Quote:
Originally Posted by thedivahrrrself
I like the word bitch. But I don't associate anything particularly negative with it. If you call me a bitch, obviously I intimidate you. That makes me smile. I got quite used to it when one of my best friends and I started calling each other Bitch in college.
"Hey, Bitch, how you doin'?"
"Bitch, you gotta see this!"
I guess you could say we were "taking it back".
She fit the word. She still does. She is competitive as hell, assertive, intimidating, aggressive, and unapologetic. I like those qualities. Long live the Great American Bitch!
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Those same qualities are revered in a man (esp. in the workplace) and, yet, those women who display such traits are negatively perceived, by some, as a bitch--a way of cutting her down to size, discouraging such traits in other women, and denigrating her achievements.
These qualities are only synonymous with the gendered word bitch when it is a woman who possesses them.
As far as reclamation of words amongst friends, I have no issues there, but it isn't for me.
As a high school teacher, I know how easy it is for some students to label some female teachers as a bitch where they give major kudos to the men who act/teach in a similar manner. Frustrating.