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Is Smoking Pot a Feminist Act?

Posted by Samhita Mukhopadhyay at 11:00 AM on August 21, 2007.


Samhita Mukhopadhyay: Is smoking weed really a "guy thing"? And if not, why are media depictions of drug use usually sexist?
spicoli3
Sean Penn as legendary movie pothead Jeff Spicoli in "Fast Times at Ridgemont High"

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This post, written by Samhita Mukhopadhyay, originally appeared on Feministing

Do you think men smoke more weed than women? Is that a proven fact? Have you ever been to the Bay Area? LOL. OK seriously, this article in the Stranger (and as a tribute to Hempfest) is about gender and weed smoke and how women don't smoke weed.

Smoking pot is a guy thing. Guys are the ones who deal, buy, and smoke. In 2005, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services stated that adult males were 50 percent more likely to have smoked marijuana in the last month than females. (Alcohol use showed only a 12 percent difference.) All illegal drugs show this approximate divide between the sexes (except illegally obtained prescriptions--women use those in substantially higher numbers).

Is this actually true? Or do women hide that they smoke weed more? A very quick look at my friends, I would say half the women I know smoke weed all the time. Even in my women's studies undergrad, I knew a lot of female stoners. In fact I have never attributed smoking weed to being a male activity. Perhaps this says something about the kind of women I hang out with, but this is seriously news to me.

Reading more into the article, I did have to agree that media depictions of drug use are in general inaccurate and definitely sexist. The war on drugs is extremely racist and gendered with little conversation about how drugs affect the lives of young women, while being absurdly focused on the incarceration of young men. Furthermore, the usual drug user is depicted as male.

But on a much less serious note, maybe women don't like to look lazy. . .

Perhaps the obstacle to female toking is a fear of looking lazy. Getting stoned is, in effect, a great way to relax. Men are allowed to be lazy--being stoned is part of their farting, pajama-wearing, video-game-playing pantheon of acceptable male relaxation techniques. Since Jeff Spicoli made his debut in 1982's Fast Times at Ridgemont High, and continuing into the entire oeuvre of director Judd Apatow (The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up), stonerdom is an accepted part of modern maleness. Their sloth is even kind of adorable.

But modern women are not allowed to be lazy, adorable stoners. Women have to go to college (which they're now doing at higher rates than men), and then get their careers going quickly, before their biological clocks run out. Then they have to have kids and take them to all of their activities. There is no time for women to be slovenly and relax--and if women do relax, it has to be at a gym.

I have never really thought about mainstream pot culture being sexist, I always thought about it as pretty corny, considering people of all different types smoke weed, not just middle class white dudes in California. But now that I do think about it, it does reproduce certain stereotypes.

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Tagged as: marijuana, culture, media, war on drugs, sexism, feminism, drugs

Samhita Mukhopadhyay is an editor for Feministing. She is also is the Training and Technology Coordinator at Youth Media Council.


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hmm
Posted by: Dboy on Aug 21, 2007 11:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My only question is, where do I find these pot-smoking hippy girls, and do they prefer Indica or Sativa? Heh

One trend I've noticed is that people seem to be smoking alot of weed while playing online first-person videogames, and have seen alot of "420" 's in player names.

Dboy

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I've had enough.
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Aug 21, 2007 12:45 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Enough "is "fill in the blank" a feminist act" articles.

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Sorry, this comment has been removed from the system.
Is having a vagina a feminist act?
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Aug 22, 2007 9:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is having a vagina a feminist act?

Gee.. I sure wish you folks were as quick to remove sexism against men as you are percieved sexism, which is actually resistence to the political commodification as well as belittling of feminism, against women.

If my name had been Jane Ludd.. would you have even thought about removing it???

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feminism in Grindhouse?
Posted by: MobileSucks on Aug 22, 2007 11:54 AM   
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Women in "Death Proof" smoked weed.

I myself dont know that it was a feminist act being depicted on screen there. If feminists say it's a feminist thing to do, and they get to define what feminism is, then getting stoned is feminist. I guess. Getting drunk would still really seem incorrect to apply the label feminist to (and other things along similar lines one can think of). Feminists do spend a lot of time arguing what it means to be a feminist, so you can imagine pro-weed feminists and anti-weed feminists, each passionately arguing if smoking a joint is feminist.

The movie was not a feminist movie, I think, but they do... well dont want to talk about the ending. But was that a feminist ending? No doubt not many alternet readers are interested to see Tarantino's latest movie that already havent. My two cents says it isnt a feminist ending, so much as an entertaining, really satisfying one that most people would enjoy.

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"420 Girls"
Posted by: MobileSucks on Aug 23, 2007 3:21 PM   
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Heard of this website 420girls.com. I think I saw something about it in one of those magazines like Maxim or something that I thumbed through while killing time at a bookstore. Anyway, that would be another example of women shown smoking marijuana. I cant say if it's "empowering" them. (I should say Im not particularly into that. Im neither pro nor con I suppose.)

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