Lately, it seems like feminism is a dirty word. No one wants to be caught dead wearing such an unfashionable brand.
Last week, Salma Hayek received an award in recognition of her work as a women’s rights activist. She took the opportunity to distance herself from feminism, saying: “I am not a feminist. If men were going through the things women are going through today, I would be fighting for them with just as much passion. I believe in equality.”
And Salma is not alone – there are plenty of high-profile women who have come out recently and said that they are not feminists, including Australia’s most senior female politician and Harper’s Bazaar Woman of the Year, Minister Julie Bishop, who said “feminist” is “not a term that I find particularly useful these days” and encouraged women to “stop whinging.”
So why are so many women apparently rejecting feminism?
I think it boils down to seven things.
1. Some people say they’re not feminists. But, they support gender equality.
The curious thing about what Salma Hayek said is not that she said she isn’t a feminist. Salma Hayek can call herself whatever she wants. It’s that what she said – that she believes in and will fight for equality – is feminism.
The definition of feminism is “the advocacy of equal rights and opportunities for women, especially the extension of their activities in social and political life.”
Top Comments
It seems that feminists do not understand that "no" means "no". Isn't it a bit ironical, considering you march every week in the streets with signs reading just that, "NO means NO"?
To put it bluntly you either don't understand what equality is or deliberately mislabel what feminism wants. Getting the good stuff and none on the bad is not equal.
More people support equality these days and that is a good thing. They are able to open their eyes and see bad things happening to both genders. Stop trying to drag them backwards.
Could you please define 'equality'?
Could you please define 'inequality'?
I think that rubbery definition is why so many are turning their backs on this.
Easier to define what it's not.
The same pay while more men die in the workplace is not equality.
Complaining that time off for children hampers their career but getting custody in 90% of cases is not equality.
For things to be equal, you take the good AND the bad.
are the high-paying jobs the ones which are responsible for the workplace deaths? If not, then I don't see what your point is.