PostAndRape

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 1 April 2013

I Make A Mean Pesto And Know How To Iron A Man's Shirt

Posted on 13:12 by Unknown

Don't forget to put that in my obituary, should I ever evaporate.  Don't mention that I don't iron.

All this is because of a New York Times obituary for Yvonne Brill, a rocket scientist.  It initially began like this:
She made a mean beef stroganoff, followed her husband from job to job and took eight years off from work to raise three children. “The world’s best mom,” her son Matthew said.
After many complaints, the lede was changed into this:
She was a brilliant rocket scientist who followed her husband from job to job and took eight years off from work to raise three children. “The world’s best mom,” her son Matthew said.
 The obituary then continues:
Yvonne Brill, who died on Wednesday at 88 in Princeton, N.J., in the early 1970s invented a propulsion system to help keep communications satellites from slipping out of their orbits.
The system became the industry standard, and it was the achievement President Obama mentioned in 2011 in presenting her with the National Medal of Technology and Innovation.
Her personal and professional balancing act also won notice. In 1980, Harper’s Bazaar magazine and the DeBeers Corporation gave her their Diamond Superwoman award for returning to a successful career after starting a family.
Mrs. Brill — she preferred to be called Mrs., her son said — is believed to have been the only woman in the United States who was actually doing rocket science in the mid-1940s, when she worked on the first designs for an American satellite.
So weird.  The obvious interpretation of all that is to reassure people that Yvonne Brill may have been a rocket scientist, but don't worry.  She put her family first and cooked, too.  She was still a woman.

And that's how most of the criticism goes.  It is deserved, I believe, but I don't think the writer necessarily intended to write such an obituary.  This is because the little shock caused by the first and second paragraph has some literary merit:  You lead the reader in one direction and then flip her or him over and present something quite different.  That way the "different" will stick to your mind.

Where it failed is in the invisibility of how women are viewed in general, and that's how it became ripe material for those reversals the Salon article posts.  Something that would have worked for the obituary of a generic Great Man (pick a hobby, such as fly fishing, to begin with, say)  does NOT work for the obituary of a generic Great Woman, because of the gender role schema.   Women are expected to cook and expected to be great mothers if they have children.  Women are not expected to be rocket scientist.

I'm trying to think how Einstein's obituary would have read had we started with what kind of a father he was. Hmm.
----
Added later:  This post supports my guess that the transition was intended as something different:
“I’m surprised,” he said. “It never occurred to us that this would be read as sexist.” He said it was important for obituaries to put people in the context of their time and that this well-written obituary did that effectively. He also observed that the references in the first paragraph to cooking and being a mother served as an effective set-up for the “aha” of the second paragraph, which revealed that Mrs. Brill was an important scientist.
But his surprise was because of that invisibility of the way female researchers are traditionally regarded.  








Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Do Not Be Afraid Of Life. Echidne's Poetry Hour.
    A musical adaptation of Kaarlo Sarkia 's poem: A rough translation of the lyrics (by me and without the rhyme): Do not be afraid of lif...
  • Speed Blogging, Monday August 12, 20013: On Media, Fracking, Gender and Death Panels.
    Today's funny cartoon .  As you may note, I'm still frustrated about the collapsed anthill aspect of public debate. But it's ...
  • Speed Blogging, Mon 9/16/2013: On Women
    Note:  Not all these are from the last few days. First , the Taliban in Afghanistan is waging a physical war against women in the public sec...
  • A Meta-Post On Income Inequality
    Or utterly weird.  You decide.  This post is based on some pictures I have on my desktop and my desire to randomly pick two of them and writ...
  • Yellen vs. Summers As A Metaphor
    Atrios posted on the nomination of the next chief of Federal Reserve.  The forerunners have been defined as Lawrence Summers and Janet Yelle...
  • Speed Blogging, Fri Sep 6, 2013: On Exclusion, Reproduction, Legos and Elections.
    1.  Worth reading:  How Women's Voices Were Excluded from the March on Washington.  This is not uncommon in any social justice movement...
  • Polling Conspiracies
    I once wrote a bad poem about Conspiracy Theories.  It began like this: There are five fat men in a secret  cave somewhere. They are naked. ...
  • Never Thin Enough? Thoughts About What We Can Sell in the Labor Market.
    Content Warning:  Body Images and Anorexia Joan Smith in the UK Independent reviews The Vogue Factor , a book about the eating requirements...
  • On Pax Dickinson. And A Little on James Taranto.
    Here's where I go wrong.  Dickinson was, until today, working for the Business Insider.  He is pretty well known as an eager anti-femini...
  • Speed-Blogging, June 27, 2013
    First, American Apparel advertises its unisex shirts rather interestingly.   Several photo series show women with bare bottoms.  Those wome...

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (365)
    • ►  September (20)
    • ►  August (34)
    • ►  July (35)
    • ►  June (44)
    • ►  May (69)
    • ▼  April (39)
      • Time Is Running Out For Beatriz
      • Why Are Women So Mean?
      • Teaching Good Work Habits?
      • The UConn New Husky Logo Meme
      • Wikipedia and Women Novelists
      • Today's Action Alert: Save Beatriz' Life
      • But That's Different! On the Horror of Air Traffi...
      • Today's Action Alerts
      • The Bitch From Hell?
      • Yardwork
      • The Reinhart-Rogoff Paper And Steven Colbert
      • Meet James Taranto
      • Gender Similarity Studies
      • A Criminal Vs. An Enemy Combatant. Words Have Con...
      • The Shame Of Dressing in Women's Clothes
      • Dog-Sitting...
      • What Should Be Written
      • Today's Research Snack
      • Pope Francis And the Uppity Nuns of America
      • The Ghouls
      • On the Boston Marathon Bombs
      • Risotto
      • The She's-A-Slut Culture
      • The Capitalists' Flexibility Act of 2013
      • Never Thin Enough? Thoughts About What We Can Sel...
      • Balancing The Federal Budget on the Backs of the S...
      • The Most Glamorous Outfit For This Blog
      • Echidne Finally Leans In. On Sheryl Sandberg's book.
      • Art Post, Sort of
      • Margaret Thatcher
      • The Hottest President of the United States of America
      • Sunday Political Shows and Diversity
      • Meet Professor Steven Landsburg. Rape and Intelle...
      • Stuff To Read on Women And Girls
      • On the Texas Prosecutor Murders
      • Missives From The LIzard People. Or on the Nation...
      • Woman's nudity may have led to man's death
      • An April Fool's Post
      • I Make A Mean Pesto And Know How To Iron A Man's S...
    • ►  March (39)
    • ►  February (41)
    • ►  January (44)
  • ►  2012 (135)
    • ►  December (41)
    • ►  November (37)
    • ►  October (54)
    • ►  September (3)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile