{"id":2888,"date":"2011-02-02T09:00:04","date_gmt":"2011-02-02T09:00:04","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=2888"},"modified":"2011-02-02T09:00:04","modified_gmt":"2011-02-02T09:00:04","slug":"why-are-trending-topic-hashtags-so-sexist-part-1","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/02\/02\/why-are-trending-topic-hashtags-so-sexist-part-1\/","title":{"rendered":"Why are trending topic #hashtags so sexist? Part 1"},"content":{"rendered":"

If you use Twitter, chances are you\u2019ll have clicked on a hashtag listed under the \u2018trending\u2019 (i.e. most popular) topics sidebar at least once. And perhaps only once \u2013 I can see why you might never do it again, especially if you clicked on #rulesforgirls<\/strong> or #ihatefemaleswho<\/strong>.<\/p>\n

Here are some examples of standard fare, from apparently male users. Apologies. They\u2019re pretty grim.<\/p>\n

#aGOODWOMAN knows how to shut the fuck up!!!!!!<\/p>\n

#agoodwoman is always ready to give head!<\/p>\n

#Agoodwoman cooks for u when u get in from work and gets up and cooks breakfast when u leavin to go to work<\/p>\n

when y’all cheat, expect for it to be over… when us men cheat, you have to be forgiving and give us another chance… #rulesforgirls<\/p>\n

#rulesforgirls When we say we wana watch football, that means no cleaning,no talking,NO FORM OF INTERACTION.We will Chris Brown you.<\/p>\n

#ihatefemaleswho slap they boyfriend thinkin he wont hit you back<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

And my two favourites, from the same guy:<\/p>\n

#IHateFemales Who want to be men. God gave you the best gift ever bitch, acknowledge it!<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

You tell her! Why on earth would she want to be a man? *scratches head*<\/p>\n

#IHateFemales Who don’t see the beauty in them & still don’t take care of their bodies & looking decent.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

Why can\u2019t she see how beautiful she is? And maybe get a wax?<\/p>\n

These make for depressing reading, and when you\u2019re faced with a whole screenful and 60 more appear in a few minutes, it\u2019s easy to feel hopeless.\u00a0 But I don\u2019t think what we\u2019re watching is a misogynist Twitter takeover as some people have suggested. So what\u2019s going on? I\u2019ll start with some theories I have encountered and explain why I don\u2019t think they\u2019ll do as an answer.<\/p>\n

A) “There are just more sexist idiots on Twitter \/ the internet than in Real Life”<\/h3>\n

I was at an event recently where Yasmin Alibhai-Brown spoke briefly about her recent run-in with Twitter<\/a>, and was disappointed that the insight she chose to pass on to the room of feminists was to be careful of using Twitter because it\u2019s filling up with horrible geeky misogynists.<\/p>\n

\"Space<\/a>

Not really relevant, but I love it. <\/p><\/div>\n

This comment on a blog post about hashtags clarified it for me: \u201cI wish I understood how and why stupid hashtags become trending topics.\u201d<\/p>\n

Um. Because they\u2019re popular?<\/p>\n

Sorry everyone, I know you don\u2019t want to hear this, but Twitter is<\/em> people with misogynist views, at least if the trending topics are anything to go by.\u00a0I would hazard that Twitter might\u00a0feel\u00a0like a feminist space that has been invaded by these ‘orrible ‘ashtags because you follow feminists. But we’re in the minority, just like in Real Life.<\/p>\n

It\u2019s much easier to craft your own media bubble online than offline, but it\u2019s basically the same thing. If you read the Guardian<\/strong>, and hang out with other people who read the Guardian<\/strong>, then Guardian<\/em>-y sort of opinions are going to appear to be the norm. Whereas the norm, in circulation figures<\/a> at least, is actually the Sun<\/strong>. And then the Daily Mail<\/strong>.<\/p>\n

Like I said, sorry.<\/p>\n

B) “Because black people are more sexist than white people”<\/h3>\n

<\/strong><\/p>\n

Click on a sexist trending topic hashtag. Everyone in the hashtag stream is African American. Therefore\u2026<\/p>\n

Just, whoa there. Wait a second. Since when are ALL BLACK PEOPLE represented by a subsection of a social network? Following that logic you might think that every single white person owns an iPad. And besides, there\u2019s plenty of misogyny to be found in \u2018white\u2019 hashtags streams too – some of the trolling on #mooreandme for example – and on Twitter in general. Sexism isn\u2019t restricted to hashtags.<\/p>\n

I\u2019ve seen a number of people describe trending topics hashtag streams as the ‘dark undercurrent’ or \u2018dark side\u2019 of Twitter.\u00a0 I don\u2019t think for a second that they were referring to the ethnicity of the users but I think it\u2019s illuminating nonetheless. There are some fascinating (and sometimes toe-curling) discussions going on at the moment about \u2018blacktags<\/a>\u2019 or \u2018black people twitter<\/a>‘\u00a0which I recommend checking out, in particular this\u00a0comment<\/a>.<\/p>\n

I think it\u2019s safe to say that there is greater uptake of the attitudes and poses of hip hop and R&B \u2013 genres notorious for misogyny and heavily polarised gender stereotypes – in the young African American twitter demographic than there is in, say, the middle-aged white British demographic, and that\u2019s probably part of it.<\/p>\n

But before you try and tell me that black people invented sexism (that must be why wholesome family entertainers like Jim Davidson hate them so much!) I recommend reading this 1994 article on misogyny and gangsta rap<\/a> by bell hooks.<\/p>\n

C) “Because the web encourages people to be shitheads”<\/h3>\n

There is definitely some truth in this one, and I can\u2019t put it more eloquently than this<\/a>.<\/p>\n

I think it\u2019s also about the hashtag format. It\u2019s a joke, and there\u2019s an age-old link between cheap gags and crude gender stereotypes. See also: your mum jokes, mother-in-law jokes, women driver jokes, blonde jokes, Essex girl jokes, nun jokes\u2026 Comedy, to some extent, encourages (or allows?) \u00a0people to voice more controversial opinions than they might in another context.<\/p>\n

But I can\u2019t help feeling that there\u2019s more to it than a web 2.0 Bernard Manning routine. In Part 2 <\/strong>I’ll throw in my two cents about why sexist hashtags are so overwhelmingly popular.<\/p>\n

Part 2 is now online here.<\/a><\/strong>
\n<\/em><\/p>\n