GLBT News &
Entertainment


Contact Us | Favorite Links | Twit Classifieds | Twit Store | Twit Members | Adult Members
Twit Home Page 
 
 News
 
 Current Events
 
 Directories
 
 Entertainment
 
 Fashion & Style
 
 Interviews
 
 Home/Family
 
 Health/Fitness
 
 Sports/Events
 
 Vacation/Travel
 
 Free For All
 Opinions
 Political Left
 Political Right
 Religion
 Sound Off
 
 Submit An Event
 
 Obituaries
Search

Content Management by ovationpub.com.


Free For All : Opinions Last Updated: Dec 28th, 2006


Rudolph Before Title Nine
Beren deMotier
Dec 27, 2006

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
Like any red-blooded, middle-class American lesbian moms, we spent the month of December decorating, overeating, shopping, visiting relatives and watching holiday television on DVD. We started with a bang December 1st by watching the original stop-motion Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer at our eleven year-old daughterís request. She thought it would be a memorable beginning to the 2006 holiday season.

Well, you could say that--weíre not likely to forget that this was the year it was mere seconds into the movie before the social commentary started. The older two were aghast that Donner was so critical of his newborn son, that Santa was red-nosed intolerant, and I couldnít help pointing out that not only was Hermie a dentist wanna-be, he had clearly been a theatre major in elf college, and with that hair was probably playing for our team. Maybe that was why he would ìnever fit in."

This was when my wife suggested we were ruining it for our three year-old (so I shut up and started taking notes), but even he said, ìSanta is not a nice guy,î when Santa told Donner he ìshould be ashamed of himselfî because his son was different than all the rest.

It was around then that it dawned on me that our kids thought this was some kind of ridiculous lampoon, rather than a reflection of the judgment, conformity and strict separations of race, class and gender that we, their parents, grew up with. It was unfathomable to them, living in our lovely, liberal bubble, that there was a time when being unique was intolerable, girls had to wear dresses to public school, boys were beaten for shedding tears, and shaming was considered a powerful and effective tool for disciplining children.

My wife and I had been in blissful ignorance of the bigotry in Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer when we first revisited it fifteen years ago with our oldest. We were full of childhood memories, all ready to sing along with ìWhy Am I Such a Misfit,î only to have our jaws drop at how the misfits are treated by Christmas Town and how Santa runs his workshop without an EEO policy, an HR rep to mediate on Hermieís behalf, or diversity training for the elves.

So while we were ever-so-aware when we popped Rudolph into the VCR, it was a big year for revelation among our children. Our eleven year-old asked, ìWhy are the girls all standing around?î when the young bucks were learning to fly, and I told her, ìThis was before Title 9.î Our fifteen year-old son could hardly believe the Coach Comet character, encouraging all the other bucks to ostracize Rudolph after he was ìoutedî during practice with the loss of his false nose.

I think my own budding feminism was fed back in 1970 by lines like ìthis is manís workî and ìthe important thing was to get the women back to Christmas Town.î If Iíd owned a bra, I would have burned it, though my wife says sheíd watched it without a single rebellious thought as a child, numbly nodding her head to Burl Ivesí voice.

Admittedly, Iíve watched it too many times over the years; maybe our whole family has. Even our three year-old can quote it extemporaneously and do the voices of the mocking reindeer, the brutish elf boss and the Abominable Snow Monster of the Northówho, by the way, seems like yet another misfit reject from Christmas Town, crying sour grapes and hating everything about Christmas to protect his fragile ego.

Misfits are the appeal of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, whether we identify with Rudolph, Hermie, Yukon Cornelius (with his life sustaining supplies of ìcornmeal and gunpowder, ham hocks and guitar stringsî) or the Abominable Snowman (who was surely scarier when I was five, lying on two-inch avocado shag carpeting in Los Angeles, than for kids today, whoíve seen the World Trade Center Towers fall, dinosaurs come to life in Jurassic Park, and have lock-downs at school because of armed meth addicts in the neighborhood). But every kid feels like a misfit at some time or another. Weíve all felt like we belonged on another planet or the Island of Misfit Toys (and spent hours trying to figure out what was wrong with the little red-haired doll). Weíve all wanted to run away and hide when our difference was causing pain, and an island full of toys is an appealing oasis.

Though why King Moonrazer thinks Santa can find homes for the misfit toys when he knows Rudolph has run away from Santaís bigotry like a homeless gay teen escaping his self-righteous rejecting parents, is beyond me.

Not that I take Rudolph so seriously; I couldnít resist remarking to my kids that Hermie the dentist and runaway Rudolph were ìbucking the systemî by being independent together. Like any red-blooded American kids, they ignored me.

Beren deMotier is a freelance writer living in Portland, Oregon with her three red-blooded American kids, her wife of twenty years, and a Labrador the size of a small horse. Her writing appears in Curve, PrideParenting.com, ehow.com and on her website, www.berendemotier.com.

© This Week In Texas

Top of Page








Opinions
Latest Headlines
Rudolph Before Title Nine
Why Brown is the new Gay!
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force leader responds to the Committee on Doctrine of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishopsí proposed new guidelines, Ministry to Persons with a Homosexual Inclination