www.echo.net.au/soap-box
Issue# 35.06 July 22–28, 2020 Editor: Mandy Nolan Editorial/gigs: gigs@echo.net.au Copy deadline: 5pm each Friday Advertising: adcopy@echo.net.au P: 02 6684 1777 W: echo.net.au/entertainment
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MANDY NOLAN’S
SOAPBOX WOMEN WHO HATE WOMEN There is a special place in hell for women who don’t help other women. – Madeleine K. Albright, Former Secretary of State and Ambassador to the UN. This is one of my favourite quotes. You see, too often the greatest enemy women are up against, is one of us. Not a man trying to bring us down – but a woman.
ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT
We have worked with these women, we have these women in our families, in our mother’s groups, they write heartless public commentary in our media, on our social media pages. These are the women who don’t just betray us, they betray themselves. There are women who don’t like other women. In fact they hate other women. These women, like their male womenhating counterparts tend to live in denial, with no insight into their deep fear and mistrust of their own gender. They don’t know they are women who hate women. They see themselves as separate and somehow in battle with us on behalf of ‘the men’. In this long-fought gender war, where equity and justice is at stake, these women are traitors. We all know them. Some of them will be reading this, getting annoyed at me. She’ll write a comment about me being fat and ugly and a boring feminist that no man wants to have sex with. She’ll say I’m jealous, or I have terrible tits. She’ll say I’m a bad mother. She’ll say I’m crazy. This is what she always writes. It’s what abusive men say to women. And women who want to silence the brave voices of other women. It’s the same bloodied club used by patriarchy, but it hits all the harder when it’s held by the soft hands of a sister. These women usually identify strongly as ‘women’ with a hyper-feminine approach. Yet they think like men. Let me clarify – they think like toxic men. It’s the stain of their own toxic femininity. They use the same language, the same hate speech and judge their fellow women with the same harsh criteria as the most fervent patriarch. These are the women who will quickly defend men in the discussion around domestic violence with a comment about men being victims too. I often read that and think – why did you need to say that? Surely you have a first hand experience of rape, violence or abuse in your immediate circle? There is no woman on this planet who doesn’t. Why don’t these women care? Why are they so angry at us? They see us as the perpetrators of our own misfortune, and ultimately, of their own deep unhappiness. These women clearly hate themselves so deeply, they can only fear other women as competitors to be annihilated instead of as collaborators to be celebrated. It seems to me that these are the women are so desperate for the attention and the allegiance of men that they are prepared to throw their bleeding sisters under the bus. It used to make me angry, but now it just makes me sad.
BIG SONG SESSIONS RESUME
SHE-RATED CABARET
Janet Swain’s Big Song Sessions started at Brunswick Picture House in 2018, and have grown in popularity. Whichever way you take your singing – as therapy, fun, a way to learn new songs to sing on the beach, as exercise, as healing – Big Song is about community connectedness, and is an easy way to get your singing fix for the week. People love the freedom of the Big Song format – the connections that are made, the laughter, the effect that the harmonies have on everyone, and the magic of singing together in a circle.
Thanks to funding from Create NSW, Mullumbimby can look forward to two intimate, COVID-safe Cabaret shows, featuring stunning and diverse local female talent, hosted by Claudie Frock, Gabrielle Griffin, and Simone O’Brien (The Moxy Collective.)
Come and learn vocal warm-ups, fun exercises, simple chants, improvisation and circle singing, lullabies, laments and rounds, and deepen your connection with your own authentic voice. You will discover ways of using singing as a simple and extremely effective way to de-stress. Meetings will be at the Memorial Hall while Brunswick Picture House is undergoing renovations. Precautions will be taken to ensure people are singing at a safe distance, and masks will be available for those who would like to wear them. Limited numbers, so book online via the Song Dynasty website. An exciting new addition to the website is the membership page, where you can find songs, videos, lyrics and sheet music, plus background stories. Bookings viasongdynastymusic.com or email Janet for more info at sdynastymusic@gmail.com
Join the crew as they dust off the glamour, sweat, swords and stockings to perform live, up close (but not too close), and personal. Thanks to a Regenerate grant from Create NSW, the She-Rated Cabaret team will be employing local theatre makers to take their sold-out Lismore cabaret show on the road: to Mullumbimby, Kyogle, and Murwillumbah. First stop is hometown Mullum, with very limited audience capacity, owing to that damn virus, so get in quick: 12 tables of two only. There will be live streaming for anyone who misses out, or are in isolation. From dance to story-telling, lip-sync to acoustic guitar, this show has it all. Starring the likes of Sprung!!, Kimberley McIntyre & her Trio Menage, Indigenous dancer Sarah Bolt, circus sideshow freak Zoe L’Amour, and headliner Ainé Tyrell, all mixed up by your fabulous trio of MCs. With stylish décor by Mandy Peters, and strict COVID-safe protocols adhered to, this could be your first big night out in a bloody long time. Sunday Matinee 2–3.30, Evening 7–8.30 at The Drill Hall Theatre, Mullumbimby. Cost: Matinee $15, Evening $15/20
As a woman, and as a feminist, I want to know why? Why do some women refuse to support other women? Why do some women refuse to acknowledge the existence of a patriarchal system that limits women’s progress in the workforce; a world that sets rigid standards to define ‘feminine’ beauty, and makes our homes the most likely place we will be murdered. You see, this stuff will have happened to them too, but they have internalised their trauma and chosen to love their captor, rather than create community with the fellow afflicted. In all my years of writing and receiving negative flack, it is always these women that hurt me the most. Not with what they’ve said, but that my ‘sister’ would seek to kick me with such gusto. That her sense of her own feminine power is defined by how swiftly she can lift her boot. As a feminist and lover of women, understanding and having compassion for female misogynists is one of my greatest struggles.
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I want to understand them. Some women are so attached to traditional gender roles that any deviation by other women threatens their identity. It makes them hate women who are different. Women who don’t know their place. Women who speak up. It scares them. There are also women, I think, who are so full of self-loathing that they unknowingly hold themselves in contempt, but that contempt spills out in a loathing of other women. There are some women who are in fierce competition with other women, who believe they are superior to other women. And then, of course, there is the misogynistic puritan who still believes being a submissive housewife is our biological and spiritual destiny. So call me fat. Call me ugly. Call me whatever you like if that’s what you need to do to make yourself feel better about who you are. But we are here; this enormous community of incredible women pushing for change – we understand that perhaps you have faced the fiercest indoctrination of all. So we have kept your seats at our table. We forgive you.
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