Rising above girls day jokes
Updated: 2016-03-14 07:33
By Raymond Zhou(China Daily)
|
||||||||
Call it "etiquette" or call it "political correctness", one must not forget that there are invisible lines when cracking jokes that are gender- or race-related. As a rule of thumb, one should not mock the institutionally weak. Zhao Benshan, China's top comedian, was once lambasted for gags that mocked the handicapped.
The funny thing is, we are living in a storm of rapid changes. Female enrollment in college has risen so fast and women are so academically competitive that the "guys" could well feel threatened. There are unwritten rules in recruitment or employment to favor males because they are weak. I've heard of more than one employer, headed by women, that would lower the cutoff line by 20 or 30 points (out of 100) for male applicants.
If you dissect the tongue-in-cheek couplets, they actually assumed a lower status for men. They were pleading with the "girls" who would otherwise go for greener pastures. Let me put it this way: The slogans would have been unthinkable two centuries ago when women were socially designated as adjunct to men.
But does the appearance of the bad jokes imply women having equality in China? By no means. Old traditions die hard. Simply declaring women equal does not turn it into instant reality. But I dare say Chinese women may have moved further than their Western peers in some respects.
In China, when a supervisor or a CEO is a woman, it's generally taken for granted. If people hate her, rarely would they say "She is a woman". I consider that progress because we have passed the stage when female executives are used as tokens for equality.
More harmful than the college jokes is the popularity of costume dramas devoured by even the fair sex. For example, a typical on-screen tale of palace intrigue would have a phalanx of beautiful young women outwitting and outkilling each other so the last one standing would get the emperor's favor. Where was Empress Wu Zetian when we needed her?
Now, I'm no feminist. (By somewhat justifying the campus pranksters, I could have offended the nation's feminists.) But I think the subliminal message of so much of today's pop culture condemns women to second class-but subtly that even women seem to be floating on cloud nine after wallowing in it.
- Putin says Russians to start withdrawing from Syria, as peace talks resume
- Merkel says Sunday's state elections 'make her party think'
- Canberra's Balloon Spectacular festival kicks off
- Germanwings crash caused deliberately by mentally ill copilot: BEA
- Second car bomb in a month kills 34 in Turkish capital, Ankara
- German voters batter Merkel over migrant policy
- Infographics: All you need to know about Premier's press conference
- Now and then photos of Shanghai Jiaotong University
- Post-90s quits his job to make traditional paper umbrellas
- In pictures: Destroying fake and shoddy products
- Armless farmer builds new hands for himself, others
- The world in photos: March 7 - March 13
- China's booming IT industry helps drones fly high
- This 'mermaid' left broadcasting for a watery world
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Anti-graft campaign targets poverty relief |
Cherry blossom signal arrival of spring |
In pictures: Destroying fake and shoddy products |
China's southernmost city to plant 500,000 trees |
Cavers make rare finds in Guangxi expedition |
Cutting hair for Longtaitou Festival |
Today's Top News
What ends Jeb Bush's White House hopes
Investigation for Nicolas's campaign
Will US-ASEAN meeting be good for region?
Accentuate the positive in Sino-US relations
Dangerous games on peninsula will have no winner
National Art Museum showing 400 puppets in new exhibition
Finest Chinese porcelains expected to fetch over $28 million
Monkey portraits by Chinese ink painting masters
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |