The Naturalisation of Everyday Sexism and Violence

By Nancy Lombard, Glasgow Caledonian University

 

The FRA study from the EU agency for Fundamental Rights released last Thursday did the usual rounds with the same old figures: 1 in three women have experienced abuse in their lifetime, 1 in 10 within the last 12 months.  We know this; we can recite these figures off by heart. The report is simply more evidence of the pervasive extent of women’s experiences of violence that is so engrained in our societies.

Liz Kelly once said that the continued recognition of the magnitude of violence against women results in further normalisation rather than leading to resistance.  We know globally, nationally and locally men’s violence against women is an endemic social problem and an enduring human rights issue within all societies and cultures (Amnesty International, 2004; Bond and Philips, 2000). The prolific extent of male violence against women is confirmed by official data, reproduced worldwide, year after year.

I have been a volunteer, activist and researcher in the field of violence against women since I was 18. My most recent research looked at what primary school children think about men’s violence against women. When I was writing up the research I reflected upon what sociologist Ann Oakley calls my autobiographical path, thinking about why I became interested in this field.

Often women become involved in the area of working against men’s violence because of direct experience but I had always assumed that I was not one of them, as I didn’t have any personal history. However when I sat down and reflected I was shocked, not only by the list of abuses I had experienced, but by my normalisation and minimisation of them – and how I still remained affected by them. Kelly (1988: 23) claims the experience and /or naming of violence is not always an immediate or present one, rather it can be ‘experienced by the woman or girl at the time or later, as a threat, invasion or assault’. My own recalled experiences of abuse included: physical abuse, experiences of coerced sex, flashing and indecent exposure, sexual assaults, physical assaults, verbal sexual abuse. Being aware of my own normalisation of personal experiences of violence made me acutely sensitive to the young people’s narratives of their own experiences and conceptualisations of men’s violence against women.

When I spoke to boys and girls aged 11 and 12 I asked them about what they understood violence was, about why it happened and why. I also spoke to the young people about their own lives, their friendships, their experiences. For the majority of young people violence was something that happened in a public place, between adult men who were physically fighting. Crucially there were visible injuries and official intervention and consequence. That is the men’s behaviour was stopped, they were told they were wrong and suffered consequence (such as jail). This same sequence was replicated at school. Boys would physically fight in public and be told by the teachers or playground assistants that their behaviour was wrong and they were chastised for it.

But that didn’t happen for the girls. Girls told me about of a multitude of experiences; of being pushed, shoved, kicked, followed, called sexualised names from their male peers. These examples did not fit the standardised constellation structure of ‘real’ violence: age (adult); gender (man) space (public) action (physical) and crucially, are generally without official reaction or consequence. Time and time again the girls – when they approached teachers or those in authority were dismissed for telling tales, ignored because of the ‘trivial’ nature of their complaint or relayed that old adage, ‘he’s only doing it because he likes you’. Thus their experiences were minimised and the behaviours, normalised.

This not only results in girls being unable to access a framework by which to make sense of their own experiences, but it also serves to invalidate and minimise many of their own experiences of violence and violent behaviour which is then replicated in their adult lives where much behaviour is seen as what Dobash and Dobash (1992) termed the ‘everyday interactions’ between men and women; the everyday sexism documented here.

The feminist project of ‘naming’, ‘involves making visible what was invisible, defining as unacceptable what was acceptable and insisting what was naturalized is problematic’ (Kelly, 1988: 139). It enables women to name, understand and challenge what had happened to them, by moving the private into the public domain and shifting the boundaries of acceptable and unacceptable behaviour.

For me this also explains why countries such as Denmark and Sweden had higher figures for men’s violence against women in the recent study. Those countries with greater levels of gender equality are more likely to provide ‘official’ recognition for women which enables them to not only name but also define their experiences as violence.

We need to start acting upon these figures, rather than finding different ways of presenting the same old story. Preventive education and public awareness campaigns to encourage resistance to violence are essential. But we also need to challenge the normalisation of violence. We must contest the dynamics in heterosexual relationships where men’s power over women is naturalised, normalised and used as a justification both of and for the violence.

 

 

Relaunch of the Paulo Freire Institute-UK

By Penny Jane Burke, University of Roehampton.  

The Paulo Freire Institute-UK (PFI-UK) has now been relaunched at the University of Roehampton as an interdisciplinary research centre, with particular interest in feminist engagements with Freirean perspectives, methodologies and pedagogies.

The PFI-UK is part of a large, international network of Paulo Freire Institutes worldwide, with its closest affiliation to the PFI-University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), headed by Professor Carlos Alberto Torres. This has led to fruitful collaborations, including the Biannual Forum Paulo Freire, with a core strand on gender and education, which was co-hosted by the PFI-UK and held at UCLA in September 2012. Additionally, the PFI-UK contributes to intensive sessions on feminist theories and methodologies and on gender and education as part of the PFI summer programmes held at University of Trento and UCLA. The PFI-UK aims to make a unique and significant contribution to the international PFI network, by engaging feminist reconceptualizations of Freirean approaches, as well as other critical perspectives, to explore the structural, cultural, symbolic and discursive dimensions of pedagogical relations and inequalities across intersecting differences and identities (such as formations of gender, class, ethnicity and ‘race’). The PFI’s research and pedagogies are deeply informed by Freirean and feminist praxis and methodologies.

As part of this, the PFI-UK has set up a Doctoral/Postdoctoral Network on Gender, Social Justice and Praxis, directed by Dr Lauren Ila Misiaszek. As a starting point, a small group of Founding Members will each work closely with and mentor an early career researcher to develop a small-scale project that makes a concrete contribution to the development of feminist approaches to education and pedagogy (for example, in the form of an online resource).  

The PFI-UK will have a relaunch event on the 6th June 2014 with keynote speaker Professor Carlos Alberto Torres, who will also launch his new book at the event: First Freire: Early Writings in Social Justice Education (soon to be published Teachers College Press). Discussants will include Professor Roger Dale, University of Bristol and Professor Penny Jane Burke, University of Roehampton.

PFI-UK aims to create dialogic and participatory spaces of praxis across national and local networks of teachers, educational practitioners and leaders, activists, artists, students, community groups and researchers dedicated to social justice in education. We hope that you will join us in developing this work!

For further information, please see http://www.roehampton.ac.uk/Research-Centres/Paulo-Freire-Institute/ and/or contact Professor Penny Jane Burke, Director of the PFI-UK, University of Roehampton.

Boys and Girls Speak Out on Sexism and Sexual Harassment

A report by Josie Austin and Helen Sivey of Cardiff University on the launch of Professor Emma Renold’s report on young people’s gender and sexual cultures for the National Assembly for Wales.

 

A dozen young people strode confidently past us into the Welsh Assembly Pierhead’s grand hall as we hovered around the imposing entrance. Like us, they were here to participate in the launch of Professor Emma Renold’s ground-breaking research report on 10-12 year olds’ gender and sexual cultures. This research will inform the National Assembly for Wales’ cross-party group on Children, Sexualities, ‘Sexualisation’ and Equalities.

The Pierhead Building in Cardiff Bay

Upon entering the hall we instantly noticed the friendly and relaxed atmosphere, and, having been handed the beautifully illustrated research report, joined the rest of the crowd. The audience consisted of an eclectic mix of people compared to the rather homogenous crowds we are used to at policy-related events, and included over 40 young people, and a range of academic researchers, teachers, third sector workers from local policy to domestic violence charities, policy makers and assembly members. However, it was the presence of young people themselves which made the event feel so different from other research launches, which all too often seem detached from young people’s lives.

The event was chaired by Jocelyn Davies (assembly member, Plaid Cymru), head of the cross party group, who opened the event and welcomed Professor Emma Renold to the stage. She  provided us with a reflexive summary of the research – a qualitative study which included 125 participants – and its sometimes unexpected findings. For example, we heard how for some girls looking older is not about being sexy – an assumption commonly made by adults – but about negotiating greater independence and feeling safe. Other findings included that children regularly experience sexual harassment, are often aware of sexism and desire social change, and that, instead of assumptions being made on their behalf, they want adults to listen to their experiences and viewpoints. Professor Renold concluded with how:

“Many children are critical and angry. They do want change. But they are also aware that just knowing something is sexist or abusive isn’t enough to stop it from happening. How to activate and sustain change is the challenge, and getting together like this, with young people, is one small step in that process. And while they are no quick fix solutions to cultural and societal change, there is a lot of desire from girls and boys themselves to make this happen”

From that last sentence, Professor Renold then introduced us to two school-based activist groups she had been working with for 6 weeks up to the lead-up of the launch. Their confident and captivating performances were the highlight of the event for many of us. First up were Merched Mentrus (Welsh for ‘girl power’), a feminist group from Plasmawr school, who provided us with a poignant performance of their poem ‘Mis(s) Seen’ (printed at the end of this article, and recently published in The Telegraph). The poem highlights the constant surveillance of young women’s bodies, and the group’s performance conveyed the conflicting emotions that these young women experience as a result of it so powerfully that it awakened affective responses in our own bodies. The poem concludes by offering an imagined future in which young women are judged on the basis of their abilities, not what they look like.

Next, students from the DIGON group performed a short drama based upon the key findings around boy-girl friendships and relationships . Ellie (who wrote the script) based each line on direct quotes from the research report and really brought the research findings to life. DIGON (which translates from Welsh as ‘enough’), is another group from Plasmawr School, who performed at the 2011 ‘Young People and Sexualities’ conference at Cardiff University (view the video here) They reflected on how this previous event had given them the confidence to continue their work. Their sketch focused on the casual but crushing homophobia and sexism encoded in school banter, and put across both the physical force and emotional pressure exerted amongst young people to enforce compulsory heterosexual relationships and behaviours. They will be taking this drama into primary schools over the coming year, and working with Emma to film the event and share with a wider audience.

Following these two creative responses using Professor Renold’s research findings, further reflections were offered by the Children’s Commissioner for Wales, Keith Towler, who somewhat jokingly, but mostly seriously, proclaimed his inability to perform to the standard of the young people we just saw, and representatives from the NSPCC (Jon Brown) and the equalities officer from the National Union of Teachers (Rosamund McNeil). They reiterated the importance of sexuality research which focuses on the views and experiences of young people, and reminded us of the dangers and restrictions associated with gender stereotyping.

The programme for the evening then had allocated time for a Q&A session with a panel of the adult speakers; however, Professor Renold suggested that we discard the proposed schedule of events and move directly to roundtable discussions led by the young people. She pointed out that we had heard a lot from adults so far this evening, and that it might be helpful to put the research principles and findings into practice by talking to one another directly, immediately. The apprehension in the room was palpable, but after some shuffling and coffee dispensing (by Professor Renold herself!), we arranged ourselves around tables and began talking.

We can’t imagine a more positive or productive way to enact the importance of engaging with and really listen to young people. And the young people we were speaking to had a lot to say, once given the space and respect to do so. We talked with young people from a range of schools about their experiences, about Tom Daley, being opinionated, and about what they think about adult interpretations of the relationship between young people and the internet. Dozens of similar conversations were filling the room, and when the time came to draw the event to a close, it was clear that nobody was ready to finish speaking. Listen to some of the children’s stories here.

We hope to continue to see more events like this where young people are more fully involved in shaping research agendas and communicating research findings and policy recommendations. We do know that Professor Renold is planning a second gender and sexuality children’s conference next summer (July 2014). Among the many interactive and peer-led workshops from sexism to sex education, she will be working with a dance choreographer so we will not just be sitting and talking, but doing and moving to connect with the research findings and create change. Watch this space.

MIS(S) SEEN

By Merched Mentrus,

In one day we can hear

‘you’re fat’, ‘FAF’, ‘slag’, ‘nice legs’, ‘nice bum’, ‘grown up’, ‘mature’, ‘cool’, ‘sexy’, boom’, ‘oy’, [wolf whistle], ‘slut’, ‘beautiful’, ‘hi ya princess’, ‘stuck up’ …

Our bodies are commented on, all day long,

With media telling us how to look, from zero size models and what not to wear, hearing a wolf whistle from an old guy in the street,

Can make you feel appreciated and downgraded

Uplifted and insecure

at the same time

Our bodies, commented on, all day long

Feeling good, feeling bad

It’s awkward, it’s hard.

Commented on, all day long

Wanting to tell someone, but nothing’s going to change

When you do tell someone, nothing does change

All day long

If we could press a button, would we want it to stop?

When we get value for how we look?

Bodies

How would it feel to be free of this?

What would it be like to be valued for what we do, not how we look?

Bright, free spirit, funny, feisty, caring, independent, clever, bubbly, understanding, creative, outgoing, sporty, determined, radical, adventurous,

These words make us feel good

How do they make you feel?

Are we just bodies?

Just bodies?

Merched Mentrus is a group of Year 12 girls – Awen, Ella, Ffion, Ffion, Georgia, Gwyneth, Rebekah and Sophie – from Ysgol Gyfun Gymraeg Plasmawr, Cardiff

Josie and Helen are PhD Students and members of the Gender and Sexuality Research Group (GASP), School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University