Misandry is the messageA Canadian columnist lifts the lid on the last respectable form of cultural bias.
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| Generally speaking, men are portrayed as objects of scorn, objects of wrath or disparecidos -- that is to say, they are often not treated at all. |
The image represents a half-truth and therefore a lie. The truth, established by all credible, peer-reviewed research, including our official number cruncher StatsCan, is that unprovoked intimate-partner violence is about equally split between men and women. Imagine another picture based on a half-truth: a woman on one side of the sofa, a man protecting children or even his aged mother on the other -- because women abuse the elderly and their children more frequently than men do. You never will see such an ad. Media bias against men is as notable for what you don’t see and hear as for what you do.
(And speaking of what you don’t see or hear, when was the last time you saw a public service ad around the alarmingly elevated statistics for male suicides (up 81 per cent), especially those involved in acrimonious custody disputes? We’re inundated with breast cancer ads; when do we see ads about prostate cancer? And if 94 per cent of work-related deaths happened to women rather than to men, I think more of us would be familiar with that shocking statistic.)
Except for radio talk shows, where real people with no ideological axe to grind control the agenda, misandry is ubiquitous in the media – and by media I mean all kinds: advertisements, sitcoms, films, political ads, TV talk shows, social service agency websites and billboards, and of course the punditocracy.
But it flies beneath most people’s radar, which is another way of saying that misandry is such an acceptable form of cultural bias – the last respectable form of cultural bias – that people are unaware of it when they hear it, read it, or see it.
White, heterosexual men
We live in an age in which the media are scrupulously rigorous in self-censoring when it comes to the terrible social crime of offending women, gays, people of colour and natives. Only one identifiable group – white heterosexual men (if they’re Christian, so much the better) – is considered fair game for overt collective prejudice.
Identifying active misandry is easy. One has only to imagine the same words, image or falsehood or failure to report attached to any other identifiable group, and the imbalance becomes clear.
Here for example, is mainstream writer Nora Ephron, ironically a revered romantic comedy writer (she scripted When Harry met Sally, and Sleepless in Seattle), in a recent post on the Huffington Post blog regarding the American political primaries:
“This is an election about whether the people of Pennsylvania hate blacks more than they hate women. And when I say people, I don’t mean people, I mean white men…the outcome of the general election will depend on whether enough of them vote for McCain. A lot of them will: white men cannot be relied on, as all of us know who have spent a lifetime dating them…” It goes on in this vein.
Her claim is absurd. Blacks and blue-collar white women vote as bloc-ishly as white men, so why the anger at white men? It’s unseemly, and yet it went completely unremarked. Apply the same words to black men or women and watch the sparks fly. Of course no mainstream writer would ever say these things of blacks or women. They know better.
As a print journalist, my particular interest is my own peer group, many of whom echo Ephron’s gratuitous contempt for men. While most male writers take up journalism because they are news or political junkies, a good many women journalists have entered the field specifically as women with a feminist axe to grind.
That’s not quite the same as spreading a conservative or liberal or libertarian message, where you attack a line of thinking, not actual people. Urging feminism on readers and viewers is tantamount to spreading misandry, for feminism as it is ideologically conceived and played out in society today evokes zero-sum thinking and the conspiracy-theory temptation. When women succeed, it is because they are superior; when they fail, it is because they have been thwarted by men.
Male writers who try to defend men from anti-male bias or who criticize feminist ideology find it a very impolitic career move if they are not already well established. I personally know two excellent male writers, probably Canada’s most under-utilized researchers, who can’t get a media foothold because they critique feminism.
Male desaparecidos
Once you decide to take conscious notice of the problem, media bias in a myriad of forms leaps out at you. Positive images of women are ubiquitous; positive images of manly men are uncommon. Generally speaking, men are portrayed as objects of scorn, objects of wrath or desaparecidos -- that is to say, they are often not treated at all.
The cumulative message is that if men try hard to meet criteria established by women as lovers, husbands and fathers, they can hope to achieve status as contributors to women’s and children’s happiness, though on the whole they are unnecessary to it.
But all too often they are portrayed as active agents of women’s and children’s unhappiness. Women who rid themselves of these bad eggs are portrayed as heroic. Promiscuous women in TV sitcoms like Sex and the City present as warm, loyal and liberated. The promiscuous men in these stories are depicted as shallow, untrustworthy and opportunistic.
When men are characterized as heroic fathers in films, it is usually because the woman has fled the scene or died, a paradigm that debuted with the 1979 film, Kramer vs Kramer. Men are only allowed to present as good parents when they are desperately trying to fill the shoes of a mother. It is a role they must learn. In movies with couples, it is rare for the father’s parenting skills to outshine the mother’s, whose commitment and skills are presented as inherent.
The past few years have seen a spate of “baby” movies: Juno, Waitress, Knocked Up, Baby Mama, Then She Found Me. All have in common career women challenged by fertility issues or inconvenient pregnancies they choose not to terminate. In every case the elective mother may have foibles, but she is on the whole mature, smart and responsible.
The men are undesirable parent material, lumps of animated clay to be tossed away, or spun and shaped by a woman potter into a domestically useful artefact. These potential or accidental fathers range from the merely wimpy, to infantile, to explicitly abusive. None of the films express reservations about a child’s future with no father.
Anger and violence
The most disturbing aspects of media misandry revolve around the issues of anger and violence. Domestic violence is -- apart from custody -- the hottest of the hot button issues for demonisers and myth busters alike.
The message that male anger is a problem, while female anger isn’t, ends in overt publicity campaigns like the divided-family ad I mentioned at the outset. But it begins in a common stereotype, pervasive in the media, of female anger as cute, inconsequential and victimless.
For example, a current TV ad promoting a stop-smoking aid features a flight attendant in the throes of nicotine withdrawal. A series of vignettes shows her screaming at male passengers for no reason, snarling and sobbing over the public address system and in general acting hysterically and irrationally.
The choice of setting -- an airplane -- is no accident. On airplanes and in airports in general, "civilians" are at the mercy of officials and airline personnel, who wield absolute power over passengers. There is no recourse for unfair treatment. The male passengers subjected to her tirades shrink away in bewildered acquiescence. Their “wussy” reaction is played for humour, but in fact their fear of her is rational. There is nothing funny about being arbitrarily thrown off an airplane.
But far from critiquing this woman's egregious misuse of her power, the ad makes light of it. In the end, once the nicotine remedy begins to work, she is sheepishly laughing at herself.
One cannot possibly imagine an ad in which a male flight attendant harangues and menaces a female passenger. Indeed, that would be considered a form of sexual assault under today's feminist- inspired governmental guidelines.
The message here is that when women humiliate and threaten men as a side effect of personal "issues", men can just suck it up, since their right to respectful treatment is always subject to women's discretion and situational needs.
Casually misandric ads like this can be found at one end of the spectrum. The other end is more socially and culturally consequential.
With the media’s facilitation, an entire industry has been built on the Montreal Massacre, a tragedy – unlike male gendercides, which frequently occur in war – that has no historical precedent or sequel. The weeks before every December 6th anniversary produce a media orgy around domestic violence against women, with Marc Lepine, who was a solitary sociopath, touted as a mere exaggeration of typical male drives.
Conversely the media treatment of Remembrance Day, the one day a year feminists tacitly lay off men, no longer celebrates the specifically manly trait of physical courage. If you’ll notice, Remembrance Day now is played out in gender-neutral programming, with combat/non-combat lines blurred to equalize the contributions of men and women.
Gays excused
While the plight of abused heterosexual men is ignored in the media, whatever afflicts gay men is instantly picked up on. When StatsCan released figures last month indicating intimate-partner violence was disproportionately high amongst gay and lesbian couples, the Globe and Mail immediately commissioned a feature article – “A Skeleton that’s Still in the Closet”.
The violence scenarios described in the selected gay-couple examples are exactly the same as those in straight couples, reinforcing objective research which finds that partner violence is gender-neutral, a function of individual pathology. Yet, unlike hetero male violence, for which no explanation other than an inherent urge to control women is ever offered, this article falls over itself finding reasons to excuse violent behaviour by gays.
In their treatment of men, a lazy perpetuation of falsehoods, an incurious acceptance of bogus studies and statistics, and an eager willingness to recycle superannuated stereotypes constitute the present media template.
I began with mention of the Ontario Human Rights Code. I will end with it as the central motif of a seemingly trivial but memorable example of misandry that was brought to my attention by an extremely vigilant reader.
Ninety-nine per cent of funded social services in Canada, even those advertising “family services”, provide counseling and other forms of help only to women victims of domestic violence. Here is how the Crouch Neighbourhood Resource Centre in London, Ontario provided itself with the moral high ground for refusing funded psychiatric help to men in crisis:
From their website last Fall: We at Crouch want to ensure that all our programming [is] accessible to all. The Ontario Human Rights Code states in section i: Every person has a right to equal treatment with respect to services, goods and facilities without discrimination because of race, age, ancestry, place of origin, colour, ethnic origin, citizenship, creed, sexual orientation, age, record of offences, marital status, same-sex partnership, family status or disability.
Sounds official, eh? But in the actual Ontario Human Rights Code, between the words creed and sexual orientation is the word sex. Its omission was no accident. To accommodate an ideological bias, this website deliberately falsified the Ontario Human Rights Code.
The excision of those three letters was, for me, in its Orwellian implications, the most chilling of all examples of media misandry.
Barbara Kay writes for the National Post, a leading Canadian daily.
Comments (118)
Adebowale Oriku said...Again, thank you Barbara. The situation is no better in the UK here. Police Stations are strewn with pamphlets and flyers imploring women to come forward to report abusive husbands. There are up to a dozen different prints of this highly-biased genre of inverted sexism. Not once have I wondered what the Police want men living with abusive wives or partners to do.
Although there are rather recent and tokenist bodies that are supposed to cater to men under pressure, these are nothing but equality-driven afterthoughts.
There are often newsflashes of how a woman (and a wife) is prone to be killed by abusive and violent man or husband, and there is nothing about how a lot of men are damaged by abusive, I’ll-wear-the-trousers-at-all-costs sort of women - and the vindictive divorced women who flout court orders and will not allow men access to their children.
In the last month, two such bereft fathers have taken their lives and those of the poor children the wives were using as pawns.
United Kingdom | Saturday, 17 May 2008 at 4:14 am
Javier said...well, all that I read also happens in Spain. Laws are hardest for men!
These days there is a controversial in the media as the helper of a jugde said (as a joke) “everybody thought once to kill her wife”. Now the case is on all media and asking for his resignation. I am sure the if a woman says “everybody thought once to kill his husband” nothing would happend!.
I agree, misandry again white men is increasing in a no fair way. We have no word in divorce, abortion. Men only have duties, no rights!
Spain | Sunday, 18 May 2008 at 12:43 am
Michel Dion said...Thank you Barbara for putting in words and illustrating with eye opening examples what I have been feeling for a number of years now.
I would like to add to those well chosen examles, one simple gesture shown on TV and in films in numerous occasions: a woman slaps a man in the face because she desagrees with what he said or has done. This is always portrayed as a scornful but affectionate gesture followed by a smile and an explanation of why what the poor guy did was wrong. The last time I saw it on TV was even worst because it was in a reality show called “Jon & Kate Plus 8”. Jon says something Kate doesn’t like and she slaps him in the face. He reacts by showing she hurt him and kate tells him not to react like this because moaning men is a turnoff for women.
Michel Dion
Canada | Sunday, 18 May 2008 at 1:16 am
Kevin J Jones said...“The men are undesirable parent material, lumps of animated clay to be tossed away, or spun and shaped by a woman potter into a domestically useful artefact.”
In Juno, the problem was that the man in the prospective adoptive couple had more in common with a teenage girl than his wife. I think this was a much-needed slam against certain males’ immaturity, rather than a slam against men as a whole.
Though I’ve never watched more than 10 minutes of the show, I suspect men in Sex and the City are depicted as shallow in part because of the writers’ personal dispositions as gay men.
United States | Sunday, 18 May 2008 at 3:41 am
Katherine Clyde said...I repeatedly hear about remanding sexophaths abused, or gay, or straight to psychiatrists. I think this should be altered because of the status of psychiatric treatment. Even Christian psychiatry is in sad shape and all of this for a long time, and should not be part of a requirement for government services.
United States | Sunday, 18 May 2008 at 3:44 am
Rick said...Wow, what a wonderful and timely piece. In flipping through the channels before bed last night, my wife and I stopped on one channel. Later I stated there were two commercials during the break that depicted the man as ignorant and the woman as “perfect.” My wife did not see the bias! I understood then, awareness of this issue depends on your position. You can see the bias clearly if you are the victim, or if you have been informed - such as through this article.
Good iformation? Yes
Timely? Certainly
United States | Sunday, 18 May 2008 at 10:16 am
Tom said...It’s amazing to me the number of people responding to this post who actually sit and watch television. My wife and gave that up long ago (like when we married nearly 23 years ago) and have restricted ourselves to carefully selected videos and DVDs. Still, even with this limited media input, there is the attitude present....
United States | Sunday, 18 May 2008 at 12:38 pm
Okey said...I knew for some time this was an American problem, I never realized it is a world wide problem. I have noticed several articles and sites on this topic lately. Is there anyway it can be united for strength? I remember society trying to brainwash me growing up. I thought why is the belief that men are to be regarded as less equal and hatred and oppression is acceptable? No surprise then that male suicide has sky rocketed. It seems that even men (before they become victims) buy into the misandrist view. This is a real tradgedy and a real problem. Thanks for this site.
United States | Sunday, 18 May 2008 at 1:00 pm
P. Stocker said...Thanks for the excellent artical. I have encountered this attitude of what my dad bluntly calls “man-haters” - almost everywhere I have worked.
I have a theory: Before marriage there is promiscuity. The focus is not on communication as it should be - it is on sex. This countinues into marriage, which in many cases turns bad - why? because that basis of communiction is not there. With these failed marriages or relationships, there is a bad attitude of women towards men, while in many cases these same women have made the wrong choices and opened themselves to precisely this kind of abuse.
These women are poor choosers. They have gone about finding a “mate” in all the wrong ways. This is a common enough phenonmenon and is made worse by Woman’s Studies courses that teach that men are inherently violent. This is also a balancing of past failings of men, but has gone to the other extreme of misandry - which is as bad as the previous situation of men not respecting women as they should have.
-- | Sunday, 18 May 2008 at 2:00 pm
Monique David said...Very interesting piece and so true. Last week i was in one of those big warehouse clothing stores and one their announcements was the following: if you are a woman, you are a potential victim of sexual assault; protect yourself and your children. Donate $ for (fill the name of the store) in their fight towards sexual agression.
If i had not read the previous piece written by you on the topic, i am not sure i would have detected this bias. Thanks for the awareness!
Canada | Monday, 19 May 2008 at 12:19 am
Tim Roberts said...While sympathetic to the general tenor of the article, I’m not totally convinced by the final example. It would be very easy to miss out ‘sex’ when the next word is ‘sexual’. Are you sure it was deliberate distortion rather than simply poor proofreading?
United Kingdom | Monday, 19 May 2008 at 7:34 am
Fr Seán Coyle said...Reading through this excellent article I presumed it was written by a man. I hadn’t noticed Barbara Kay’s name at the top. Perhaps my presumption proves Barbara’s point, at least to some degree.
Philippines | Monday, 19 May 2008 at 8:22 pm
Michel Dion said...In response to Tim Roberts assumption that the omission of the word “sex” was the result of poor proofreading, I wanted to send the Crouch Neighbourhood Resource Centre an e-mail to inform them of this thread and ask if they could make the correction to see how they react. Unfortunately their Web site is under re-construction and I could not find their e-mail address. So I guess we will never know.
Having said that, even if this omission was the result of an unfortunate and honest mistake, I believe what is most important is the fact provided by Barbara: “Ninety-nine per cent of funded social services in Canada, even those advertising “family services”, provide counseling and other forms of help only to women victims of domestic violence.”. A fact that strongly supports her point.
Canada | Monday, 19 May 2008 at 11:58 pm
Okey said...I’d like to add something, A second thing popped up in my memory that I observed throughout my life time. Men buy into the deception, or Chivalrous truth, whichever you prefer; that a woman cannot be misandric. Therefore any man who claims to be hurt by a woman is not really a man. He must be a mama’s boy or worse. That men are strong and there’s no such thing as a female being abusive toward boys or men etc. What an ignorant and arrogant belief. I guess that’s why unless one has become a victim he can’t or refuses to believe in the crimes committed against men. That it may exist but it is so rare that extremely few men need be concerned with it. I heard all these “reasonings” through out my life.
United States | Tuesday, 20 May 2008 at 6:52 am
Barbara Kay said...In response to Tim Roberts:
Yes, I am sure the word “sex” was deliberately left out of the ad because I called the Crouch centre and brought it to their attention. They admitted the ad was conceived so as to leave out the word, because they had no intention of offering psychiatric help to men in distress. I threatened to write a column about it and in a few days it disappeared. So it was indeed deliberate and because it distorted an actual legal document, I found the duplicity and the conscious mendacity involved particularly disturbing.
Canada | Tuesday, 20 May 2008 at 6:58 am
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