Friday, February 3, 2012

Sexist Jokes Part 4

Now, I do acknowledge that there is a time and place for categorization and stereotype jokes. Telling a black joke to a group of Black Panthers would not be very productive. Neither would telling gay jokes at a gay pride event, or a sexist joke at a feminist rally. There is a time and a place for these things which depend on cultural norms and level of intimacy with the audience. If one is with a comfortable audience who understands one's intentions, the stereotype joke can be very humorous and not at all insulting. Same with when one is a different culture. What is treated as acceptable in one culture can be the taboo of another.
I still promote caution when practicing such jokes, but there are times when they can be used when they are socially acceptable.

3 comments:

  1. I find your point interesting and will be posting a blog to comment on it.

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  2. I wonder if the right question is "is this socially acceptable?" Since slavery, for example has been socially acceptable for most people in most of human history, we might need a more objective measure of gender put-down humor's moral acceptability.

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  3. I agree with Matt that acceptability should not be a condition for whether a practice should continue, as many men are completely comfortable with allowing the status of women to go unchanged. Is there a time and place when a particular race, gender, or class should be subordinate?

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