Technologically undeveloped societies will have strong gender roles because (a) physical strength is important for doing many things, such as hard work or defending yourself from interpersonal violence, and men are stronger than women on average, and (b) if most children die young, the society survives only if women spend a lot of time being pregnant and taking care of babies, which puts a limit on which activities they can specialize in.
Therefore, we should expect developed societies to have weaker gender roles, on average, simply because they have the option to do so. Even in absence of pressure to weaken the gender roles, at least the pressure to strengthen them is absent. They are free to optimize for things that conflict with gender roles, such as having more people at work. -- Also, non-pregnant women are objectively more similar to men than pregnant women, and the women in developed countries spend more time being non-pregnant.
Some reasons for gender roles remain even in the developed societies, namely:
it may be a stable equilibrium, e.g. if the society punishes any man or woman who deviates from the gender roles (or even argues against the gender roles), the roles may persist for a long time;
women are actually not identical to men, and most of them still get pregnant at least sometimes, which has some impact e.g. on their careers;
following the gender roles can make you more attractive in eyes of potential partners, i.e. the gender role is no longer a necessity, but a signal.
This alone does not explain why some societies—developed, but oppressive—actively promote strong gender roles. In theory, you could have a society that completely ignores gender, but is e.g. a totalitarian bureaucracy with extreme differences in wealth and power depending on your position in the bureaucracy, but uncorrelated with gender. Why do we see the macho dictatorships rather than this?
One guess is that we are not developed enough to completely overcome the need for physical strength; especially in dictatorships which probably need more soldiers and policemen than liberal societies. Guns make a difference, but they are not perfectly reliable (you may miss, you may get surprised, the opponent may keep fighting for a while despite being shot), you still want the gun + physical strength. Dictatorships of the future may fill the streets with battle drones that would automatically kill any subject in conflict with a cop, and this can make the physical strength finally irrelevant; the cops will simply observe whether the subjects follow the rules, and kill any troublemaker by pointing a finger at them.
Or maybe it is about psychology, that we still instinctively perceive men as more threatening, regardless of who has the gun, so the dictatorships prefer to employ men as soldiers and policemen, because image matters.
Another guess is that even in the hypothetical totalitarian bureaucracy with zero physical conflict, people would make coalitions that compete for power, and gender is simply a Schelling point to organize the coalitions around. Where your gender (whether male or female) has a majority, it is convenient to promote sexism, because it automatically puts you on the stronger side. Unless you have something better to organize around; which you sometimes do, and sometimes don’t.
Femininism is intimately connected to sexual liberation.
I think there is a motte and bailey of feminism; officially all feminists oppose gender roles, but in practice some of them seem to want to replace them with different gender roles. Women are encouraged to express their sexuality more freely, but the same does not necessarily apply to men. The overall effect is mixed; it seems to be “more sex talk, less actual sex”. (Correlation does not imply causation though; maybe people have less sex simply because they spend most of their free time scrolling Facebook on smartphones.) Sometimes you get more nudity; sometimes the Playboy magazine decides that actually nudity is problematic and there should be less of it.
I agree that weakening of gender roles leads to sexual liberation. The role of feminism seems a bit more complicated; in most cases, breaking a sexual taboo feels like a weapon against patriarchy, but if the “cishet while males” seem to enjoy some change too much, it creates a little cognitive dissonance.
Also, is Japan some avantgarde of feminism? Why isn’t more ecchi anime produced in Sweden? :P
It’s not really necessary for Japan to be a hub of avant-garde feminism in order for a particular piece of art from Japan to be sexually liberated. Realistically, it’s more that any country with a strong focus on cultural exports like animation will eventually, through sheer volume and luck, manage to create something progressive. Look at all of the corporate media in the United States that manages to smuggle in anti-capitalist themes. It’s more of an indication of artists as a whole being progressive, rather than the people who hire them.
I think you’re right in saying that feminism isn’t always correlated with a blanket anything-goes sexual liberation, and that it’s more of a trade-off, but I’d argue it’s a trade-off which allows for other freedoms to be expressed in a sort of knock-on effect. A feminist society might have a taboo against marital rape and molestation where a traditional society would not, but the effect of that taboo is that people feel more comfortable expressing themselves at their own pace. That’s assuming, of course, that there is a consistent feminist position on sexual liberation, which isn’t always true.
It’s worth keeping in mind that every popular movement has its stuffy closed-minded members. What you see as a motte-and-bailey I see as two (or more!) clearly different factions, stratified by age and political alignment, which cooperate occasionally to promote uncontroversial women’s rights like access to abortion and maternity leave etc. The divide between sex negative feminism (all pornography is exploitation of women) and sex positive feminism runs pretty deep, and I think is more a symptom of feminism’s long history. We’re talking about an umbrella that contains all four waves of feminism, some of which were built on some pretty radically different principles. The writings left behind by the suffragettes didn’t just go away because the fourth-wave feminists are here, and there are entire swaths of people who echo those writings because they’re more palatable than queer theory and postgenderism and so on.
As for the persistence of gender roles, I think option 1 is the most likely. Less that it’s a stable equilibrium now, and more that there’s just a ton of cultural inertia. Zoomers like me were still raised with gendered toys and clothes, however diluted they are from my parent’s generation, and we’re only barely old enough to vote. A fraction of us will pass those preconceptions on to the next generation, who will then pass a fraction of a fraction of those preconceptions on to the generation after that. It’s worth mentioning that fourth-wave feminism is hilariously new. Newer than rationalism is! It will take a while to see where those ideas lead us.
There might be a dash of option 3 as well, but working in the opposite direction—there seems to be a massive unmet demand for gender nonconformity. Think of all of the women looking for kind, sensitive guys. Or men who like tomboys. The people who most strongly using traditional gender roles as a signal are trans-women and trans-men, who feel compelled to overcompensate, and their existence is something the classic conception of gender doesn’t permit. If we’re being naturally pulled in any direction, it’s that.
I don’t think so. Judging by my personal experience of Taiwan, China, Japan and the USA, it’s Japan that has the most stifling womens’ gender roles. However, I don’t speak Japanese and that strongly biasing the sample of the women I interact with away from conservatives.
I think Japan produces more ecchi than Sweden mostly because Japan dominates the world at comics and animation.
Technologically undeveloped societies will have strong gender roles because (a) physical strength is important for doing many things, such as hard work or defending yourself from interpersonal violence, and men are stronger than women on average, and (b) if most children die young, the society survives only if women spend a lot of time being pregnant and taking care of babies, which puts a limit on which activities they can specialize in.
Therefore, we should expect developed societies to have weaker gender roles, on average, simply because they have the option to do so. Even in absence of pressure to weaken the gender roles, at least the pressure to strengthen them is absent. They are free to optimize for things that conflict with gender roles, such as having more people at work. -- Also, non-pregnant women are objectively more similar to men than pregnant women, and the women in developed countries spend more time being non-pregnant.
Some reasons for gender roles remain even in the developed societies, namely:
it may be a stable equilibrium, e.g. if the society punishes any man or woman who deviates from the gender roles (or even argues against the gender roles), the roles may persist for a long time;
women are actually not identical to men, and most of them still get pregnant at least sometimes, which has some impact e.g. on their careers;
following the gender roles can make you more attractive in eyes of potential partners, i.e. the gender role is no longer a necessity, but a signal.
This alone does not explain why some societies—developed, but oppressive—actively promote strong gender roles. In theory, you could have a society that completely ignores gender, but is e.g. a totalitarian bureaucracy with extreme differences in wealth and power depending on your position in the bureaucracy, but uncorrelated with gender. Why do we see the macho dictatorships rather than this?
One guess is that we are not developed enough to completely overcome the need for physical strength; especially in dictatorships which probably need more soldiers and policemen than liberal societies. Guns make a difference, but they are not perfectly reliable (you may miss, you may get surprised, the opponent may keep fighting for a while despite being shot), you still want the gun + physical strength. Dictatorships of the future may fill the streets with battle drones that would automatically kill any subject in conflict with a cop, and this can make the physical strength finally irrelevant; the cops will simply observe whether the subjects follow the rules, and kill any troublemaker by pointing a finger at them.
Or maybe it is about psychology, that we still instinctively perceive men as more threatening, regardless of who has the gun, so the dictatorships prefer to employ men as soldiers and policemen, because image matters.
Another guess is that even in the hypothetical totalitarian bureaucracy with zero physical conflict, people would make coalitions that compete for power, and gender is simply a Schelling point to organize the coalitions around. Where your gender (whether male or female) has a majority, it is convenient to promote sexism, because it automatically puts you on the stronger side. Unless you have something better to organize around; which you sometimes do, and sometimes don’t.
I think there is a motte and bailey of feminism; officially all feminists oppose gender roles, but in practice some of them seem to want to replace them with different gender roles. Women are encouraged to express their sexuality more freely, but the same does not necessarily apply to men. The overall effect is mixed; it seems to be “more sex talk, less actual sex”. (Correlation does not imply causation though; maybe people have less sex simply because they spend most of their free time scrolling Facebook on smartphones.) Sometimes you get more nudity; sometimes the Playboy magazine decides that actually nudity is problematic and there should be less of it.
I agree that weakening of gender roles leads to sexual liberation. The role of feminism seems a bit more complicated; in most cases, breaking a sexual taboo feels like a weapon against patriarchy, but if the “cishet while males” seem to enjoy some change too much, it creates a little cognitive dissonance.
Also, is Japan some avantgarde of feminism? Why isn’t more ecchi anime produced in Sweden? :P
It’s not really necessary for Japan to be a hub of avant-garde feminism in order for a particular piece of art from Japan to be sexually liberated. Realistically, it’s more that any country with a strong focus on cultural exports like animation will eventually, through sheer volume and luck, manage to create something progressive. Look at all of the corporate media in the United States that manages to smuggle in anti-capitalist themes. It’s more of an indication of artists as a whole being progressive, rather than the people who hire them.
I think you’re right in saying that feminism isn’t always correlated with a blanket anything-goes sexual liberation, and that it’s more of a trade-off, but I’d argue it’s a trade-off which allows for other freedoms to be expressed in a sort of knock-on effect. A feminist society might have a taboo against marital rape and molestation where a traditional society would not, but the effect of that taboo is that people feel more comfortable expressing themselves at their own pace. That’s assuming, of course, that there is a consistent feminist position on sexual liberation, which isn’t always true.
It’s worth keeping in mind that every popular movement has its stuffy closed-minded members. What you see as a motte-and-bailey I see as two (or more!) clearly different factions, stratified by age and political alignment, which cooperate occasionally to promote uncontroversial women’s rights like access to abortion and maternity leave etc. The divide between sex negative feminism (all pornography is exploitation of women) and sex positive feminism runs pretty deep, and I think is more a symptom of feminism’s long history. We’re talking about an umbrella that contains all four waves of feminism, some of which were built on some pretty radically different principles. The writings left behind by the suffragettes didn’t just go away because the fourth-wave feminists are here, and there are entire swaths of people who echo those writings because they’re more palatable than queer theory and postgenderism and so on.
As for the persistence of gender roles, I think option 1 is the most likely. Less that it’s a stable equilibrium now, and more that there’s just a ton of cultural inertia. Zoomers like me were still raised with gendered toys and clothes, however diluted they are from my parent’s generation, and we’re only barely old enough to vote. A fraction of us will pass those preconceptions on to the next generation, who will then pass a fraction of a fraction of those preconceptions on to the generation after that. It’s worth mentioning that fourth-wave feminism is hilariously new. Newer than rationalism is! It will take a while to see where those ideas lead us.
There might be a dash of option 3 as well, but working in the opposite direction—there seems to be a massive unmet demand for gender nonconformity. Think of all of the women looking for kind, sensitive guys. Or men who like tomboys. The people who most strongly using traditional gender roles as a signal are trans-women and trans-men, who feel compelled to overcompensate, and their existence is something the classic conception of gender doesn’t permit. If we’re being naturally pulled in any direction, it’s that.
I don’t think so. Judging by my personal experience of Taiwan, China, Japan and the USA, it’s Japan that has the most stifling womens’ gender roles. However, I don’t speak Japanese and that strongly biasing the sample of the women I interact with away from conservatives.
I think Japan produces more ecchi than Sweden mostly because Japan dominates the world at comics and animation.