By James Bowman on 1.16.07 @ 12:07AM
They don't stand a chance in this age of eager exhibitionism and faux seduction.
In a terrific piece in Friday's Wall Street Journal, Kay
Hymowitz writes of the recent fashion for exhibitionism in women --
not only girls gone very calculatedly wild like Britney Spears or
Paris Hilton but also older women like Jane Juksa (A
Round-Heeled Woman) or Toni Bentley (The Surrender)
or Kathryn Harrison (The Kiss) who have in recent years
found that there's money to be made and fame to be won from
translating their more or less exotic sexual experiences from
between the sheets to between hard covers. She might also have
mentioned the photographers, artists, and so on who have adopted a
similar strategy for career advancement. Last summer the London
Sunday Times ballyhooed "what one woman photographer has
described as 'the new trend for the enlightened, liberated woman of
today...to be proudly naked on the internet'" -- all in the
interests of her art, of course. A less high-minded view was taken
by Jessica, of California, who sourly noted that "unfortunately
there are more and more people trying to get attention via their
nipples."
Well, it's an easy thing for women to do! Miss Hymowitz notes
that "flashing is hardly limited to celebrities. The
girls-next-door who migrate to Florida during spring break happily
lift their blouses and snap their thongs for the producers of
'Girls Gone Wild,' who sell their DVDs to an eager public." It is
true enough that the latter are not celebrities. But they belong to
the celebrity culture as much as celebrities themselves -- who
really are nothing without their fans. For nowadays, fandom doesn't
just mean reading movie magazines or writing fan letters. There is
also an almost inevitable urge to emulation in modern
celebrity-worship. Fame, detached from any great public virtue that
might once have been thought to make a person worthy of it, has
never seemed easier of attainment than it does now, and the easiest
way of all -- for women, at least -- is to abandon modesty.
Sometimes it actually works, too. Pamela Anderson and Paris
Hilton might be forgotten today if it weren't for those sex tapes.
Ordinary women who have a tenuous claim on public attention can get
their fifteen minutes by stripping off for Playboy, which
has for years been exploiting the willingness of some women, from
minor soap stars to Patty Reagan, to try to parlay a brush with
fame into something approaching celebrity. A few years ago the
magazine even did a feature titled: "Women of Enron Uncover Their
Hidden Assets."
Tommie Lee and whoever was the guy in the Paris Hilton video
notwithstanding, however, public nudity only confers its dubious
blessing of faux celebrity on women. "Why men have become
more discreet than women, assuming they have, is one of those
cultural mysteries that is yet to be solved," writes Kay Hymowitz.
Well, I think I can offer her a solution to the mystery. The answer
has to do with that same old double standard I wrote about last
week in this space. Whether we like it or not -- or fulminate
against its ideological and political incorrectness or not -- women
are and always have been, and presumably always will be, defined by
their sexuality in a way that men simply are not. And that means
that women are always in a position to get far more attention than
men by displaying sexual behavior in public. It also means that
Monica Lewinsky will always be known for that blue dress, whatever
else she may do or accomplish in life, just as Sharon Stone, though
she has acted in many serious films -- or as serious as Hollywood
gets, anyway -- will forever be known as the woman who flashed her
private parts in Basic Instinct.
It's all very unfair, perhaps, but it is the way of the world --
the obverse or correlate of the fact that a woman's honor is her
chastity. Such "fame" as these women have achieved would once have
been known as notoriety or shame. But now that we've done away with
those things -- in the name of equality and justice and compassion
of course -- all fame (like all publicity) is good fame. The
expectation of female modesty and chastity remains,
however, in our vestigial sense of honor, and for that reason it is
still news when women outrage that expectation. That's why it's all
the better for publicity's sake if the women, like those of
Calendar Girls or Hanif Kureishi's The Mother,
are of a certain age -- an age when, as Hamlet tells his mother,
"the hectic in the blood is tame."
But that kind of outrage and the fame it generates must
eventually become a wasting asset when we've seen it all before.
According to a report in the Daily Telegraph last
month, in the land of the Yorkshire Calendar Girls, "the number of
individuals willing to pose stark blooming naked for 2007 charity
calendars has reached plague-like proportions." Also of course --
and again on account of the double standard -- men have a much
harder time being "transgressive," as the literary theorists say.
It's already no surprise when men behave as old goats -- which is
why there is no equivalent term for women. Unlike men, they become
more interesting when they give us a flash of flesh -- or of the
flushed aftermath of sexual naughtiness. Men are not more discreet,
they're just uncomfortably aware -- most of them, anyway, thank God
-- that they don't become more interesting and thus more famous by
such behavior. They become merely disgusting.
topics:
Hollywood