Sunday, December 2, 2012

Re: Mind's Eye Women's Issues

We should train dogs to be managers, the one in A Boy and His Dog had a
leg up on everyone. Our pup gave me a look the other day that made me
wonder, did he just tell me 'better to keep your mouth shut', or was it
my imagination? Heh, I get the feeling that my elders are testing me
when complaining about women (especially the older). I wonder if
characters like John Wayne in The Quiet Man and the previously mentioned
one were more an attempt at making humor than guidance in any form.

I'm leaning toward your take Allan, many of the complaints I've heard
are self-reinforcing. But then liberal education can have a sinister
effect in blanketing novel perceptions with institutional pedagogy and
producing naive idealism. Something a few members here have said in
better words I think. Some have said that we have no real comprehension
of an egalitarian or meritocratic society in America beyond a book
definition, I say if this is true the answer would be found in
generational and class discontinuity, our isolationist tendencies that
promote either self-reinforcing over-generalizations or reactionary
hypersensitivity and puritanical poo. Despite everything (a long word),
from my earliest memory until today the strongest person I've ever known
is a woman. What a frustrating topic, we all have strengths and
weaknesses, even the strongest.

On 12/2/2012 4:01 AM, Allan H wrote:
> my problem is other than child birth (brat hatchen) I really do see
> much difference between the genders, I think a well developed
> personality contains all of the personality traits.
> Allan
>
> Now now calm down...
>
> On Sun, Dec 2, 2012 at 3:16 AM, archytas<nwterry@gmail.com> wrote:
>> My next questions are on what gender issues hide. But really this is
>> just a path to people I teach choosing their own paths. It's very
>> hard not to be directive and I usually suggest the philosophic muck
>> means less to me than one word in personal insurrection. I might ask,
>> in the right company, 'what the little women have to say'. One has to
>> take the risk somewhere to break the supplication of academic
>> discipline.
>>
>> On 1 Dec, 17:01, gabbydott<gabbyd...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> That question is settled then. What's the next?
>>>
>>> 2012/12/1 archytas<nwte...@gmail.com>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> The Body
>>>> Class and Work
>>>> Disability
>>>> Discrimination
>>>> Equality of Opportunity
>>>> Identity Politics
>>>> Multiculturalism
>>>> Objectification
>>>> Parenthood and Procreation
>>>> Power
>>>> Race
>>>> Rape
>>>> Reproduction and the Family
>>>> Science
>>>> The Self
>>>> Sex and Gender
>>>> Sex Markets
>>>> Trans Issues
>>>
>>>> These are just some of the topics I thought I could put forward in
>>>> teaching gender issues in management. They underlie the bland
>>>> politically correct policy matters. One thing has always occurred to
>>>> me as missing in every debate I can remember. Women are as bad as men
>>>> as managers. I equate equality with hospitality (always two-sided at
>>>> least) and suspect we don't realise behaviour is much less to do with
>>>> gender or the individual than we think and perhaps has little to do
>>>> with rationality. I don't think we see the wood for the trees on
>>>> gender.
>>>
>>>> --
>>
>> --
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>

--

0 comments:

Post a Comment