By Jonah Goldberg
Friday, June 05, 2015
At a moment when many on the left are desperately trying
to conjure up enthusiasm for Hillary Clinton’s bid to become the first woman
president, others on the left want to turn the word “woman” into a term of
exclusion and oppression.
This is just one of the more amusing ironies on display
as what passes for liberalism today eats itself.
No doubt you’ve heard: Bruce Jenner has become Caitlyn
Jenner. I can’t muster much outrage about this. If someone born a man wants to
live as a woman, or vice versa, they are free to do so as far as I’m concerned.
What does bother me is the way everyone is expected to celebrate Jenner’s
decision and courage. Why can’t I just not care? Or, maybe I just don’t want to
be part of a massive public-relations effort tied to the rollout of yet another
reality show?
While conservatives had their own list of complaints
about this national celebration, the more intriguing ones came from the left.
For instance, many people criticized the Vanity Fair cover of Jenner as a
pinup. “One step forward for Caitlyn Jenner, one step back for womankind,” Eric
Sasson complained in The New Republic. “As a media sensation, Jenner had many
choices for how to reveal herself to us, so the fact that she chose a way that
only reinforces how much our society objectifies women is a bit distressing,”
he explained.
Dana Beyer of Gender Rights Maryland argued fairly
persuasively that it would have been better for her cause if Jenner had dressed
as a businesswoman instead of as a sex symbol.
One problem with this argument, as many of the people
making it recognize, is that Jenner’s business is the reality show
celebrity-buzz racket. The Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue surely objectifies
women, but it wouldn’t sell nearly as many copies if it was the Sports
Illustrated Sensible Pantsuit Issue.
Moreover, there’s something gloriously perverse in
celebrating someone’s courage to boldly smash sexual categories and then, in
the same breath, castigating them for reinforcing gender stereotypes. If men
are to be free to become women, surely they get to decide what kind of women
they want to be. The first word in Vanity Fair is, after all, “vanity.” The
Sports Illustrated swimsuit models seem very happy to be paid lots of money to
be objectified by the male gaze. Who am I to judge?
But the most fascinating argument comes from those who
have no problem with Jenner changing genders, but have serious misgivings about
the word “woman.”
On a recent MSNBC panel celebrating the “Jenner Effect,”
The Nation’s Michelle Goldberg (no relation), noted that many young feminists
“no longer want to use the word ‘woman’ in relation to abortion because it
excludes trans men.” There’s a lot of “conceptual murk to clear away,” she
added with admirable understatement, “but among younger people that I’ve talked
to, it almost seems amazing to them that anybody would question the need to
have gender-neutral language.”
In a fascinating piece for The New Yorker, Goldberg wrote
about this growing schism. Rachel Ivey, a young feminist told Goldberg, “If I
were to say in a typical women’s-studies class today, ‘Female people are
oppressed on the basis of reproduction,’ I would get called out.”
Some students, she explained, would ask, “What about
women who are male?”
Next stop: the other side of the looking glass.
On most days of the week, liberals are fond of claiming
that Republicans are “anti-science” on everything from global warming to
evolution. Well, last I checked, biology hadn’t been declared a branch of the
humanities.
Bruce Jenner was 65 years old when he decided to be a
she, but that’s not why Caitlyn can’t have a baby. Figuratively speaking,
removing the spigot won’t change the rest of the plumbing. That’s not
patriarchal oppression talking. That’s science. And no matter how fluid gender
may or may not be, the biological category of “female” isn’t going away anytime
soon.
I have sympathy for people who are convinced they were
born the wrong sex. But feeling oppressed by a category doesn’t render that
category illegitimate or unreal. (Short people may resent being short, but that
doesn’t nullify the concept of height.)
Nevertheless, I will certainly enjoy watching this
argument unfold as Hillary Clinton wraps herself in the new mantle of
oppression called “womanhood.”
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