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"Women Center Stage" Festival To Provide Some Much Needed Balance to Macho Media

By Don Hazen, AlterNet. Posted June 20, 2007.


This summer, at a time when the media is dominated by bombastic male voices, New York City's Culture Project's multidisciplined festival of women voices provides a welcome antidote.
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I'm pretty weary of macho male voices dominating the media, with men as the constant aggressive font of insider wisdom and analysis of all things political. The masculine overcompensation of the Bush era certainly has its parallel in media representation. Every where I turn, for example, I have to see, hear and read Christopher Hitchens, as one over exposed male media icon, among many.

Meanwhile radio shock jocks show no sign of lowering their voices. We don't have Don Imus anymore, but other equally egregious male talk jocks are still with us in large numbers. As one example, Rory O'Connor points out in "Michael Savage and Bill O'Reilly Must Go" that Savage, reportedly on 350 stations with 8 million listeners weekly, again went off on one of his regular diatribes calling gay parenting "child abuse."

Another macho prototype, CNN's Lou Dobbs, the king of immigration intolerance, has for more than four years spread one-sided -- and in some cases outright false -- information to attack undocumented migrants. Most recently Dobbs promoted lies about immigrant leprosy cases.

I take offense to the one-sided tone of much of the media because it is not good for my health or the health of our society. It deprives me of the balance that feels necessary for sanity and equilibrium.

I subscribe to the fundamental tenant of Gestalt therapist Fritz Perls, who understood our psychological makeup in terms of polarities -- e.g., masculine and feminine or "tough and tender." We achieve mental health by reconciling these polarities, not by pretending that men have only one side and women the other, or by men projecting all their softness and vulnerability onto women.

This notion of balance -- yin and yang, if you want to use the Chinese version -- has been with us for centuries and we ignore it at our peril. Today, four-plus years after 9/11, we live in a paranoid, overly militarized society where macho maniacs like Rudy Giuliani are considered serious contenders for the presidency. Giuliani gets in touch with his feminine side when he dresses in drag for a skit but ignores it the rest of the time, while fanning the flames of fear as he campaigns for president.

So it makes me happy, as well as conflicted, to tell you about Women Center Stage -- a festival created by the young singer and political activist Olivia Greer through the infrastructure of the Cultural Project, one of NYC's true artistic treasures, whose aim is to harness artistic inspiration for the purpose of social change. The festival uniquely weaves together the relatively rare combination of women's political voices with a diverse range of artistic talents. (Disclosure: Olivia once worked for me as an intern, and her parents are good friends of mine.)

I'm happy at the prospect of the festival because it is exciting to know that strong and charismatic women are gathering and their talents are being showcased. I'm conflicted because the seeming gender specific nature of the festival may make it too easy for men to dismiss or marginalize the ideas and talent being presented or not see it as a place where we belong in the audience. I hope that is not true and the Festival finds many curious men in the audience.


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See more stories tagged with: gender, masculinity, femininity, media, women center stage

Don Hazen is the executive editor of AlterNet.

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What's the point of this article?
Posted by: Poe on Jun 20, 2007 4:27 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is this about women not having a voice in the media, or is this an article about a particular group of women that just want to create another feel-good artistic movement? Women have plenty of voices in the media in this country, even obnoxious, although I don't think women wear that one too well. Some pretty powerful women in the media,(Barbara, Katie, Oprah, Martha) and women are starting to make their mark in the political arena.( Condi, Hillary)

How wonderful...there's something for men...."insights" no less, on human trafficking and domestic violence. Of course. Because its widely known that all men have the human trafficking and domestic violence gene in them.
I'm thinking, that any man involved in human trafficking or has a history of domestic violence, won't be attending the Women Center Stage festival.

Poe

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Gender as polarity? or hierarchy...?
Posted by: frosty86 on Jun 20, 2007 4:49 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"I subscribe to the fundamental tenant of Gestalt therapist Fritz Perls, who understood our psychological makeup in terms of polarities -- e.g., masculine and feminine..."

Hmm, suggesting that gender's masculinity and femininity are simply equally valid opposites is dangerous. It masks the inherently unequal power relationships between the two. Male dominance. And as Denise Thompson put it, "Male dominance does not mean what one writer referred to as 'unrelenting male drives for dominance and mastery' (Hawkesworth, 1989: 543). It does not mean that all men are invariably the passive, peaceable victims of a male will to power. It is a social system, a matter of meanings and values, practices and institutions."

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» Unequal power relationships Posted by: suprmark
Boycott all Cock-Based Media!
Posted by: Amynda M. on Jun 20, 2007 6:28 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I, too, tire of the negative male energy of our yammering so-called "media culture." I turn-on the tv, and what to I see? Talking penis-havers, always talking talking talking about their penises.

"My penis is bigger"

"No, MY penis is bigger."

Thank Goddess there's an alternative: fanciful, whimsical womyn who provide us with a safe-space to talk about our mystical female energies which permeate the sun, moon, stars and menstrual blood through which we womyn are bound to the fabric of existence.

Like a breath of fresh air.

My only objection is the author's use of yin and yang when everyone knows that the yang is based on destruction and RAPE while yin is based on peace and light.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» You are freakin' nuts, lady. Posted by: Illiteratilumen
» RE: Boycott all Cock-Based Media! Posted by: Blue Heron
» Talking Posted by: suprmark
» RE: Talking Posted by: Solar Wind
» RE: Talking Posted by: suprmark
Don't need a festival!
Posted by: wawa on Jun 20, 2007 6:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Real women reporters don't need a a petting and purring festival to bring in some balance!

And the Yin and the Yang of Anarchy will birth that balance:

Anarchy is BEST understood as Rebellion against UNJUST laws.

The Yang, or male positive force of anarchy resists authority and causes disorder and is socially and politically incorrect by the norms of the status quo for it seeks the higher ground of JUSTICE.

The Yin or feminine passive force of anarchy births a new order out of the chaos and

Chaos is creativity in action...


This eco-feminist, agitator of church, state and limp media has traveled on her own dime to Occupied Palestine four times in the last two years and I am heading back for a 5th to do what the USA media has failed so miserably at:

Bearing witness and reporting on the good works of Anarchists Against the Wall, Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions, and SABEEL: which translates to THE WAY in Arabic and is all about Liberation Theology, which is the opposite of what John Hagee and Hal Lindsay promote.

Balance can only come when the old order is overthrown, and corporate controlled media is yesterday's news.

After THAT DAY we call 9/11, Civilian Journalists filled a vacumn by asking hard questions and seeking the truth, all because the limp MSM chose to become lap dogs and take down dictation from this Administration.

Civilian Journalists follow their hearts and we do NOT take orders from editors or paychecks from conglomerates.


Festivals are great if you seek an ego trip;

Actually reporting takes guts!

Eileen Fleming,
Author "Memoirs of a Nice Irish-American 'Girl's' Life in Occupied Territory
Reporter and Editor WAWA
Producer "30 Minutes with Vanunu" FREELY STREAMING on
http://www.wearewideawake.org/

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Was this comic relief? Ooooooh, those dirty widdle bombastic Y chromosomes!
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Jun 20, 2007 8:33 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I subscribe to the fundamental tenant of Gestalt therapist Fritz Perls, who understood our psychological makeup in terms of polarities -- e.g., masculine and feminine or "tough and tender."

Oh my chuckles, I guess that answers my question handily. With respect to the festival in question, no doubt there will be talented people showcasing their wares. If they separate themselves from the rest of the pack by being exceptional, then they'll no doubt enjoy success, and I wish them all the best of luck. Surely the same thing will apply to the next ManFest, as well. Odd that certain contingents put so much weight on what sorts of naughty bits their neighbor sports, though, isn't it? Especially with regard to something that ought to have a broad audience (no pun, I promise).

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Damn!
Posted by: MartianBachelor on Jun 20, 2007 9:46 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm already signed up for the National Men’s Equality Congress on 7/14... Can someone post a link to a recording of Samantha Powers presentation, please?

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» RE: Damn! Posted by: frosty86
I think thats a good point
Posted by: dealmeinfo2 on Jun 20, 2007 2:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is generally a good article, enjoyed it. THanks

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A quibble
Posted by: susanhathaway on Jun 20, 2007 3:33 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a minor point in the article, but you state that "Giuliani gets in touch with his feminine side when he dresses in drag for a skit ..." Actually, getting laughs by putting on a dress is a time-honored macho way to get points for being a "regular guy" who can laugh at himself--because, of course, it's ludicrous to think that anyone who wears a dress could ever be taken seriously.

Like everything Giuliani does (or, for that matter, everything just about all of the presidential candidates do), it's not about getting in touch with any side of himself; it's just shallow, empty posturing.

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» RE: A quibble Posted by: fork