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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Can a man teach feminism?

555 replies

lucydogz · 11/08/2018 14:18

Reading the Guardian colour supp today, an article about gal dem quotes 2 young black women saying they were shocked, when taking a class on Feminism at Bristol university, that it was taken by white man.
Firstly, I see no relevance in his race. But why shouldn't a man teach Feminism?

OP posts:
IncrediblySturdyPyjamas · 18/08/2018 16:08

I am a woman.

& You've made feminism the dullest dull thing in Dullsville.

Congratulations.

LassWiADelicateAir · 18/08/2018 16:28

& You've made feminism the dullest dull thing in Dullsville

Congratulations

Because I don't agree that a man can't teach feminism as an an academic subject? That's your response?

Do you have an opinion on whether a man should be allowed to study feminism?

TallulahWaitingInTheRain · 18/08/2018 18:02

It just gets so dull and dreary, no fire, no life and certainly no point

Absolutely this

Although maybe rendering feminism pointless and academic is the point

Moussemoose · 18/08/2018 18:14

Marxism is not only theory it has a practical application. Socialism needs to be lived not just theorised about.

If only teaching the theory meant people who follow the practical application.

This thread has just demonstrated how little poster know about political theory. Feminism is just another theory, it is not particularly different or special to many others.

TallulahWaitingInTheRain · 18/08/2018 18:55

So should universities be places where theory (which is only meaningful if relevant to practice) is developed, tested, elaborated, generalised? ... in which case the conversation certainly ought to be led or contributed to by skilled practitioners?

Or should they be places where theories dissociated from any current practical relevance are disseminated in a top-down fashion? ... and might this have any bearing on the parlous state of our current political establishment and of women's rights in the UK?

thebewilderness · 18/08/2018 18:56

If a women can get over her socialisation to be a feminist, why can a man's socialisation be assumed?

Women are not socialized to be Feminists in most cultures. We are socialized to be misogynists.

I am somewhat puzzled by people arguing that teacher's bias has no influence on their students and so any competent teacher can teach any subject they have knowledge of. It isn't as though we don't know what that attitude has led to in the schools, so why would anyone who has been paying attention defend it?

Moussemoose · 18/08/2018 19:39

I am somewhat what puzzled by the confusion of academics and teachers.

An academic at a university who studies, publishes papers and happens to lecturer is NOT a teacher. In this instance someone running, designing and then publishing on feminism does probably need to be a woman.

A teacher of A level politics or sociology does not.

University academics are not teachers.

MrGHardy · 18/08/2018 19:50

"I think this thread shows just what happens when men try to teach such subjects they clearly don't understand.

It just gets so dull and dreary, no fire, no life and certainly no point."

Lovely to be able to pull the get out of jail card when you don't have any actual points to make. Fwiw, pretty sure Lass is not a bloke and she is arguing along the same lines as I am.

CardsforKittens · 18/08/2018 19:52

Moose The OP referred to a man teaching feminism at Bristol University. And actually most academics in universities do indeed teach. Usually their teaching is related to their research.

Lichtie · 18/08/2018 19:57

"Women are not socialized to be Feminists in most cultures. We are socialized to be misogynists."

Nobody said they were socialised to be feminists? The opposite was said. So how do you explain feminists not being bound by their socialisation.

Moussemoose · 18/08/2018 20:28

Most academics teach but they are not teachers. Big difference.

TallulahWaitingInTheRain · 18/08/2018 21:17

It just gets so dull and dreary, no fire, no life and certainly no point.

No this is the point. This is exactly the point. Feminism is meaningful when it's about women's lived experience, the limitations we face, the ways that we subvert these, the alternative lives we can imagine.

When it's all about some bloke pontificating on about Judith Butler it is an exercise in futility.

thebewilderness · 18/08/2018 21:30

Lichtie
It was a direct quote. Responding to it by saying nobody said the direct quote that you quoted makes no sense.

Lichtie · 18/08/2018 21:33

You don't know the content of the course or the style of presentation but just because it's man you assume he's pontificating.
If it was presented by an academic woman who didn't believe in feminist theory or any of your views or who had not shared your experiences ... Would that be preferable?

thebewilderness · 18/08/2018 21:33

So how do you explain feminists not being bound by their socialisation.
Most women unpack their conditioning for purposes of survival.
Are you really this ignorant of women's lives or just being goady?

thebewilderness · 18/08/2018 21:34

Offering up Hobson's Choice isn't really standing you in good stead.

Lichtie · 18/08/2018 21:49

Thebewilderness... If that's the case why do most women not consider themselves feminists?

LassWiADelicateAir · 18/08/2018 21:54

Can a man study feminism as an academic subject at university ?

Or is that another point which is too dull and dreary to ask?

Lichtie I doubt your questions will be answered either.

Feminism is meaningful when it's about women's lived experience, the limitations we face, the ways that we subvert these, the alternative lives we can imagine

Again you are failing to distinguish between teaching the history and theory of feminism and how, should you want, it would apply in your life.

Can the theory of Marxism only be taught by a Marxist to baby aspiring Marxists? Because that is what you are saying.

IncrediblySturdyPyjamas · 18/08/2018 21:57

If that's the case why do most women not consider themselves feminists?

Because they don't understand it! Probably because a bloke mansplained it to them school, and bored the fucking shit out of them, endlessly pontificating about bollocks, like on here.

LassWiADelicateAir · 18/08/2018 21:59

Marxism is not only theory it has a practical application. Socialism needs to be lived not just theorised about

Marxism has failed badly. Are you suggesting Marxism should only be taught with the end view that it will then be put into practice? Because if so that is an absurd proposition.

thebewilderness · 18/08/2018 22:11

If that's the case why do most women not consider themselves feminists?
Because the effort by corporate interests to monetize the concept of feminism and market it as a lifestyle was very successful. Because the media that is sponsored by those corporate interests spent millions of column inches telling women that feminism should be about equality for all men
and that men are what feminists look like
and that women are opting out of Feminism and into femininity
and then came the commercial feminists selling sex positive feminism
and teaching women to suck dick and learn to like anal penetration.

Feminism is not the only political movement capitalist corporate interests have damaged by using them as a marketing tool.

If that was all I knew about feminism I would not want anything to do with it, nor would I call myself a feminist, and I would find a different women's movement to work for.
But that is not all I know about Feminism because I am old and I saw them do it, what they did and how they did it, and I have angry about it and pushing back on it for a very long time.

CardsforKittens · 18/08/2018 22:12

Lass I've already addressed the points you're making - it was earlier in the thread. So have others. Would you care to offer a response rather than simply repeating your questions? If there's something you need more clarification on, it's ok to ask.

TallulahWaitingInTheRain · 18/08/2018 22:51

There's a widespread problem across academia in general (not all academia is like this I dare say but I'm aware of a number of fields which are) which is to do with the dissociation of theory from practice and in particular the privileging of theory over practice in terms of resource allocation and whose ideas get developed. This damages theory because it becomes irrelevant and practice because it doesn't benefit from the resources and brainpower that ought to be advancing it.

This is a derail and I'm not talking about politics or feminism in particular here so I'll leave it there. But I also think that the appropriation and neutering of potentially disruptive ideas by the academic establishment can be seen as an aspect of oppression.

IncrediblySturdyPyjamas · 18/08/2018 23:06

Hey, I'm a man.

I'm wearing my 'This is what a feminist looks like' T-shirt.

This means i understand you women, see?

What do you mean, this t-shirt was probably made by a woman in a sweat shop that got paid 3p?

She's lucky to be working and should be thrilled that I am buying her products, at outrageoously hiked prices imported by blokes that are taking the £19.96 difference.

Doesn't she know who I am?

No, I don't understand the point you are making, there is no irony here Janet.

TallulahWaitingInTheRain · 18/08/2018 23:16

I mean what I'm trying to say is that universities should either engage with the actual process of advancing women's liberation through development of ideas and enactment of them or they should stop claiming to have any authority wrt feminism and the teaching of it. Teaching a bullshit, irrelevant, historical version is like teaching academic surgery. And getting men to do it just proves they are taking the piss.

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