Germaine Greer

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Smearing political opponents as sex criminals? I'll drink to that!
It's a social construct
Gender
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Spectra and binaries
Nowadays we are all likely to meet people who think they are women, have women's names, and feminine clothes and lots of eyeshadow, who seem to us to be some kind of ghastly parody, though it isn't polite to say so.
—Germaine Greer, 2009, making the same bajillion arguments as TERFs have for many years[1]

Germaine Greer (/ɡrɪər/) (29 January 1939–) is an accomplished Australian radical feminist author, journalist, scholar, and kind of a creep. She wrote the important feminist tome The Female Eunuch,Wikipedia which decried the 1970s ideal of a "stable," suburban nuclear family as repressive of women, and dedicated her life to "women's liberation". She is currently emeritus professor in English Literature and Comparative Studies at the University of Warwick, UK.[2]

Victim blaming[edit]

During the controversy surrounding Salman Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses,Wikipedia Greer refused to sign a petition supporting Rushdie because she said it was “about his [Rushdie’s] own troubles”.[3][4] She went on to say that Rushdie was “a megalomaniac, an Englishman with dark skin."[4][5]

On September 2006, she wrote a piece in The Guardian concerning the death of Steve Irwin.Wikipedia While many mourned his death, Greer declared that "the animal world has finally taken its revenge."[6][7] This piece was published one day after Irwin was killed by a stingray.

Transphobia[edit]

As with many other powerful voices of the second wave of feminism, Greer has been a frequent and forceful critic of gender transition and transgender people generally, like her contemporaries Janice Raymond and Sheila Jeffreys.

Greer holds views on transgender people that are common for transphobic individuals but compounded by a grounding in a rather simplistic interpretation of feminist theory. For instance:

Governments that consist of very few women have hurried to recognise as women men who believe that they are women and have had themselves castrated to prove it, because they see women not as another sex but as a non-sex. No so-called sex-change has ever begged for a uterus-and-ovaries transplant; if uterus-and-ovaries transplants were made mandatory for wannabe women they would disappear overnight. The insistence that man-made women be accepted as women is the institutional expression of the mistaken conviction that women are defective males. —Germaine Greer, The Whole Woman, 1999

This excerpt from her book The Whole Woman is way off base. The procedures she describes are beyond current medical technology; it is literally impossible to meet the standard she arbitrarily imposes. Transgender women have actually died attempting to have uterine transplant procedures, and it is a common occurrence in post-op trans women to strongly desire the procedure, in some cases resulting in depression at the fact that medical science has not made it safely viable.[8] Uterine transplantation has been performed successfully on at least one cisgender woman, meaning the day might soon come when a trans woman could likewise have a uterus, though this would not justify her bigoted gatekeeping. The first successful operation was performed in Turkey in 2011[9], but the patient - a cis woman - was not able to carry a pregnancy to term.

Like many of the allegations Greer makes about transgender women, her assertion that "No so-called sex-change has ever begged for a uterus-and-ovaries transplant"[10] is demonstrably false. Lili Elbe (Lili Ilse Elvenes) was probably the second identifiable individual ever to undergo sex reassignment surgery in a series of operations carried out in 1930 and 1931. The second of the four operations involved implanting an ovary. The fourth involved transplanting a uterus and was probably the cause of her death in September 1931. Part of the reason she gave for wanting to undergo such highly experimental surgery was her wish to marry a man - and bear children.[11]

Her viciousness is rather aptly captured in this quote:

On the day that The Female Eunuch was issued in America, a person in flapping draperies rushed up to me and grabbed my hand. “Thank you,” it breathed hoarsely, “Thank you so much for all you’ve done for us girls!” I smirked and nodded and stepped backward, trying to extricate my hand from the enormous, knuckly, hairy, be-ringed paw that clutched it. The face staring into mine was thickly coated with pancake make-up through which the stubble was already burgeoning, in futile competition with a Dynel wig of immense luxuriance and two pairs of false eyelashes. Against the bony ribs that could be counted through its flimsy scarf dress swung a polished steel women’s liberation emblem. I should have said, “You’re a man. The Female Eunuch has done less than nothing for you. Piss off.” — Independent magazine in 1989

See use of the words 'it', 'paw', 'burgeoning'.

Pedophilia[edit]

The Beautiful Boy (or sometimes The Boy in the British market) was written by Greer and published in 2003.[12] In an interview with the Daily Telegraph prior to finishing the book, she complains about how disorganized her house is for about seven paragraphs before getting to the point: she is very interested in young boys.

Finishing the current book is more difficult than it should be, because I just can't let it go. Working on it has been the best fun in the world, because it is a book of pictures of ravishing boys. Ravishing pictures of ravishing boys. I know that the only people who are supposed to like looking at pictures of boys are a sub-group of gay men.

Well, I'd like to reclaim for women the right to appreciate the short-lived beauty of boys, real boys, not simpering 30 year-olds with shaved chests. The real snag is that everywhere I turn I find new pictures of absolutely outrageously lovely boys, and it's too late to get them into the book. But I keep downloading them, scanning them and printing them, just in case, and just for fun.[13]

She used a photograph of Bjorn Andresen on the book cover, and when he learned of this fact he apparently wasn't very amused. He stated that he had no idea the book was going to use his photo and that if he did know he wouldn't have given permission for its use. Having experienced as a young boy the sort of ogling Greer promotes in the book, he also seemed to be pretty disturbed by the book itself.[14][15]

In a glowing Telegraph review of the book itself, Greer is also quoted asserting the exact conditions under which a boy is the most attractive.

A boy is only a boy for a very brief space. He has to be old enough to be capable of sexual response but not yet old enough to shave. This window of opportunity is not only narrow, it is mostly illegal. The male human is beautiful when his cheeks are still smooth, his body hairless, his head full-maned, his eyes clear, his manner shy and his belly flat.[16]

An article in The Age specifically refers to her interest as having been towards pre-adult boys and even references her confessed relationship with her own "boy", though she was unsurprisingly stingy on the details. The article also recalls an interview she gave on Canadian television where she was asked what attracted her to boys rather than men, in which she said: "Oh, everything - sperm that runs like tap water will do."[17] She is quoted by the Sydney Morning Herald as having said that "A woman of taste is a pederast - boys rather than men."[18]

Although this book was seemingly written for less than honorable reasons, one of the ideas the book proposes is that the "less masculine" boys could "bring the sexes to a reconciliation" because of their supposedly intermediate status. This is only unintentionally interesting: it begs the question as to why Greer had apparently never thought to apply this exact same logic to transgender people and what their cross-gender experiences might offer the world.

Accusations of sexism[edit]

In November 2008, Greer mocked Michelle Obama's election night outfit, calling the dress a "butcher's apron" and a "travesty". She also said her daughters' clothes were not "girly" enough.[6][19] In the same month, she said Cheryl ColeWikipedia could not be a feminist icon because "there's not enough of her - she's too thin" and that "a healthy girl is a fat-bottomed creature."[20]

Greer was accused of sexism and hypocrisy as a feminist when critiquing Australia's first female Prime Minister Julia Gillard during a television debate in March 2012. Rather than discuss policy, Greer chose to mock the Prime Minister's fashion sense, and labeled her a "big arse" (which apparently isn't a compliment despite her previous standards of healthiness being a "fat-bottomed creature").[21][22]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Germaine Greer, Caster Semenya sex row: What makes a woman?, The Guardian, 20 August 2009.
  2. "Germaine Greer - Biography", The European Graduate School.
  3. How one book ignited a culture war
  4. 4.0 4.1 Today everyone wants to defend Salman Rushdie. It was not always like that
  5. A Fundamental Fight
  6. 6.0 6.1 Germaine Greer's big mouth
  7. That sort of self-delusion is what it takes to be a real Aussie larrikin
  8. http://www.secondtype.info/pregnant.htm
  9. World's first womb transplant in Turkey promises hope for women
  10. What We Knew of the Sexes. New Republic. November 14, 2015.
  11. Lili: A Portrait of the First Sex Change by Lili Elbe, Edited by Niels Hoyer, Canelo, 2015. Previously Published as Man Into Woman: The First Sex Change, a Portrait of Lili Elbe: the True and Remarkable Transformation of the Painter Einar Wegener; ISBN-13: 9789333656917 (Hardcover). Page three of the introduction has all the pertinent details in one passage.
  12. https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Beautiful_Boy.html?id=Zh7qAAAAMAAJ
  13. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/gardening/3307166/Country-notebook-beautiful-boys-cause-bedlam.html
  14. https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/books/im-not-germaines-toy-says-cover-boy-20031018-gdhlyf.html
  15. https://www.theguardian.com/film/2003/oct/16/gender.film
  16. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3604427/The-brief-beauty-of-the-child.html
  17. https://www.theage.com.au/national/a-feminist-buoyant-in-her-passion-20030705-gdvzqq.html
  18. https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/its-all-in-the-delivery-20080315-gds5fm.html
  19. If Michelle Obama's such a great dresser, what was she doing in this red butcher's apron?
  20. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2008/nov/25/women-equality
  21. Germaine? You lost me at "big arse" …
  22. Women being mean to women: still sexist