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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

A Point of View on Radio 4 at 20.50 - What is a Woman?

41 replies

nauticant · 15/04/2022 21:00

Zoe Strimpel talks on "What is a Woman?"

Very interesting. I didn't agree with it all, there is some fence sitting, but this is now being discussed on the BBC out of the ideological straitjacket. Worth listening to the end.

OP posts:
TheGreatATuin · 16/04/2022 09:50

They can't conceive of the idea that gender boxes/essence/stereotypes aren't involved in our definition at all.

To be more accurate, they can't conceive of any definition of womanhood that doesn't involve gender boxes/essence/stereotypes.

Photinia · 16/04/2022 09:56

She set out to answer the question "what is a woman".

I thought she ended up trying to answer the question "what does it mean to be a woman" (as in, what is the consequence of being a woman), which is hard and nuanced and subject to varying opinion and we all acknowledge that.

Rather than what answering "how do we define woman", which is the currently controversial bit.

But yes, great to have it at least attempted to be discussed. And the whole thing with a point of view is it's one person's opinion and there's no counter argument and you end up shouting at the radio.

AssignedBlobbyAtBirth · 16/04/2022 10:04

There are as many ways to be a woman as there are women but it all starts with being born female

EarringsandLipstick · 16/04/2022 10:09

@lovelyweathertoday

I fear a relapse into arguing that women are defined by their biology beyond the swimming pool or the cycling track or the locker room.

There's probably a name for this logic error.

Woman is a biological category, so the definition and practical reality of women comes from biology.

Defining women by biology means women get to compete fairly in sports events that are for women. Or get given the correct healthcare etc.

This is considering a person's sex when it is relevant.

This is not remotely the same as sexist limiting women's options in life, which is where the phrase "I won't be defined by my biology" comes from. I that case the person's sex is being considered when it is completely irrelevant.

It never occurred to women that this phrase would be used against them as it never occurred to women that everyone would lose their minds and pretend they don't know what a woman is.

Excellent post. 👏👏
nauticant · 16/04/2022 10:48

It seems that round about the same time as preparing her talk for Radio 4, Zoe Strimpel also wrote this:

bariweiss.substack.com/p/how-feminism-got-hijacked

It looks to me that she is tailoring her arguments with different emphases to reach different audiences.

OP posts:
SallyLockheart · 16/04/2022 11:28

Waffle, waffle waffle. It’s an adult human female. Simple

LauriePartridge4Eva · 16/04/2022 11:43

It's always amazing to me to see pathetic little adults pretending they can't do what babies can do, what cats, dogs and even birds can do. Where is their fucking self respect and respect for women?

GrimDamnFanjo · 16/04/2022 12:14

I just feel the worlds gone crackers.

mirax · 16/04/2022 12:56

So very tired of the fallacious reasoning that we cannot define women by biological metrics because SOME women do not menstruate or reproduce, have had breasts or wombs removed, may have mutant x chromosomes and/or endocrinal abnormalities. The answer is that ONLY women are capable of having these set of markers (XX chromosomes, female gonads and reproductive processes. That's it. Biological sex isnt complicated for 99.98% of the population and even our stone age ancestors understood it well enough. Feminist and queer theory has disappeared up its own fundament and has brought us to this impasse. Harvard and Oxbridge degrees are absolutely not necessary to recognise such a basic sexual dimorphism. It is a gaslighting exercise and we should resolutely refuse to engage in it.

tabbycatstripy · 16/04/2022 12:58

Mirax

Like because we chop off some dogs’ bollocks, we can no longer say this argument ain’t the dogs’ bollocks.

mirax · 16/04/2022 13:11

The sleight of hand is conflating biological identity with biological "essentialism". The old feminist slogan 'biology is not destiny' was not a rallying cry for blokes to shoot themselves up with hormones and craft themselves faux vaginas. My feminism does not come from western theorists and it never did. It comes from my father's deep disappointment when I was born female, the way I was treated when my female body started to menstruate at age 12 and became a communal property on which the shame and honour of the tribe rested.

mirax · 16/04/2022 13:15

Btw, I am an Indian woman from Singapore. I am grateful for the suffragettes who won us our rights and I am very proud of Terf Island and Mumsnet for fighting back against this ghastly gender identity bollocks but I am often critical of western feminist theory, so bear with me.

JustSpeculation · 17/04/2022 05:34

@lovelyweathertoday

I fear a relapse into arguing that women are defined by their biology beyond the swimming pool or the cycling track or the locker room.

There's probably a name for this logic error.

Woman is a biological category, so the definition and practical reality of women comes from biology.

Defining women by biology means women get to compete fairly in sports events that are for women. Or get given the correct healthcare etc.

This is considering a person's sex when it is relevant.

This is not remotely the same as sexist limiting women's options in life, which is where the phrase "I won't be defined by my biology" comes from. I that case the person's sex is being considered when it is completely irrelevant.

It never occurred to women that this phrase would be used against them as it never occurred to women that everyone would lose their minds and pretend they don't know what a woman is.

This is interesting.

I don't know if there's a name for the error, but in linguistics there's a distinction between a prescriptive approach, which tells you what you should say, and a descriptive approach, which accounts for what people actually do say. This distinction arises because people study language for different reasons. But it has resulted in a pointless argument amongst language teachers about which is "right", with some saying, effectively, that prescription "disempowers marginalised identities" while others, more pragmatically, point out that language teaching is largely a matter of telling learners what they should say to get things done in a foreign language. Particularly in the early stages.

The argument is pointless because there is no reason to conflate the two approaches. A descriptive approach does not entail prescription, except in the silly, silly navel gazing world of Critical Theory.

I think there are parallels here. A descriptive account of "woman" and "man" does not entail a "should". Isn't this the "is/ought" fallacy Hume talked about?

JustSpeculation · 17/04/2022 05:44

To go on - "What is a woman?" can mean "how can you define the class?", which is descriptive and value free, or it can mean "What does it mean to be a woman?" which is prescriptive, value laden and a matter of private belief.

I wonder how much of the argument currently going on results from the conflation of these two different meanings of the question?

nepeta · 18/04/2022 02:24

@mirax

The sleight of hand is conflating biological identity with biological "essentialism". The old feminist slogan 'biology is not destiny' was not a rallying cry for blokes to shoot themselves up with hormones and craft themselves faux vaginas. My feminism does not come from western theorists and it never did. It comes from my father's deep disappointment when I was born female, the way I was treated when my female body started to menstruate at age 12 and became a communal property on which the shame and honour of the tribe rested.
I understand a little, Mirax, but not of course completely.

My father was disappointed by my birth, too, as I was not of the sex he desired for his progeny. So my feminism sprouted from that seed (heh) and the things he said to me later, although I read all the feminist books I could get hold on from pre-teen years on and they certainly had some impact on my understanding. Later I tried to learn as much as I could about women's roles in other cultures.

So much work left to do, and we have to fight this current stupidity instead. But when even the UN is redefining women it is sadly necessary.

thinkingaboutLangCleg · 18/04/2022 09:04

@BenCooperisaGod

It is only ever those who are trying to convince you that women can have penises that find the definitions so challenging.
Worth repeating.
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