Day By Day

Thursday, March 03, 2005

What's the Matter with Estrich?

Heather Mac Donald, writing in the City Journal contemplates the recent Estrich-Kinsley brouhaha. She writes:
Estrich’s insane ravings against the Times cap a month that left one wondering whether the entry of women into the intellectual and political arena has been an unqualified boon. In January, nearly the entire female professoriate at Harvard (and many of their feminized male colleagues) rose up in outrage at the mere suggestion of an open discussion about a scientific hypothesis....

It is curious how feminists, when crossed, turn into shrill, hysterical harpies—or, in the case of MIT’s Nancy Hopkins, delicate flowers who collapse at the slightest provocation—precisely the images of women that they claim patriarchal sexists have fabricated to keep them down. Actually, Estrich’s hissy fit is more histrionic than anything the most bitter misogynist could come up with on his own.

Self-centered? Thin-skinned? Takes things personally? Misogynist tropes that sum up Estrich to a T.

Here Ms. Mac Donald asks the critical question:
The assumption that being female obviates the need for any further examination into one’s qualifications allows Estrich to sidestep the most fundamental question raised by her crusade: Why should anyone care what the proportion of female writers is on an op-ed page? If an analysis is strong, it should make no difference what its author’s sex is.

And here she exposes the ludicrous contradiction at the heart of modern feminism:
For Estrich, apparently, having a “woman’s voice” means being left-wing. She blasts the Times for publishing an article by Charlotte Allen on the decline of female public intellectuals such as Susan Sontag. Allen had argued that too many women writers today specialize in being female, rather than addressing the broader range of issues covered by their male counterparts. For Estrich, this argument performs a magical sex change on Allen, turning her into a male.

“Women’s liberation,” for the radical feminists, means liberation to think like a robot, mindlessly following the dictates of the victimologists. But if all bona fide women think alike, then publishing one female writer every year or so should suffice, since we know in advance what she will say.

Delicious! Read the whole thing here.

We are living in revolutionary times at home as well as abroad. Just as a new generation of political activists are liberating their countries a rising cohort of new intellectuals are challenging the intellectual tyrannies of the left here at home.

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