Taamar wrote:
Misogyny is
1) The act of ascribing to women as a group, rather than as specific individuals some undesirable characteristic.
2) The contempt or hatred of women.
Can you cite a source for this? Wikipedia and the dictionary do not include your first definition.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/misogynyQuote:
mi·sog·y·ny
/mɪˈsɒdʒəni, maɪ-/ Show Spelled[mi-soj-uh-nee, mahy-] Show IPA
–noun
hatred, dislike, or mistrust of women.
http://mw1.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/misogynyQuote:
Main Entry: mi·sog·y·ny
Pronunciation: \mə-ˈsä-jə-nē\
Function: noun
Etymology: Greek misogynia, from misein to hate + gynē woman — more at queen
Date: circa 1656
: a hatred of women
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MisogynyQuote:
Misogyny (pronounced /mɪˈsɒdʒɪni/) is hatred (or contempt) of women or girls
You are ascribing a definition to misogyny that it does not have.
Proper usage for your first definition would be perhaps bigotry or prejudice. While of course both are undesirable character traits, neither uses the loaded language of "misogyny." As such, choosing to use such a loaded phrase, particularly for uses it is not traditionally defined as containing, is itself a telling thing.
Without a source, let's look instead at your cases from the thread using only the proper definition:
Taamar wrote:
CASE: most women are lying whores
Does it classify women as a group? YES
Does it ascribe an undesirable characteristic? YES
Does it display hatred or contempt? YES
One could disagree with your first assessment and your final. More important is the latter. What about this shows "hatred or contempt?" That's the true issue for misogyny. It is clearly a prejudiced statement, but whether it is hateful or contemptuous is a matter of context. I may or may not agree that it does show those things, but the fact is that your final line should be a "maybe," not a "yes."
Quote:
CASE: women put their drama on you
Does it classify women as a group? YES
Does it ascribe an undesirable characteristic? YES
Does it display hatred or contempt? YES
In this case one could disagree with your second and final assessment. Again, is "putting drama on you" undesirable? Without further context we don't know. Furthermore, the final assessment is the only one that would convey misogyny, and again that would be subjective. It should again be "maybe."
Quote:
CASE: The anger isn't even with women, it's with myself, but it's easier to project it on to women than to feel like **** all the time. If it makes me feel a little bit better, what do I care if some women are insulted?
Does it classify women as a group? YES (as his target)
Does it ascribe an undesirable characteristic? YES (people who's feelings don't matter)
Does it display hatred or contempt? YES
Interestingly, on this one I'd say that you're not only stretching for your first two assessments, but in fact are simply straining too hard and the assessments aren't applicable. However, given that the final assessment (again, the only one that really matters for misogyny) is one on which most anyone would firmly agree, this is certainly a misogynist statement. Is it prejudicial though (the first two assessments)? I don't believe it is.
Taamar wrote:
Feel free to go through the Glade and find for me examples of women saying things about men that pass all three tests.
Again, given that your first "two tests" are irrelevant, I could probably easily find almost as many statements of misandry as I could of misogyny: nearly none.
See, this was my core point, and thank you for finding one from this thread by the way: truly misogynist statements are incredibly hard to find because attitudes like that are certainly not the mainstream. Prejudicial or bigoted statements, on the other hand, could still be found relatively easily
on both sides.
Now, before you (or anyone) tries to hand-wave this away as semantics, let's consider the importance of language, particularly loaded language to assassinate one's character. Is it more harmful for someone to be branded as racist or prejudiced? Neither is desired as a character trait, but the weight of racism is more heavy than that of prejudice. The same is true of misogyny.
But why? Well, for one thing we're all prejudiced. We may not like it, or even admit to it, but we are. It's Khross's oft-cited "otherization." We group people who are not like ourselves, and become prejudiced against them, lumping them into groups and assigned them stereotypes. Is "otherization" wrong? Insofar as it is natural, I don't believe it is, provided we can be self-aware enough to know when we're doing it. If we know we're doing it, we can work to compensate for the bias it generates.
But why is that "better" (for lack of a more appropriate word) than racist or misogynist? Well, for one thing, we all have a mother or a sister or aunt or daughter. The idea that we'd hold them as less than ourselves
exclusively due to their sexual organs is relatively abhorrent to non-deviant individuals. The same is relatively true of race, because in modern America we are all likely to have some relative of alternate or mixed ethnicity, or to be of mixed ethnicity ourselves. So again, these words of misogyny and racism hold much more weight than "prejudice" or perhaps even than "bigotry."
Given that, it is important, in my view, to only ascribe them to behavior and statements that actually reflect their definition. Otherwise, we not only risk diluting the word usage (boy crying wolf) until they're no longer useful, we risk undermining our own ability to distinguish between these traits; and for the reasons I mentioned above (and others), those distinctions are important.