What Counts as a Feminist Intervention?
By Jess Horsnell, MA Student
We live in a society that is obsessed with putting people in boxes. I think being able to do so helps others form their own identities, and when they can鈥檛 put someone in a perfectly square box, all chaos breaks lose. It is easy to identify yourself based on what you are not, but forming your own genuine identity based on what you are becomes more complicated. And of course, people are not perfectly square, easy to categorize entities. People are complicated, nuanced, and dynamic. People are messy. That鈥檚 what makes life interesting.
Something that I鈥檝e been reflecting on quite a bit in the past few months is how society loves to police those who identify as feminists. The amount of times I鈥檝e been told I鈥檓 not a 鈥渞eal feminist鈥 because I don鈥檛 hate men, because I wear makeup, because I watch shows like Game of Thrones is unreal. At first, I thought this was due to societal misconceptions about what feminism actually entails 鈥 and much like people, feminism as a movement is complicated, nuanced, and dynamic. This misconception is certainly a part of it, but it goes deeper than that. I鈥檝e come to realize that this policing is a patriarchal tool to patrol women, particularly as they try to go against the grain, and challenge the patriarchal system.
As one of my jobs, I work as a princess impersonator, leading children鈥檚 birthday parties dressed up as their favourite characters. Even in choosing my topic to write about for this blog post, I was hesitant to reveal that part of myself. I find that I tend to over justify it when I explain it to people, and a lot of that justifying tends to manifest itself in me reassuring people that I鈥檓 still a feminist, but I need improvisation experience for my future career goals. Nothing will quite give you improvisation skills like a group of six year olds rapid fire throwing questions at you, while you have to try to stay in character and keep them entertained at the same time. I find myself reminding people that I鈥檓 still a feminist, but I organize parties for fun. I think there is also an added dimension of being an MA student in that there鈥檚 a feeling of having to maintain somewhat of a serious scholar fa莽ade.
Beyond that, I do really believe that princess parties do leave room for challenging norms and stereotypes. I鈥檝e done parties where little boys are made fun of for wanting to wear princess dresses. When I gently suggest that it鈥檚 okay for anyone of any gender to wear a princess dress, it seems to hold a lot of weight. There鈥檚 nothing about being a princess that is inherently non-feminist, and in reflecting back on my justifications, I find it interesting that I feel like it鈥檚 something that I have to explain to people. But I think there鈥檚 a direct link to people policing what they think a feminist should look like. Can鈥檛 be too masculine, can鈥檛 be too feminine, can鈥檛 stand up and do anything or say anything. Can鈥檛 enjoy dressing up as a princess and delivering children鈥檚 birthday parties, because that鈥檚 too childish/feminine/anti-feminist.
You can love princesses, fairy tales, and still be a feminist, and I feel like this is something I should not have to explain, yet I find myself doing it preemptively. The truth is, I love doing it. I love letting my inner child out. Creating magic for little kids absolutely does not feel like a job, it feels more like a gift. The feeling of empowerment I feel after leaving a party is pretty much indescribable. Letting your inner child out, especially in today鈥檚 world where we鈥檙e surrounded by a myriad of bad things, is really important. Maintaining creativity, magic, and even joy are so important to focus on in a world where we can be overwhelmed with more bad things than good. Shame has been a tool of the patriarchy to keep women in line, and I think it鈥檚 high time we break out of that shame. If you want to play sports and go for hikes, that鈥檚 cool. If you want to wear Ugg boots and drink pumpkin spice lattes, that鈥檚 cool too. If you want to dress up like a princess and deliver children鈥檚 birthday parties, that鈥檚 not shameful.
You don鈥檛 have to let yourself get shoved into a box. You can be a princess and a feminist. You can let out your inner child and be a scholar. You can be who you want to be, identify how you want to identify, and I feel like that in itself, in a society where we keep people in line by shoving them into boxes, is an act of resistance.