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- From: levine@symcom.math.uiuc.edu (Lenore Levine)
- Subject: Re: Why are many low-income women fat? (was Re: Separate but Equal?)
- References: <Bzo75G.LBB@news.cso.uiuc.edu> <1992Dec22.184718.2825@wam.umd.edu> <BzoFx7.1zs@news.cso.uiuc.edu> <1992Dec22.211433.11135@wam.umd.edu>
- Message-ID: <Bzq3H1.5Dn@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.cso.uiuc.edu (Net Noise owner)
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 17:34:11 GMT
- Lines: 236
-
- rsrodger@wam.umd.edu (Yamanari) writes:
-
- >In article <BzoFx7.1zs@news.cso.uiuc.edu> levine@symcom.math.uiuc.edu (Lenore Levine) writes:
- >>rsrodger@wam.umd.edu (Yamanari) writes:
- >>
- >>>In article <Bzo75G.LBB@news.cso.uiuc.edu> levine@symcom.math.uiuc.edu (Lenore Levine) writes:
- >>>>rsrodger@wam.umd.edu (Yamanari) writes:
- >>>>I note that my mother appears younger than she is; and she once
- >>>>got in trouble, on a bus, when an angry driver refused to believe that
- >>>>she was over 65. I do think the driver's reaction was sincere, even
- >>>>though he was a man.
- >>
- >>> It happens, especially in interactions that last a
- >>> short time. However, it doesn't last more than about
- >>> 5 or 6 minutes.
- >>
- >>I know I was mistaken about my friend, Eugenia's, age for a long time --
- >>until she told me. We are about the same age, but we each thought the
- >>other was considerably younger.
- >>
- >>I note that neither one of us uses alcohol or tobacco, or wears makeup;
- >>and we are both of Eastern, not Western, European ancestry. I suspect
- >>some of these factors may be relevant.
-
-
- > I, myself, cannot adequately judge the age of most asians
- > (that is, east-asians but also SE asians). This is due, primarily,
- > at lack of exposure. I can easily judge the age of most caucasians
- > and blacks, thanks to exposure. I have asian friends who can't
- > judge any better than me because they grew up in predominantly
- > white suburbs (w/o asian grandparents, etc..). OTOH, I know asians
- > who can peg asians without any difficulty whatsoever.
-
- > So if you think ethnicity has something to do with it, you may
- > have something, but I think it's also a matter of learning
- > what the signs are.
-
- I think I would know the signs for people of my own ethnicity, as
- well as for Anglo-Saxons.
-
- >>> Sure it was. If they valued other things more, well, that
- >>> was then this is now and whatever. Appearance is not
- >>> "overvalued" it is simply valued higher than other things
- >>> (like "cooking skill" and "child rearing skill"). Would
- >>> you prefer one of these others valued highest?
- >>
- >>I would prefer that human attributes be valued in the contexts in which
- >>they are relevant. I think nowadays there are a great many women living
- >>in fear that their appearance doesn't measure up to some unrealistic
- >>standard; and living in this fear to the point where they can no longer
- >>take any sincere delight in their bodies. Yes, I would say that this
- >>is overvaluing appearance. (And if you have any doubt women live like
- >>this, or, at least, are encouraged to live like this, read Redbook...)
-
- > Blha blah blah. Men have *exactly* the same fear. "Are my
- > breasts too small?" "Is my penis too small?" "Am I too fat?"
- > "Am I too fat?" (harder for men, BTW, since women canbe fleshy--
- > men are supposed to be *hard* which cannot be accomplished
- > just by dieting) "Is my nose too big?" (both) blah blah..
-
- Of course men have the same fears. Does this make such fears OK?
-
- By the way, my father's untimely death was in part caused by attempts
- to achieve a standard weight...
-
- >>If thirty years ago, women had less fear that their appearance wasn't
- >>perfect, and more fear that their *homes* weren't perfect, this was
- >>not an *improvement*. But it was an example of how things can change.
-
- > I think it was. A woman does not *have* to submit to judgement
- > by appearance, while if she could not keep an adequate home,
- > she was liable to be divorced (with no alternate means of
- > support, other than leeching).
-
- A woman might be divorced (then or now) if she does not keep an adequate
- standard of appearance. And many women nowadays are still in situations
- where their economic options are extremely limited.
-
- Of course much of this, then or now, is the fault of the individual
- woman. But part of feminism *is* educating women to take advantage of
- options the society does offer them. In particular, I think that even
- women who plan on being homemakers should have other job skills, so
- they are not too economically dependent.
-
- >>And by the way, I think child rearing skill is always important,
- >>and should always be valued, in both men and women. If our society
- >>regards this skill as unimportant, it does not say much for our society...
-
- > So do I, which is why it saddens me that so many people are having
- > children for the novelty or it, or because of ignorance, and then
- > raising children who are not civilized (no manners, no self
- > control, rude, illiterate). Childen are a *privelage* IMHO
- > and not a "right".
-
- We are certainly in agreement on this. (I recently posted on this
- subject on soc.feminism.)
-
- >me> What is most valued in a man? Looks, probably. After
- >me> that, probably money-making ability. Yeah, this makes me
- >me> feel all warm and happy inside.
- >me> Tough.
-
- > Failed to contrast this with the above, huh. Well, I'm,
- > no Rutger Hauer, so I sometimes feel inadequate. But you
- > don't see me blaming this on the media or on some evil
- > conspiracy of women. I do not think physical appearance is
- > "over valued"it is simply valued higher than some of my
- > stronger qualities.
-
- > A long time ago a man who was a romantic was highly valued,
- > and now--for most real encounters--a man who is a romantc
- > ==wimp, loser, dateless wonder (unless he scrapes the bottom
- > of the bucket).
-
- I also think it unfortunate that romanticism is not highly valued.
-
- I find your language "scraping the bottom of the bucket" -- to be a
- very disturbing way to refer to other humans. Particularly, there
- are men who will use "the bottom of the bucket" to refer to women,
- mostly on the basis of their appearance. In other words, Golda Meir
- is the bottom of the bucket; Vanna White is not. I will do you the
- credit of not assuming you are using the expression in this manner.
- But I do wish you would make yourself more clear.
-
- > In other words, I don't much care if women think there's
- > too much pressure to be attractive. Men get the same thing--
- > or worse (we get it from other men morethan women get it from
- > other women) and I don't see women doing anything about it or
- > even putting forth suggestions that might change the reality
- > for either side. (Not that I think it's possible)
-
- A valid suggestion; and it certainly *is* possible.
-
- >>> Shifting priorities. You'll find, however--all through
- >>> time that physical appearance has always been valued extremely
- >>> highly. Sure, it would do no good to marry a lowly peasant, but
- >>> s/he'll make a great bedwarmer. How many bastards did these
- >>> noblemen father? How many illegitimate children did these
- >>> noblewomen bear? Quite a few.
- >>
- >>I did not say that physical apparance was ever *not* valued; I did
- >>say that there have been societies in which it was valued less than
- >>it is in ours. In many of these societies, noblemen had many lowly-born
- >>mistresses, but they didn't feel any social pressure to choose mistresses
- >>who met a particular standard of beauty (as opposed to women they
- >>personally wanted to go to bed with). For example, Czar Peter III's
- >>publicly acknowledged mistress was a hunchback.
-
- > Come on, why would you choose a _mistress_ for anything other
- > than beauty? Get real. These noblemen (with few exceptions)
- > chose the good looking bed-tiger, and the noblewomen (when they
- > could, which was often) chose the muscle-studs. The fact
- > that you can point out a famous exception is irrelavent--
- > let's stick to reality. If they wanted conversation, they
- > could talk to anyone.
-
- >>By the way, do you realize how many men there are in this culture, who
- >>have the attitude, "Sure, it would do no good to marry a lowly fat girl,
- >>but she'll make a great bedwarmer!"
-
- > I sure do. But I would point out that the reason they choose
- > that way is because the "lowly fat girl" is what men generally call
- > an easy fuck or a "low maintainance girlfriend"--say a few nice things
- > and act like you care for easy sex. Hell, I know more women who
- > do that than men, as a matter of fact.
-
- You seem to be saying, that sexual attraction is only in proportion to
- beauty. I don't think so; if this were true, we would all be sleeping
- with 15-year-old Mexican schoolgirls, or snow leopards.
-
- Your argument does not apply to my own sexual fantasies, the ones
- I know most well. But I may be more perceptive about the character,
- and sensuality, of individuals I come in contact with than many people.
- I could not imagine being perceptive about these things, and having
- much else determine your fantasies.
-
- But beyond the obvious reasons why what you say is not the case, there are
- more subtle reasons. That is, that the trivial things that
- determine sexual attraction -- not the important things about their
- character, but the details -- come from our unconscious. They are partly
- determined by what the culture values, and partly determined by
- our individual experiences. For example, a man may be more attracted to
- a woman who reminds him of his female relatives (in one case I know,
- who reminded him of his grandmother!). I suspect Peter III was
- particularly attracted to Elizabeth Vorontsova because she *was*
- a hunchback. She was uneducated and coarse, and certainly not as good
- a conversationalist as his wife, who eventually became Catherine II.
-
- For more expert information on human sexual fantasies, I suggest
- you post to alt.sex for individual accounts, and written references.
-
- > My sister used to date this guy for a year and a half because
- > he was easy sex. Whenever he would start talking she would just
- > tell him to shut up. "He'll do for now"
-
- I am sorry those you love have such values. (I have a sister whose
- values I am uncomfortable with too.)
-
- > None of this dispells the "sex appeal value" argument--
- > ask these people if they would dump their current BF/GF
- > for supermodel/movie star X and they'll mostly say, "in
- > a second."
-
- I don't think this comment would apply to *any* of my friends. Of course
- I'm 43; I'm sure when I was 23 I had less mature friends.
-
- >>P.S. Do you think it is acceptable to choose a candidate for a
- >>technical position, based on physical appearance? If you were
-
- > *I* do not think it is acceptable. OTOH, I think it's
- > even less acceptable to try and dictate--through law or
- > subversion (boycotts, protests)--who a private employer
- > should choose for *any* position.
-
- Why are boycotts unacceptable? They are just another exercise of the
- free marketplace. (Do you find the Montgomery bus boycott
- unacceptable?)
-
- >>on a committee to evaluate job candidates, and one of the other
- >>members of the committee said, "Don't hire that woman, she's
- >>a dog!" what would you do?
-
- > I would probably start wondering about my own job safety.
- > Other than that, unless I had a personal interest in
- > this woman getting the job, I would probably ignore it
- > and cast my vote how I felt about her competence. To *me*
- > ability is all that counts, but I am not about to suggest
- > that my criteria is relavent to the example. Is this woman
- > supposed to take clients out to dinner, make presentations,
- > whatever? Then I *would* consider looks, because they *matter*
- > in those circumstances.
-
- I was not talking about such an example. I was talking about highly
- technical positions.
-
- Lenore Levine
-