Summer 2012 will be most likely be remembered for the London Olympics, the Republicans’ awkward, gaffe-prone run-up to the US presidential election and the situation in Syria. What also made Summer 2012 was the number of female-led stories the media picked up on and which got people talking. It feels like the floodgates opened…but for how long? This isn’t a precise, detailed chronology (though it hopefully doesn’t wander onto Niall Ferguson’s patch of thin ice) so please add to it in the comments!
Though the sun wasn’t quite out in full force back in April, that’s where I’m going to begin – the month when Barbie, in a ‘designer pink power suit’ reminiscent of Reese Witherspoon’s character in Legally Blonde, joined the US presidential campaign in collaboration with The White House Project. I Can Be President Barbie
Also that month came a video urging Asma al-Assad to halt the escalating violence in Syria. (Caution: contains graphic images)
As the sun became a more common sight in the sky, so did female-centered articles,
Then came Anne-Marie Slaughter’s article for The Atlantic on “Why Women Still Can’t Have it All.”
The response it provoked was extensive, so here are a selection of pieces discussing, dissecting and driving conversation on the topic:
“Why Women Shouldn’t Want to Have It All” – taking issue with Slaughter’s assumption that women naturally wish to be mothers;
“Men Can’t Have It All Either” – “The fact is that life is full of trade-offs. It’s not possible to “have it all.” It never was. And never will be. For women or for men.”
“Why Women Still Can’t Ask the Right Questions” – Naomi Wolf notes that “Slaughter’s article is one that is published in the US by a revolving cast of powerful (most often white) women every three years or so.”
“Why America Can’t Have It All” – Slaughter’s red flags are actually symptoms of wider social myths perpetuated by US culture;
“Can Modern Women “Have It All”? – “A new Atlantic cover peddles one of the most dangerous myths about modern women”
“‘Having it all’ looks very different for women stuck in low-paid jobs – the “focus on a few high-powered women hanging out with the boys is meaningless to millions.”
…and finally, “No One Has It All Because Having It All Doesn’t Exist – “The idea that there is one homogeneous definition of “it all” that all women are supposed to desire is painfully reductive.” (warning: strong language)
Come July, the Slaughter debate had cooled off a little and the impending Olympics took up the slack with stories on the female participants – the biggest perhaps being the sending of a female athlete by every participating country. The Columbia Journalism Review has a great piece by Jennifer Vanasco which notes that while media coverage “should be about female athletes’ achievements … it’s often more focused on their chromosomes.”
“Women may be are [sic] everywhere in the coverage of these Olympic Games, but they will be real winners only when the subject of their gender is less of a story than their achievements in the competitions.”
No sooner had that coverage started to die down then Pussy Riot grabbed global headlines.
Summer is now coming to a close so it seems likely that the ‘slow news season’ will also shortly be over. Female-led stories may once again take more of a back seat in the media until the next fallow period. Or now the floodgates have opened a crack…will the stories continue to flow?