Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

WOMEN AS NEWS.

Miss Rose Macaulay, lecturing on "Women as News" at tho meeting of the Six-Point Group, said that in this aspect women were becoming a great and increasing nuisance, states an exchange. People were always discussing such-' subjects as Do women understand art ? Have women any sense (if honour ? or Should clever women marry ? "I am always being rung up or written to my some newspaper and asked what my opinion is, but I do not believe men novelists are ever asked 'Should clever men marry?'" An enormous number of books were written about "woman," and as for the press, she thought sometimes that if a future chronicler were to study the files of our newspapers he would get the impression that there had appeared at this time a strange new creature called woman who was receiving great attention from the public. If a speaker made an unimportant reference to women that small part of his speech had special prominence. If a scientist ;n a lecture remarked that women were not as strong as men one might suppose that tho obvious truth would pass unnoticed, but the newspapers would jump at it and discuss it eagerly. As a topic woman was a hardy annual, or, it might bo said, a hardv daily. Men insisted on generalising about women. Instead of regarding them as so many millions of individuals, with separate temperament and outlooks, all they saw was an odd conglomerate being which they called women. " 1T 'w will the women vote ?" they ask be to - elections. The implication was that sex formed some kind of bond in the women's political world, and that neither temperament, nor education, nor economic conditions counted for anything. Generalisations should be made more guardedly. "Of course, yon can generalise to a certain extent," said Miss Macaulay.. " I should say that women have on the whole less brain power than men, less initiative and courage, and more highly-strung nervous development and weaker sex emotions That is fairly obvious, but as you realise tho many exceptions all you can safely say is that most women on the whole have certain qualities in a rather greater or rather less degree than men." It. was not fair to men that so much attention should be devoted to women—men should be investigated as thoroughly, and they were quite as well worth studv. "I have nover met tho woman who is written about with a capital W,' " said Miss Macaulay. "I dislike her intensely, and I am afraid that if too much is written about her she may come to lifo like Frankenstein's monster. That would ho a most deplorable happening." Miss Macaulay amused her andienco very much by reading from some magazine an article about women in which the writer described tho qualities that pleased or highly displeased men. She had altered this slightly and road it as if all tho inane hints applied to men. Mr. Stephen Gwvnn, who presided,' was captivated with this ingenious Hea. "Let us givo woman a rest,"*Baid Miss Macj anlay, "and write articles on men, their temperament, qualities and habits."

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19260105.2.7.4

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19217, 5 January 1926, Page 5

Word Count
518

WOMEN AS NEWS. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19217, 5 January 1926, Page 5

WOMEN AS NEWS. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19217, 5 January 1926, Page 5