Discussing Feminism

chimamanda ngozi adiche, ezra miller, feminism, http://schemas.google.com/blogger/2008/kind#post, intersectionalism, john legend, mark ruffalo, marvel, masculinity, tom hardy

This is going to be one heck of a truthful post. First, we must ask ourselves this. What, precisely, is feminism?
Take that ‘meninists’. 

As seen above, feminism is about the equality of sexes. 

Modern Day Feminism
In recent years, we’ve seen women and men stand together to advocate feminism. Until then, we’d seen men take a fearful approach towards it. Admittedly, I myself took an unsure stance towards feminism, believing the sole purpose of it (albeit an existent radical feminist approach) was that feminists wanted ‘world domination’ and that they were all angry and rude, a stereotype that I’ve now realised was offensive and harsh. In light of recent events, I’ve now noticed that feminism is so much more than that, and I see it’s true importance. Feminism is about allowing everybody to have the opportunity of free expression, to be able to live in a society where we’re all treated equally, a society where women will be paid and treated with the same respect that men are, because while the place of women in today’s society has considerably improved, there are still limitations. As a ‘man’ myself, I’ve still taken the time to look into society and notice that, in 2015, we still live in a patriarchal society. However, thanks to social media, feminists have been able to initiate a much more active form of feminism, with a considerable amount of young people involved.

Now, a large amount of feminists, notably on Twitter, identify themselves as ‘Intersectional Feminists’, while I didn’t understand this at first, I’m now hugely supportive of intersectionalism, a key reason being as follows;

The view that women experience oppression in varying configurations and
in varying degrees of intensity. Cultural patterns of oppression are
not only interrelated, but are bound together and influenced by
the intersectional systems of society. Examples of this
include race, gender, class, ability, and ethnicity.”

Masculinity
An important factor when discussing feminism is who you are, who you really are, in all forms. It helps with understanding gender inequality on both sides, myself being (at the time of writing) an 18 year-old, straight, white, working-class, male. Due to my lifestyle and my surroundings, I’m able to understand the oppression women face, but I’m also able to understand the struggle of masculinity. Here’s a rant I had a while back;

While I don’t want to undermine the oppression faced by women, we’re fortunate enough to understand that there is indeed oppression faced by the male gender, not to the extremes of female oppression, but it’s definitely there. The key factors in male oppression are sexuality, class, and age. As previously mentioned, being straight, assumingly working class and 18 (a ‘new’ adult so to speak), means that there are certain limitations in my character, or at least what is expected of me. I’m expected to like rugby and football, whereby in contrast I prefer comic books and film/TV, which somehow makes me less of a ‘man’ than people who prefer sports. Being raised in this situation, where people expected me to be obsessed with sports, I grew up understanding that there are different forms of masculinity, and unfortunately these are ranked to define how ‘manly’ you are. I would frequently get asked “are you a rugby player?”/”do you play football”, and I would reply “no, I prefer to play video games/write/etc” and would be asked “What? Are you a girl?”, which is hugely undermining of character.

We shouldn’t forget that men have the highest percentage of depression and suicide, we don’t talk to people about it because we’re expected to “not be as sensitive” or “man up”. We’re expected to hide our feelings in order to be a ‘man’, and that in itself is damaging. Within my ‘group of friends’, this struggle for masculinity would also occur. I would be asked “why do you have a tumblr account? I thought it was for girls”, “why do you like Marina and the Diamonds? You’re a man!”. I would witness others be asked similar things, but I would also, especially in my two years at sixth form, experience my ‘guy’ friends joke about rape and ‘how nice her tits are’. The new wave of feminism really does help the struggle of masculinity, it helps us understand the layered system of being a man, and it’s helping us understand feminism as a whole and the ever-going fight for gender equality and understanding. Fortunately, there are male celebrities who openly support feminism, which is hugely beneficial.

L-R; Ezra Miller, Tom Hardy and John Legend, three of the ever-growing list of male celebrity feminists.

With this in mind, I hope that with the progressive nature of new-feminism, us men are able to not only be happy within ourselves and have free expression, but also to understand the derogatory basis of female oppression, to truly understand that rape jokes are not okay and that consent is hugely important, the objectification of both men and women is something that needs to be changed. Challenging masculinity is why this is hugely important, if men can begin to understand how they internally oppress each other, and overtly oppress women, then we can help men who do not identify as feminists and gain their support in gaining an overall equality of gender.

Feminism in the media
Before starting this section, I’d like to identify my three feminist icons.

L-R; Virginia Woolf (author), Emma Watson, and Mark Ruffalo. 

As I mentioned before, I’m a huge comic book fan. We’re set to get two female-led superhero movies soon, Captain Marvel for, well, Marvel, and the iconic Wonder Woman for DC. It was recently announced that the gender gap in comic readers is narrowing, in fact, women have taken over men and are now the dominant gender in comic book readership.

(Source)

I thought it would be worthwhile pointing out some important female heroes in comic books, from the two dominant forces Marvel and DC Comics. These heroes are hugely important because they teach their readers that anyone can be a hero, no matter their gender, age, sexuality, race and, well, even species. Young girls are hardly ever encouraged in the same way young boys are, so these heroes are hugely important for these reasons.

L-R; Marvel’s Black Widow (a spy), Captain Marvel (a pilot) and She-Hulk (a lawyer)

L-R; DC’s Batgirl, Wonder Woman, Supergirl.

While we’re on the topic of female superheroes, we shouldn’t forget Miss America (America Chavez, an LGBT Latin-American superhero that leads the Young Avengers), Squirrel Girl (she defeated the top Marvel villains like Thanos (you know, that huge purple guy with the infinity gauntlet), and some heroes like Deadpool, with squirrels), Miss Martian, Magik, Zatanna, and Hawkgirl.

We also have some iconic feminist characters in the wonderful world of TV and film;

L-R; Princess Merida (Brave), Mindy Lahiri (The Mindy Project) and Imperator Furiosa (Mad Max)

The importance of such characters like Merida, Mindy and Furiosa is that they define this new wave of feminism in a way that promotes the idea of free expression within character. While characters like Merida and Furiosa are genuinely bad-ass heroes that don’t need no man, Mindy is a doctor that stands by her fellow women while being happy to fall in love. Feminism is about the equality of genders, and with this in mind, these characters promote the idea that you can do whatever you want to do and still be a feminist, because that’s what it’s about, the freedom to be yourself in an equal society.

I’d like to end with these two quotes from Mark Ruffalo (y’know, Hulk) and Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche (the hugely important feminist, the one that ‘woke up like dis’ in the Beyoncé song).

Hero

Thanks for reading, I hope you’ve read this and feel like you can fully support the feminist cause, no matter what your age, gender, sexuality, race or social class is.




Feminism is here to benefit everyone.




That’s all for now, feel free to share this post (it took me 4 rewrites to get it right), follow me on all my social media accounts if you’d like to!
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I’M BACK WITH A RANT AND SOME GEEKY GOODNESS

age of ultron, ant man, avengers, batman vs superman, beyoncé, cara delevingne, doctor who, feminism, gambit, harley quinn, http://schemas.google.com/blogger/2008/kind#post, maisie williams, masculinity, suicide squad
Before I start, here are a few pictures to create some hype.
Hello! Yes, I’m back. Bit of a change around here, Geek Culture and Me is now Totally Geek. I thought I’d change it around and has a hypothetical ‘rebranding’ of the blog. I noticed that I was writing more about things that weren’t essentially ‘geeky’, don’t fret – I’ll still be doing some super crazy posts about all things geeky, like Suicide Squad (HOW COOL DO MARGOT ROBBIE AND JARED LETO LOOK AS HARLEY QUINN AND THE JOKER WOAH) and Doctor Who (MAISIE WILLIAMS IN DOCTOR WHO WHAT WHAT WHAT). Basically, I’ve been away for a few months to focus on my exams, and this morning I finished my last exam Sociology (I had two Sociology exams, and just for reference I also took English Lit and Media). It seems that actually I have missed blogging, just because it’s a place for me to be myself in what seems to be a really idealised, constructed society (lol jk I’m just introverted). My gap year has begun, and with this comes more blog posts, some exciting prospects, and some fun travelling (as well as re-applying to University because I withdrew my application).
DISCLAIMER: FEEL FREE TO SKIP THIS WHOLE MASSIVE PARAGRAPH BECAUSE IT’S SIMPLY ABOUT HOW WE SHOULDN’T BE LABELLED IN SOCIETY AND HOW MUCH I SUPPORT FEMINSIM

Anyway, during the ‘intense’ revision period which mainly consisted of binge-watching TV shows, my bad, I found myself really immersed into music, I found that my guilty pleasures won’t really guilty pleasures, they were perhaps just pleasures. I must admit, and it is sad for me to do so, but I feel that there is a kind of social consensus that a (excuse me for being controversial here) white, straight, 17 year old cannot listen to certaint types of music without being laughed at. I mean, heck, screw that. If I want to listen to Beyoncé and Taylor Swift, or listen to Hillsong and songs from musicals, I’m going to do that because we shouldn’t let ourselves be defined by what seems to be this concept of ‘you’re not a man if you don’t behave like a man’, perhaps relating to Tony Porter’s ‘man box’, in which a man is expected to ‘not cry openly or express emotion – except anger’, ‘not express weakness or fear’, ‘be aggressive’, ‘heterosexual’, ‘views women as property/objects’. I find myself in this position, asking why a straight guy can’t listen to a truly respectable artist like Beyoncé, in the fear of being called ‘gay’, why is there this preconception that a straight guy cannot listen to music? I am comfortable enough in my sexuality to be myself and admit that sometimes, I like to listen to the Les Misérables soundtrack, but also admit that sometimes I like to watch action films and be immersed in the oh so ‘manly’ culture. When/If I marry in the very far future, I truly hope that my wife appreciates a quick dance to Taylor Swift’s Shake It Off like I do, there’s nothing wrong with being yourself and the fact that people’s association with such forms of entertainment being negative saddens me, even when reflecting on personal experience. I’ve noticed that with celebrity males, being straight and listening to Beyoncé etc is perfectly fine, however being an ordinary male, being straight and listening to Beyoncé results in people sniggering at you and thinking ‘is he sure?’. That’s sad, that’s depressing. Our society takes pride in taking interest in other people’s personal lives, and with this new wave of feminism that I totally support, which again is a kind of taboo with straight men (I know of only three other friends of mine who can openly admit they support feminism without the fear of being called ‘gay’), it still seems like there’s a division in gender, and a division in character. I believe in a future where a straight male like myself can listen to certain music without being laughed at because it’s ‘gay’ and ‘feminine’, I believe in a future where a straight woman gets a short haircut without being labelled a ‘lesbian’. I believe in a future where genders are treated equally, and we don’t have to hide behind a false mask in order to avoid being falsely labelled, because there is absolutely nothing wrong with being labelled as ‘gay’, ‘feminine’, ‘lesbian’ or ‘butch’, but it would be just as nice to be labelled as something true, to be labelled as ourselves. Self-identification is the future, not peer-identification. 
Anyway, rant over. I thought I’d continue with some fanboyish moments. 
How great was Avengers: Age of Ultron? I got to see it with a group of good friends for free because one of them worked at the cinema, and I found myself so involved in the film. So good! How great is Elizabeth Olsen as Scarlet Witch? Why did REVLISKCIUQ (SPOILERS read that backwards, unless you want to avoid spoilers) have to die?!?!?!?! The Vision is my new idol. 
Suicide Squad set pictures are fantastic, and the fan-art is just as good. How cool is this fan-art of Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn, it’s absolutely poster worthy! Interestingly, no set photos of Cara Dele-whatshername apart from the odd rare (one of her fully covered to avoid costume leak). I’m starting to wonder just what role The Enchantress will play in the DCU film. I think I’m more excited about Suicide Squad than Ant-Man and Batman V Superman, not really too hyped about such films like Gambit though, you get me? 
ANYWAY
In the next few days/weeks, I’ll be back in full force, posting reviews on the new Florence album, doing top 10 lists of live performances and songs from musicals but to name a few. I look forward to start blogging again. It’s fairly exciting! 
Thanks for reading, be sure to check out all my fancy little social media sites. Feel free to subscribe by email to be notified whenever a new blog post comes out! 
2. http://www.zap2it.com/blogs/ant-man_avengers_poster_tv_spot-2015-06
3. http://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/doctor-who-spoiler-watch-game-5633767
4. http://www.slashfilm.com/avengers-age-of-ultron-trailer-3/
5. http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/JoshWildingNewsAndReviews/news/?a=120122