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Modesty
Revisited
by Wendy Shalit
Author, A Return to Modesty: Discovering the
Lost Virtue
This afternoon I was reading a magazine for
brides in which a woman had submitted the following
question: "My fiancé wants us to move in
together, but I want to wait until we're married.
Am I doing our marriage an injustice?" The editor
responded: "Your fiancé should understand
why you want to wait to share a home. Maybe you're
concerned about losing your identity as an
individual. Or maybe you're concerned about space
issues."
Space issues? Losing her identity? If
this woman cared about those things she wouldn't
want to get married in the first place. Her
question was a moral one. She wanted to know what
would be best for her marriage. And on this --
however unbeknownst to the magazine's new-agey
editor -- the evidence is in: Couples who live
together before marriage are much less likely to
get married; and if they do marry, they're more
likely to get divorced. Yet the vocabulary of
modesty has largely dropped from our cultural
consciousness; when a woman asks a question that
necessarily implicates it, we can only mumble about
"space issues."
I first became interested in the subject of
modesty for a rather mundane reason -- because I
didn't like the bathrooms at Williams College. Like
many enlightened colleges and universities these
days, Williams houses boys next to girls in its
dormitories and then has the students vote by floor
on whether their common bathrooms should be coed.
It's all very democratic, but the votes always seem
to go in the coed direction because no one wants to
be thought a prude. When I objected, I was told by
my fellow students that I "must not be comfortable
with [my] body." Frankly, I didn't get
that, because I was fine with my body; it was their
bodies in such close proximity to mine that I
wasn't thrilled about.
I ended up writing about this experience in
Commentary as a kind of therapeutic
exercise. But when my article was reprinted in
Reader's Digest, a weird thing happened: I
got piles of letters from kids who said, "I thought
I was the only one who couldn't stand these
bathrooms." How could so many people feel they were
the "only ones" who believed in privacy and
modesty? It was troubling that they were afraid to
speak up. When and why, I wondered, did modesty
become such a taboo?
At Yale in 1997, a few years after my own coed
bathroom protest, five Orthodox Jewish students
petitioned the administration for permission to
live off-campus instead of in coed dorms. In
denying them, a dean with the Dickensian name of
Brodhead explained that "Yale has its own rules and
requirements, which we insist on because they
embody our values and beliefs." Yale has no core
curriculum, of course, but these coed bathrooms,
according to Dean Brodhead, embody its beliefs. I
would submit that as a result of this kind of
"liberationist" ideology, we today have less, not
more freedom, than in the pre-1960s era when
modesty was upheld as a virtue. In this regard it's
important to recall that when colleges had separate
dorms for men and women, and all the visitation
rules that went with them, it was also possible for
kids to circumvent those rules. It was possible,
for instance -- now, I'm not advocating this -- for
students to sneak into each others' dorms and act
immodestly. But in the new culture of "liberation,"
a student can't sneak into the dorms and be modest,
or, more accurately, she can't sneak out. There is
no "right of exit" in today's immodest society. If
you don't participate, you're a weirdo. Hence
students are not really free to develop their best
selves, to act in accordance with their hopes.
Modesty's Loss, Social
Pathology's Gain
Many of the problems we hear about today --
sexual harassment, date rape, young women who
suffer from eating disorders and report feeling a
lack of control over their bodies -- are all
connected, I believe, to our culture's attack on
modesty. Listen, first, to the words we use to
describe intimacy: what once was called "making
love," and then "having sex," is now "hooking up"
-- like airplanes refueling in flight. In this
context I was interested to learn, while
researching for my book, that the early feminists
actually praised modesty as ennobling to society.
Here I'm not just talking about the
temperance-movement feminists, who said, "Lips that
touch liquor shall never touch mine." I'm talking
about more recent feminists like Simone de
Beauvoir, who warned in her book, The Second
Sex, that if society trivializes modesty,
violence against women would result. And she was
right. Since the 1960s, when our cultural arbiters
deemed this age-old virtue a "hang-up," men have
grown to expect women to be casual about sex, and
women for their part don't feel they have the right
to say "no." This has brought us all more misery
than joy. On MTV I have seen a 27-year-old woman
say she was "sort of glad" that she had herpes,
because now she has "an excuse to say 'no' to sex."
For her, disease had replaced modesty as the
justification for exercising free choice.
In 1948 there was a song called "Baby It's Cold
Outside" by Frank Loesser, in which a boyfriend
wants his girlfriend to sleep over. His argument is
simple but compelling: Baby it's cold outside, and
if she doesn't sleep over, she could catch
pneumonia and die, and that would cause him
"lifelong sorrow." In response, the girl offers
several counter-arguments: "My father will be
waiting at the door, there's bound to be talk
tomorrow," etc. It's a very cute song. And while
post-modern intellectuals at progressive
institutions like Yale would no doubt say this song
proves how oppressed women were in 1948, I would
argue that today's culture ? in which fathers can't
be counted on to be waiting at the door ? is far
creepier.
The counterpoint to "Baby It's Cold Outside" is
a story I read in a women's magazine, written by an
ex-boyfriend of an 18-year-old girl whose father
had decided that she was too old to be a virgin.
After commiserating with the boyfriend, this father
drove the pair to a hotel (he didn't trust the
boyfriend with his car), where the girl became
hysterical and the scheme fell apart. This article
was called "My Ex-Girlfriend's Father: What a Man!"
And although the story isn't typical, it is quite
common these days for parents to rent hotel rooms
for their kids on prom nights, which is essentially
the same principle. So the father in "Baby It's
Cold Outside" waiting at the door, and the older
culture that supported modesty, actually made women
stronger. It gave them the right to say 'no' until
they met someone they wanted to marry. Today's
culture of "liberation" gives women no ground on
which to stand. And an immodest culture weakens
men, too ? we are all at the mercy of other
people's judgment of us as sexual objects (witness
the revolution in plastic surgery for men), which
is not only tiring but also dishonest because we
can't be ourselves.
When I talk to college students, invariably one
will say, "Well, if you want to be modest, be
modest. If you want to be promiscuous, be
promiscuous. We all have a choice, and that's the
wonderful thing about this society." But the
culture, I tell them, can't be neutral. Nor is it
subtle in its influence on behavior. In fact,
culture works more like a Sherman tank. In the end,
if it's not going to value modesty, it will value
promiscuity and adultery, and all our lives and
marriages will suffer as a result.
Four Myths
Exposed
A first step toward reviving respect for modesty
in our culture is to strike at the myths that
undermine it. Let me touch on four of these.
The first myth is that modesty is Victorian. But
what about the story of Rebecca and Isaac? When
Rebecca sees Isaac and covers herself, it is not
because she is trying to be Victorian. Her modesty
was the key to what would bring them together and
develop a profound intimacy. When we cover up what
is external or superficial ? what we all share in
common ? we send a message that what is most
important are our singular hearts and minds. This
separates us from the animals, and always did, long
before the Victorian era.
The second myth about modesty is that it's
synonymous with prudery. This was the point of the
dreadful movie Pleasantville, the premise of which
was that nobody in the 1950s had fun or experienced
love. It begins in black and white and turns to
color only when the kids enlighten their parents
about sex. This of course makes no sense on its
face: if the parents didn't know how to do it, then
how did all these kids get there in the first
place? But it reflects a common conceit of baby
boomers that passion, love and happiness were
non-existent until modesty was overcome in the
1960s. In truth, modesty is nearly the opposite of
prudery. Paradoxically, prudish people have more in
common with the promiscuous. The prudish and the
promiscuous share a disposition against allowing
themselves to be moved by others, or to fall in
love. Modesty, on the other hand, invites and
protects the evocation of real love. It is erotic,
not neurotic.
To illustrate this point, I like to compare
photographs taken at Coney Island almost a century
ago with photographs from nude beaches in the
1970s. At Coney Island, the beach-goers are
completely covered up, but the men and women are
stealing glances at one another and seem to be
having a great time. On the nude beaches, in
contrast, men and women hardly look at each other
-- rather, they look at the sky. They appear
completely bored. That's what those who came after
the '60s discovered about this string of dreary
hookups: without anything left to the imagination,
sex becomes boring.
The third myth is that modesty isn't natural.
This myth has a long intellectual history, going
back at least to David Hume, who argued that
society invented modesty so that men could be sure
that children were their own. As Rousseau pointed
out, this argument that modesty is a social
construct suggests that it is possible to get rid
of modesty altogether. Today we try to do just
that, and it is widely assumed that we are
succeeding. But are we?
In arguing that Hume was wrong and that modesty
is rooted in nature, a recently discovered hormone
called oxytocin comes to mind. This hormone creates
a bonding response when a mother is nursing her
child, but is also released during intimacy. Here
is physical evidence that women become emotionally
bonded to their sexual partners even if they only
intend a more casual encounter. Modesty protected
this natural emotional vulnerability; it made women
strong. But we don't really need to resort to
physiology to see the naturalness of modesty. We
can observe it on any windy day when women wearing
slit skirts hobble about comically to avoid showing
their legs ? the very legs those fashionable skirts
are designed to reveal. Despite trying to keep up
with the fashions, these women have a natural
instinct for modesty.
The fourth and final myth I want to touch on is
that modesty is solely a concern for women. We are
where we are today only in part because the
feminine ideal has changed. The masculine ideal has
followed suit. It was once looked on as manly to be
faithful to one woman for life, and to be
protective toward all women. Sadly, this is no
longer the case, even among many men to whom modest
women might otherwise look as kindred spirits.
Modern feminists are wrong to expect men to be
gentlemen when they themselves are not ladies, but
men who value "scoring" and then lament that there
are no modest women around anymore ? well, they are
just as bad. And of course, a woman can be modestly
dressed and still be harassed on the street. So the
reality is that a lot depends on male respect for
modesty. It is characteristic of modern society
that everyone wants the other guy to be nice to him
without having to change his own behavior, whether
it's the feminists blaming the men, the men blaming
the feminists, or young people blaming their role
models. But that is an infantile posture.
Restoring a Modest
Society
Jews read a portion of the Torah each week, and
in this week's portion there is a story that shows
us beautifully, I think, how what we value in women
and men are inextricably linked. Abraham is visited
by three men, really three angels, and he is
providing them with his usual hospitality, when
they ask him suddenly, "Where is Sarah your wife?"
And he replies, famously, "Behold! In the tent!"
Commentators ask, why in the world are the angels
asking where Sarah is? They know she is in the
tent. They are, after all, angels. And one answer
is, to remind Abraham of where she is, in order to
increase his love for her. This is very
interesting, because in Judaism the most important
work takes place, so to speak, "in the tent" --
keeping kosher, keeping the Sabbath, keeping the
laws of marital purity. Torah is only passed on to
the next generation because of what the woman is
doing in the home. Yet it is not enough for there
to be a Sarah who is in the tent; it is also
necessary that there be an Abraham who appreciates
her. So I think the lesson is clear if we want to
reconstruct a more modest, humane society, we have
to start with ourselves.
I don't think it's an accident that the most
meaningful explication of modesty comes from the
Bible. I was fascinated in my research to discover
how many secular women are returning to modesty
because they found, simply as a practical matter,
that immodesty wasn't working for them. In short,
they weren't successful finding the right men. For
me this prompts an essentially religious question:
Why were we created in this way? Why can't we
become happy by imitating the animals? In the sixth
chapter of Isaiah we read that the fiery angels
surrounding the throne of God have six wings. One
set is for covering the face, another for covering
the legs, and only the third is for flying. Four of
the six wings, then, are for modesty's sake. This
beautiful image suggests that the more precious
something is, the more it must conceal and protect
itself. The message of our dominant culture today,
I'm afraid, is that we're not precious, that we
weren't created in the divine image. I'm saying to
the contrary that we were, and that as such we
deserve modesty.
Wendy Shalit was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
and received her B.A. in philosophy from Williams
College. Her essays have appeared in The Wall
Street Journal, Commentary, City Journal, and
other publications. Her book, A Return to
Modesty, was published by The Free Press in
1999, and last year was reissued in paperback by
Touchstone Books in an edition that includes
questions for classroom use.
Reprinted by permission from IMPRIMIS, the
monthly speech digest of Hillsdale College
(www.hillsdale.edu).
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