Speaking of competing women, Germans created a term called "stutenbissig". It's supposed to describe the phenomenon that women are said to be very afraid of other women who might knock them from their perches, however, they don't show this frankly (by openly fighting their battles), but tend to scheme, to knife, to exert emotional pressure and so on. I never liked this term very much, as I always thought this behaviour (which I can't deny to have observed many times, too) had to be rather a result of our society (teaching girls not to show their needs and agression openly, but to be a good girl) than a speficic female character trait.
Seems that I was wrong. A study of the Emmanuel College in Boston showed that girls are indeed as aggressive as boys, but choose completely different ways to act aggressively - and this at the very early age of only 4 years already! The researchers asked groups of three kindergarten-kids to fight for a special doll. Half of the groups consisted of only boys, the other half of only girls. The boys chose very direct ways to get hold of the doll: They showed their aggression towards the current doll-owner openly, or they took the doll away from him with might and main. The girls, however, didn't do any of this. Instead, the two girls who did not hold the doll at a current moment, allied themselves against the doll-owner, they hid away from her or whispered in front of her. In other words: they used "social aggressive tactics" as the researchers called it: they redlined the doll-owner and put emotional pressure on her.
I was quite surprised to read that these mechanisms work already at the age of 4, I have to say! I think every one of us has suffered from such strategies now and then during her life, but I wouldn't have expected it to start it that early! So what do you think: is it a typical femal character trait to act like that? Or does socialization show its effects on us women that quickly?
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