Times Colonist

Sadly, sexist slur is all too common

- JOCELYN NOVECK

Ask a woman if she’s been called the B-word by a man — perhaps modified by the F-adjective — and chances are she’ll say, “You mean ever, or how many times?”

Because most women will tell you it’s a pretty universal experience, especially if they’ve held a position of power in the workplace. “I’d say, maybe 25 times?” says Ellen Gerstein, who spent years in technology publishing, a fairly male-dominated field, before becoming a pharmaceut­ical executive. “And that’s just to my face.”

In fact, Gerstein says, use of the word as a slur against women has come to feel so unfortunat­ely routine that her own memories of it tend to blur together — unlike, say, the time 20 years ago when a male colleague asked her who she’d “lap danced” to push a project ahead. But she says she was filled with admiration when she heard U.S. Congresswo­man Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez take to the floor of the House and call out a male colleague for vulgar words.

“I thought, listening to her: ‘Wow, you’re 100 per cent right,’ ” says Gerstein, now 52. “Why didn’t I apply those same standards to myself?”

Ocasio-Cortez’s remarks last week, widely shared online, amounted to a stunning indictment not only of the words of Rep. Ted Yoho, R-Florida, who she said called her a “f***g bitch” in front of reporters, but a culture of abusive language against women that can lead to violence. Her speech resonated with many women — in politics and out, supportive of her politics or not — who said the language had been tacitly accepted for far too long.

The moment was extraordin­ary, says Debbie Walsh, director of the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University, not because the language was new — as OcasioCort­ez herself said, it was nothing she hadn’t heard waiting tables or riding the subway — but because of where it took place, and especially because the freshman congresswo­man had the confidence and the support of her colleagues to call it out in such a public way.

“This is all part of a shift,” Walsh says, attributin­g the change to the #MeToo movement, in large part. “Women are feeling empowered to speak up and believe they will be heard.”

More than a dozen Democratic colleagues — but no Republican­s — joined Ocasio-Cortez, D-New York, in speaking out against sexist behaviour, including from U.S. President Donald Trump.

The moment led Gloria Steinem, the most visible feminist advocate in the United States, to reflect on her own struggles with the word Barbara Bush once famously said “rhymes with rich.”

“It took me years to learn what to do when someone calls you a bitch,” Steinem told the

Associated Press in an email. “Just smile in a calm triumphant way, and say: ‘Thank you!’ ”

Steinem, 86, said she hadn’t realized the strategy could be helpful to other women until it made it into the script of a recent off-Broadway play about her life, “and every night, women in the audience burst out in big relieved laughter.”

Still, Steinem noted, “Refusing to be hurt may not really change the people who are trying to hurt you.” She called for both “cultural and workplace penalties for such behaviour,” and, more profoundly, “raising our children to empathize and treat others as we want to be treated.”

Gerstein, too, says she found it helpful to repurpose what was intended as a slur into a compliment. “I didn’t want to feel like a victim, so my theory was to own it,” she says. “As if to say, ‘What you’re really saying is I’m tough, I’m bossy, I’m determined and I’m damned good at what I’m doing.”’

Ocasio-Cortez “owned” the word as well when she tweeted, in response to Yoho’s alleged remarks: “Bitches get stuff done.”

That itself was a throwback to a 2008 sketch on Saturday Night Live, in which Tina Fey and Amy Poehler discussed the slur as often applied to Hillary Clinton. “Yeah, she is. And so am I,” notes Fey on the “Weekend Update” segment. “You know what? Bitches get stuff done.”

Feminist author Andi Zeisler, co-founder of the non-profit Bitch Media, notes that the sketch marked the beginning of a long and evolving process of women “reclaiming” the word, much like the word “queer.”

“We don’t get to control who uses it and how,” explains Zeisler. “We can only control the way we conceive of it.”

Of course, context is everything. When used as Yoho allegedly did, the word is intentiona­lly gender-specific and heavy with implied power dynamics, says Walsh, of Rutgers.

It “otherizes women, it dehumanize­s them and tells women they don’t belong in these institutio­ns and positions,” Walsh says.

“It is about silencing women and keeping them out.”

Jen Singer, a freelance writer in New Jersey, says that “when men call you a bitch, it’s a warning shot across your bow — a reminder that they have power and you had better not overstep your bounds.”

It’s the feeling that Jennifer Bogar-Richardson, an educator also in New Jersey, felt when she learned that a superior had referred to her as a “ho” in a meeting with colleagues years ago, using words from a Chris Brown song to indicate she’d been disloyal.

“I felt naked,” says Bogar-Richardson, 44, “because it obviously didn’t matter how smart I was, how intelligen­t or how well I did my job. I’m nothing more than that name.”

 ??  ?? Ellen Gerstein, now a pharmaceut­ical executive, estimates that she's been called the B-word 25 times during her career.
Ellen Gerstein, now a pharmaceut­ical executive, estimates that she's been called the B-word 25 times during her career.

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