Victimhood, Feminism and Identity Discourse!
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A Post-modern Feminist Demonstration |
Cruising through the day, I stumbled upon a rusty graffiti around South Delhi which said “Hum Pinjra tod ke aaye hain” (We came out by breaking the cage). Not knowing what it was, my curiosity made me stop listening to songs and google what it was about (I remember listening to “Crazy Little Thing Called Love” by Queen at the time. It would have been really funny if it was “I Want To Break Free” instead). And there it goes, I found another social issue, maybe political (Who knows really!), that happened a decade ago, and I had no clue about it. Fundamentally, Pinjra Tod was a feminist movement in 2015 which challenged the unnecessary impositions on students, purely based on gender, which majorly curbed any female to step out of her hostel after 8 pm. Yes, 8 pm. Well, however noble the intentions of this movement were, some activists left it into something which caused discrimination on another aspect, which is caste. Some were later charged due to their involvement in CAA 2019 protests and Delhi Riots in 2020. It creates an impression of “upliftment in assumptions but political gains in conclusions.” This is nothing but identity politics, in layman terms, divide and rule.
You know, there was a time when identity politics or feminism were powerful forces of positive change. These were the movements born out of genuine struggle, movements that fought for fairness, for equality under the law, for the right to be treated as individuals with dignity and respect. Basically, something like the movement above, which started off with noble intentions, to reform the social system, to value women as people just like men in the society. But somewhere along the way, this message shifted. And now, when we look back, we see social turmoil; which makes us wonder. I don’t know about you but it makes me wonder if those ideals have been twisted into something less prudent, or into something harmful. Something corrosive, like acid. Before the outrage begins, let me clarify that I am not dismissing the historical importance of any movement that fought for fundamental rights, women’s suffrage, civil rights, or the fight against discrimination. I believe these were some struggles which were very significant in nature, which changed the course of the world into something better. But something did really shift, maybe it was another “Silent Revolution” that Christophe Jaffrelot probably missed, or it was something the deep state is always accused for, but something did change. And the shift that I am talking about, it needs to be said, well, at least by someone: “Post-modern feminism and identity politics have done more harm than good to this generation.”
I come from an essentially masculine household, which is ironically managed by my lovely mother, somehow she does not wish to take the credit for it, and never does. I was raised prominently by my mom and my elder sister, and while doing so, I would hear different anecdotes as to how a woman really is, her traits, wishes and desires, many stories of bravery and of sensitivity; a full spectrum of womanhood (Long story short, I am not a misogynist!). She would tell me how the society was before and how it has ‘progressed’ now, basically referring to how her generation as well as my grandmother’s generation was about fighting for real, tangible equality; like the right to vote, to work, to be treated fairly. My mom was right, she always is! (except when she says I don’t study at all or I am on my phone all the time).
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An Anti-men Demonstration |
The problem it creates is similar to that of the argument of “straw feminists” that there is oppression everywhere, even when it’s really not there. It has made its way so deep that even disagreement is a hate speech now. If you challenge such narratives, you’re labelled as a bigot, a misogynist, a racist—no further debate allowed. We now have raised a generation so sensitive, so shielded from discomfort that they now fear words. Words. Ideas that challenge them are labelled “violence.” This is really just a division of a solid unity of people on very trivial issues which are politicized so to the brim that people get offended if someone mistakes their identity for something else, which seems fair enough, but raises particular questions such as, do you really want to be identified like what you say? I mean an entrepreneur, a scientist or maybe a lawyer would be better, if not, an engineer (Its okay, you have a special place, engineers, sadly in my heart though, maybe not in the company you want…) but you conscientiously choose to be identified as what, AS GAY? I mean how reductionist can you be? People should stop reducing their personality just to their sexual orientation and begin thinking of an alternative. I think calling themselves as “ideologically addled” might be a good start.
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Trump allegedly displayed as a "Misogynist" |
Well, life isn’t fair. It never has been, and it never will be. But the way forward isn’t clinging to victimhood—its to rise above it. What if we stopped obsessing our differences and started focusing on common values—kindness, affection, courage? What if we reminded people that empowerment doesn’t come from perpetual outrage but from personal strength? What if, instead of teaching young people to dwell in their identities, we teach them the strength of humanity? I think its time we stop tearing people down in the name of justice. This generation needs power of self-determination. Not more resentment. Or division. The real path to equality isn’t found in endless grievance. An empowered character is enough, not to be shackled by identities. The pivotal question is—do we have courage to break free? I believe we do!
Men used to go to war Vishwaa!
ReplyDeleteAgainst men
DeleteNow they yap on the internet
DeleteAnd women used to get slapped for talking too much
DeleteOne more thing... there are no definitions and there are no logics....this is Marxism in true colours
ReplyDelete