Entry tags:
Fail, Slash Fangirls, Fail
You know what I keep hearing? What pisses me off like no other?
The slasher pov that it is impossible to write a male/female relationship that is equal.
Fuck that.
If you want to write about boys sexing each other, fine, but don't flat-out state that it is impossible for a fictionally heterosexual relationship to ever be equal, as well as implying that every single real world straight relationship is inequal to boot.
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Definitely.
And the father thing is basic Freudian psychology. Our opposite-gender parent gives us our picture for what people of that gender are supposed to be like, and supposedly defines our self-image a bit more than the other parent. So women whose fathers were misogynistic and dismissive towards them are more likely to have those (skewed) values and to view themselves and all women as being less than men. These women are also more likely to look for similar values in potential mates.
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But I understand the nerves, I think. It really isn't my place to comment on other people's familial relationships, especially when I know nothing about them and I'm just making assumptions. (Not to mention that Freudian psych is pure squick.)
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(Not to mention that Freudian psych is pure squick.)
Yep.
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Are you talking about the... shit, what is it ... Antigone complex? I think that's it anyway.
See, I always thought it was more that a child would look for a partner that bore similar traits to the parent of the opposite sex -- which meant they wanted to have sex with that parent, or something like that.
Of course, this is just going off what I remember of it. I kinda zoned out on the Freud talk. Dude was messed up and had no business playing with people's heads when his own was a playground of jacked-uppery. Not to mention, I think you were helping me with a psych project not too long ago ... so chances are I'll probably defer to you on this one.
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I learned that it was both that and that the opposite sex parent has slightly more influence over a child than the other parent.
The Freud talk is one of the better ones to zone out on. It's... disturbing to think about. And it makes you wonder about Freud's relationship with his own mother and his daughter, Anna, who continued his research.
No problem! It was a lot of fun. But I think my words should be taken with a grain of salt. I grew up around psych people, but I've only taken two formal classes in it. Everything else I learned at the age of five with my mom when she was studying. (Though I was apparently disturbingly good at behavioral modification, as my dad really should have noticed.)
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I think he had some good BASE ideas, but the man was entirely too preoccupied with sex and was more about (it seems to me) finding PROBLEMS than solutions.
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Still, he's pretty important to pop culture; his ideas have been infused in all sorts of literature and music etc. He's also important because his ideas spawned a lot of good other houses of thinking.
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I can see a connection between our opposite-sex parent and how we look at the opposite gender...because that's our first interaction with the opposite gender. I think it's a matter of perspective, of understanding that not ALL men are jerks.
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About the gender-model parent- BOTH parents effect the child's view of gender norms and self-worth, by both their absence and presence. A douche-y father has just as much affect on a daughter as a supportive mother, and vice versa.
Indeed, people do need to understand that not all men are jerks. Unfortunately, not everyone is able or willing to move past childhood issues.