Thursday, March 15, 2012

Where were you in ‘72? - from the Festival


Report by Maggie Rainey-Smith

This particular title for a session was a huge draw card for me.   I know exactly where I was, in London, reading a first edition copy of ‘The Female Eunuch’, a fledgling feminist, and even having a letter published in Ms Magazine.
So, what a treat it was to see on stage, Marilyn Waring, Sandra Coney and Germaine Greer, brilliantly chaired by Judy Mcgregor.   She was for me the stand-out chair of the festival, so smart, so quick and on task.    Let me set the scene.   The theatre is filled with women of a certain age and I couldn’t help smiling looking up at the stage to see all of the feet (chair included), shod in sensible flat shoes.    Oddly, shoes become a focal point when you’re looking up at writers during the festival.
Judy McGregor did splendid introductions although you imagine that most of the audience needed none of them.      She asked, ‘What was so special in 1972’ and went on to mention Roe versus Wade, Led Zeppelin climbing his stairway to heaven and Don McLean endlessly lamenting the loss of the American dream.   She mentioned an advertisement in MS magazine asking why a woman couldn’t make a good Daiquiri (advertising Hawaiian Rum), and that Helen Reddy was on the top 100 billboard with her song “I am woman, hear me roar’.

But of course here in New Zealand, 1972 is remembered, as Judy McGregor told us, for the time when Germaine Greer was ‘acquitted on bullsh.t, and convicted for f..k’.    There was much appreciative laughter for this terrific summing up of the moment.    But the back story was so much more interesting than I had ever realised.  It was really for me a vague myth from the seventies that I had missed.  It turned out that Germaine Greer had agreed to use the word bullshit in public because at the time Tim Shadbolt had been arrested for a similar offence.   The theory was that because Germaine was a woman and a visiting Australian, she would not be arrested and this would set a precedent for free speech and have the charges against Tim Shadbolt dropped.    Unfortunately a woman pushing a pram was walking through the university grounds when Germaine uttered the infamous four-letter f-word.    And this woman (I wonder who she is and how she feels about it now?), took umbrage, even though it wasn’t really a ‘public space’
               Judy McGregor reminded Germaine (who it seems had forgotten), that she sacked Julian Miles QC and conducted her own defence. The rest is history, although Germaine added a lovely anecdote when years later she wanted to return to New Zealand and there were fines owing with interest that had accumulated relating to the offence. Margaret Wilson told her not to worry, they had managed to lose the paperwork.
               Marilyn Waring (right) spoke of how amazing it was to be on stage with Sandra Coney and Germaine Greer, two feminist giants on whose shoulders she had stood as a young woman.    They spoke about the fun of feminism and the prevailing (perhaps male) perspective that they were all dour and couldn’t get a man.     Marilyn went on to say she lives an international life ‘down among the women’ to quote Fay Weldon and that is what keeps her going.   She said the age of “IT” doesn’t do it for her and she is not interested in twitter and Facebook, but wants to be on the street, and that’s where you make a difference, the revolution she told us is about people in the streets.
               Germaine Greer spoke about the fact that Western Women are no longer directing the Women’s Movement.   She said I’m scared, really scared and spoke of the Islamic brotherhood and that 40% of the woman in Tahrir Square were wearing the hijab and every version of it. She claimed that American pornography has penetrated Islamic Society. 
               Sandra Coney said that men are her soul mates and she feels young women have been stereotyped.   She spoke of her work as a Regional Councillor and Parks Chair in Waitakere and said they were doing wonderful things.   She was full of hope and felt that the young women she was meeting were doing Science degrees and achieving good things, but not getting the attention or recognition for it.   Sandra Coney said “I believe there are more of them than we realise”. This contrasted with Germaine Greer’s lament about young women being focused on their five minutes of fame, and wanting prosthesis to look beautiful.   
               The Chair then asked each woman to comment on one issue that they felt was most important to them today.   Sandra Coney said violence and money, Marilyn Waring said violence and Germaine Greer felt that equality was an illusory aim and that women are ‘pretend equals’.   She is interested in segregation to empower women.    She said we should go back to the top table and turn it over.        Marilyn Waring emphasised the search for dignity and spoke with pride of the work she is involved with talking to care-givers of patients with HIB Aids, and whether they had capability to do the work they were doing.   Issues such as being safe and healthy, having time off, your own health, the fundamental right to enjoy life.
               Sandra Coney made us laugh when she said that still in meetings, if a woman raises an issue it sits as if not taken up, but if a man raises the same issue, it will be tabled and discussed.   She said that she and some of her female colleagues have a running joke if they have a good idea: “can we find a good man to say the same thing!”    She also spoke of the fun she had when she marched on the weekend for the Ports of Auckland workers, catching up with ‘every old feminist’ and that she had a jolly good day.
               Germaine Greer corrected the Chair when she said she was a member of the UK Liberal Democrat Party and said no, she wasn’t a member, she just voted for them. She pointed out that somehow Labour has always assumed she votes for them.   She then took Stephen Hawking to task for saying we will have to conquer space and said he just doesn’t get it, doesn’t he realise “slime mould is our sister”.  Then the tenor turned to banter about being overlooked as an older woman when you go shopping which was light-hearted and comedic and of course we all recognised ourselves – the being overlooked, no longer holding sway.
               The session was rounded up by the Chair asking all of them what makes them happiest and what they were reading:  
               Marilyn Waring – happiness for her is family, friends and novels and the fact that you can’t connect to an internet in her home.  I can’t remember what she was reading (sorry).
               Sandra Coney – happiness for her is her restoration project planting trees, and more recently the marriage of her youngest son, and then she mentioned research and learning.    She said she was reading ‘A Girl of the Limberlost’ and ‘Hemingway’s boats’. This caused some laughter when someone commented “that’s a bit blokey don’t you think?” – and then added, “You don’t have to defend yourself”.

               Germaine Greer told us she had just discovered Kim Scott at the festival and thought he was genius and a most extraordinary talent.   She called him a “completely new voice” and said he was “dazzling”.  Her rainforest project makes her happy!
               In the end, a terrific and highly anticipated session which I’m certain did not disappoint anyone.   There was a small sour note afterwards, when I queued to have my purchases signed by Germaine Greer.  Evidently the Trans gender community have a problem with her over a dispute she had with a colleague at a university.   This issue was raised at question time, but Germaine vehemently refuted the version presented.    Sadly, as she was generously signing books, someone glitter-bombed her.  I heard the kerfuffle and the festival organiser calling out for help – I’m just glad it was only glitter, but a shame to denigrate a generous and much-welcome guest to the festival.   I heard from Unity Books that Germaine had sat for 90 minutes the day previously signing books and taking a specific interest in each and every one of her audience that came to talk to her.   Still, perhaps an old feminist would understand the motive behind a high-profile sort of stunt like that – who knows – I do hope she wasn’t too distressed by it.
               P.S.   This is not the ‘definitive’ report on the session.  If anyone recollects anything else or wants to amend or correct anything I’ve said, please do – I was so absorbed and taking notes but it’s not easy to accurately convey all of the great ideas and comments conveyed.
Maggie Rainey-Smith



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