Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Soraya Chemaly

Quote by Soraya Chemaly

“The summer my daughters were six and four, we were at the beach one day and went for a long walk. It was astonishingly hot, and the sun, bouncing off a clear sea and blinding sand, was relentless. Wearing bikini bottoms but no tops, my children alternated between making sandpiles and running into the sea to cool off. The beach was empty. Eventually a woman and her son appeared in the distance, moving lazily in our direction. The boy seemed to be around the same age. Eventually the children came together, playing in the water with on another but not talking. His mother and I, farther back in each direction, waved and smiled. I thought we would just keep walking, but when we got close to the children, she said loudly, 'You really should put tops on them.' At first, I didn't understand her. 'Thanks,' I replied. 'They're covered in sunscreen.' 'They're girls,' she said. It wasn't until she was near my daughters that she'd realized this. I was dumbfounded. She might have been equally dumbfounded if I had taken the time to explain that her statement was an overtly sexist sexualization. The four children were physically indistinguishable, physically active on a hot beach. When I made no move toward shielding her son from the girls' scary, tempting, and corrupting bodies, she pulled him out of the water by the arm. They rushed down the beach before it crossed my mind to whip off my own top. Aggression takes many forms.”

Quote by Soraya Chemaly

Work

Rage Becomes Her: The Power of Women's Anger

Browse quotes and source details for this work. more

Author

Soraya Chemaly

Browse famous quotes and profile details for Soraya Chemaly. more

You May Also Like

“In other words, sexualization is a more general tactic to delegitimize and dehumanize people. This helps to explain why there is often so much shame, reluctance, and secrecy surrounding discussions of sexuality, as even broaching the subject can lead a person to become stigmatized.”

“Żadna epoka nie była tak uporczywie zaabsorbowana kwestią płci, jak obecna; dowodzą tego niezliczone książki o kobietach, pisane przez mężczyzn, jakie znalazłam w British Museum. Z pewnością winny jest ruch sufrażystek. Musiał on wzniecić w mężczyznach przemożną potrzebę, by jakoś zaznaczyć swoją obecność; zmusił ich do tego, by położyli nacisk na swoją własną płeć i jej cechy szczególne, czego nie zrobiliby przecież nigdy, gdyby nie rzucono im wyzwania. Kiedy bowiem ktoś rzuca nam wyzwanie - nawet jeśli jest to zaledwie kilka kobiet w czarnych kapeluszach - wówczas i my atakujemy; jeśli zaś spotyka nas to po raz pierwszy w życiu, atakujemy w sposób nieco przesadny.”

“Sarah Palin appears to have no testable core conviction except the belief (which none of her defenders denies that she holds, or at least has held and not yet repudiated) that the end of days and the Second Coming will occur in her lifetime. This completes the already strong case for allowing her to pass the rest of her natural life span as a private citizen.”