Overcome Masculine Oppression Bill Moyers

Overcoming Masculine Oppression by Bill Moyers (1980 version)

Many of the problems we run into in anti-nuclear groups are those of domination within the movement.

People join a social change movement in order to alleviate an external problem. Too often we are confronted with the same kind of behavior we find in our everyday lives. We’re all too often stifled by heavy-handed authority: bosses at work, parents or spouse at home and teachers at school. People want not only to be accepted in these groups but also to make a contribution and be active participants. In order to work successfully to change things we must also pay attention to our own behavior. More often than not, men are the ones dominating group activity. Such behavior is therefore termed a “masculine behavior pattern” not because women never act that way, but because it is generally men who do it.

HERE ARE SOME SPECIFIC ways we can be responsible to ourselves and others in groups:
  • Not interrupting people who are speaking. We can even leave space after each speaker, counting to five before speaking.
  • Becoming a good listener. Good listening is as important as good speaking. It’s important not to withdraw when not speaking; good listening is active participation.
  • Getting and giving support. We can help each other be aware of and interrupt patterns of domination, as well as affirm each other as we move away from those ways.
  • Not giving answers and solutions. We can give our opinions in a manner which says we believe our ideas to be valuable, but no more important than others’ ideas.
  • Relaxing. The group will do fine without our anxiety attacks.
  • Not speaking on every subject. We need not share every idea we have, at least not with the whole group.
  • Not putting others down. We need to check ourselves when we’re about to attack or “one-up” another. We can ask ourselves, “Why am I doing this? What am I feeling? What do I need?”
  • Interrupting others’ oppressive behavior. We should take responsibility for interrupting a brother who is exhibiting behavior which is oppressive to others and prohibits his own growth. It is no act of friendship to allow friends to continue dominating those around them. We need to learn caring and forthright ways of doing this.
THE FOLLOWING ARE some of the more common problems to become aware of:
  • Hogging the show. Talking too much, too long and too loud.
  • Problem solver. Continually giving the answer or solution before others have had much chance to contribute.
  • Speaking in capital letters. Giving one’s own solutions or opinions as the final word on the subject, often aggravated by tone of voice and body posture.
  • Defensiveness. Responding to every contrary opinion as though it were a personal attack.
  • Nitpicking. Pointing out minor flaws in statements of others and stating the exception to every generality.
  • Restating. Especially what has just been said by a non-dominant person.
  • Attention seeking. Using all sorts of dramatics to get the spotlight.
  • Task and content focus. To the exclusion of nurturing individuals or the group through attention to process and form.
  • Putdowns and one-up-manship. “I used to believe that, but now…” or “How can you possibly say that …?”
  • Negativism. Finding something wrong or problematical in everything.
  • Focus transfer. Transferring the focus of the discussion to one’s own pet issues in order to give one’s own pet raps.
  • Residual office holder. Hanging on to formal powerful positions.
  • Self-listening. Formulating a response after the first few sentences, not listening to anything from that point on and leaping in at the first pause.
  • Inflexibility and dogmatism. Taking a last stand for one’s position on even minor items.
  • Avoiding feelings. Intellectualizing, withdrawing into passivity or making jokes when it’s time to share personal feelings.
  • Condescenscion and paternalism. “Now, do any women have something to add?”
  • Being “on the make”. Using sexuality to manipulate people. Seeking attention and support from women while competing with men.
  • Running the show. Continually taking charge of tasks before others have a chance to volunteer.
  • Pack Ratitis. Protectively storing key group information for one’s own use and benefit.
  • Speaking for others. “A lot of us think that we should …” or “What so and so really meant was …”

The full wealth of knowledge and skills is severely limited by such behavior. Women and men who are less assertive than others or who don’t feel comfortable participating in a competitive atmosphere are, in effect, cut off from the interchange of experience and ideas.

If sexism isn’t ended within social change groups there can’t be a movement for real social change. Not only will the movement flounder amidst divisiveness, but the crucial issue of liberation from sex oppression will not be dealt with. Any change of society which does not include the freeing of women and men from oppressive sex role conditioning, from subtle as well as blatant forms of male supremacy, is incomplete.

Reference

This piece was originally written by Bill Moyers of the Movement for a New Society (MNS). An edited version appeared in the Pentagon ’80 Handbook (1980), which was excerpted in the Diablo Canyon Blockade/ Encampment Handbook, from which this was copied. For the complete article, write to MNS at 4722 Baltimore Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19143, USA. Does anyone knows when and where the original version was published?

Texts on nonviolent resistance and civil disobedience

Start
Thoreau: Civil Disobedience – 1849

Discourse on Voluntary Servitude – 1548
The Tyranny of Structurelessness
Emma Goldman: Against Mass Movement
Anti-Mass
Deleuze and becoming resistance
Civil disobedience Duty rather than a right
Albert Einstein – Obedience or intervention
Overcome Masculine Oppression Bill Moyers
Plowshares movement
Manual for Civil Disobedience
Postprotest Resistance

Blog

Texts by Per Herngren
Kurdish, Polish

Arabic, Spanish, Dutch

Leave a Reply

Scroll to Top