In
part I of this two-part series, I confessed that I cringe when I hear women in
astronomy put other women down. Last week’s post was aimed at junior women, but
at the risk of alienating everyone, it is now time for senior women to sit up
and take notice. I pay close attention when women talk about what it is like to
be a woman in astronomy. One unfortunate theme that seems to repeat itself goes
like this: a junior woman reluctantly complains about the senior woman in her
department/group/organization who does not support her. Here are some generic
examples:
A
junior faculty member is having a baby. She is negotiating for release time
with her department chair. The senior woman in her department argues that the
rest of the department members should not have to do more work to cover for
their junior colleague.
A
grad student is dealing with sexual harassment. A senior woman advises her to
keep her head down, not complain, and just finish her thesis.
A
shy postdoc with an introverted personality is the victim of bullying. A senior
woman advises her to get a backbone and stand up for herself.
A
young astronomer wants to take a year off after her first child is born. A
senior woman challenges the young mother to get back to work as soon as
possible.
The
common problem in all these examples is that the senior woman is expecting her
junior colleague to follow in her footsteps. The first senior woman succeeded
because she decided not to have children. The second snuck through because no
one paid attention to her. The third used her strong personality to plow her
way through trouble. The fourth attributed her ability to “have it all” to
great daycare. These incidents support the idea that there should be more than
one senior woman in every department/group/organization. No one should have to
represent all women.
I
remember a series of AASWOMEN Newsletter contributions from years ago where a
junior woman confessed that she could not think effectively when she was
pregnant, and as a result, had a difficult time doing science. A senior woman
pounced on her, bragging that she was able to work successfully right up until
the day she delivered. An e-mail frenzy ensued, with each subsequent
contribution describing the “right” pregnancy experience.
I
remember thinking at the time that all these descriptions represented a
spectrum (there’s a nice astronomical word) of experiences. No pregnancy was
more right than another. They were all valid. Why then did we spend so much
time and energy putting each other down? I can only speculate because I myself don’t understand it; does
putting other women down somehow make us feel better about our own situation,
predicament, and/or accomplishments? Or is it more about thoughtlessness than
malice? We need to be supportive of paths, choices, and experiences that are
different than our own. We should all walk a mile in each other’s shoes.
Younger women are getting tenured and federal
positions, chairing review panels, and becoming PIs of new instruments.
Sometimes, it is easy to get negative about these things. Why them and not you?
It is so easy to get into that “us” versus “them” frame of mind! Don’t let yourself
fester in this negative space. Rather, remind yourself that as a group, junior
women should be able to go further
than their senior counterparts, simply because they have less opposition.
Incidents of overt discrimination and sexual harassment are not completely
gone, but they are seriously waning. CSWA is working to make the astronomy
community aware of unconscious bias and bullying. We hope that these incidents
will begin to wane as well. Senior women, if you ever feel envious of the
accomplishments or opportunities of a junior colleague, remember that you helped create the environment where
those accomplishments and opportunities were possible. Be proud of them, and in
the process, don’t forget to be proud of yourself.
Senior women, stop charging ahead and take a
moment to turn around – figuratively speaking, of course. Younger women do not
have to walk solely in your footsteps to succeed. Your individual efforts have
blended with those of all the other women who have made it. You have helped
create an environment where junior women have more freedom to make their own
choices. They are individuals, not your clones. Support them in their troubled
and challenging times and celebrate with them as they triumph!
Thanks to Nancy Morrison and Caroline Simpson
of CSWA for sharing their insights on these issues.
-Joan Schmelz
When we put on the original "Women in Astronomy Conference" we discovered that it is not unusual (in astronomy and in the other fields we studied, law and medicine), for senior women who only succeeded by "out-masculine- ing" the men, to not be sympathetic to younger women who have it easier than they did.
ReplyDeleteI see now that our graduate student women have little idea of what things were like 20 years ago.
So I sympathize with these senior women - BUT - my attitude is that it's best to try and deal with the here and now, and help improve today's situation, helping young women faculty whenever possible.
For some reason this article reminds me of conversations I have had with people about breastfeeding or using cloth diapers when you have infants around. For instance, people who vehemently believe that if you don't breastfeed until your child is in college (excuse my hyperbole) then you are evil and a bad mother without ever considering the multitude of reasons why people choose not to breastfeed, or to stop before the child can ask in whole sentences etc. I think it is the same mindset that leads to the bad behavior describe here. I know I used to be guilty of assuming that everyone thinks the way I do. I don't do that anymore. But I do have to remind myself from time to time that I have to take a holistic approach to advising my students/postdocs/younger colleagues and that is true whether they are male or female.
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