Jameela Jamil Sparked an Internet Debate Over Her Comments About the Kardashians
The Good Place actress Jameela Jamil has never shied away from tackling society’s obsession with dictating and policing how women “should” look. Earlier this year, she launched an Instagram account called “I Weigh” that seeks to measure women by “achievements and experiences, not pounds and kilograms” and later poured her feelings into a powerful piece for Glamour.com: “Our culture is obsessed with women’s appearances, and it’s holding us back as a gender.”
Now, she’s back in the spotlight for taking on these issues again. She went on a podcast from the U.K.’s Channel 4 late last week and talked specifically about the Kardashians, whom she has called out in the past for promoting unrealistic standards of beauty to young girls. After Kim Kardashian posted an ad promoting an appetite-suppressant lollipop in May, Jamil had screenshot the images and written on Twitter, “No. Fuck off. No. You terrible and toxic influence on young girls,” she wrote on Twitter. “I admire their mother’s branding capabilities, she is an exploitative but innovative genius, however this family makes me feel actual despair over what women are reduced to.”
On the Channel 4 podcast, hosted by Krishnan Guru-Murthy, Jamil elaborated about why she called the Kardashians toxic—and how she feels their influence embodies the idea of a “double agent for the patriarchy.”
“The double agent for the patriarchy is basically just a woman who perhaps unknowingly is putting the patriarchal narrative out into the world,” she said, adding later, “But it’s a wolf in sheep’s clothing: Just because you look like a woman, we trust you and we think you’re on our side, but you are selling us something that really doesn’t make us feel good… You’re selling us self-consciousness.”
Watch the full interview here:
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While many people embraced Jamil’s criticism as constructive, the Internet was quickly divided. Some pointed out that in the past, Jamil has made comments about the sexuality of artists like Beyoncé and Miley Cyrus. “Jameela Jamil has history for policing/shaming women for ~using their sexuality~ & it’s so tedious,” one Twitter user wrote.
https://twitter.com/bethanyrutter/status/1036178045487513600
https://twitter.com/marthajosephine/status/1035598845529473024
In the Guardian on Sunday, Frances Ryan had a different take than Jamil.
She wrote about why calling Kardashian “a double agent for the patriarchy” can be problematic—but also argued that Jamil made an important point worth exploring: “Still, blaming other women for misogyny has always felt uncomfortable—like you are doing patriarchy’s job by turning on women pressured to conform to sexism, rather than critiquing the male-dominated structures that got us here. But Jamil is surely speaking out about a side to sexism that is worth confronting.”
There are more than a few sides to sexism and misogyny worth confronting, and whether or not you agree with Jamil, it’s worth considering the mixed messages the Kardashians send under the guise of being feminist—and figuring out how they fit into how you define (and live out) the concept.
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