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Showing posts with label feminist images. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feminist images. Show all posts

12 January, 2012

Heroine

I love to watch all of the crime-solving murder mystery shows that TV has to offer. But even though those shows do feature some women in smart scientific roles, the leads, the people who manage the teams, supervise the cases, and ultimately take the credit for solving the crimes, are usually men. Just check it out: Gil Grissom, Mac Taylor, Horatio Caine, Patrick Jane, Jethro Gibbs, G. Callen, among many others.

Then I stumbled upon "Bones." This show features a male FBI agent + a female forensic anthropologist duo who catch murderers by examining the victims' skeletal remains. Not only is her expertise essential to the investigations, but she is also intelligent, courageous, and often saves her partner's butt in sticky situations. Her character, Dr. Bennan, is based on a real forensic anthropologist, professor and author. And although Dr. Bennan's "socially awkward" and unapologetic manner with which she speaks of her own talent is sometimes ridiculed on the show, overall she knows how to assert herself and never backs down on her convictions.

Check out this kick-ass woman taking front and center!

Of course I realize that this is TV, with its limited capacity for good and flushed-out characters that make everyone happy. I am still excited to finally see someone like her on the screen. She is not oversexualized, but she talks about sex in a woman-centered empowered way. She does not dumb down her knowledge and does not struggle with having a professional identity while secretly pining for quiet days at home with children. She is not over-feminized, has both male and female friends, and even has conflicted relationships with her family. In other words, it's as if she's a real human being! 

The other day at work, I caught myself asserting my thoughts and opinions in a group discussion, while feeling unapologetic for my insight and skills. I found myself mentally referencing what Dr. Bennan would do and how she would handle herself in a professional situation. It may feel wrong to break gender role convention, I thought, by demanding that people listen to what I have to say, but at least I have a virtual role model who has shown me that it's OK to do so. This is when I realized, viscerally, how powerful media images truly are, in negative and positive ways. I can only hope that the future of TV holds more Dr. Brennans for the benefit of all of us. 

29 September, 2011

Un-femininity: women and skulls


Source here

Skulls are so unfeminine. There is something about death and about the macabre dark nature of skinless face bones that apparently does not go with femininity. Because women can't possibly think about death, or be in dark moods, or have anything to do with the human skeleton.

Source here
I know that traditional femininity generally does not include "gross" or deathly or internally bodily things altogether. Women are not associated with things like worms or boogers or shotguns. But there is also something particular about the image of a skull, and the meanings that it evokes, that people won't put together with their idea of a woman. I guess I am sensitive about skulls and images of skulls because, well, a) I collected human skull figures in high schools, but people then wrote it off as "teenage angst", so my identity as an adolescent overrode my identity as a women. But also, 2) I have a tattoo of a skull on my wrist. And aside from the gasps I get for being a woman with tattoos (more on this later!), I especially get weird looks, even from tattooed folks, about it being a human skull. It's not a cartoon skull, and it doesn't have a feminizing bow on it. It is realistic and human and it's there to remind me of just that: that death is imminent and life is fleeting, as is the external, and we are here to make things work for each other.

So skulls can be versatile, skulls can be quite spiritual, skulls can be philosophical, skulls can be just anatomy, but skulls are part of our experience. I wish women were allowed to be full human beings who may be fascinated by all parts of our existence.

27 July, 2011

Un-femininity: women with shaved heads

Source of photos here

I want to post a few thoughts regarding our notions of femininity, to discuss and challenge what is considered characteristic and/or necessary parts of being a woman. Thus the title "un-femininity" questions whether the aspects mentioned in the posts are in fact unfeminine.

So recently, perhaps due to summer heat or artsy moods, I have been wondering about women with shaved heads. Not that I am seriously considering shaving my head, but in a sense I am attracted to the notion. There is just something so freeing and startling about it. Even in our age where men with long hair are noticeable but not uncommon, women with shaved heads are singled out, and usually not in a good way.

We still consider women's hair essential for femininity, and women with long, full hair are true women indeed. Just notice how many volumizing, moisturizing, safe-guarding, upkeeping, and accessorizing products exist for women's hair. Women are at their best when their hair is straightened, then waved, lightened and brightened, shiny and noticeable. Women who chose to keep their hair short usually have to justify their look by being "an artsy pixie" or worse, by being a "psycho chick who took a raiser to her head". Whereas women with longer hair are just women. This obsession with long hair for women could be part of the general focus on women's appearances. Although it seems that there is a special connection between women's hair and femininity in that when hair is missing, womanhood is fundamentally compromised and often women must overcompensate with other symbols of femininity to convince others to see them as women, like by parading children in strollers or wearing frilly dresses.

So yes, something inside is telling me to be a walking example of changing femininity.