- Those who miss the question. A person needn’t be a feminist to be a feminist icon; in the same way one needn’t be gay to be a gay icon.
- Those with the dogma, the syllogistic fallacies common to student-level politics; socialists are feminists therefore feminists have to be socialists. Oh dear.
- Those lacking a sense of history. Some might find the misogyny of today’s “lads mags” and the “girl power” message of not so long ago phony and dispiriting; I know I do, but it’s a breeze compared to the 1970’s.
Wednesday 13 June 2012
Thatcher!
Margaret Thatcher - The Musical, it’s only a matter of time. Not actually what I wanted to scribble but a random thought on the “is she or isn’t she (a feminist icon)” maelstrom that was. The film however was an age ago; the arguments, stale, packed away awaiting their final outing. I’ll not wait; on this subject I need to scratch an itch, though it’s hardly original. The answer to the question is “yes”. Those who answer “no” seem to fall into a number of groups:
I know what an icon is. I own two.
ReplyDeleteYou have to be dead to be an icon. I am not a fan of Margaret Thatcher, but I do not wish her dead. She was not highly evolved, but she was sincere in her beliefs and did what was Right in her own eyes, and deserves, therefore, to live out her days in tranquillity. All that being said, she is not dead.
You ought to be male. Or a Virgin Mother to be an icon. Very few icons are otherwise female. Speaking of gender preferences, I don't like what men did to Margaret. That braying band of sycophants who did her over for the unprincipled reason that with her the next election could not be won, are not of her stature. Nevertheless, as a woman, she is an unlikely icon.
You have to be a saint to be an icon. Mrs T only made, 'Blessed'.
Most pertinently Phil, an icon has to be venerated by those who nail them above the prie-dieu. I think I have you there.
Ah, I concede you have a point. So the statement is "she should be a feminist icon!"
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