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- <text id=90TT2986>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1990: Coming From A Different Place
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 08, 1990 Special Issue - Women:The Road Ahead
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SELF & SOCIETY, Page 64
- Coming from a Different Place
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Men and women just don't see things the same way. Some
- surprising new studies of schoolgirls show why
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis--Reported by Barbara Dolan/Chicago and
- Melissa Ludtke/Boston
- </p>
- <p> "It is obvious that the values of women differ very often
- from the values which have been made by the other sex...It is
- the masculine values that prevail."
- </p>
- <p> So wrote the novelist Virginia Woolf in 1929. In societies
- where male standards are considered normative, those female
- values have been viewed not only as secondary but also as
- somehow defective: based on emotion rather than reason,
- intuition rather than logic; ultimately incapable--as Sigmund
- Freud suggested--of shaping ethical judgments.
- </p>
- <p> Times, happily, change. Today the interior lives of women
- are being intensely scrutinized by a band of educators and
- ethicists, linguists and psychologists. Far from being
- deficient, their studies show, women are as fully developed
- psychologically as men, and their ethical judgments are equally
- valid. The reality is that women experience life differently
- from men; consequently, they think differently. In the words of
- Harvard psychologist Carol Gilligan, a central figure in this
- dynamic research movement, they have "a different voice."
- </p>
- <p> At the crux of women's existence, the researchers contend,
- is the sense of relationship, the interconnectedness of people.
- That notion challenges long-accepted theories of human
- psychological development. As set out by Freud and his largely
- male successors, healthy emotional growth is marked by a
- striving for autonomy. People who deviate from that pattern, as
- many women do, have often been considered immature, even
- psychologically ill--victims, perhaps, of dependent
- personality disorder. But critics charge that that orthodox
- psychological dogma is based almost exclusively on studies of
- men. Ignoring women distorted the picture. The male voice, in
- effect, became the human voice.
- </p>
- <p> A number of scholars, most of them female, are redressing
- the balance. Abandoning standard research techniques that
- emphasize impersonal inquiries, they engage women in long
- conversational dialogues exploring friendships, sexual desires,
- classroom experiences, racial identity, ideas of justice. What
- they are discovering is that women's psychological equilibrium
- depends on human connection. The terror for women is isolation.
- Psychiatrist Jean Baker Miller of Wellesley College's Stone
- Center for Developmental Services and Studies and the author of
- a seminal 1976 book, Toward a New Psychology of Women, says,
- "Women's sense of self and of worth is grounded in the ability
- to make and maintain relationships." When men try to kill
- themselves, it is commonly out of an injured sense of pride or
- competence, often related to work. When women attempt suicide,
- it is usually because of failures involving lovers, family or
- friends.
- </p>
- <p> Relationship colors every aspect of a woman's life,
- according to the researchers. Women use conversation to expand
- and understand relationships; men use talk to convey solutions,
- thereby ending conversation. Women tend to see people as
- mutually dependent; men view them as self-reliant. Women
- emphasize caring; men value freedom. Women consider actions
- within a context, linking one to the next; men tend to regard
- events as isolated and discrete.
- </p>
- <p> Those differing values inform the way women approach ethical
- dilemmas, argues Gilligan, who oversees Harvard's Project on the
- Psychology of Women and the Development of Girls. On same-sex
- teams in grade-school sports, she notes, when a boy is injured
- he is removed from the field and the game continues. Among
- girls, when a teammate is hurt the game stops.
- </p>
- <p> On matters of justice, women are less concerned about
- abstract rights or wrongs and more interested in finding
- compromises that maintain the social contract. In her
- provocative 1982 book In a Different Voice, Gilligan offered an
- example. A boy and a girl, both 11, were asked whether a poor
- man should steal a drug that would save his wife's life. Yes,
- said the boy, because human life is worth more than property.
- No, said the girl, who suggested that he borrow the money or
- work out a payment schedule with the druggist. Her reasoning: If
- the man stole, he might end up in jail--and then where would
- his wife be?
- </p>
- <p> Women's commitment to alliances and consensus is shaped
- early. Through age 3, girls and boys behave similarly. But at
- age 4, boys begin to break their dependence on their mother or
- caretaker. Girls, meanwhile, immerse themselves in intimacy and
- are trained to be empathic.
- </p>
- <p> Girls appear to reach another critical juncture at
- adolescence. Drawing on interviews with youngsters in Boston and
- students at public and private schools--including the Emma
- Willard School in Troy, N.Y., and the Laurel School in Shaker
- Heights, Ohio--Gilligan and her collaborators conclude that
- girls reach a psychological impasse around age 11 when they
- confront the conventions of a male-dominated culture. They
- discover that their intense awareness of intimacy is not highly
- prized, even though society perceives women as caring and
- altruistic. The dilemma, says Gilligan, is that "for girls to
- remain responsive to themselves, they must resist the
- conventions of feminine goodness; to remain responsive to
- others, they must resist the values placed on self-sufficiency
- and independence."
- </p>
- <p> Presented with a choice that makes them appear either
- selfish or selfless, many "silence" their distinctive voice.
- They become less confident and more tentative in offering their
- opinions--a trait that often persists into adulthood. "We
- start to hear the breathy voice," says Gilligan. "After a while,
- they speak in a way that's disconnected from how they are really
- feeling." Speech becomes punctuated with passive "I don't
- knows." Consider Anna. At age 12, the insidious words cropped
- up only 21 times during an interview. By age 14, they numbered
- 135.
- </p>
- <p> The result of girls burying their knowledge, says
- psychologist Lyn Mikel Brown, a member of the Harvard project,
- "is self-doubt, ambivalence, panic and loss." Researchers link
- this confusion to the prevalence among teenage girls of
- depression and eating disorders.
- </p>
- <p> Some critics argue that Gilligan and her colleagues
- overemphasize the importance of gender. "Gilligan's wrong about
- any sex differences in moral thought," declares Eleanor Maccoby,
- professor emeritus of psychology at Stanford. What the
- revisionist scholars are mapping, she contends, is the influence
- of socialization--meaning that society expects different
- things from the sexes and trains them differently. Class,
- education or ethnic background may be more important than sex
- in shaping psychological growth. The new theorists are
- "overgenderizing," says Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, a sociologist at
- City University of New York. "Seeing distinctions and
- stereotyping are so much a part of our culture."
- </p>
- <p> But the most explosive aspect of the new research is its
- political implications. Some of Gilligan's critics fear that her
- findings reinforce stereotypes--women as nurturing,
- sacrificing and peaceable--and thus undermine the struggle for
- equality. They note, for example, that people-oriented jobs in
- which women dominate, such as nursing and teaching, are
- invariably on the low end of the pay scale. Catharine MacKinnon,
- law professor at the University of Michigan, calls Gilligan's
- different voice "the voice of a victim."
- </p>
- <p> In reply, revisionist researchers argue that their work
- offers a way to liberate women and transform society. If women's
- approach to life is acknowledged as authentic, they will no
- longer need to act like men. "What we are doing is more
- revolutionary than early feminism," declares psychologist Judith
- Jordan, co-founder of the women's studies program at McLean
- Hospital in Belmont, Mass. "We believe that the culture, which
- has been one of power, objectification and violence, has to
- change. Women's sensitivity to relationship offers a special
- gift in making that occur."
- </p>
- <p> That may sound a bit overblown, but there are a few areas
- where the findings are having some influence. Educators are
- beginning to reconsider teaching methods in order to take
- advantage of women's sense of relationship. For example, at the
- Emma Willard School, the entire curriculum has been revised to
- emphasize cooperative learning rather than individual
- competition and to encourage girls to analyze and express ideas
- from their own perspective rather than parrot back the accepted
- dogma. In psychology, distant, impersonal therapists are
- gradually giving way to more empathic and active listeners who
- are better able to help women scarred by battering or sexual
- abuse.
- </p>
- <p> But a major obstacle in pursuing change remains. As Gilligan
- sees it, the language of our culture "hasn't been able to
- represent difference without hierarchy. For us to do that, it
- is really necessary to have a change in language." A former
- dancer, she reaches for a musical metaphor to suggest how the
- contrasting voices of men and women might blend. "One can think
- of the oboe and the clarinet as different," she says. "Yet when
- they play together, there is a sound that's not either one of
- them, but it doesn't dissolve the identity of either
- instrument."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-