
Wednesday, January 10, 2001
Hell Hath No Fury Like a Man Devalued--and Women Pay the Price
By ROBERT S. MCELVAINE
Although white rapper Eminem did not win an American Music Award on Monday,
his two nominations in that competition combined with the four Grammy nominations he
received last week serve to remind us how prevalent violent misogyny has become in
contemporary popular culture.
Horror has been expressed about the effects of what seems almost universally to be seen
as a disturbing new development that threatens to debase civilization. Like his black role
models, Eminem shouts about abusing, raping and murdering women, including his mother and
his wife. The chorus of one of his songs begins with the endearing declaration, "Bitch, I'ma kill
you!"
Some people maintain that a culture overflowing with such repulsive messages has no
effect on the thinking and actions of people who live in it. This is absurd.
Yet the alarm about what a departure the current trend in popular culture is, and how
threatening it is to our traditions, also is mistaken. Apart from the vulgar language, there is
nothing new about the rap on women. It is our tradition.
Misogyny, often coupled with violence, has long been a staple of popular culture.
Three of the men often cited as the most important influences on modern music are instructive
examples. "I'm gonna buy me a pistol, just as long as I'm tall/I'm gonna shoot poor Thelma, just
to see her jump and fall," sang Jimmie Rodgers, the "father of country music," in his 1927
classic, "T for Texas." A decade later, Robert Johnson, often credited with being the grandfather
of rock 'n' roll, affirmed: "I'm gonna beat my woman until I'm satisfied." In 1948, Muddy Waters
sang: "Well, I feel like snappin' a pistol in your face, I'm gonna let some graveyard be her restin'
place--woman." And the main theme of the 1955 movie "Rebel Without a Cause" is that a
woman wants a man who uses physical violence against her. "If he had guts to knock Mom cold
once," the James Dean character says of his father, "then maybe she'd be happy."
But the sad truth is that the oft-repeated message in contemporary popular culture that
women are evil and should be considered objects to be used, abused and discarded at the whim of
males does not threaten to debase our civilization. How could misogyny debase a civilization that
has been based--and debased--on misogyny throughout recorded history?
Mutilation of female genitalia has been a recurrent theme in some of the most
objectionable products of recent years, such as some songs by 2 Live Crew. Horrifying as this is,
it is anything but new. In the Babylonian creation epic Enuma Elish, dating from the second
millennium BC, the male god Marduk "shot the arrow that split the belly, that pierced the gut and
cut the womb [of the goddess Tiamat]," thereby destroying her creative power and establishing
his own. Perseus' severing of Medusa's head (which some classical scholars say symbolizes a
powerful vagina) is a parallel Greek representation of the destruction of female power.
Similarly, Eminem's glorification of matricide is but a new improvisation on a very old
tune. The argument of Aeschylus' play "The Eumenides," for instance, is precisely that killing
one's mother is not a horrible crime because the mother is not a parent but merely the soil in
which the true creator, the man, plants his "seed."
Then there is the Bible. The law in Deuteronomy punishes a man who rapes a virgin by
requiring him to make a payment to her father and marry her. The woman is required to marry
her rapist because she is considered mere property that has been ruined: You break it, you've
bought it.
The concern over the effects of violent misogyny in contemporary popular culture is
appropriate. But when we realize this evil has been central to cultures around the world for
millennia, it becomes apparent that it would be more useful to examine this phenomenon as a
symptom of a deep-seated malady.
The current outburst of woman-hating is only the latest manifestation of an underlying
male sense of insecurity. A large number of men throughout history have suffered from the envy
of female reproductive abilities. Added to this, since women invented agriculture about 10,000
years ago and thereby devalued the traditional male role of hunting, has been the fact that many
men can find no satisfactory definition of manhood. Hell hath no fury like a man devalued.
The rap on women has been the anthem of history for 10,000 years. The current
misogynistic music is but a different song with the same old meaning.
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Robert S. McElvaine is a historian at Millsaps College in Jackson, Miss. His latest book
Eve's Seed: Biology, the Sexes and the Course of History, has just been published by
McGraw-Hill.
Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times