Image: the unsilenceable Olivia Pope from Scandal
Some time ago I spoke out strongly in a work meeting dominated by men. I was told not to be ‘hysterical’, which served to silence me very effectively.
My experience is not unique. My colleague was following in the footsteps of a long line of men, dismissing a woman through reference to her womb.
Tony Abbott is on record as saying that women will never approach dominance or equal representation in the workplace “because their aptitudes, abilities and interests are different for physiological reasons”. Translated, this means women are biologically inferior – and we should accept our status as the second sex.
Does this explain why we only have one woman Minister in the current Commonwealth Government? It is not because women are physiologically inferior, but because men in positions of power believe in the myth of ‘raging hormones’ and use it as a justification for keeping women down – or out.
Historically, women were excluded from attending university, and from training as doctors, because of the fear it would drain energy from their wombs. Thinking and menstruating were seen as incompatible. The end of menstruation did not bring equality and freedom. Menopausal women were encouraged by medical experts to lead a quiet and sedentary life, in order to “keep the mind in a calm and complacent mood”. They had to refrain from reading novels, sex, dancing, going to the theatre or to parties, for fear that this would “excite the nervous system and hence endanger the reproductive organs”.