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Feminism: Sex & gender discussions

Mrs Thatcher?

10 replies

coribells · 08/04/2013 23:29

Am watching Newsnight discussion on Thatchers legacy, with Ken Livingston , Douglas Hurd and Baroness Williams, I a, perplexed as to why they refer to her as Mrs Thatcher and yet they speak of other politicians by their full names or last names. What's this about?l

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rosy71 · 09/04/2013 14:56

I don't know but I do remember she was usually referred to as Mrs Thatcher. I always think of her as that. Saying Margaret Thatcher seems odd. Confused Perhaps it's something old-fashioned to do with using women's titles so you know whether they're married or not.

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Xenia · 09/04/2013 15:14

She was usually known as Mrs Thatcher. Thatcher is fine too.It was just a generational thing. Then she became Lady Thatcher so I would have thought that became the right title.

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LRDtheFeministDragon · 09/04/2013 15:31

She was a baroness, wasn't she?

It is peculiar to refer to her as Mrs Thatcher but I suppose they're thinking about her as PM, when that was the title she used.

There is a semi-official convention that pisses me off, that in a lot of formal writing you use just 'Surname' for men and 'firstname surname' for women. Hmm I don't think people mean to do it, it's just one of those ingrained habits that reminds you women aren't the default.

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vesuvia · 09/04/2013 16:07

I notice that Angela Merkel is often described as Mrs. Merkel.

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vesuvia · 09/04/2013 16:09

And there is Mrs. Clinton too.

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coribells · 09/04/2013 16:20

Though I haven't noticed any male political leaders being referred to 'Mr X'. It probably is generational, but to still refer to as Mrs seems a bit odd to me.

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KRITIQ · 09/04/2013 16:29

I can't work out if there is any protocol for referring to leaders past or present. I always found it odd that the former Iraqi leader was always referred to by his first name - Saddam (whether he was an ally or an enemy at the time.)

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kim147 · 09/04/2013 16:34

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

LRDtheFeministDragon · 09/04/2013 16:51

Isn't that because Hussein is a bit like Smith? Besides there was a King Hussein in Jordan, so that could have been confusing.

(I am pondering ignorantly here, please correct if you know better).

My completely anecdotal experience is that Ms is more accepted in Aus than here.

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TeiTetua · 09/04/2013 17:21

I think Saddam Hussein's first name was used frequently to make sure there wasn't any confusion with King Hussein of Jordan, who died in 1999.

We always seem to be less comfortable using just a last name when we talk about a woman. You can say "Thatcher" and people do, but sometimes one has to force oneself a little. Maybe the unspoken feeling is that surnames belong to men, and a woman with that name has to be differentiated from her husband, or even from her father if she's not married. Dennis Thatcher wasn't a public figure, but he was a businessman who was probably well enough known in some places. Did his associates ever say "Thatcher, old chap..." (and did it continue, "about that wife of yours..."?)

Just imagine "Ms Thatcher". Bwhahaha to that.

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