@stfumisogynists<\/strong> @sajarina maybe appeals
due to a sense of lacking agency? Or at least did, but
it now just standard practice. Plus there is something
about ideas of women\/girls somehow getting
‘saved’ by fate or whatever (often
delivering a man), cf. pretty much every fairytale
ever.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
There’s also something to be said for women
claiming and reclaiming a symbolic language and
ideas of the sacred separate to the patriarchal
power of organised religion. There is a long, proud
history of women’s mysticism or participation
in magical or occult societies, often bringing women
a freedom and license denied to them in traditional
belief systems.<\/p>\n
Feminism and astrology?<\/h3>\n
I also happened upon this bizarre ‘Sisterhood
and the Stars<\/a>‘ article by Ophira Edut,
one half of the Astro Twins<\/a>. A feminist
former writer for Ms. magazine<\/a> and horoscope
writer for Elle and Teen People. Credit it to her,
despite the incredibly irritating habit of
dropping people’s starsigns into the piece
whenever they’re mentioned, she clearly has
a sense of humour and seems to genuinely see
astrology as having the potential to empower women
and help them to succeed.<\/p>\n
She writes \u201cWhen you know yourself, you can
make quick, clear decisions instead of wasting
time second-guessing yourself, a huge psychic
burden\u201d which I find difficult to argue with.
And given that my starting point is that the
movement of the planets has no effect on our
behaviour or personality whatsoever (until they
start exploding or crashing into the sun of
course) perhaps astrology can offer an indirect
route to self knowledge or at least self
improvement. The language makes me feel a bit
queasy (\u201cThere was so much I could teach them
about unity and self esteem from the stars\u201d)
but where’s the harm?<\/p>\n
Well, I don’t think astrology deserves to be
at the top of any feminist’s hit list, but
it’s not all fluff. Edut approvingly quotes
J.P. Morgan saying that \u201cmillionaires
don\u2019t use astrology; billionaires do\u201d, a
quote which I initially read as negative –
because they’re so utterly detached from
anything resembling a normal life they need to try
and establish some sort of meaning to their
existence no matter how absurd and
implausible?<\/p>\n
But Edut\u00a0adds \u201cHow\u2019s that for an
antidote to the seventy cents women earn to each
man\u2019s dollar?\u201d It’s a joke, but
that’s where I think the harm is. Self
knowledge and individual success is grand and
I’d say the identification of astrology with
the feminine isn’t any more damaging than
the other qualities, interests and traits that
stick to gender identities like old chewing gum.
But women’s magazines peddle spiritual power
alongside beauty and sexual power ,and none of
them are a substitute for equal pay; bodily
autonomy; freedom from violence; status, authority
and representation. Reading your fate in the stars
might be reassuring, but you might be missing a
chance to change the world.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n