Tag: femininity
A Call For Submissions: Lipstick Red: A Zine About Revolutionary Anti-Capitalist and Proletarian Femininities.
So I’m doing it, I’m doing a zine about leftist femininity and proletarian femininity, please submit articles, artwork and so on to yourprincessmadeira@gmail.com.
Stories about the experience of being a feminine working class person, about style as resistance, about wearing your class pride on your sleeve, about experiencing sneers from bourgeois intellectuals for being “trashy” or whatever very welcome.
Here’s the makeover scene, note the conversation between Cyn (the brunette) who does not aspire to be a member of the bourgeois and the aspirational Tess. Cyn criticizes the simplicity of the dress, it is meant to be read as her showing her ignorance of what is considered fashionable among the upper classes, but I think it says more about her characters working class pride.
She unlike Tess does not attempt to discard her working class accent, she does not discard her cultural roots, she is proud to be a prole. She cares for her friend, but she doesn’t entirely approve of the masquerade, and I think doesn’t entirely approve of the world Tess is attempting to enter.
Tess may be determined to be the exception, to get to the top, but she does not question the validity of the system, doesn’t question why these people should hold complete power over others, she sees them as innately superior.
Working Girl 1988
Note the difference between secretary and boss, note the difference in types of femininity.
The 1988 film Working Girl
Has a lot to teach us about proletarian vs bourgeois femininity, despite having a shitty message
The Cuteness Matrix // Jealousy, Polyamory, Femininity
Not being into masc folks has made it a lot easier for me to love other fem people, because I only love other fem people. Honestly, I’m not even poly but excluding masc people from my love life has been awesome.
Even so, I’ve had fem partners be pissed that I was getting more masc attention even though neither of us was into masc people