Cognisant
cackling in the trenches
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This is prompted by news of a pregnant superhero in the new Spiderman movie.
I think the world desperately needs more positive representations of pregnancy in media, but I think a pregnant superhero is a step in the wrong direction.
Superheroes may engage in other activities but what they're best known for is fighting, a superhero's merit is defined by their martial prowess, of course being able to punch good doesn't make someone a hero but it is the ability to go toe-to-toe with threats the emergency services can't handle is what makes a hero a superhero.
Now I'm not saying there shouldn't be female superheroes or even that there shouldn't be pregnant superheroes, the intended message is that women and pregnant women can be heroes too and that's not a bad message, pregnancy may be inconvenient but it's not a disability, a pregnant woman is not an egg to be kept in a nest and incubated.
Rather the problem is that such "female empowerment" has created an insecurity with being female because it's fundamentally judging women by a male standard. Women can possess martial prowess but in bout between a female martial athlete and a male martial athlete the outcome is all but set in stone, hence I think the propensity for depictions of "strong female characters" to often overcompensate in terms of martial prowess.
But in this way the insecurity reinforces itself, the intended message is that women can possess martial prowess but the message received is that women should judge themselves by male standards. Just as a female superhero cannot be overshadowed by her male peers, she must be equally or more capable, a lot of women today feel they need to be equally or more capable than men in performing the male gender role.
Hence the insistence on "equal pay" even though our legal systems (Western countries, probably elsewhere too) have a precedent for discrimination, if a woman can prove that she's being paid less than a colleague per hour for doing the same work she can sue her employer and most companies would be DESPERATE to settle this out of court because they know if it goes to court it'll be a PR nightmare. So what the people complaining about equal pay actually want is equal pay irrespective of hours worked or the work being performed, which is blatantly unfair, and men generally work longer hours by choice because they're resource acquisition driven, because that's a major part of the male gender role.
I digress, the world needs positive representation of women being heroically women and that's difficult to explain because this notion has almost completely disappeared from the modern mythos. The heroic woman is a supportive and loyal wife, a gentle and kind mother, a skilled cook (granted everyone should know how to cook), she's attractive but it's a wholesome kind of attractiveness, the sort of woman a man wants to fall in love with and dedicate himself to, the sort of woman who can create and nurture a family.
This is merit by a female standard, a man can try to embody these virtues (and should) but in an alternate universe where the tables are turned, where media is full of these distinctly feminine heroes I think men would likewise feel very insecure about their ability to measure up.
Granted this definition of heroism seems a lot less exciting than having superpowers and punching bad guys, but then again what makes a story compelling? Ellen Ripley in Aliens is best known for fighting the xenomorph queen but what got the audience invested in her character, thus making the fight for survival so dramatic, was that she wasn't a badass marine. She went on the mission with the marines (despite her prior traumatic experience) in hope of saving the colonists, when they found Newt she was the one that got the child to calm down and open up about what had happened, and the true defining moment of her character is when she went back to the reactor to save Newt. She is the go-to example of a strong female character, not because she killed xenomorphs but because she confronted her trauma, risked her life to save others (general heroism) and exhibited feminine heroism through her motherly interactions with Newt. Replace Ellen Ripley with some dude-bro space marine that goes back to save the little girl because he's a tough guy that doesn't know when to quit and it wouldn't have been a bad movie, but it wouldn't be such a classic either.
Likewise there's that powerful scene in Terminator 2 when Sarah is thinking to herself how ironic it is that the terminator would actually be a perfect father for John.
Imagine an equivalent scene of a man thinking to himself about an incredible woman and what a perfect mother she would be, it's hard to imagine it happening these days without it being incredibly cringe because it would just look like some guy being a simp for a modern woman that the audience knows full well does not embody the feminine hero archetype.
I think the world desperately needs more positive representations of pregnancy in media, but I think a pregnant superhero is a step in the wrong direction.
Superheroes may engage in other activities but what they're best known for is fighting, a superhero's merit is defined by their martial prowess, of course being able to punch good doesn't make someone a hero but it is the ability to go toe-to-toe with threats the emergency services can't handle is what makes a hero a superhero.
Now I'm not saying there shouldn't be female superheroes or even that there shouldn't be pregnant superheroes, the intended message is that women and pregnant women can be heroes too and that's not a bad message, pregnancy may be inconvenient but it's not a disability, a pregnant woman is not an egg to be kept in a nest and incubated.
Rather the problem is that such "female empowerment" has created an insecurity with being female because it's fundamentally judging women by a male standard. Women can possess martial prowess but in bout between a female martial athlete and a male martial athlete the outcome is all but set in stone, hence I think the propensity for depictions of "strong female characters" to often overcompensate in terms of martial prowess.
But in this way the insecurity reinforces itself, the intended message is that women can possess martial prowess but the message received is that women should judge themselves by male standards. Just as a female superhero cannot be overshadowed by her male peers, she must be equally or more capable, a lot of women today feel they need to be equally or more capable than men in performing the male gender role.
Hence the insistence on "equal pay" even though our legal systems (Western countries, probably elsewhere too) have a precedent for discrimination, if a woman can prove that she's being paid less than a colleague per hour for doing the same work she can sue her employer and most companies would be DESPERATE to settle this out of court because they know if it goes to court it'll be a PR nightmare. So what the people complaining about equal pay actually want is equal pay irrespective of hours worked or the work being performed, which is blatantly unfair, and men generally work longer hours by choice because they're resource acquisition driven, because that's a major part of the male gender role.
I digress, the world needs positive representation of women being heroically women and that's difficult to explain because this notion has almost completely disappeared from the modern mythos. The heroic woman is a supportive and loyal wife, a gentle and kind mother, a skilled cook (granted everyone should know how to cook), she's attractive but it's a wholesome kind of attractiveness, the sort of woman a man wants to fall in love with and dedicate himself to, the sort of woman who can create and nurture a family.
This is merit by a female standard, a man can try to embody these virtues (and should) but in an alternate universe where the tables are turned, where media is full of these distinctly feminine heroes I think men would likewise feel very insecure about their ability to measure up.
Granted this definition of heroism seems a lot less exciting than having superpowers and punching bad guys, but then again what makes a story compelling? Ellen Ripley in Aliens is best known for fighting the xenomorph queen but what got the audience invested in her character, thus making the fight for survival so dramatic, was that she wasn't a badass marine. She went on the mission with the marines (despite her prior traumatic experience) in hope of saving the colonists, when they found Newt she was the one that got the child to calm down and open up about what had happened, and the true defining moment of her character is when she went back to the reactor to save Newt. She is the go-to example of a strong female character, not because she killed xenomorphs but because she confronted her trauma, risked her life to save others (general heroism) and exhibited feminine heroism through her motherly interactions with Newt. Replace Ellen Ripley with some dude-bro space marine that goes back to save the little girl because he's a tough guy that doesn't know when to quit and it wouldn't have been a bad movie, but it wouldn't be such a classic either.
Likewise there's that powerful scene in Terminator 2 when Sarah is thinking to herself how ironic it is that the terminator would actually be a perfect father for John.
This is an incredibly emotional powerful scene because she's basically saying the terminator perfectly embodies the archetype of the masculine hero, no man can watch that scene and not see the terminator as an ideal to live up to, the sort of man they should aspire to be. If you want to combat domestic violence THAT is how you do it.Watching John with the machine it was suddenly so clear. The terminator would never stop. It would never leave him. It would never hurt him, never shout at him, or get drunk and hit him, or say it was too busy to spend time with him. It would always be there, and it would die to protect him. Of all the would-be fathers who came and went over the years, this thing, this machine, was the only one who measured up. In an insane world, it was the sanest choice.
Imagine an equivalent scene of a man thinking to himself about an incredible woman and what a perfect mother she would be, it's hard to imagine it happening these days without it being incredibly cringe because it would just look like some guy being a simp for a modern woman that the audience knows full well does not embody the feminine hero archetype.