Thursday 17 March 2005

Problem Solving-the Female Way

Got tis from user:eduardo1dacosta. An interesting read for understanding the different ways the two genders think and act. Enjoy!
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Men attack problems. Maybe women understand that there's a better way.

By Deborah Tannen

In asking why there aren't more female newspaper columnists, Maureen Dowd confessed that six months into the job, she tried to quit because "I felt as though I were in a 'Godfather' movie, shooting and getting shot at."

"Men enjoy verbal dueling," said Dowd, who is the only female Op-Ed columnist at the New York Times. "As a woman," she explained, "I wanted to be liked — not attacked."

Dowd put her finger on one reason fewer women than men are comfortable writing slash-and-burn columns. But she didn't take her argument to the next level and question the fundamental assumption that attack-dog journalism is the only kind worth writing.

That is the blind spot that explains why women are missing from many of the arenas of public discourse, including science (as noted by Larry Summers of Harvard) and opinion writing. (The Los Angeles Times was recently criticized for not running more women on its opinion pages.)

No one bothers to question the underlying notion that there is only one way to do science, to write columns — the way it's always been done, the men's way.

There is plenty of evidence that men more than women, boys more than girls, use opposition, or fighting, as a format for accomplishing goals that are not literally about combat — a practice that cultural linguist Walter Ong called "agonism," from the Greek word for war, agon.

Watch kids of any age at play. Little boys set up wars and play-fights. Little girls fight, but not for fun. Starting a fight is a common way for boys to make friends: One boy shoves another, who shoves back, and pretty soon they're engaged in play. But when a boy tries to get into play with a girl by shoving her, she's more likely to try to get away from him. A recent New Yorker cartoon captured this: It showed a little girl and a little boy eyeing each other. She's thinking, "I wonder if I should talk to him." He's thinking, "I wonder if I should kick her."

Older boys have their own version of agonism, using fighting as a format for doing things that have nothing to do with actual combat: They show affection by mock-punching, getting a friend's head in an armlock or playfully trading insults.

Here's an example that one of my students observed: Two boys and a girl are building structures with blocks. When they're done, the boys start throwing blocks at each other's structures to destroy them.
The girl protects hers with her body. The boys say they don't really want their own creations destroyed, but the risk is worth it because it's fun to destroy the other's structures. The girl sees nothing entertaining about destroying others' work.

Arguing ideas as a way to explore them is an adult version of these agonistic rituals. Because they're used to this agonistic way of exploring ideas — playing devil's advocate — many men find that their adrenaline gets going when someone challenges them, and it sharpens their minds: They think more clearly and get better ideas. But those who are not used to this mode of exploring ideas, including many women, react differently: They back off, feeling attacked, and they don't do their best thinking under those circumstances.

This is one reason many women who are talented and passionate lovers of science drop out of the profession. It's not that they're not fascinated by the science, don't have the talent to come up with new ideas or are not willing to put long hours into the lab, but that they're put off by the competitive, cutthroat culture of science.

The assumption that fighting is the only way to explore ideas is deeply rooted in Western civilization. It can be found in the militaristic roots of the Christian church and in our educational system, tracing back to all-male medieval universities where students learned by oral disputation.

Ong contrasts this with Chinese science and philosophy, which eschewed disputation and aimed to "enlighten an inquirer," not to "overwhelm an opponent." As Chinese anthropologist Linda Young showed, Chinese philosophy sees the universe in a precarious balance that must be maintained, leading to methods of investigation that focus more on integrating ideas and exploring relations among them rather than on opposing ideas and fighting over them.

Cultural training plays a big role too. Mediterranean, German, French and Israeli cultures encourage dynamic verbal opposition for women as well as men. Japanese culture discourages it for men as well as women. Perhaps that's why Japanese talk shows rarely include two guests (they'll have one or three or more), to avoid the polarized debates that our talk shows favor.

This brings us to our political discourse and the assumption that it must be agonistic in method and spirit. If we accept this false premise, then it is not surprising that fewer women than men will be found who are comfortable writing political columns. But looking for women who can write the same kind of columns that men write is a waste — exactly the opposite of what should be the benefits of diversity: introducing new and different ways of doing things.

In a book about female lawyers, Mona Harrington interviewed successful female attorneys who said they were more successful when they were not being as aggressive and confrontational as possible but instead listened, observed and better "read" opponents. In taking depositions, they got better results by adopting a "quiet, sympathetic approach" (instead of grilling and attacking) so that witnesses tended to forget that the attorney deposing them was their adversary. But, Harrington noted, they couldn't tell this to potential clients, who assumed aggression was the only way. Instead, they had to emphasize that they were seasoned veterans of large aggressive firms who could slug it out with the best of them.

Of course a political columnist must be ready to expose wrongdoing, look critically at events and public figures and be ready to offend if necessary. But attack-dog journalism is not the only way to do this, and it probably is not the best way either.

As Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics, has put it, we tend to think that if you're not an attack dog, you're a lap dog, taking everything politicians say at face value. But the true role of journalism should be a third way: a watchdog. And a dog who is busy attacking is not watching.

, Deborah Tannen, a professor of linguistics at Georgetown University, is the author of "The Argument Culture" (Random House, 1998).

Source: LA Times, 15 March 2005.

11 comments :

  1. haha, i wonder if i should slap him. and he wonders if he should say sorry to me. lol.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Right. . .I just read a book by relationship gurus allan and barbara pease; WHY MEN LIE AND WOMEN CRY. got the book just because i was getting married and i thought the book will tell me how to spot the signs if my hubby was lying or cheating on me. . .but no such luck ladies. . .anyways. . . in it, is a little section on how men and women solve problems. . .or sort of.
    it states that women are"build" (since pre-historic times) so that they ensure they survival; ok it will take me a while to get to my point so please bear with me.
    while the cave-men are out hunting food for their women, the women folks gather round just to chat each other up.they want to "belong" to the rest of the women folk.no women like to be left without a "gang". the only way for them to survive is to stick together. i think that is why, we women hate or avoid conflicts. cos when we get into conflicts, there is a possibility that we might end up with one less friend.(i mean when was the last time u lent a gal pal some money and u actually ask for it back???we dont cos it might hurt them.we just wait till she pays up. but guys on the other hand, they WILL ask for it. . .)and i think it also explain why we women have to do things with another gal pal. like shopping, or TOILETS or sports, etc.
    am i making sense?if not i'll borrow u guys the book. . . ha ha ha
    while i'm still on it. . .do u girls know why we ladies are not that good at driving???cos men have this spatial skill "in-built" into them since the pre-historic times. when they went out hungting they have to kill while on the run or run away in order NOT to get killed. . .so next time someone gives u a hard time about your driving, u have another excuse!

    ReplyDelete
  3. yes u make sense n u did highlight how typical we girls think and do things. it always feel good to have company for us ladies but guys juz do things on their own. probably the very reason why men die at younger age then women, cos they like to bottle problems up n suffer in silence. well even if they try to have a sharin session, i doubt it'll be much help cos they end up talkin cock and ego bashing, while when we girls throw out a question or confide, everyone is keen to get down to the problem and share opinions, not shoot each other down wif wittier suggestions.

    such difference between us n guys that sometimes it's really hard to comprehend the other gender. i noe y men lie..cause they hate confrontations too AND they hate to see women cry but why do women have to cry? i can't answer that, is there an answer in the book, babe?

    and as to why women make bad drivers? i think MAYBE because we try to analyse situation so much before comin to a decision while guys juz "kill" the situation.

    ReplyDelete
  4. guilty as charge. if we tell our problem, especially to a group of buddies, we have a tendency to make witty or sacarstic comments. But its not always the case. if it is a one to one session, then the chances of confiding is higher. But guys generally try to cheer a buddy up then listen to a problem and "comprehend" with the heart...but this is just me talking *winks*

    ReplyDelete
  5. only after makin the troubled guy feel like a total loser from the talkin cock/ego bashing first. But credits to u guys cos when u do really listen n dish out solutions, u deliver. and it's always guys who do better at critical thinkin, not us. hmm...

    ReplyDelete
  6. of course u r...remember the time i lost my wallet?

    ReplyDelete
  7. Iyuan dude.. I cant help it but ask ya, WHERE DID U GET THE ICON NARUTO DOING THE HENGE???

    For me, my frenz say I'm a good listener and also a counsellor *shrugs*

    ReplyDelete
  8. im more of the
    "well that sucks, but whats done is done. SUCK IT IN" type of person. i dont do consoling, not really the sensitive one in the group *shrugs*, im the person that get you back to the realities of life.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Well there are a few you can find them at www.narutocentral.com

    ReplyDelete