essaysbysean.blogspot.com
Headnote ~Yes, I realize
many regular people go through life making little or no effort to match their
values to their words, but hey, I’m a writer.
A Cloudy Night
It’s been a rough
week.
You would think
that, as a science fiction fan, I would be in favor of feminism: From seeing Kathryn
Janeway as the Captain on Star Trek Voyager,
or the admirals on Battlestar Galactica,
or from reading David Gerrold’s book series about the ecological Chtorr Wars. Gerrold’s
first person narrator usually doesn’t think to mention the gender of a soldier moving
in the background.
You would
say that, if you didn’t know the gloom I
have felt this week. My mood is best illustrated by the science fiction animated
Japanese TV series Gantz; specifically,
by the ending credits:
As credits roll, three
people are continuously walking towards the left of the screen, along dark
deserted streets. As the Japanese would read, right to left, they are: a high
school girl, a tall leader, and a shorter guy. They are wearing the embarrassing skintight black
body suits Gantz has forced them to wear: Their lives are not their own. As
they walk the gentle lyrics begin, “We
all start out as pure and innocent babes. Even if you taste the bitter fruit,
don’t be discouraged, walk straight.” (This week I am discouraged)
The lady who
voiced the girl’s character said she cried to see the ending credits. Lyrics: “I’m lonely as floating ice.” (Me too) As
they walk the girl abruptly stops, stands still, and fades to nothing. The other
two are walking, but the leader, stops, turns around, stretches out his arm to
her, and he too fades away. The last guy is walking, stops, turns around, and
he is all alone. He bows his head. I can understand a sensitive viewer crying.
As regards the
metaphor of people walking ahead, Mark Clifton wrote, in his 1962 satire When they Come From Space, something
like, “If a man takes one step ahead of
his time he is a genius, a star; if he takes two steps ahead he is a madman, a
fool.” This week I am going around thinking the women’s movement has
vanished behind me. I can stretch out my arm, but—they’re gone… Then why should
I be a minority of one?
Last night I phoned
up a university graduate who had hung out during her campus years with
progressive ladies. Granted, she probably had
to, since she was Gay and in those days there was a feeling that Gays, at least
the semi-out of closet ones, were left of center. I asked her: What do you think of “guys”
as a unisex term for men and women both? She told me that when she and her
partner Jane were at a restaurant she felt contempt when they were addressed as
“guys,” thinking, “Is our server too lazy to use an extra syllable to say
ladies?” I sighed.
It was only a
couple of years ago that I heard two teenage girls at a store counter, waiting
to be served, ask each other what “Ms.” meant. They didn’t know. When I related
this to a friend with a masters degree she said, “I think it means you’re
divorced.” I sighed.
In fairness, she
went through her undergraduate years without ever being an activist. I’m still
chuckling over the time she was on campus calling long distance to book her
place at a student weekend conference. She came down the hall to my office
looking very small. She said, “… and I replied ‘No, I didn’t require vegetarian
meals,’ and then I asked if I could have a room to myself. I added, ‘I’m homophobic…’and there was a long,
long silence.” My friend, looking forlorn, asked me, “What does the word mean?”
She had thought it meant not liking homo sapiens.
Words count. As
Mark Twain would say, there is a big difference between lightning, and a
lightning bug. As Buddhists say, “Words
build your world.” As professors of semiotics say, “Changing word-meanings
reflect your changing world.”
And sometimes I
despair at seeing the changed world being
reflected to me as others are upset and
offended at me saying “guys” for women.
In the
award-winning science fiction novel Double
Star the greatest statesman of the solar system says the public can only
take so much progress. Then they need a rest. Two steps forward, one back. The
historical record for my formative century, the twentieth, is clear. When my
dad went off to war, Amelia Earhart could still fly heroically, and Eleanor
Roosevelt, the wife of the president, could still advance us all politically, making sure a token number of
“Eleanor’s troops,” of “separate but equal” Blacks, could fight in manly combat
roles.
It remained for
the administration after Roosevelt’s, President Harry Truman’s, to dump
separate black forces and integrate the armed forces as being omni-racial. In such
contrast to President Clinton’s lengthy dancing around that finally produced
“don’t ask, don’t tell,” Truman merely issued a mere one page document, which
included a mechanism—inspections by senior officers—for enforcement.
But society took a
step backwards, eh? None of the ladies who piloted aircraft across the Atlantic
during the war remained as pilots; there were never any peacetime female prime
ministers in Britain after the lion, Sir Winston, stepped down. Not until, desperate
from being “the sick man of Europe,” they needed the iron maiden, Margret
Thatcher, to fix their economy. After that, no more female PM’s until after the
Brexit vote, after the male rats jumped ship. In Canada, the only female
PM was the one appointed just before the ruling
party lost all but two seats. Neither one of the two seats that remained were
hers. No Canadian female PMs since. And today? Today the younger generation,
both male and female, don’t see
themselves as believing in feminism…
So who am I? Who am I to disagree with my society, which disagrees with feminism? If equal rights are now an opium pipe dream, then why should I be the sole floating ice, a madman, a fool?
People need a rest.
“The world has changed,” I tell myself. “Never mind the 1930’s,” I say, “forget
the 1970’s.” Still, as the gentle lady sings at the end of Gantz, “I won’t forget, I won’t forget.”
The Morning Star
…Of course things
look different in the new morning, when I consult my sensible fellow writers.
September
Calgary
2016
Footnotes:
~I wrote at great
length about words in Words, Guys and
Unisex archived in January 2014.
~I will avoid saying "guys" around conservatives, not to wimp out, but to copy the singer Jewel: In the end, only kindness matters. (Link to song)
~How amusing: If only back in university I had majored in liberal arts, then maybe my quotations for this essay would not all be from science fiction—and one pop culture song.
Feminism - A Faded Fad? When I was young I was told I couldn't be a radio operator like my dad because I was a girl but I could be a secretary which is exactly what I became. My daughters though do not question their right to be whoever they wish to be. One works in a male-dominated part of the oil and gas industry. The other is a film director. Perhaps that is the greatest legacy of the feminism movement - you can choose to believe you are equal or not.
ReplyDeleteWhat a sweet legacy: "Right on, sister!"
ReplyDelete