Posts Tagged ‘Feminism’

Without Models

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Here is a big applause for Brigitte, Germany’s most read women’s magazine!

From 2010, they are banning models from their pages – all editorials will we done with normal (I would rather say “average”) women. This is a fantastic step in the direction of  boycotting the artificially created image of the impossible beauty perfection which so strongly destroys not only women’s self-esteem but also men’s criteria.

Now, if they would also ban Photoshop, the job would really be done. I hope more magazines (and also the advertising world) are to follow. Let’s start liking the natural (and possible) us.

For more information go to: Bigitte

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Hair II

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Few days ago, I read a statement in Grazia (British fashion& gossip magazine) saying that women can relax because it is now “allowed” NOT to have a Brazilian – now we may leave a stripe of hair down there. This had left me strange feeling: I wondered who has the right to dictate how that what I have between my legs should look like. And then, I grabbed Spiegel, Germany’s highly respected political magazine, to find a three page article about the newest fashion dictatorship of body-hair removal. And yesterday, I had a body-hair discussion with two female friends. The topic was sparked by our visit to a newly opened, stylish and expensive waxing studio. We were all surprised to see the price list was divided in two identically big halves: women and men. Which made me angrily protest (again) against men depilating their body hair. Men with moderate body hair are sexy – hair gives them the manly touch that clearly differentiates them from women. There is something gayish (yeah, call it meterosexual if you like), insecure, even childish to shaved chest. And then there is something very uncharming to it when it starts growing and turns into tiny black, unattractive, stubbing spikes. Why the hell would you ever do that to yourself? Have women really been so successful in hiding the pains of hair removal and hair re-growth? Maybe we made a mistake – had we confronted men with our legs, arm pits, bikini-zones and arms full of black stubby hair, maybe they wouldn’t have been so stupid to start depilating their bodies.

But let’s get serious here. The discussion about the removal of male chest-hair is not a discussion about a beauty norm or personal preference. It is a discussion about manipulation, about distraction, about consumerism, about fake liberty. In today’s world, when we are rapidly tuning towards living in “The Brave New World” or “Matrix”, the discussion about male body hair is a very important discussion.

Men depilating their body-hair is yet another step towards continuously blurring boarders between sexes. With the identities of the sexes invisible and roles completely androgynous, the natural fundament of our society will be crashed. When men are no longer men and women are no longer women, one more fundament, one more orientation, one more natural-law will have disappeared. And nothing new will come to replace it. While men used to be strong, hairy and concerned with how to win the next battle and secure the survival of their family, now they are slim, smooth and concerned with which bottle of skin conditioner to buy. Something is foul here.

And then there is this pathologic need to “take things into our hands” which the post-modern society managed to train us into. Just as the neo-liberal capitalistic system managed to free us from all traditional values and rules in order to establish greed as the only valuable rule, it managed to make us feel free and responsible to reshape every single aspect of our being. It is that self-realisation aspect in which it is not the nation, the social class or the education that are responsible for our success and our life-stories – it is only and exclusively us and how we manage ourselves and our lives. The neo-liberal capitalism gave us the right, which has then unfortunately turned into a painful obligation, to construct and shape every single aspect of our existence, including our body hair. While this can be liberating and fun, it can also be frustrating and exhausting. And here’s the real danger – concerned with shaping ourselves and our lives, we cannot be concerned with shaping the world we live in.

Taking things into your hands can turn into a problem, when the “things” are not important and when the re-shaping process turns into a process of enslaving instead of liberating. Look at what happened with women: For generations, feminists have been fighting against treating women as objects which can be shaped and used however men, or the society, wants it. Unfortunately, today women have turned into objects more then they have ever been. They are literally blackmailed by the existence of a new virtual woman presented by the media: the Bimbo. She is airbrushed, siliconised and liposucted, über-naturally slim and toned, with huge breasts, plumped lips, not a trace of cellulites, body-hair, brain or any other natural “imperfections”. The appearance of Bimbo resulted with naturally beautiful women feeling frustrated, insecure and unhappy. It resulted in a rocketing rise in eating disorders, deaths through anorexia, plastic surgeries and of course, bought cosmetic products and services. But what is even worse, it resulted in women wasting an incredible amount of time and energy on their looks. And we all know that today, more then ever, there are more important things to be occupied with than looks.

And because half of the market cannot be enough, now it is men’s turn to become victims. Have their ego crashed and have them waste money on cosmetics and have them waste their time figuring out the newest depilation techniques! Sheep like that are much easier to manipulate. The male Bimbo is already a reality. Open any magazine and you will find a six-packed, completely shaved, wrinkle and grey-hair-free Ken smiling at you, selling you one of the newest products.

Finally, there is the hidden agenda to create a complete dissatisfaction with anything we are born with. Because if you are unsatisfied with everything you are born with, and if you believe you must take things into your hands to change it and shape it the way magazines told you it should be, you will be a fantastic consumer of cosmetics, pharmaceuticals and various services such as waxing, hair colouring and breast-enhancing. It seems to work. Today, leaving anything untouched and unchanged seems like a proof of failure or weakness. And being  unhappy with yourself is good: self-secure and strong people might rebel. We seem to be safe from this: After you’ve spent 10 hours in the office, 2 in the gym and 1 reading about the newest diet, you will not have the capacity to notice the socio-economic system crashing, rich getting richer and the environment being poisoned to the point of no return. And even if you do, you will be way too tired to try and change anything.

This is why male body hair is important: To learn to love ourselves just the way we are. And to start working on improving the world rather then our unimportant little asses.

Upcoming interview with A.Schwarzer

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

I am extremely honoured to announce that I will be granted an interview with Alice Schwarzer end of May. It is not at all that easy getting an interview with her. It will be very interesting because, while I do not agree with all her points and attitudes, I do highly appreciate what she and women like her have done for our generation. Now, it is our turn to find our bearings and continue working on making this world a better place. In one of her lectures, she said: “We offer the new generation our shoulders to stand upon and climb even higher.” We should say “Thank you” and resist moving backwards.
I have also been offered to write for her magazine Emma, which will be a big honour for me. Now let’s see if the offer will be withdrawn once Barbie is out in German – as I learned, the book (and I) can be seen as both feminist but also anti-feminist. Laudonplace claims that this depends on if I am having enough sex or not. Hmmm, interesting times ahead.
And here the second announcement: Von der Barbie zum Vibrator will be out in German on 26 May 2009.
I am one happy, happy, happy person!

P.S. My publisher proposed a Tajder brand – Tajder Home, Tajder Beauty, Tajder Style. How about “Pimp my Tajder”?

An emancipated Barbie

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Last week, I have attended two lectures by Alice Schwarzer, Germany’s most famous (second wave) feminist. One was about her professional path, the other about Art & Pornography.
One interesting point I took with is that Tim K., the guy who shot 9 students and 3 teachers in Germany last month, only shoot girls and female teachers. This fact was shortly mentioned at the first press conference but then never again. Had he only shot black people or Jews, it would have been such a scandal that we would still discuss its consequences in 2015. She had two interesting points: first was that the manhood is being threatened by growing women’s emancipation, and this might result in aggressive behaviour like in the case of Tim K. The second point was what I have been writing about in my articles: a virtual picture of an artificially over-sexualised Bimbo which has been created by the media as a balance to women’s emancipation, endangering any further developments.
But then she said a thing that hurt me personally: “You cannot be emancipated and be a female in the same time.”
Well, I can.
Yesterday, I saw a poster propagating her sort of emancipation on which someone (“a woman with tits”) wrote her comments. The poster perfectly illustrates the paradox of emancipated vs. female. But the best is: it is featuring – BARBIE!
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Poster:
Betrayed! It is your turn!
50% university to women, feministic theory and criticism on all faculties, fight sexism, gender language in all texts, women on higher positions at the university.
GRASS (green and alternative students)

Comment:
I LOVE BARBIE
Only because a woman is wearing flat shoes does not mean that she is independent. Shitty lefty emancipated women. Signature: A woman with tits.
So a Schass GRASS (such a shit GRASS).

Links:
Alice Schwarzer
Emma

Bad, bad Charles!

Monday, April 20th, 2009

One of the most incredible quotes I read in a long time:
“Feminism exists only to integrate ugly women into the society.”
Charels Bukowski
Of course I do not completely agree with Mr. Bukowski (you just need to consider the fact that in some parts of Europe, women only got a right to vote 80 years ago).
But hey….. there is a bit of truth in it.

Am I a feminist?

Monday, February 9th, 2009

I am invited to a discussion by the magazine Die Furche about women’s identities in today’s society. The occasion is 70th birthday of Johanna Dohnel, Austria’s first minister for gender topics. They heard about “From Barbie” coming out in May and find it very interesting. I am discussing with one young Muslim woman and one leader of some feminist society. Well, well – once again I may represent the golden middle. I had a similar discussion a year ago on Okto TV where I faced a woman who explained that we all have a man inside of us. I don’t like this theory. “I am a 100% woman, I replied” and made her my enemy the very instance.
Knowing what I am to expect, I decided to clear my thoughts about the topic – and while doing this, to write down my own position on all of this. I wanted to do this few months ago, after I received an e-mail by a reader saying that “It looks like you defend feminist positions in your articles, but I wonder why you decided to be naked on your website (which is nice for my eyes but contrary to feminist position).”
Let me start with this – I am not a feminist. I (almost) live the life feminists fought for. Theoretical dealing with feminism never was my intention. I wrote a book based on my experiences with the intention of painting a portrait of my generation. I wanted to show that we are emancipated, ambitious, determined, independent and ready to use the freedom and the rights given to us by our mothers and grandmothers. But I also wanted to show that in the same time, those young powerful women are lost, are going through painful lessons, feel unprotected and insecure and are still unfairly treated.
And yes, we are still searching for the perfect man. Our Mr. Right. We need a man – so that we can be a woman, a wife, a mother. And he still has to be strong, to protect us, to believe in us, to inspire us (ugh and I must say this ……also to….fuck us.) We want men to be men. We don’t want to rob them of their manhood, just as we don’t want to give up our femininity. We want a partnership of two poles of same strength which accept and value their differences and jointly profit from those differences – so that they can raise a healthy family and become a healthy base for a healthy society. To reach harmony, ying and yang must be of same size. And they must stay positive vs. negative. Vive la difference! I have an urge to scream this over and over again.
I was first stamped as a feminist by Frédéric Beigbeder who in his review called my book “feminist”. I was so excited about receiving a review by a writer and a man who is so famous and whom I admire so much that this excitement shaded the fact that something important has happened – I got labelled. Then came the interviews and they kept on asking “Are you a feminist?” I hated this question. I hate labels and I hate categorisations and I never wanted to proclaim myself as this or that. I am a woman writing about what I see and what I experience. My writing is not a construction and there is no strategy behind it. I simply I write about topics that touch me and move me. This is why I write about the bad influence of media’s artificially über-sexual image of women. Now, I notice same process happening with men and I am planning to write about that – so does that make me a hominist? I write about the fact that in Austria, women still get paid 20% less than thier male colleagues for the same job and occupy only 6% of top managerial positions. But I also write about the danger of the virtual feeling of choice created by internet networks and about horrors of war and about the financial crisis. I write about aspects of our society which I believe systematically endanger us as humans in our basic rights to be happy and free. If you need a label, call me a “humanist”, for heaven’s sake!
And a “humanist” movement is what we do need right now (as the crisis is proving). We got very far with our rights and freedoms as women (yes, I am speaking for western societies). On paper, we are equal and, most importantly, we have the freedom to shape our life the way we want it. But not in real life. What is still hindering us from equality with men is the fact that our society is focusing on the profit and not towards on the human being. As long as our world continues turning around profit, women will not be equal. Because women – if they want to have a family – cannot sacrifice 90 % of their energy to their work. They have to be pregnant, take care of their babies and later raise their kids. To achieve equality, we have to make sure this unchangeable fact doesn’t hinder them, which means that men should also be allowed (or forced?) to spend 2/3 of their energy on their private lives. It is easy. It might sound silly, but if all offices closed at 17h, there would be no danger that your male colleague will steal your project while you’re picking your child up from kindergarten. And what about the possibility to do every job, on every level, as part time? I still don’t understand why am I not allowed to be a part-time marketing manager.
Women of my generation have proved that we are able to have it all – now we need the support of society and of men to make this a reality. For this, our focus has to turn away from the business and the profit and making money and turn towards the human – men and women and children – and our happiness and fulfilment.

DABA

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Check them ladies out!
Dating a Banker Anonymous is a blog started by two friends whose relationships with their FBFs (Finance guy Boyfriend) went down with the Wall Street reports. So they started a blog: “Dating A Banker Anonymous (DABA) is a safe place where women can come together – free from the scrutiny of feminists– and share their tearful tales of how the mortgage meltdown has affected their relationships.”
So if you want to see how some people are REALLY suffering from the economic crisis, go visit them at:

http://dabagirls.wordpress.com/

The world is gone mad.

…………
Hehe, and the FBFs are (trying to ) fight back:

http://www.bankersball.com/2009/01/28/the-curiously-pathetic-life-of-bankers/

Ana’s Ode to Manhood

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Yesterday, I attended a lecture by Erich Lehner, an Austrian gender scientist. The promising topic of the lecture was “Man: the neglected sex”. The first shock was that Mr. Lehner, although very sympathetic, managed to turn this exciting topic into a sleeping pill. The second shock was his main message: save the poor men, help them, they are in crisis. We expect them to be manly but also have soft skills, be strong but also understaning, go on maternity leave, look like George Clooney, be rich like Bill Gates, etc., etc. WE don’t! It is the media that makes you feel we do. We want men to be men, to respect us and to be reliable (plus: we want chemistry, of course). This was so heartbreaking that I immediately wanted to hug all men in the audience and tell them how fantastic they are. Is manhood really suffering a crisis? I didn’t notice that. I mean, yes, all that shaving of breast hair and tons of cosmetics and the quest for a six pack are….well…..not really necessary…… But hey, today’s men are fantastic! They care of their looks (didn’t I write about those muscles few weeks ago?), they are hard working, they are great lovers, they are more open to women and their complex nature (and needs), they can cook and change diapers. And come on, they are still the bosses (in Austria only 6% of top management positions are occupied by women)! So where the hell should a crisis come from?

This got me a bit sad. First, we have women in crisis. Then we have “Frauenpolitik” (women’s policies). Now we should have men in crisis… Männerpolitik? Isn’t our society just totally absurd? I mean, this should be the simplest thing in the world. It is just that we managed to make it so complicated.

And finally, Mr.Lehner mentioned a very interesting statistics: 3x more women attempt suicide. 3x more men are successful in it.

Guys, get your act together. You’re fantastic!

Put a Ring On It

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Not to start a year with a comment on Middle East (which I would really like to do), here a more positive topic. Or is it?
Beyonce’s new hit “Single Girls (If You Like it Put a Ring On It)” is constantly repeated on gotv (Austrian MTV) so I already started singing (and dancing) along. I am only wondering if this is a message for the girls or the boys?
Christmas present from my gay neighbour Marcus: a book called “Suche Mann zum Kinderkriegen (Searching for a Man for Babies)”. Subtitle: “Why men disappear when it gets serious.” It is cute, but maybe not so fitting.

Yesterday, I passed by a shop with cake decorations. A whole window is dedicated to wedding cakes. Looking at all that kitsch is always amazing but when I looked at it yesterday, I started screaming. Photo is attached.

I am considering writing a book with a subtitle “Why women disappear when it gets serious.” And I think that the shop should start producing decorations with grooms dragging brides to the altar. Things are changing.
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Merry Christmas!

Thursday, December 25th, 2008

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