When Laura Bates created the Everyday Sexism project – an online space where women could call out everything from the casual sexism they experienced in their day-to-day lives to more extreme instances of violence against women – she didn’t know whether anyone else would be listening.
But 60,000 entries to the website, a book and a presentation to the United Nations later – people are definitely listening.
“It was so exciting to be asked [to speak at the UN],” Laura says. “And the fact that they wanted to hear specifically about Everyday Sexism, after two years of fighting tooth and nail to get people to acknowledge that this problem even existed… It was amazing.”
And what’s the problem, as Laura sees it? How women are represented as second-class citizens in the media, the normalisation of degrading and demeaning attitudes towards women, and how pervasive those attitudes are.
Laura, however, says that things are changing.
“There’s been a complete surge of interest in this area. In media coverage, but also in activism and people standing up,” she says. “I think it’s international and can be seen everywhere from the New Delhi protests against gang-rape in India to protests in Sri Lanka around the same time.”
“We’ve seen it in the Maldives, people protesting against the sentence of 100 lashes for a 15-year-old who was raped, we’ve seen it in Cairo with people standing up against the assault they’ve been facing there while protesting in the streets. We’ve seen it in the US with students protesting against the Steubenville coverage seeming to imply sympathy for the perpetrator, and in Australia with the outrage around the treatment of Julia Gillard and Destroy the Joint.”
Top Comments
Interesting reading some of the comments by men here.
Talking about sexism and violence against women, and just plain overall lack of respect seems to spark a lot of angst amongst men, along the lines of - well, what about us? What about violence towards men? What about funding for prostate cancer? What about male suicide?
Well - men - I don't think this is a competition as to who has the hardest road to travel. This is a discussion about feminism, and about how marginalised women still are in every day life.
Do men not understand that they are the mainstream? and by virtue of that they have the automatic right to create their own movements and research and support systems.
Of course male violence against men is wrong, male suicide is tragic.
But does speaking about violence against women detract from that?
Do men not like that women are focusing on themselves and their own issues? Do they need women to still make them front and centre in their lives?
Seems like a big dummy spit to me.
Hey people, posted this on everyday sexism but here for you too. I need to know someone will get a laugh out of this. Karma's real, right?
Sitting on the couch watching tv with my two male housemates.
Housemate 1: "Go get me a beer"
I look around wondering who the hell he's talking to like that, he's staring at me. I wait for some time, for some indication that he's joking. He's not.
Me: "What the F**K? What am I your bitch?".
Housemate 1 glares at me and raises his voice: "Yeah! You are!"
Me, brandishing my middle finger at his face: "F**K you!"
Housemate 1 turns to Housemate 2 and says while laughing: "Look at that, try do her a favour and she gives me the finger and says 'f**k you'"
Me: gets up and leaves room.
Before you ask, he's still not joking.
Abuse has continued since he began living here, awesome! (sarcasm)
Goodbye, flatmate one!
and flatmate 2 for not calling him out
Nah, I'm moving out. Apparently it's always the bad people who get to treat people however they want without any repercussions. Man's world I guess.
More like, "It's an arsehole's world."