Humour — A Magnet Between The Sexes
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Humour – a magnet between the sexes.
In todays society whatever other problems one may wish to lay at the door of the twentieth century, the substantial liberation of women that has taken place in the past century is surely an example of significant human progress. Never in the history of Western civilization have women come this far in the freedom movement and endow themselves in the equality that men imply. This development is as revolutionary as anything this age has seen, and it is already extending very rapidly from United States & Great Britain to a large part of European continent and many non-European countries.
The right to vote is only a small part of the freedom. In the past, women necessarily defined themselves by the relationships they established with men. There was surely some choice available to women in previous periods. They could choose to be satisfied or ill tempered, dominant or compliant, efficient or troublesome. But their choices were very limited, and women always have made in towards the terms of masculine figures in their lives. Today, great numbers of women can, if they choose, define themselves as independent, self-determining individuals. As Kinsey (1953) writes: “women can become fully human, since self-definition is the capacity marking human beings off from the rest of the universe.” (p. 51).
However, in the potential of achieving the human status, women in fact are not fully allowed to the prospects of liberty within the society. Women are still viewed behind the males within the society. Be it from the wage gap existing between the sexes, to the actual career positions that women hit, as Foegen states, the glass ceiling ( p.1), which encompasses residual sex discrimination. For one thing, it is difficult to know the practical limits of equality. The more biological differences the sexes imply, and in some areas endeavor, as would seem to be the kind of fundamental inequality.
Stereotypes, for this matter can and have influenced behaviour through a self-fulfilling prophecy, or the “tendency to behave in a way that confirms other peoples reasoning towards that individuals behaviour” (Darley & Fazio, p. 3). As Margaret Matlin writes, “Peoples judgments about themselves are typically less stereotyped than their judgments about others” (p. 270), providing that the behaviour of any individual is not completely influenced by the ongoing deterioration.
However, even theoretically, we do not know what the limits of freedom are, and our progress towards equality has been uneven. Any woman today can get an education as good as she has the capacity to endeavor. Equality in the classroom has been almost completely achieved. Even though, the economic equality is a distance off. Given the reasoning behind the appropriate, the equality has the capacity to weaken and destroy the old roles which women traditionally filled, rather than creating new ones. It is easy to assert that women must be something more than wives and mothers, but it is not easy to define that something, nor is it easy to reconcile the added human importance that equality implied with the old biological roles.
In todays society, humour plays a huge role in the development of the essential equality among the individuals living in it. Humour has been viewed as the one behavioral characteristic that men and women seek in roughly equal proportion, wanting a partner who is entertaining and fun. However, women and men have set an imaginary border line within that relationship to the point that unconsciously women are seen as the humour appreciator, while men are seen as humour generator.
Both sexes, however, possess the same amount of humour within “Sexes might differ in interests and in temperament but not in underlying mental abilities” (Farber 1963, p. 26). Women have developed an unconscious technique to use humour to bond with others, men on the other hand, use humour to set their status within the society, and impress women as they walk up the ladder of position between their male acquaintances become more common, “unaware when they are sexually aroused” (Heiman, 1975, p. 347). Therefore making humour more of a magnet between the sexes, attracting the gaps within.
In the fantasy world of humour, the male has been able to step outside the restrictions of normal interactions between both sexes. Generally it is evident in mens dirty jokes that women can be represented adequately by reference to the sexual, domestic and other services which they provide for men. As Legman (cited in Mulkay, 1988) writes “In the world of dirty joke, women often become no more than objects designed to cater for the needs of men.”