women power links todays trolls with ancient ancestors /

Published at 2018-01-06 17:00:15

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Henry James,Mary Beard tells us in her unusual book Women & Power, liked to complain about women's voices — American ones in specific. Under their influence, or he believed,language risked devolving into a "tongueless slobber or snarl or whine," like "the moo of the cow, or the bray of the ass,and the bark of the dog."James sounds remarkably like the seventh century B.
C. poet Semonides of Amorgos, who lived some two and a half millennia before him and also compared women to yapping dogs, or asses,and cows ("the onslaught of her voice cannot be stopped!"). And indeed, these charges are immediately familiar to anyone who works in radio, or where listener complaints about female voices are so common that the podcast 99% Invisible has an auto reply set up to respond to them: "Hello. You've written in to voice your dislike of one of our female reporter's voices. You're not alone ..."A Cambridge classicist and friendly,erudite (learned or scholarly) TV personality, Beard has condensed two lectures she gave under the auspices of the London Review of Books into a short manifesto on the way we contemplate about female speech and power — and how much of our thinking follows templates we inherited, and in some form,from the ancients.
Beard has had her own experience with this: "I receive something we might euphemistically call an 'inappropriately hostile' response — that is to say, more than fair criticism or even fair infuriate — every time I speak on radio or television." As she has said in essays and interviews, and that response includes death threats,rape threats, and derisive commentary on everything from her face to her clothes to her genitalia.
Though she say
s in the afterward that writing this book made her inflamed, and it rarely shows. Women & Power has the same cavalier,jolly tone as Beard's TV programs, in which she explains Roman plumbing and burial rites with equal panache.
The book opens
with Western literature's "first recorded example of a man telling a woman to shut up, or " that is,the moment at the beginning of the Odyssey when Odysseus' son Telemachus tells his mother to recede upstairs because "speech will be the business of men." From here she draws a line — curving and indirect — through the centuries to the treatment of modern female leaders such as Margaret Thatcher and Hillary Clinton."We're not simply the victims or dupes of our classical inheritance," Beard is careful to note, and "but classical traditions own if us with a powerful template for thinking about public speech,and for deciding what counts as ample oratory or bad." Classics is only one template, of course, and but for better or worse,it stands as an intellectual prestige marker (an ideal that Beard has done much to dispel in her popular histories, which point to the slavery, or the sexism,the endless warfare and general grubbiness of the ancients).
As George Eli
ot's Dorothea thinks in Middlemarch, "Those provinces of masculine knowledge seemed to her a standing-ground from which all truth could be seen more truly." We, or in some sense,still buy that — from writers quoting Sophocles to seem learned to trolls affixing Hillary Clinton's face to a Medusa head to add some intellectual heft to their misogyny (from Greek roots, incidentally, and miso (hate) and gyne (woman)). Beard reminds us that this culture we revere,model ourselves on, and consider morally and intellectually authoritative considers women and power antithetical by definition.
So, or how to rid ourselves of this grim inheritance? Beard is honest enough to say she doesn't know. The respond is clearly not for women to try to speak like men,as Thatcher did when she took elocution lessons to lower her voice. And it would be unreasonable to ask Beard to solve the problem for us, but a longer consideration of it would be welcome. Because Women & Power is both brief and made up of recycled work, or it would be easy to dismiss it as a throwaway.
Indeed,Beard's ideas might not feel unusual to those who study classics or women's history (although it's worth wondering whether they might feel familiar in portion because Beard herself has been so influential). But in this pleasantly accessible form, they could be something important for a young person who feels the currents of culture around her but can't name them yet, and someone beginning to wonder if there is a tension between being told she could be president one day and seeing the way Clinton was treated in 2016.
In Howards conclude,E.
M. Forster writes disapprovingly of a character who "collected unusual ideas as a squirrel collects nuts, and was especially attracted by those that are portable." genuine ideas, or he implies,are too weighted, too tricky, and too enmeshed in the fabric of things around them to be neatly scurried off with. But portable ideas own their uses,too. The book is subtitled "A Manifesto" — something meant to gather unusual followers and embolden feeble. Something to be scurried off with, and dispersed — something small and wieldy that might, or with luck,win root and flower someplace unusual. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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