I
have a story to tell, and an observation to make.
Recently
my boyfriend was fired, or rather his permanent hiring was
terminated, because of his appearance. For those of you who don't
know him my boyfriend is the epitome of business casual
professionalism. He is all polo shirts and slacks with no overbearing
patterns or flashiness. His shirt is always tucked in and his shoes
are practical and well cared for. He is constantly clean-shaven and
is almost obsessively clean. Being dirty actually bothers him to the
point of nausea. He also has long flowing locks of dark hair that are
scrubbed clean every single day and brushed free of tangles.
So
here is the story of how a certain unnamed medical corporation used
sexism as a rationalization for firing one of their best IT people.
After
a 6 month period of contracting to the position this IT department
decided that Jonathan was a good fit for their team and began the
hiring process. This particular institution has a very complicated
bureaucracy when it comes to hiring and they had to recreate a
position and have him apply before they were able to fully hire him.
He had applied and been assured that within a few days his job would
be secured.
In
the meantime another member of the team found a better job and was
thrown a going away party. At this party Jonathan's boss (from here
known as . . . Eugene that is a sufficiently douchey name) 's boss
made a comment to Eugene that he later relayed to Jonathan as “
Does he always wear his hair down?” This sparked a conversation
that ended with Eugene suggesting that he 'might want to wear his
hair in a pony tail. Up to him and not that big a deal'.
The
next day Jonathan went into work, hair still down and intending to
put it up before leaving his office. saw, and Eugene inquired as to
why it wasn't in a ponytail as he thought Jonathan had decided to
wear it in a ponytail. Jonathan told him that he was going to wear it
down in the office but would be sure to pull it back before leaving
his office.
Later
that day Eugene called him into the office and told Jonathan that
while wearing his hair down wasn't against the dress code, and he had
never been told to wear it up, he was no longer being hired because
he hadn't pulled his hair back. This evidently demonstrated that he
was so unmotivated that Eugene felt uncomfortable hiring him.
Here
is where I start my observations. This was incredibly sexist and had
little to nothing to do with motivation and professionalism.
The
reason I say this is that Jonathan's direct supervisor is a woman
with even longer hair than Jonathan, which is saying something. She
wears her hair down often and Jonathan never wore his down until
seeing her do the same with hers. When asked about his hair he
assumed that she must put hers up before leaving the office and
decided to take the same tactic. This was not the case. It was not
the long hair that dictated this special dress issue, but the hair
coupled with his sex.
The
argument that this is about motivation assumes that asking someone to
change the way they wear their hair when there are no issues of
hygiene or even professionalism at stake is acceptable. While I would
argue that it is never appropriate it is certainly not appropriate
when sex starts becoming a determining factor. It is only okay if
there are health or hygiene factors involved (men wearing athletic
cups in certain physical jobs or women wearing proper support
garments)
Telling
a woman with short hair she needs to grow it out is not acceptable
unless you do the same to male employees. It is not okay to have
dress codes that enforce skirts for women and pants for men. It is
not okay to tell women they have to wear makeup when men don't. The
only time when this might be acceptable is if the job is something
like modeling. . . but Information Services is not a glamour job, it
is about skills. Business professional clothing and cleanliness
really should be the extent of the dress code.
So
the fact that a woman wears her long hair down without reprimand is
proof that this request was never reasonable. The fact that Jon was
willing to wear his hair up isn't proof that there is no issue, the
issue is that he shouldn't have to. It is the same appearance
prejudice that comes with tattoos and piercings but worse because it
is fueled by sexist ideas of what appearance should be. The reason
these are sexist is not just that they are different for the sexes,
but that the reason it is seen as improper for a man to have long
hair is because we consider that feminine. The same for men wearing
dresses. It is okay for a woman to wear pants or have short hair
because we consider the pursuit of anything perceived as masculine as
valuable and disregard anything considered feminine.
There
is no legal recourse, this is “the way the world is” but that
doesn't make it right. Think about this when we say the world has no
place for feminism, or that feminism doesn't work for men's goals as
well. There are still people being affected by sexism and misogyny
every day, and they are not always women.