Saturday 11 July 2015

Leticia Bufoni and the ESPN body issue

So unless you've been hiding under a rock, you'll have probably noticed that Leticia Bufoni posed naked for ESPNs body issue and the net it trying to decide if this is a good or a bad thing.



I'm going to put my cards straight on the table, my initial, visceral reaction to the pictures was one of dislike. This is because I'm a skater grrl, and for me it feels like they feed into the way women in board sports are sexualised and marketed to a predominantly male audience. However, when I went and looked at the body issue - well the pictures from it at least - I liked looking at the images, not in a titillating way, but just seeing myriad different ways a body could be athletic and powerful and beautiful. I realise beautiful is quite a loaded term, but there was something incredibly captivating about seeing all these different shapes of athletic body - especially when they were caught in sporting motion. Go and have a look and tell me I'm wrong. Clearly if I'm happy looking the naked bodies of female athletes in sports I don't care about, but I'm upset about Leticia Bufoni's pictures, there's something else going on.

I need to say that I've read comments pretty much slut shaming Letica Bufoni for doing this. This is not on. It's her body, her life and she can pose naked if she wants to... it's not even like it's massively out of context either, because that's the whole point of the bloody magazine. So stop with the slut shaming already because it ain't big or clever.

This is the point to start talking about objectification, and whether or not the Body Issue is guilty of this - and before someone dives in with "but the men are being objectified too", I'm well aware of that and don't particularly like it much either, however once a woman has been presented as a sexual object it can be hard to shake that off, whereas it doesn't seem to define men in quite the same way. Objectification is all about power and who has it - this comic explains it all very neatly. Now it gets messy and complicated when we're talking about professional athletes because part of your job as a sponsored pro is to rep the companies that sponsor you. I doubt that any of Letica's sponsors straight up told her that she "had" to do the body issue, because this is 2015 and ewwww - so she almost certainly had a choice and the ability to say no if she wanted to.

So far so good.

It gets complicated here because the Body Issue is a very high profile thing, it does drive advertising and that's kind of her job as a sponsored athlete. Do sponsored skaters have pressure to put out media, to compete, to win? Sure, being sponsored isn't a badge of merit, it's something you have to work hard to achieve and then put a lot of work into to keep. When that's how you make you're living, you're always going to consider how your actions affect your value and worth with a sponsor. Does that mean she was forced? No, but it does mean that the answer about how much of a choice she had is murky. Obviously this is purely speculative, I neither know Leticia nor am I a mind reader, and this is just based on stuff I've been told and experienced - Though my brief stint as a sponsored skater hardly set the world aflame.

Then we need to throw in the horrible truth that in the wider context of the world and society we live in, a naked women will be regarded as a sexual object and her public nudity will follow her and define her in a way it really doesn't for men, no matter how empowering the initial act was. This is because the world is a shitty place most of the time, and personally I can't wait till the thumb cats take over and we can get down to being ruled by our new feline overlings. They can't make as much of a hash of it as we have.

Jokes aside, public female nudity feeds male entitlement to women's bodies - and before someone dives in with #notallmen, I realise this, I'm using male as a label for a class of people who aren't women and not you personally - and I think this is going to follow her for the rest of her career. Whether it ends up being a good or a bad thing remains to be seen.

And it's still not her fault, so stop thinking it.

Monday 23 March 2015

Team no Balls

I went to the Summer Swine Stomp freeride at Hog Hill recently (by recently I mean last july) - it was fun,the weather was good, there were a bunch of ladies skating the hill and generally the stoke was flowing in full effect. However something happened there that just niggles at my feminist soul - I was told I had balls for skating down the hill on my Rayne Phantom (basically an over sized skateboard). Now I let it slide for a number of reasons - I was having fun and didn't want to kill the vibe, it was unintentional, and because (despite everything you may have heard) feminism isn't about publicly shaming individuals; instead it's the case that we live in a world that normalises certain ways of thinking. We all feed and support that system unless we consciously check our privileges and language all the time, and feminism is merely a set of tools that allows us to do this.


Photo by Steven Cornish Photography

This is critical - I know the red mist often descends when I mention the 'F' word - but critique of the system of patriarchy that we live in is not a critique of you. So please take a few deep breaths, maybe have a cup of tea and then come back.

I don't hate you... No really, I don't.

Me "having balls" was most likely a comment and compliment on the fact I was skating the hill confidently on a board with a 19" wb... What can I say, I like wrongboarding. But having balls does not equal confidence any more than having (or being) a pussy equals being timid, doubtful, or apprehensive. Confidence is built up of many different things: experience, technique and attitude. If you put in the time, you learn good technique and you keep at it no matter how hard it seems, then you will get better. Any dangly things you may or may not have between your legs never come into it. As someone of the female persuasion it's actually a little bit insulting to brush aside the blood, skin and tears I've sacrificed to skaten over the years in order to gain that confidence, by saying it's about having balls. It needlessly genders a compliment, it says that my skating can only be good when it's considered to have attained some weird abstract of maleness. It may not be quite the slap in the face of "you skate like a guy", but it is firmly headed in that direction.

You may think this is unimportant, trivial even, but it does genuinely matter. Gendered compliments subtly reinforce male dominance of the space that is skateboarding, and indeed society in general. It's not about swapping one kind of gendered compliment for another, it's about realising how ridiculous they are in the first place. Generally women don't have balls (and most of those that do don't want them). If you happened to meet a trans skater and you told her she had balls, you would ruin her whole day - tell her she looks really confident doing what she's doing and she'll be stoked. There is a growing movement in the world of female skating to reclaim the label of "skates like a girl", not because we think it's better than skating like a guy - see comments about needlessly gendering stuff - but rather because as girls, when we skate, we skate like girls. Some girls shred, some don't - same goes for guys. Experience is gained through hard work and determination and is not gendered. Ever.

So to the point of this little diatribe. Please stop gendering compliments and insults, they demean and lessen the safe and welcoming space that skating should be. I have been told countless times that guy or girl skaters are just skaters, something I agree with completely, but instead of just saying it, make it true by living it. The language is there to say what we need without resorting to tired and damaging gender stereotypes. So, no more telling someone that they've got balls when what they really have is confidence, and no more calling your mate a pussy if they're bottling a trick.
Let's all keep skating awesome.

If you have read this far without rage throwing your cup of tea at you monitor, you may want to learn more about feminism and why it's important for everyone, so I've included some links to some feminism 101s. Enjoy.

Saturday 31 January 2015

Holesom Girls 2015 Calendar


The 2015 Holesom Girls calendar is pretty awesome, and not just because I'm Miss June. It's refreshing for a company to view their female riders as talented skaters in their own right, rather than just pretty adornments for holding product in ads. Hell it's refreshing for a company to support such a large roster of female riders in the first place.

Basically Holesom rock. 

Twenty badass ladies feature, and we're from all over the world, representing all sorts of styles and skill levels of skating. This isn't about selling product - though you should buy holesom pucks, they're badass - but about showcasing a bunch of ladies who shred hard and ride with a smile. 

Like I said, pretty fucking awesome - and something we need more of in skateboarding.

Anyway, ride with a smile and keep it Holesom!