Women are the only
oppressed group in our society that lives in intimate association with their
opressors.
1 comment:
I greatly enjoy your observations. I find them measured and well thought out. I check your blog daily. Thx
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