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Pre-Packaging Gender Roles: Abstinence-Only Programs Perpetuate Dangerous Stereotypes

Martha Kempner's picture

I’m fighting a losing battle right now.My enemy is dead, or if you are to believe the rumors cryogenically frozen, but in some ways he seems to have more influence over my three-year old daughter than I do. We’re in the princess phase that seems to have been mandated, if not by Walt Disney himself, than by his brilliant and powerful marketing machine.

I am trying to teach my daughter to be an independent thinker and have aspirations that go far beyond being pretty.She wants dresses that go all the way to the floor.I want her to understand that women are able to do anything they want to and that there is more to life than finding a man.She wants to twirl.

The other day we watched Little Mermaid, a movie I had once thought I liked, but seeing it through my daughter’s eyes, I was horrified. If you strip away the upbeat music, the scary octopus queen, and the Rastafarian crab, the message of this movie is that if you’re pretty and don’t say too much, you can get a prince to fall in love with you (because, after all, landing the prince is your ultimate goal).

The thing is, if abstinence-only-until-marriage programs have their way, all of our daughters are going to learn awfully similar messages in school. This year, SIECUS reviewed the entire Choosing the Best series which includes Choosing the Best WAY, PATH, LIFE, JOURNEY, and SOUL MATE. This series, written by Bruce Cook, founder of Choosing the Best, Inc. and a leader in the abstinence-only-until-marriage industry, remains quite popular around the country.These programs hold marriage (though not necessarily to a prince) out as the ultimate goal and are littered with age-old gender stereotypes that might even make old Walt wince.

Choosing the Best WAY, which is for sixth grader, starts by saying “guys and girls are really different. That’s one reason why it’s so hard to understand the opposite sex.”To illustrate this, the teacher is supposed to ask students first to hold three to four books and then to look at their fingernails. The teacher then explains, “…guys usually carry their books down by their sides. Girls usually cradle their books in their arms… guys usually look at their fingernails with their fingers curled toward the palm. Girls usually look at their nails by holding their hands outstretched in front of them.”

The activity then divides the class by gender and asks each group to answer questions such as: “Why do guys act silly and clam up around a girl? Why do guys pay so much attention to the way a girl looks?” and “Why do girls talk on the phone so much? Why do girls talk about guys all the time? Why do girls get their feelings hurt so easily?”

The notion that men and women sure are different is at the center of best-selling books, at least one Broadway play, and pretty much all episodes of “Everybody Love Raymond.”But as much as it can be mined for humor, it can also be pretty damaging.

Choosing the Best SOUL MATE, which is for juniors and seniors, prides itself on helping young people gain confidence and improve their self-esteem.Much of the program reads like a Myers/Briggs personality test or What Color is Your Parachute. Unfortunately, there are some incredibly stereotypical assumptions about what guys and girls can do.

One exercise asks young people to look at pictures which depict guys in football jerseys and a girl in a cheerleading uniform attempting to convince others of a point using a chart and a megaphone.The instructor is supposed to explain:“Look at the two pictures at the top of the page – one showing a guy who is good at getting things done and a girl who excels at relationships.”It goes on to say “Our guy will do well in ‘success situations’ that give him a chance to plan and achieve his goal; while our girl will excel in situations that allow her to influence and interact with people.”

The curriculum warns, however, “The guy who is great at getting things done can become so goal-oriented that he walks all over people in his drive to achieve his goal. The girl who is wonderful with people can become so people-centered that she is distracted and has a hard time focusing on her goal.”

The pictures alone set gender equality back 25 years.More importantly, providing such stereotypical portrayals of what men and women excel at undermines the lesson’s goal of increasing self-confidence. Young people should understand that sex does not determine what they will and will not be good at in life.

All of these differences, however, seem only to be included in an effort to underscore how very different men and women are when it comes to sex and relationships. In truth, neither gender is depicted positively. Men are portrayed as cads who desire casual sex with any and all women but are frequently misunderstood and the victims of nagging women.Women, on the other, will use sex to get love and are forced to tolerate the bad behavior of the men.

These stereotypes are particularly apparent in the stories the curricula tells about young couples.

Choosing the Best JOURNEY tells the story of Ashley and Jerome who marry after just three months: “Soon Ashley began to notice some things about Jerome she had never seen before. He continued to go to sports bars and party on the weekend with his guy friends…She suggested that they go to museums or plays, but Jerome wasn’t really into ‘cultural stuff.’” Roughly the same story appears in SOUL MATE, though his name is now Michael:“When Ashley suggested they go to the library, Michael said he was proud that he hadn’t read a book since college and didn’t want to start now.”

A first person narrator in Choosing the Best SOUL MATE tells a different tale of woe:“My wife Lateisha has always been a major shopper…When I ask about her many new outfits, she always has some story about how she was ‘given’ the clothes.Lateisha keeps bouncing checks and running up credit card debt.”

The most offensive gender stereotypes, however, come in the stories of the “Disappointed Princess” and the “Knight in Shining Armor” also in SOUL MATE (which, by the way is intended for high school juniors and seniors). These parables give young people clear rules on how to interact with members of the opposite sex.

Soon after meeting a handsome and charming knight and considering marriage, the princess becomes upset because she “wanted to spend time talking about their future life together but the Knight was obviously not interested in listening.He preferred daily jousts with other Knights.”He did, however, bring her lots of gifts.

Still, the princess was lonely until one day she has horse trouble and meets a blacksmith.Despite the fact that he is “rather plain” he listens to her and she decides to marry him instead.The moral of the story “To win and keep a princess, expressing love through active listening and engaging conversation trumps gifts, activities and even looks”

Though the moral of this story makes sense, the portrayal of women as princesses who simply crave the attention of a man is disturbing.More disturbing, however, are the messages in the curriculum’s other parable.

It begins: “Deep inside every man is a knight in shining armor, ready to rescue a maiden and slay a wicked dragon.When a man feels trusted, he is free to be the strong, protecting man he longs to be.”

Unfortunately for this knight in shining armor, his princess is not one to sit back and allow herself to be rescued.Instead, she has ideas about how he might best slay the dragons.When the second dragon attacks, she suggests that instead of the sword he uses a noose. This works and “everyone is happy, except the knight who doesn’t feel like a hero this time.He would have preferred to use his sword.”The princess’s continuing suggestions (for the third dragon she recommends poison) make the knight doubt his own instincts and feel ashamed despite the fact that he continues to slay dragons.

Then one day he hears another maiden in distress.Though he initially doubts himself, at the last minute he remembers how he used to feel “before he met the princess” and successfully uses his sword. He never does return to the princess. Instead, he lives happily ever after with the maiden, “but only after making sure she knew nothing of nooses or poison.”

The moral of this story: “Occasional suggestions and assistance may be all right, but too much of it will lessen a man’s confidence or even turn him away from his princess.”

The suggestion that women should not have their own ideas, or worse, should suppress them in order to make men feel good, is remarkably offensive.It is bad enough that Walt Disney is teaching my daughter that she should be pretty but quiet; I don’t want her learning it in school.

Perhaps the princess knew more about dragons than the knight and understood that the second dragon had a skin too thick to be pierced by a sword or that the third should be poisoned because its neck was too strong to be quickly snapped by a noose. According to the curriculum, she should have kept this information to herself despite the risk to the castle all to ensure that she did not offend her man.

I have been married long enough to know that there is a grain of truth to the whole “men are from Mars women are from Venus” kind of thinking.But the solution isn’t, as John Grey and Bruce Cook would have us believe, to accept these behaviors as innate and unchangeable and let either sex (though let’s face it, mostly men) behave badly as result.Instead of just being told that this is what it is, students should be asked to question the nature, validity, and origin of these gender stereotypes, and to explore how stereotypes affect communication within friendships and sexual relationships.

I am pretty confident that my daughter’s princess phase will pass and she will use her strong will and stubborn streak to defend both her rights and abilities as a woman. Maybe I should remind her that the little mermaid saved the prince from drowning, not once, but twice.


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9 comments
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to be quiet, I remember that being a handicapp imposed by the evil octopus queen to suppress her. In fact, we saw how it held her back from telling the prince how she loved.
But definitely we see the princess's primary end game is getting the man or at least its a goal inextribably intertwined to her other goals (escaping this provinicial life, seeing the surface world).
I do see this as partially the innate desire for mating...but, we have other innate desires as well - personal achievement, exercising your own wisdom. While the "natural law" moralists will argue that evolution "makes mating our most important goal", the fact is that:
1.) evolution has several sub-theories about human desire that are being debated, even while the overall theory of evolution is (rightfully) beyond debatable.
2.) Evolution is NOT human morality. Evolution is not even a person. It's just a natural force that shapes us for a purpose that is indifferent to human morals, survival and reproduction - WHICH are primarilly taken care of by human medicine, social services,etc. Anyone thinking every individual needs to mate and reproduce for the planets population has not been watching the overpopulation bubble.
3.)The desires which drives us to be independent thinkers, to be conscious of stereotypes, prejudices, and human habits - and actively change - these desires are ALSO the products of evolution. Otherwise we wouldn't have the brains to have this consciousness

4.) Evolution doing its thing does not dictate we humans from doing our thing. Evolution did not create these gender stereotype curricula. Humans did. Evolution did not create the all the books, movies that the author described. Humans created those things. Evolution did not create laws that oppose sex ed and abortion. Humans created these laws. Everything humans created are CHOICES.
So yes, evolution does its thing, but we do our thing, and we must take responsibility for what we do and not pass the buck to evolution (or some imagined process of it).

Submitted by Harry834 on November 9, 2009 - 1:34pm.

Yes, the sea queen does take Ariel's voice as an attempt to thwart her prince-wooing, but the point of the story is that she gets him anyway. He's totally won over by the beautiful mute, at least until the antagonist casts a spell, etc. etc. The sea queen even has some lyrics in her song about "the men up there don't like a lot of blabber," which turns out to be the case. Silent and pretty gets the prince.

 

Wow, I know way too much about Disney movies. 

Submitted by dubiouslygreat on November 9, 2009 - 3:59pm.

Kudos for thinking like a mission-focused superhero:

"Perhaps the princess knew more about dragons than the knight and understood that the second dragon had a skin too thick to be pierced by a sword or that the third should be poisoned because its neck was too strong to be quickly snapped by a noose. According to the curriculum, she should have kept this information to herself despite the risk to the castle all to ensure that she did not offend her man."

This is why it's all about solutions, not ego, on the battlefield.

Of course, the key word is the word "perhaps". If she did not know these things, and the sword was the best, then we could legitamitely accuse her of holding him back...and if the genders were reverse, we could accuse him of holding her back. I believe men nag women, though I know the word "nag" is heavilly tied to the female gender-stereotype, so I can't easily use it without triggering that stereotype.

How do men nag women? Let me think...(feel free to add more)

Many men tell women, in various ways, to "get over" their issues, while not knowing what those issues are. Reproductive health is a big example.

How else to men nag women?

Submitted by Harry834 on November 9, 2009 - 2:15pm.

men tell pregnant women what they can and can't do...yes that "protective white knight" telling the woman what she needs for her own good...

Any other suggestions? Perhaps the anti-abortion men who try to stand in the way of their wives. "I lost my fatherhood!!!"

 

Submitted by Harry834 on November 9, 2009 - 2:18pm.

for wanting to do things other than motherhood is society's way of nagging women

Submitted by Harry834 on November 9, 2009 - 2:21pm.

“Deep inside every man is a knight in shining armor, ready to rescue a maiden and slay a wicked dragon.When a man feels trusted, he is free to be the strong, protecting man he longs to be.”

Is this for real?
So when a man behaves well, it's his innate nobility coming out- But when he's an ass, it must be some woman's fault?

Submitted by DaveL on November 9, 2009 - 5:03pm.

Pretty much, Dave..."Dr" Laura says so.

Submitted by ahunt on November 9, 2009 - 5:05pm.

I read my daughter all of Patricia Wrede's books about the Princess Cimorene, who is so tired of being 'proper' that she run away and ends up in as librarian for a dragon. She is extremely annoyed by having Princes knocking at the cave mouth intent on 'rescuing' her when she's got better things to do.

Submitted by crowepps on November 9, 2009 - 9:23pm.

I grew up with The Little Mermaid--my parents remind me that I watched at constantly as a little girl. I have always though it was my favorite because Ariel was so free-spirited and curious and rebellious, compared to most of the Disney pricesses who are mostly just sitting around waiting for their prince to rescue them. I still think all the Disney princess movies paint a really dismal picture of relationships and marrage--the goal of a girl's life is not just to snag a good man.

Submitted by atheistyogi on November 13, 2009 - 11:00am.