http://afeministblog.blogspot.com/2006/10/north-country.html
   
  NORTH COUNTRY is a movie based on a true story. The movie is starred by 
Charlize Theron¡Xcast as Josey Aimes¡Xand Frances McDormand¡Xcast as Glory, 
Josey¡¦s friend.
The movie illustrates the sexual harassment done to women miners working for 
Pearson Taconite and Steel, Inc. And it reminds me of my own post here some 
days ago about a male friend of mine working for a mining company located in 
North Sulawesi; he complained when one day a female miner was hired and she was 
under his supervision. The complaint was that he didn¡¦t have a heart to give 
her work to explore an area that he considered difficult for a woman.
A bit different from that experience of my friend, NORTH COUNTRY focuses more 
on the sexual harassment experienced by women working in the mining company. 
(It made me wonder, though, whether in the mining company where my friend works 
male employees also do sexual harassment to women? 
There are two main things that attracted my attention when watching this movie: 
the struggle of Josey Aimes to get justice for women miners, and her personal 
life as a single mother who tried hard to make her two children happy.
The movie stated that a mining company started to hire women in 1975 in North 
Minnesota. However, in 1989, the comparison between male and female working in 
there still showed a big gap: 30:1. As in many other countries in the world, 
American people classify jobs into men¡¦s jobs and women¡¦s jobs. And working 
in a mining company is classified into men¡¦s job. When someone¡Xa man or a 
woman¡Xhas a job that is traditionally held by the opposite sex, he or she will 
get a big protest from society.
Josey Aimes didn¡¦t get permission from her father to work for Pearson Taconite 
and Steel, Inc. where her father also worked.
Apparently, her father¡XHank Aimes--didn¡¦t like it coz he considered the job 
as men¡¦s job. The bad relationship between the father and the daughter made it 
worse. My interpretations for these are
„« The father¡Xas a man¡Xfelt threatened to lose his job if women started to do 
this job traditionally held by men. When more and more women are hired to work 
in a mining company, men will feel threatened that it will be more difficult 
for them to get a job coz they get more competitors. As the main 
breadwinner¡Xin a patriarchal society men always want to show their superiority 
to women by being the solely breadwinner in a family¡Xmen feel that their 
superiority is at stake.
„« The father that felt ashamed coz Josey got pregnant when she was still in 
high school¡Xwithout telling who the man was¡Xfelt more ashamed coz his 
daughter decided to do a job traditionally held by men. He had to face society 
that would accuse him failing to raise a daughter. He wanted to bury Josey¡¦s 
bad past experience by seeing her as a ¡§good¡¨ woman, by being a good wife 
(unfortunately Josey¡¦s husband often beat her cruelly so that she left him) or 
by having a ¡§woman¡¦s job¡¨. Society in Minnesota was illustrated as 
old-fashioned in 1989, such as accusing Josey as a bad woman coz she got 
pregnant outside the wedlock in a relatively young age, and when she left her 
husband although she did that due to his cruel treatment.
I really appreciate Josey¡¦s guts to quit from her job¡Xalthough she needed 
much money to raise her two children¡Xcoz of the sexual harassment she 
continuously got from her male workmates after she found out that the boss of 
the company didn¡¦t help her overcome the problem. She reported the company to 
the court although (at the beginning) none of her workmates supported her coz 
they were worried to lose their job that meant they would lose their income. 
The result of the case in the court was very relieving coz Josey won it after 
Glory and some other female workmates eventually supported her. This winning 
was very good coz then the mining companies made strong regulation on sexual 
harassment.
Another thing that impressed me from this movie is Josey¡¦s responsibility to 
raise her first son although she got pregnant due to a rape done by her high 
school teacher. She toughly hid this secret although she was accused as having 
sex with many partners so that she didn¡¦t know which of them was the father of 
her son. (She even didn¡¦t tell the truth to her parents about it.) It made me 
wonder if Josey got this idea from Scarlet Letter, a novel written by Nathaniel 
Hawthorne, where Hester Prynne hid her lover¡¦s name coz he was an outstanding 
priest: Josey had to keep her high school teacher¡¦s good name?
Every time Josey looked at Sammy¡Xher first son¡Xshe would always remember that 
miserable experience¡Xto be raped by her high school teacher. But still, she 
kept the pregnancy until her baby was born. She kept loving Sammy although he 
showed hostility toward her coz he believed what society said that his mother 
is a bitch.
If only Josey had told her parents since the very beginning why she got 
pregnant when she was still in high school, she would have had a better 
relationship with her father, I am wondering. She would have had a lighter 
burden.
If only Josey had told Sammy since the very beginning that she kept her 
pregnancy coz she loved her baby, she wouldn¡¦t have undergone the hostility 
shown by her son.
Anyway, the movie had a happy ending. It reminded me of one lecturer when I was 
still in college. He said that American movies tend to have a happy ending 
instead of unhappy ending coz people need to be entertained. :-D
PT56 05.22 141006


Minds are like parachutes, they only function when they are open. 
  (Sir James Dewar)
visit my blogs please, at the following sites
http://afemaleguest.blog.co.uk
http://afeministblog.blogspot.com
http://afemaleguest.multiply.com

THANK YOU
Best regards,
Nana


       
---------------------------------
Get the Yahoo! toolbar and be alerted to new email wherever you're surfing. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke