Friday, May 07, 2010

Women, language, and the onus

Women, it's time to stop referring to yourselves and letting others refer to us as "girls." If you are 20 or older, I've got news for you: you're a woman.

The term "girl" is diminutive and serves to keep us down. We are not children. We are adults and should be referred to as such.

I will grant you that in college you can still get by with "boys" and "girls," but I'm not talking about exceptions to the rule here. On a daily basis, people say things like, "She's a really sexy girl" (let's hope you mean "woman," or we've got a problem) or "We need more girls on the field" (really? will third graders help this team win?).

Stop it. You are referring to grown, adult women. We are not lesser individuals and do not need to accept a pint-sized moniker.

Men do no tolerate this. They don't have to. How often do you hear any man older than, say, 23 referred to as a "boy"? Yes, men have a handy non-committal term in the form of "guy," but that does not excuse this inequity.

And guess what? The onus is on us. We have to consciously use the right language and correct people when they say "girl" but mean "woman." It's up to us to own it.

It may feel awkward at first, but it's up to us to correct and educate. Don't be afraid to stand up for your adulthood.

Step up. Take a stand. One woman at a time, we can work our way toward an environment of equality.

2 comments:

jlbraaten said...

Just wondering... you say it's not ok to say "She's a really sexy girl" but it would be ok to say "She's a really sexy woman?"

What does more damage to gender equality? Using the label "girl" or just the objectification of women in general by applying labels such as "sexy" and "hot?"

I fully support gender equality. It's just sometimes it doesn't appear that we all know exactly what that might look like, even if we have an idea of how to improve.

Unknown said...

Oh, you silly goose! Of course you can say, "She's a really sexy woman." Why wouldn't you? Men can be sexy, too.

Now if someone asked your opinion about a female Congresswoman, and your only response was, "She's a really sexy woman," that may be a problem. But there is nothing inherently wrong with describing a woman as sexy.

Obviously, objectification of women is a problem. And that problem is exacerbated because women allow themselves to be treated as lesser people, tacitly accepting terms like "girl" as acceptable descriptors of their adult selves.

There are myriad problems at play, and this is just one of them. It won't make women equal to men, but sticking up for ourselves is a start.

That's all I'm asking for, really - a start, a step in the right direction.