{"id":2171,"date":"2010-12-22T14:00:22","date_gmt":"2010-12-22T14:00:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/?p=2171"},"modified":"2010-12-22T14:00:22","modified_gmt":"2010-12-22T14:00:22","slug":"feminist-family-christmas-part-five","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2010\/12\/22\/feminist-family-christmas-part-five\/","title":{"rendered":"Feminist Family Christmas: Part Five"},"content":{"rendered":"
A few snapshots of different sorts of feminists, their families and the
festive season. I\u2019m fortunate to have lots of lovely people in my
circle, many of whom identify as feminists and I was interested in what
their Christmases looked like. <\/em><\/p>\n
So, are you sitting comfortably? Then let\u2019s
continue…<\/em><\/p>\n
TELL ME A BIT ABOUT YOURSELF.<\/strong><\/p>\n
My name is Oli.\u00a0 I’m a man, and I’m
self-identified as a thinker, a pluralist and a liberal socialist
rather than a feminist per se. I am all about equality for
everyone – my feminism, such as it is, is an acknowledgement
of a need to redress an imbalance of power and privilege across
gender lines and a desire to be aware of the privilege I have by
accident of birth and not be insensible to it or frankly abuse
it.<\/p>\n
I do think that a lot of how I feel about gender and society has
sprung from my exposure to feminist ideas and discourse through my
family, social and academic life, not to mention an ongoing
interest in engaging with the society I live in. I suppose I would
characterise where I come from on the spectrum as really a
post-feminist or a “sex-positive” feminist. I’m
about to get married and shortly thereafter I’m going to be
a father. I am happier now, in my mid-thirties and planning a life
with someone, than I have ever been. \u00a0This is in no small
part due to that person being as equally broad-minded, open and
thinking a woman as I try to be a man.<\/p>\n
WHAT ARE YOUR PLANS AT CHRISTMAS?<\/strong><\/p>\n
We’re planning a quiet, family orientated Christmas with
my fiancee’s family in rural Sussex – I am looking
forward to it immensely!\u00a0 There will be food, drink,
boardgames, Christmas telly, and most importantly from my
perspective, a sense of togetherness. \u00a0We will (briefly)
celebrate again with my family on the eve of our upcoming
wedding when they get back into the country from spending
Christmas with my brother and sister-in-law in Belgium.<\/p>\n
WHAT HAVE YOU BOUGHT?<\/strong><\/p>\n
A Kindle for my parents, a laptop for my partner, an array
of games\/DVDs\/CDs\/books\/hats and gloves for various
siblings – that kind of thing.<\/p>\n
HOW DO YOU BUY GIFTS?<\/strong><\/p>\n
About half and half online and in the shops – we
have done most of it together.<\/p>\n
AS A FEMINIST DO YOU FEEL ANY PARTICULAR PRESSURES
OR RESPONSIBILITY AT THIS TIME OF
YEAR?<\/strong><\/p>\n
I suppose more than anything I would want to avoid
cliche with regard to roles in the “Family
Christmas” – there is no reason for
just the women to cook and the men to socialise
– but to be frank my lifelong experience of
Christmas has been my father cooking Christmas
dinner, in fact dealing with all things distaff
over the festive period, so to avoid cliche I
would have to inhabit my own personal one.<\/p>\n
This year in particular I will be a guest in
another family’s idea of Christmas, and
while I want to be true to how I feel about all
kinds of things, like not just defaulting to
giving little girls “something pink”
to fighting over the washing up instead of just
doing it, I am aware of the fact that I need to
bend in the wind of another family’s
prevailing wind, if you’ll pardon the
dreadful imagery.<\/p>\n
Tradition has a funny way of entrenching the most
trivial gender bias to the most insidious
prejudice; I suppose the particular pressure I
feel whenever Tradition weighs in, as it does
heavily at Christmas, is to not let it force me or
allow anyone else to behave in a way that is
inappropriate.<\/p>\n
AND FINALLY…<\/strong><\/p>\n
There are many groups of people that get a
pause for thought, at least, from me at
Christmas; the old, the lonely, the homeless,
and in amongst that I would have to say women
who have to be all things to all people over
this period, all the way through to the women
spending what should be a happy time filled
with love and family, running and hiding from
abuse. But as with any other “time of
year” or similar, I always find myself
chiding myself for not thinking of such things
just on any old Tuesday a bit more often.
\u00a0I suppose what I want to say is that
Christmas being a time for reflection as well
as joy is a bit of a double-edged sword; after
all, a social conscience of any stripe should
be for life, right?<\/p>\n