This week I came across another aspect of women artists, and their work still receiving less respect than the work of men. Lena Dunham has been making headlines for throwing shade at Woody Allen during a panel at the Sundance film festival this week. However, if you listen to the actual discussion, Dunham (along with Mindy Kaling, Kristen Wiig and Jenji Kohan) is talking about how the world generally equates female artists and writers with their characters--- assuming that the artist/author shares the foibles, issues, aspirations etc. of their characters--- whereas this happens much less with male artists. Here is the excerpted segment:
Again, rather than engaging with a story or a character as a serious piece of art and creativity in and of itself, people prefer to spend time puzzling out how the character is a window into the neuroticism or hubris of the female author/artist.
This is problematic and sexist because:
- It again refuses to take the art seriously, simply because it was created by a female. The same respect, intelligence, experimentalism, and benefit of the doubt afforded to male artists are not extended to the women.
- It is a sort of dominance display, attempting to ferret out the vulnerabilities of a woman against her will, and prove that the investigator knows the woman's mind and self better than she.
- It is based on the assumption that women are fundamentally crazy (hysterical) or flawed, and a morbid desire to expose this.