
Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language

Pressures for women to position themselves as “normal” and “nice” are almost always a constraint, no matter who’s listening. “None of us is ever free of the need to keep up some sort of front,” Coates says.
Amanda Montell • Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language
A 2017 study of body-camera footage revealed that police officers were 61 percent more likely to use low-respect language, such as informal titles like “my man,” with black drivers than they were with white drivers. Interactions like this are not a sign of affection or something the recipient should be flattered by. Because really, they’re just a s
... See moreAmanda Montell • Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language
Young women use the linguistic features that they do, not as mindless affectations, but as power tools for establishing and strengthening relationships.
Amanda Montell • Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language
As Deborah Cameron once said, “Teaching young women to accommodate to the linguistic preferences, aka prejudices, of the men who run law firms and engineering companies is doing the patriarchy’s work for it.” It accepts the idea that “feminine” speech is the problem, rather than the sexist attitudes toward it. “The business of feminism is surely to
... See moreAmanda Montell • Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language
People don’t seem to care or even notice when men talk this way. Only when it comes from female mouths does it cause such an upset. This fact makes it clear that our culture’s aversion to vocal fry, uptalk, and like isn’t really about the speech qualities themselves.
Amanda Montell • Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language
Scholars have a clever word for this kind of social structure in which power is formed through a brotherhood that objectifies and dehumanizes those on the outside: they call it fratriarchy. Many think this is a more accurate way to describe our culture’s post-feudal system, which is ruled not by the fathers, but by peer networks of the brothers.
Amanda Montell • Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language
Ultimately, language can serve as a rather blatant means of otherizing all things feminine.
Amanda Montell • Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language
“Language is not always about making an argument or conveying information in the cleanest, simplest way possible. It’s often about building relationships. It’s about making yourself understood and trying to understand someone else.”
Amanda Montell • Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language
I’ve heard the satirical argument that women were given purses to hold and high heels to wear to physically slow them down. While I don’t take this sentiment literally, I think you can compare it to the critique of women’s voices, which are there to steal the focus away from the content of their statements, while distracting women with the anxiety
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