(I wrote this last night but fell asleep before I had time to fix the typos and post it and now reading Bookitty's reply to Tyr I am not sure what Bookitty's position actually is but my core arguments against the privilege article still stand.)
What's wrong with listen and believe? It doesn't say "Listen, believe and change everything!!" It only says listen and believe.
To believe is to accept as true. I don't understand why you have such a hard time seeing how insane what you are advocating actually is. The statement "women don't read comics" is just obviously not true so it would be silly for me to believe it.
What if you apply your same privilege logic to violent crime and someone like Mumia Abu Jamal. According to you scheme a white person would have to "believe" him when he says he innocent. Do you not see how sick that is?
Or do you still think he is innocent?
(There is a history here I am wondering if you ever got the full story of. Did you ever really investigate what people like Angela Davis and George Jackson wrote. Susan Brownmiller's criticism of Jackson was 100% accurate but every feminist I've known just read the totally dishonest response of Davis and mindlessly believed it.)
Naive1000 started this thread off with some really disturbing quotes from some radical feminists that you are now saying a man would have to believe because of privilege. I don't think you have thought through your privilege theory at all as your rhetoric shows you can't even conceive of a man or white person having to deal with bigotry from a woman or black person.
You need a way to differentiate false statements from true statements. Rather than having a methodology for actually doing that the privilege scheme sets up a hierarchy of authority in which some statements are considered inherently true simply because of a persons status within the hierarchy.
If a person in a wheelchair says "It sure is a drag to miss out on cool restaurants because I can't get up the steps." *listen and believe them. *
This statement is very different from the one I was reacting to and you are missing the point completely. ALL types of people will sometimes say things that are not true and nobody should be demanding that everyone just automatically believe anyone. Giving examples of true statements doesn't alter my position that some statements are untrue and should not be believed.
Accept that being able-bodied has given you some advantages and that, at that moment, you weren't aware of how it was for them.
I think your phrasing is very interesting, "accept that . . . You weren't aware of how it was for them." Do you think you are aware of how it was for me? Tell me about my life and how you know it so well.
Did you stop reading at the paragraph above? It follows with (bolding mine)
That doesn't fit your " women can't be sexist and blacks can't be racist "
Except the theory as she wrote it (and you defended it) has no actual consideration for the possibility of women being sexist. The privilege theory that she presents just assumes women/minorities will always make true statements and that any objection from a man/white is due to them being blinded by their privilege.
The comic thing is something that gets tossed around by female comic readers all the time. Even the ones who aren't feminist.
I think this is an odd line for you to even try to pursue but I will play along. Long ago the founder of Wimmen's comix Trina Robbins got me my first job working for the alternative comic book publisher/distributor Last Gasp and I think you really haven't considered how much variety there is within the comics world. Comics are just a medium for telling stories like books. If someone has an issue with a particular comic being sexist condemning all comics for that single example is as ridiculous as condemning all books for a single example of a bad book.
Remember when Catwoman came out? (Sometime around 1993, I think.)
LOL, no. In 1993 I had five different friends who were regular comic readers and AFAIk none of them were reading Cat Woman and I never heard anything about it that peaked my interest. Do you know how many different comics were coming out every month? I would guess more then 300, nobody read them all.
At first she was a super-duper sexy chick in a fairly useful costume. By #10, she was tits. Huuuuuuuuge tits, like "how the hell are you going to jump across the rooftops with those things?" type of tits. It was annoying.
Because the super-duper sexy burglar/prostitute chick wearing a skin tight cat suit jumping across roof tops fighting crime was totally reasonable until her tits got too big?
I found an online store that has the comic book covers and going by the covers Cat woman's costume didn't change and she was pretty busty early on and I don't see the change you are describing. Are you sure about your timeline?
http://www.mycomicshop.com/search?TID=100201
Regardless of what was going on with Cat Woman If one (or a few) comics have hyper-sexualized representations that
you don't like that doesn't give you any right to demonize the whole medium. Just because some women (and men) agree with you doesn't mean you are an authority on what all women thought about it.
The Batman series is one of the few to offer complicated female villains with back stories that make them empathetic (Poison Ivy, amazing.)
You are seriously complaining about there being a female super VILLAIN gap?! Since villains by design are evil complaining about women being underrepresented in that realm is really weird. IMO very few male villains in the traditional super hero comics have any real depth either so while I think it is silly realm to even argue about I am in disagreement with your assessment as well.
They don't need to look like Morggana the kissing bandit to be interesting. But as soon as the sales drop - tits.
Do you have reference for the "sales drop - tits" claim because based upon the covers it didn't happen like you said.
Super hero comics often do tend to have hyper idealized bodies (male and female) but here is a online list of someone's Top 20 favorite female villains and I don't think any of them look like Morganna:
http://www.comicvine.com/myvine/harleyquinnhawkgirl/top-20-female-villains/75-13921/
Morganna for comparison:
http://photos.lucywho.com/morganna-roberts-photos-t4374108.html
This isn't uncommon. The most recent brouhaha was over DC's redo of Starfire. *(of course, they never should have given her to Scott Lobdell. *He's pretty good with angst-ridden guys, not so good with complicated female characters. *IMHO.)
I would say far worse then any comic you can come up with was famous mainstream literature that idealized male rapists. Books like
Gone With The Wind, The Fountainhead, The Story of O all demonstrate far worse attitudes then anything you will find in the comics you mentioned.
The Fontainhead is explicitly stated by the author as being about the "ideal man" and then he commits an intentionally cruel rape. I would 100% agree with the notion that these works show there is something very, very wrong with male society except they were all written by women and they were all presented to me in a positive way by different girlfriends of mine in the past. The
Fountainhead and The Story of O were given to me as gifts by girlfriends who even though they had taken feminism classes just couldn't agree with it's theories about sexuality. So which do you think is more significant, an obviously unrealistic comic book full of hyper-stylized imagery that included a heroine with overly large tits or a story explicitly written about an "ideal" man who rapes his feminine interest not out of passion but out of scorn?
So when she says something like that, she isn't saying "No girls will read your comics!" but more like "Really? This again? Don't you know that tons of women read comics and that this sort of nonsense has filled up chatrooms, bog posts and private conversations for like 30 years?"
Your rewrite is radically different then what was actually said:
If you’re male and a woman says “this maquette is a perfect example of why women don’t read comics,” listen and believe her.
1)Your rewrite says "don't you know tons of women read comics" which totally contradicts the original statement that "women don't read comics".
2)You left out the part that says if your male and a woman says it you have to "believe" her.
3)Your version also includes three question marks so there is implicit room for a response rather then insistence upon automatic submission.
Since you could see it needed to be drastically altered to be reasonable why not just acknowledge that the original statement was wrong instead of defending it?