Politicising Childhood Activists spark rage by linking Tiger Who Came to Tea classic kids book to rape abuse of women
A Scottish domestic abuse watchdog has drawn flak for spreading âwoke rotâ after claiming that classic childrenâs book âThe Tiger Who Came to Teaâ reinforces âharmfulâ gender stereotypes that could lead to violence against women.
The 1968 picture book â" about a talking tiger who shows up uninvited at a house and only leaves after consuming all the familyâs food and drink â" was termed âproblematicâ by the charity, Zero Tolerance, because of its âold-fashionedâ portrayal of womenâs roles in the family.
Speaking to BBC Radio Scotland, the campaign groupâs co-director Rachel Adamson queried why the tiger was represented as male rather than female or gender-neutral, and pointed out the âstereotypicalâ ending in which the father âsaves the dayâ after coming home from work.
Also on rt.com Grossly irresponsible! Scotlandâs schools guidance on supporting trans pupils keeps parents in the dark on life-changing decisionâWe know that gender stereotypes are harmful and they reinforce gender inequality,â Adamson said, adding that this inequality was behind violence against women and girls, including âdomestic abuse, rape and sexual harassment.â
Describing the author, Judith Kerr, as âwonderful,â Adamson said the story was still âreflective of a society that we need to think more closely about.â She added that the book did not need to be banned and could instead be used to âraise a conversationâ in nursery schools.
Kerrâs book â" which has reportedly sold more than five million copies since being published â" was held up as an example by Zero Tolerance for why âparents and nurseries [need to] look closely at their bookshelves,â The Telegraph reported.
On Monday, the publicly funded charity published the findings of a âgender and diversity auditâ of over 3,000 books in 21 nurseries across Scotland â" only three of which passed the test. To pass, the book collection must have âmore books that donât promote gender stereotypingâ than ones that do.
The group also said boys who âbelieve in rigid gender normsâ were âmore likely to become perpetrators of violence against women and girls.â
Many on social media were not happy about the âextreme left-wing audit,â with some saying Adamsonâs claims serve to âpoliticise childhoodâ and tilt the world view of kids to match the âcultish hatredsâ of groups like Zero Tolerance. One person termed it âwoke rot.â
There is something so deeply sinister about these organisations. Their obsession with politicising childhood and children, tilting their view of the world to match their own cultish hatreds, and robbing them of beautiful stories written by such inspirational figures as Kerr.
â" Emily Kate ð´ó §ó ¢ó ¥ó ®ó §ó ¿ (@BucketsOf_Rain) August 24, 2021Several commenters remarked that by suggesting a relationship between the book and the problem of domestic violence, the campaign group had âdemeaned [its] own worthy causeâ and âmade a mockery of the very thing it claims to draw attention toâ by âtrivialising the issue beyond satire.â
I'm shaking my head in despair. I'm 100% for challenging gender stereotypes and ending violence against women, but this is a 50 year old book. No boy ever grew up to harm a woman because of it.
â" Alex Lloyd (@alexlloydjourno) August 24, 2021A few defended the group for undertaking the survey, however.
âIt is not the text, but the subtext of a book. And not one book, but the cumulative effect of numerous books and adverts etc. which reinforce womenâs role in society and thus menâs expectations of how women should behave,â one person said.
Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!
0 Response to "Politicising Childhood Activists spark rage by linking Tiger Who Came to Tea classic kids book to rape abuse of women"
Post a Comment