What Is Mizz?
This happens every time I go for a routine
test to a neighbourhood medical centre; without asking, they add a Mrs before
my name in the bill. Each time, I have to patiently explain to the baffled
person on duty, that firstly they cannot assume every woman is married; and
secondly that all women use their husband’s surname. The surname I use is my
father’s, I tell the bored young woman (usually a female), so it cannot be
prefixed with a Mrs, please use Ms. Their computer does not seem to have that
option. Even government and bank forms now give you a Ms choice, does this
medical centre exist in the last century?
The young woman scratches out the Mrs with a pen, writes Ms and hands
the paper back with a sour “Bas, happy
now?” expression.
The other thing that gets my hackles up is
vendors in the market, cabbies, security guards calling every woman over the
age of, say, twenty “bhabhi.” They
decide she is too old for baby and too young for aunty, so bhabhi seems safe. “Why are
you forming a needless rishtedaari?”
I snap when I have the time and energy to. They don’t understand what the
problem is—why shouldn’t a married women be called bhabhi, and why shouldn’t woman in her twenties or above be
married? My theory is that this is the
patriarchal way of diminishing a woman; she cannot exist without being attached
to a man; she cannot be madam or memsaheb,
because to their mind, that would give her an identity of her own and the man
does not think she deserves an independence from familial bonds. To him, bhabhi means the woman, who, in his home
does the domestic chores, and in the lewd videos he watches on his phone, a
woman who invites lust—Savita Bhabhi, for instance.
There is a problem in the language of patriarchy,
especially when for centuries male has been the default gender in many languages.
So the people who form the Aam Aadmi Party do not seem to think that it
excludes women. Why could it not have called the Aam Nagrik Party?
We use a terms like common man, countryman,
layman, chairman, when there are gender neutral terms like common citizen, compatriot,
layperson and chairperson in use. Some may snigger and say that this is taking
political correctness too far, but they don’t object to visually impaired for
blind, speech impaired for mute or differently abled for handicapped, which,
activists working in these areas now insist on to give a sense of dignity or
inclusiveness to them.
Language has to evolve to take in changed
social circumstances, and by now gender sensitive or gender neutral language
should come naturally to the educated, but even today in the mainstream media
we find term like eve-teasing and fairer sex being routinely used. Women are
not just married, they are married off like an unpleasant duty being performed;
a woman will be referred to as widow of a dead man, but a man is seldom widower
of a dead woman.
David Shariatmadari writing in The
Guardian, lists words referring to women, that had a different meaning but
have changed to mean something entirely different and invariably negative. For
instance, ‘mistress’ was the female equivalent of ‘master’ but has come to mean
a woman with whom a man is having an affair. ‘Madam’ was the female equivalent
of ‘sir’ and is now mostly used to refer to the owner of a brothel. Hussy once
meant the female head of a household and is now used for an aggressive
woman. A ‘governess’ was like a
‘governor,’’ a woman of importance, and was reduced to mean a woman who is employed
to look after children. A ‘courtesan’ was a female courtier, but has come to
denote a prostitute. Spinster was a person—male or female-- who spun yarn, but
is now used as a derogatory term for an unmarried woman. ‘Tart’ was short for sweetheart, and now means
a flirt… or worse.
What is the male equivalent of ‘old maid’? Why doesn’t a man ever
‘remain on the shelf’? Why is bitch spat out as an insult, but not dog? Men
also spend hours eating, gossiping and gambling, but who calls their group a
kitty party? A vixen is a nasty woman,
but a fox is wily person who gets grudging admiration. Men also grumble and
find fault but why do only women ‘nag?’
Why is a young man called ‘dude’ and a young woman ‘chick?’
Needs thinking about… the next time we speak!
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