Friday, May 4, 2012

take that mr. media: reflections on "miss representation"

I took Olivia to see the excellent film, Miss Representation, this week. Since I cannot spare her from the all-penetrating gaze of men, society and the media, I have striven to teach her early to look back—to know the power of her own gaze. I hope that if she learns to keep a critical eye trained on the digitized she-fantasies of media moguls, then perhaps she will be less likely to turn that eye on herself.

The timing of this film is perfect for us. Olivia has just begun to look in the mirror with expectation. So far, however, she hasn’t found anything unacceptable there--saved, perhaps, by the great irony that, at age 11, she still lives in the kind of body to which the rest of us grown women are supposed to aspire. Like so many ears of corn, we’re to forever strip ourselves of our husks, our silken hair, and our many plump kernels of goodness, until there’s nothing left but a hard narrow cob to be accessorized with a boob-job and a pair of low-cut skinnyjeans. How truly hilarious that would be if it wasn’t so completely not funny at all.

I wish that someone had shown me Miss Representation when I was eleven. I did see a similar film, Killing Us Softly, in college. It’s about the ways that women are systematically sexualized and objectified in advertising. The message came too late, however. By the time I saw it, a fast/binge/purge pattern of disordered eating had long since entangled me in its ever tightening noose. I would follow its lead like an obedient dog, well into my twenties.

I do not want Olivia to skip out of her childhood into that snare.

Despite all the graphic and horrific images of women portrayed by Miss Representation, the most pernicious thing I learned is that men own the increasingly consolidated media. You don’t have to dig too deep into the theories of political science to learn that he/she who owns the means of communication in a society, controls that society. I did not realize how few women work behind the scenes (producing, writing, programming) in news and entertainment.

Suddenly I’m wondering, do we need a woman president?—or do we just need to take over Fox News? I hear they’re in search of a new figurehead anyway, what with good old Rupert being “unfit” and all. With the standard so low, surely even a woman could do that job!

No wonder women have taken social media by storm. What the male dominated communications industry has tried so hard to contain has come oozing out in blogs, on facebook and in tweets.

On the internet, we can redefine the terms, giving women: power without the bitch, intelligence without the nerd, humor without the ditz, emotion without the hormones, sensuality without the debasement, and of course, beauty without the objectification.

However, while we encourage each other to celebrate the portrayals of women that achieve these ideals (and reject the ones that don’t), we also need to look inward. I think there are a lot of women like me: ex-bingers, ex-anorexics, ex-selfhaters. We look and sound healed, but when this film asked me to examine that more closely, I admit, I discovered a residue. A dirty film left on my psyche by the colonizing eyes of men.

Case in point: I had to abandon my usual workout routine last fall because I injured my neck in a car accident. Instead of exercising my body all winter, I had to exercise patience, standing quietly by as I gained nearly 15 lbs.
It’s really no big deal. I know that.

Except, I lied about my weight on my driver’s license renewal last week.

And, I wonder, what is the first thing you see when you look at this snapshot, taken at Steve’s birthday in March?
The cake? the candles?...Perhaps the roll of fat hanging over my pants in the background? Or if
we really want to take it apart, perhaps my veiny arms? Or my right hand? It looks sort of like the three-fingered claw of a sleestak from that 70s show Land of the Lost, don’t you think?

When I saw this headless photo, I picked everything about my body apart and piled the wreckage of it on the table next to me, a trophy to my inadequacy.

Even though I already knew it, watching Miss Representation reminded me of the insidious nature of such behavior. What’s so bad about a roll of fat? Who cares if my body type doesn’t fit the arbitrary beauty-norms of the late 20th/ early 21st Centuries?

I fit in perfectly if we just go back a bit.

Here I am sitting on a sofa one day in 1876. I know I look a bit sad, but do you think I’m worrying with Renoir about the roll of fat that would have tumbled over the front of my pants were I modest enough to wear any?

Nah. I think I’m just feeling a bit resentful of this painter who wants me only for the beauty of my form.

Here’s another shot of me after the hunt.

I know what you’re thinking: I’m ashamed of my plans to binge on yet another
deer. I’m gripping my bow, trying to talk myself out of the slaughter, reminding myself of the heft of my ass on the rock. It seems, doesn’t it, that I’m calculating the time: can I eat the beast, hide the evidence, and throw it up before my knight in shining armor comes along with a barrel-chested horse to sweep the tremendous bulk of me off my feet?

Nah. I think I’m just marveling at my excellent shot and wondering how the heck I’m going to get that thing home by myself. I’m also feeling a bit irked that I’ve been asked to go hunting then sit on a rock in the nude. Really, Pierre!

Renoir, known for his misogynist views, was said to have stripped women not only of their clothes, but of their agency in nude paintings where he equated their bodies with the earth. How interesting, however, that my body fits so easily into his objectified form, yet fits so badly into the expectations of beauty today. The men with the means to represent are just making this shit up!

Amazing, isn’t it, how the context and the narrative around our bodies so dramatically shapes our vision of them? If Renoir had painted my gelatinous belly in the background of a birthday cake, would art historians note it as a thing to be reviled, rejected and erased?

No. But if I ran for office in a few years and this picture that I’ve so recklessly shared on the internet, were discovered (as it would be), do you think it would make CNN? Would they get out the digital pens and circle the evidence of my weakness for emphasis, marking me as “unfit” for public service?

Even if you deplored the news story, would you inwardly cringe at the up close exposure of my belly roll?

You might. Or perhaps I should say, I might (sympathetically), if it were your belly, spread out over the expanse of a wall-sized flat screen TV.

If women like me, who have bent under decades of programming, want to honestly critique the unnatural standards of beauty foisted upon us by a male dominated media, then we need to start in earnest with the mirror.

We cannot truly reject the random fantasies of men until we fully accept the varied realities of women. With that, we can model for our daughters the self-love we so desperately want them to own.

So there you have it, for Olivia’s sake and mine:

My belly.

My veins.

My sleestak
fingers.

Take that Mr. Media.

15 comments:

  1. This is a great post! Thanks for being so articulate and for sharing your insight with the rest of us. I'm right there with you!

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  2. Awesome post. Olivia is one lucky kid.

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    1. thank you csread, tnit and anon - i appreciate you're stopping by and reading!

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  3. Okay, maybe this is because in scrolling down the page I just saw the top of the picture first... but, honestly, my eyes noticed your, um, chest first and the pretty shirt. LOL! And then the pretty blue necklace. And then the cake... It's funny how we we're all really our own worst critics. But, of course, it's hard not to internalize all the messages coming at us from our male-dominated society. ... One that always strikes me as so ridiculous are high-heeled shoes. We deliberately wear something that slows us down, makes us less sturdy and more vulnerable, all in the name of beauty. ... Anyway, great post!

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    1. thanks jennifer. this really made me laugh. if only we could treat ourselves with the same friendly eye we offer our friends! great observation on the high heels. i think there is no coincidence that the things that supposedly make us beautiful, like high heels and, say, corsets, are also the things that make us weak. why aren't big muscles beautful!?

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  4. I am a little behind or a ginormous amount behind in everything in my life right now, except for being one kick-ass cougher. So, I am not even caught up on my fav blogger, and part of that may be that I am worn out right now, and I know my bike is lonely and that I should ride it much more often, so I may put off reading your posts that "give" us the opportunity to ride our bicycles.
    I finally did reply to your reply on dandelions. Thank you again for reading!
    Regarding this post, of course I love it all. And I really really really need to stop my "I'm fat" talk. My girlies are avid listeners. Extremely nosey little girls who take what husband and I say to heart. Also, I think you look like one hot mama with one tiny crinkle to show that you did bear children. The fingers, they do look funny in that picture. And I can say this as a lady with "expressive" hands. LONG fingers, with a few double joints so my hands can contort is some weird ways. I say it is a sign of our intelligence.

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    1. thank you for not pretending that my fingers look normal! i could never trust you again if you had! i've have also been told i have 'expressive hands" - i like your idea that they indicate intelligence much better than my assumption that they indicate the presence of a sleestak deep in my ancestry. don't worry about that dusty bike - they are patient creatures. i'm sure it will be there waiting when you're ready! (btw, the second bike post is about driving your car safely around bikers - no guilt trip about exercise!)

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  5. omg. awesome post.

    with a little girl now, i'm noticing all these little things i do. what shoes i put on. what i wear. my hair. if i put on moisturizer. what am i telling my daughter? i NEVER thought those things about my son, that i recall. it's disgusting, frankly. rewiring that programming. appreciate models like you!

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    1. thanks meredith! it is true, that everything we do regarding our appearance sends a msg to our daughters. it's hard to find the balance between wanting to look our best while accepting our bodies as they are.

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  6. If I could add anything I would, but I think you've said it all!

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  7. The first thing I see is cake. Mmmmm.....CAKE. I look for evidence in the photo that you are a yummy cake lover like me and I find none. Seriously. I see a person bending slightly to deliver a cake. Then I hate myself for WANTING a piece of cake, because I know it will make ME fatter than YOU.

    Aren't our brains twisted places?

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    1. ah yes. i would see the cake too (if it wasn't my belly in the background). someday, if we know each other better, i will send you a picture of my butt. then you will know where i store the cake! :)

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  8. This is a fantastic post! I particularly like your grace after a hunt; that's a skill few women can pull of these days. :)

    I've very much found that the lessons I want to teach my daughter about body image are lessons that I could use now and then as well.

    It's funny that you mention taking over Fox News. Did you see one of their hosts joke that they choose their female anchors by looking Victoria's Secret catalogues and asking which ones can talk? Gag.

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    1. Hi Michelle,
      thanks for reading! since I wrote this, my daughter has transformed. she is now 12 which has brought a lot of changes. she is surprisingly preoccupied with my appearance: are my shoes cool, why don't i where makeup etc. I need reminders like your post to stay positive!
      i hadn't heard the Fox news "joke." i'm going to look that up. disgusting.

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