Tuesday 3 June 2014

Allsop, women, university and missing the point

So everyone's losing their shit about Kirsty Allsop saying that girls should think about not going to university at 18, but instead working, getting a flat, having kids. Some of the unspoken assumptions in the responses:

  1. Kirsty Allsop is worth listening to on this.
  2. Her opinion will counteract the (overwhelming) societal pressure to go to university.
  3. Having children young is regressive and disempowering to women.
  4. Going to university is A Good Thing.

Allsop!
I think we can probably agree that we've all got carried away with (2). A voice suggesting a different path is not going to roll back votes for women.

I'm leaving (3). Obvious that there are different ways to live a happy life.

Now, (4). We tend to think that university is a good thing, that people benefit from it, and the more people we can get there the better. More women, more ethnic minorities: we're on our way to a better society!

However, I have a hunch... Power is increasingly entrenched; more women going to university is a signal not of progress, but of the lessening importance of a university education in amassing real power.

A degree does not increase your options, it changes them. Most graduates will go on to work for big companies and institutions. They will earn steady salaries in return for corporate drudgery. They will do the housework of capitalism, they will not be its masters.

Bet you're glad you did that degree.
Now, on (1), turns out Kirsty Allsop IS worth listening to, on this point, anyway. Not because she is a public figure, but because she is very posh. Posh people have power. They know other powerful people. If they're cooling on university it's not because they have been displaced by bright kids from Tower Hamlets. They know things.

Power's elusive. Any institutional route is a bait and switch.
Here! Have a degree, it's the keys to the kingdom!
Right. Got the key. Now, where's that kingdom?
May as well join the army instead. At least you'll get taught how to ski.

6 comments:

  1. I like it! Much better than my initial take, which was:

    1. This means students and first-jobbers will be a mix of early 20s men and early 30s women
    2. Sex will ensue

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    Replies
    1. Imagine if the mix was the other way round, though. Early 30s men and early 20s women. Imagine.

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    2. But those would be early 30s men who were students or first jobbers - would the early 20s women be bothered?

      Seriously, Allsop has opened up a really interesting "social science fiction" experiment.

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    3. I mean if the early 30s men had all been off fighting a war, maybe. If they had had kids and been house husbands, and were only just starting on their careers - I don't know, I really don't know.

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    4. Househusbands, maybe not...

      I think she suggests for women that they should get out there, get property and jobs, then kids. So if we're talking early 30s men who own cars, houses, have some cash, some knowledge of life….

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    5. Aha - so the guys go out and get joe jobs, get on the property ladder, have some kids, live life a bit, and then aged 30 go to a uni filled with early 20s girls. Yes I see what you mean!

      I might need to my own post on the Allsop experiment, it's really interesting trying to think it through.

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