Etsy: Tool of the Patriarchy
June 16, 2009
So I think I might be just a teensy, tiny little bit obsessed with Etsy, the magical place on the interweb that brings you spiffy handmade goods from independent sellers all over the globe. I know I’m I’m not alone in my DIY shopping zeal. The Etsy obsessed may number in the thousands these days. There’s even a guy who keeps a blog about about being an Etsy widower, the phenomenon that occurs when your significant other becomes so Etsy-absorbed that she forsakes all other things in the name of craftiness. Dude, you and my boyfriend should totally start a support group, I’ll give you his phone number.
Some people are so into Etsy that there’s a whole website about planning your wedding with it. I used to make fun of people who had their nuptials devised before there was even a proposal but I’ve gone through the website and bookmarked every invitation, feathered bridal fascinator and crocheted wedding bouquet I liked. I said it was for a friend who’s getting married this summer, but no, it was all for me and my future awesome totally DIY wedding that is taking place, oh I don’t know, somewhere between now and 2085. I’ll send you a handmade letterpress save the date printed on recycled bamboo with soy based inks when I get around to it.
Shopping on Etsy just makes me feel warm and fuzzy. I like that I’m keeping my dollars out of the big box stores and supporting independent businesses. They even have a search feature that allows you to buy locally. I like that many Etsy sellers use recycled, upcycled or eco-friendly materials and I like that when I buy something from Etsy I’m buying something unique that everyone else in the world won’t have. So what ruined my feminist wet dream? Listen in, oh daughters of the revolution! According to Double X, Etsy is peddling a false feminist fantasy.
That’s right, every time you buy an all natural yoga mat carrier, handmade set of stripper pasties or pouch for your menstrual cup you are contributing to the system of oppression that is keeping women down. Why? Because Etsy was founded by men. And we all know know everything that men are in charge of is inherently corrupt and evil. And also, did you know that it’s difficult to get rich running a business on Etsy? Yeah, and making it on your own as an artisan, renting gallery space and touring to craft shows all over hell and creation is a really lucrative business model, much more lucrative (and environmentally sustainable) than working from home. And did you know, the majority of people who sell goods on Etsy are female!? Obviously, this makes Etsy bad because if it was really so great, men would be selling their stuff on Etsy too, right?
The writer continues on to bash the typical Etsy family, who reportedly has an average household income of $62K, well above the national average, This, she theorizes is because the male partner is out working his high paying corporate job enabling the woman to stay home, chained to her knitting needles creating low cost goods all while being duped into believing that she’s living a feminist fantasy.
That last bit is where I really start to to take umbrage. I am so sick and tired of being told that I’ve allowed my pretty little head to be tricked into thinking that oppressive things are feminist. Fuck you, I’ll decide for myself what’s oppressive with my own well educated, independent, feminist little head thank you very much. Wake up Double X, there is a whole network of independent businesswomen on the web. Most of the savvier ones use Etsy as a vehicle to sell their crafts in tandem with several other on-line venues. Etsy is just one of many ways for a small business owner to get her product out there, not some kind of monopolizing sweat shop. I fail to see how providing a low cost platform to start a business and get your product some exposure is a model of oppression. If anything it is exactly the opposite, allowing more women independence by providing a way to build a business with very little start-up money or experience.
Second of all, this post touches on my absolute least favorite subtext in some feminist writings, the idea that we’ll never be truly equal until women live their lives exactly like men do. I’ve never understood why being more like a man was supposed to make me a better woman or a better feminist.
The problem with the “old” feminism is that it leaves out 50% of the population. As long as we are solely focused on women’s rights in the narrowest sense of the word (gaining the right to take on stereotypically male occupations) we will fail to create a world where all people can live free from the rigidity of traditional gender roles. We need to move the debate beyond the same old arguments. If we focus on creating a world that is more equitable to all people, where the concerns of those from all walks of life are being addressed as equally important, we will see a world where gender disparities are lessened.
Do I want to live in a culture where having a child won’t be career suicide for a woman? Absolutely. But I don’t think we’re ever going to achieve that until men can take paternity leave without facing criticism for it. I’m sure that some of those so called “Etsy Husbands” would love to focus on being partners, parents and artisans but we haven’t yet created a system where that is a very acceptable choice for men. Of course, this whole argument can be viewed as cyclical too. We may hope for the time when more men can be stay at home dads, but until women are given equal pay, it will be difficult to make that dream come to fruition. That 100% pay gap between working moms and child-free women isn’t exactly helping things either.
Even though the women of Etsy may not be getting rich, I still believe their business model can be in line with feminist ideals. To me it doesn’t have to be all about who’s making the most money. It is also about spending my money in places I feel good about. Etsy gives ethical consumers alternatives. Now I have the ability to buy things that fall in lines with my social and environmental ethics, support small businesses and keep my money out of the pockets of big companies that hurt women. Did you ever think of that, Double X?
I believe that DIY mentality of companies like Etsy can only have a positive impact on society. I don’t need no stinkin’ hammer to smash the patriarchy. We crafty women will take it down one knitting needle at a time.
Entry Filed under: Art, I'm Totally Obsessed With..., Niftiness, Politics, autobiography, feminism, opinion, reviews. Tags: Art, autobiography, crafts, DIY, Double X, Etsy, feminism, opinion, Politics, reviews.
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1.
Kami | June 16, 2009 at 1:04 am
I too love etsy and feminism. I also love double x and wonder how they could be so misguided as per this particular issue…
2.
fever2tell | June 16, 2009 at 1:15 am
sometimes i feel like double X doesn’t “get” the new feminism of the new media.
3.
joanne | June 16, 2009 at 1:50 am
I think they are just jealous because they aren’t as crafty.
Equality should be about everyone having a level playing field. Not about uniformity. Women shouldn’t have to be more like men and men shouldn’t have to be more like women. The only thing that should matter is that they are ALL getting a fair chance to live their lives how they want to as long as they are not harming anyone else.
4.
fever2tell | June 16, 2009 at 3:28 am
yeah, the other thing i really hate about the article is that it takes the tone that educated women in their childbearing years have “better” things to do than putter around making handcrafts. i get tired of people devaluing what is traditionally considered women’s work and treating you like doing something in that vein is inherently worthless.
5.
Ayelle | June 16, 2009 at 4:25 pm
> i get tired of people devaluing what is traditionally considered women’s work and treating you like doing something in that vein is inherently worthless
Well, clearly, it’s not worthless if you get rich off it! That’s totally worthwhile and praiseworthy! But if you’re just bringing in a little money for your family on the side by pursuing that crafty hobby you love, you know, the one that relaxes your mind, the one that you would do for fun even if you never got a dime for it… well, that’s being a tool of the patriarchy. Duh. The only thing worthwhile is to make money, like men always have, and if you were a real feminist you’d recognize that.
In all seriousness. I knew about that pay gap between working mothers and childless women, so that wasn’t news — along with the fact that fathers get paid *more* than childless men, because employers assume they will work harder because they’re the breadwinners, duh!! — but I totally used up all my Sanity Watchers Points for the day by reading some of the comments on that article. Don’t waste your time on them; just take my word for it that every possible stupid, sexist, evil line of logic, (along with every misogynist assumption about What Women Workers/Mothers Are Like), explaining why this fact is right and fair and how it SHOULD be, is present in those comments. It horrifies me that the facts themselves are not self-evidently appalling, a wrong that obviously needs to be addressed and righted, to the average reader. It’s that, rather than the unsurprising truth of the pay gap/motherhood penalty itself, that makes me lose hope some days.
6.
Ayelle | June 16, 2009 at 4:51 pm
Also, it strikes me that the writer has cause and effect backwards here. People aren’t getting rich off being artists/crafters? That’s not news. Almost nobody gets rich, or even makes a decent living, off art, nor ever has — neither women nor men! That’s always been true, and you could argue that it’s a societal problem (the people at the top of the arts & entertainment pyramid — professional sports stars, famous actors, super bestselling novelists, genius artists — have the potential to get really rich; nobody else working their tails off in A&E can even afford to eat or quit their day jobs) — but for the most part, the fact that we underpay artists is not a gendered problem. (I should qualify that: the people at the top of the pyramid are more likely to be men, of course, and in the best-paid of the fields I mentioned, sports, they *all* are.) But nevertheless, the vast majority of artists out there are starving regardless of their gender.
So, who chooses that starving artist life? Well, people of both genders do, but the men who do it, if they don’t succeed, are the ones who will after a point almost certainly be forced, by the norms and expectations of our sexist society, to give up that dream, find a job and settle down. Women may have to do that too — unless, again by the norms and expectations of our sexist society, they find themselves in a situation where their husband is the breadwinner and they can continue to pursue their art. It’s not that Etsy is preventing them from pursuing a Real Worthwhile Job Like A Man Would, enabling them/fooling them into thinking they can get rich this way. Cause-and-effect is backwards.
So yeah, I think the pressures of a sexist society, along with the fact that Etsy is a particularly hospitable home to the kind of crafts that have traditionally been regarded as women’s work, is the cause of the dominant female presence there — but that doesn’t mean that Etsy is keeping that sexist system in place. It may not be pusing back very strongly, but I think it’s still pushing back. Suggesting that traditionally female crafts are worthy of renumeration at all is a start. Allowing artists (of any gender) — even if they’re very low-volume producers unable to transform their creations into some kind of viable self-sustaining business model — to get their products to buyers is a positive thing for art and for artists.
Anyway, some of that analysis only stands up if we buy Double X’s picture of who the typically Etsy seller is (stay-at-home wife or mom with breadwinning husband). I mean, do we know that for a fact? Not a single one of the Etsy sellers I know personally fits that profile. Two that I can think of have day jobs doing something else, and sell their crafty stuff on Etsy for fun, not primarily profit; some I know have full businesses, and just use Etsy as the online storefront for their brick-and-mortar store; one is a traveling artisan, hitting up all the craft fairs up and down the Northeastern coast.
7.
fever2tell | June 16, 2009 at 5:17 pm
good point, artists in general aren’t getting rich, not just female artists. i should probably stop being such a lackey to the patriarchy and quit doing all that unpaid community theater. : P
this is a problem with our culture as a whole not valuing the arts enough to pay fair wages to artists for their hard work. the arts won’t be a livable career choice until artists are paid a living wage, but we don’t demand a living wage for our work. most of us make art like it’s breathing, we can’t not do it, we’d be doing it even if we weren’t getting paid to, so we are willing to make it without being paid for it. Artists also need practice. If I expected to get paid every time I wrote or danced or acted I’d hardly ever have a chance to do it. I’m willing to take unpaid opportunities because they help me grow as an actor.
A few years ago I managed a program that paid teenagers an hourly wage to create and perform a theater piece. The playwright who was hired to help us was scandalized by that. She told me she thought it sent a very bad message to the kids to expect to be paid for their work. I for one thought it was great that they got paid. Now maybe the next generation of artists will grow up to view themselves as professionals with skills that have worth.
The pay gap in the arts is also a class issue. Many teenagers are expected to get summer jobs to help support themselves and their families, they don’t have the luxury of taking a summer off to make art. the same goes with many working and middle class adults, they don’t have access to the arts and can’t realistically pursue it as a career because it can’t put food on the table. Unless you are that tiny percent that “makes it” or you have a trust fund or a rich benefactor, you can forget a career in the arts.
this is the same reason why etsy is great, it allows people who might now otherwise have the opportunity or resources a way to make art, sell it and market themselves. like hollywood actors, a few of them might “make it big” but most of them will make their craft for self-satisfaction, just like most other artists in the world.
8.
Ayelle | June 18, 2009 at 12:09 am
you’re absolutely right to bring class into it. a whole ‘nother discussion, there. I started to expand my thoughts to include that, and then backed up because it got too complicated too fast.
9.
Sarah J | June 17, 2009 at 1:51 am
You are awesome.
I think Double X actually posts crap like this just to get other people pissed off and blogging about their shit posts, to up their hit count. Shitty business plan.
On the other hand, it could be that DOUBLE X IS A TOOL OF THE PATRIARCHY! It’s trying to sneakily keep us down by branding itself as “feminist” but really being not terribly feminist at all, and just specializing in boring slut-shaming and whining about those pesky third wave crafters. I’d rather read BUST.
10.
fever2tell | June 17, 2009 at 2:34 am
HA HA! I think you are totally right. I was really pissed about the whole slut shaming thing too. BUST seems to get where I’m coming from much more than double X does.