Hidden Brain - Men: 45, Women: 0
Episode Date: March 6, 2018More women are running for political office than ever before in American history. But in politics and many other fields, women still struggle to attain positions of power. Researchers say they're ofte...n trapped in a "double bind" — a series of unconscious, interlocking stereotypes we have about men, women and the nature of leadership. This week, we take a closer look at the double bind as we revisit a favorite episode from October 2016.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
The second annual Women's March was held in January.
The focus was on getting people registered to vote.
Everyone who enjoys the privilege of voting in our elections must do with the House of
2018.
Let's get more people in Washington on our side, right?
It drives me into the voting booth.
In the upcoming 2018 midterm elections, there are going to be many women running for political
office.
According to research from Rutgers University, more than 400 women are estimated to be on the ballot for the US House of Representatives.
That's unprecedented.
All this made us want to revisit an episode we first aired in October of 2016.
If you look at the gender makeup of Congress, you'll see that fewer than one in five legislators are women.
At Fortune 500 companies, fewer than one in twenty CEOs are women.
And look at all the presidents of the United States.
Now, I know there was a long time when women couldn't be president, but if men and women had an equal shot at the White House, the odds of having 45 presidents
in a row all be men, about 1 in 36 trillion.
What explains the Dirt of Women in Top Leadership positions?
Is it bias, a lack of role models, the old boys club? Sure, but it goes deeper than that.
Women are trapped in a catch-22, a paradox so deeply embedded in our culture that there are few
means of escape. And so it is really that very, very fine line between being a shrew on the one hand and a puppet on the other that any woman in public
life has to walk.
The puppet, the shrew, and the double-bind facing women who want to lead this week on Hidden
Brain.
A few years ago, one of our listeners decided to switch careers.
So, my name is Deborah Metta, and I am a second year marketing student in an MBA program.
Deborah had been a successful teacher, but the business world appealed to her.
She thought she would be a good fit.
So did the program to which she applied.
She was awarded a full scholarship.
Soon, she was sharing the good news with an old friend.
We met for coffee one day and she is very nice.
I'm still really good friends with her, but she said to me, I really can't see you in
business.
I think you're, you know, too sweet for the business world.
It was the beginning of a series of comments that undermined her belief that she could be
a leader or a manager.
Later that year, Deborah's voice was the problem,
specifically her habit of ending sentences on a higher pitch.
A professor during a class mentioned that I do that, that I raise my, you know,
pitch at the end of a sentence. The implication was that Deborah sounded like a lightweight,
not manager material. Deborah said she wasn't prepared for the offhand remarks.
I mean, it really was leading me to lose confidence,
the criticism of my voice, and then, you know,
everyone, not everyone, but several people telling me,
I'm too sweet for business.
I think it really affected me.
This is one side of the Catch-22.
Women like Deborah are seen as not tough enough to be leaders.
Another listener, Tully Winston, made a different set of choices.
As a manager at a construction company, a female leader in a man's world, she decided to be
strategic.
From the way she dresses...
I've definitely chosen to go a more masculine path
wearing Oxford shoes and button-downs, a straight pulled back hair and pants.
To the way she greets clients, you just go in there and grab that hand and squeeze it
because you have muscles too. I think that tends to help them go, oh wow, this is not
just a lady.
Tully doesn't want to appear soft or overly feminine
because she knows that would be seen as weakness.
But appearing tough turns out to create
its own set of problems.
It's definitely a double-edged sword
because if I'm outspoken, all of a sudden,
the men in the office will joke about,
oh, whoa, whoa, watch out for Ty, watch out, she's dangerous that one.
Dangerous, not driven, not strong, dangerous.
We tell you their stories because together, Tuley and Debra's experiences reveal a powerful
phenomenon that plays out when women strive to become leaders.
The problem doesn't end with getting to the corner office, women confront the same issues
when it comes to exercising power.
It's a double-bind.
Social psychologist Alice Eglie says the double-bind comes about because of a series of unconscious,
interlocking stereotypes we have about men, women, and the nature of
leadership.
The female gender role is based on the stereotype that women are nice and kind and compassionate,
but it's also expected.
So people expect women to be kind of diced friendly.
And smile.
Now, Sazalis, consider our cultural stereotype about leaders.
In a leadership role, what is expected to take charge?
And sometimes, at least to demonstrate toughness, make tough decisions,
be very assertive in bringing an organization forward, sometimes fire people for cause, etc.
So what's a woman to do? Be nice and kind and friendly as our gender stereotypes about women require,
or be tough and decisive as our stereotypes about leadership demand.
To be one is to be seen as nice, but weak.
To be the other is to be seen as competent, but unlikeable.
The double-bind exists for women like Tuley and Debra in the business world, but it also
exists in public life, even for women with enormous power and experience.
We talked to two women elected to high office.
One is a Democrat, the other is a Republican.
Their stories have many similarities.
By the way, you may notice we refer to our guests by their first names.
Their agenda biases in the way the media use names.
Journalists regularly refer to women by their first names and men by their last names.
On this podcast, in the interest of being conversational, we use first names for all guests.
When Carol Mosley-Bron was elected to the US Senate, she achieved a powerful first.
She was the first female African-American senator.
Carol says growing up, her parents shielded her from finding out how bias might
limit her choices.
My parents had never given me a notion that I was limited anyway by my race or my gender,
and that I could just do whatever it was that I thought I wanted to do and could do.
But when she got into politics, Carol realized that race and gender did matter.
Of the two, she thought that racism would be the bigger barrier.
And I have to tell you that I think in some regards, the gender biases are more profound
and more central to our culture than even the racial ones.
And that, for me, was the surprise. I was expecting some pushback based on race and or gender.
What I wasn't expecting was that the gender pushback
would be as pronounced as it was, even more so than the racial ones.
But shortly after Carol won her race,
she says she confronted a second trap,
the other side of the double bind.
One time she made an impassioned plea on the floor of the Senate, but she felt her colleagues were just tuning her out.
All they could hear was a stril black woman.
Just because it hasn't worked and I submit to you, Mr. President,
that it had came home that night.
I was so upset and demeaning to use the word
that I thought, okay, that's it,
I can't take this anymore, I'm gonna quit.
She didn't quit, but Carol still vividly recalls
how unfair it felt.
And it wasn't just over how she was being treated,
she saw her experience
in the long light of history.
In the 15th century, women who talked back, they would put weights on their tongue and
make them walk around the square. That's a shrews punishment. The idea being that you're
not supposed to have opinions about things outside of the home.
And so that's a real danger for any woman in public life.
So every stranger gets to comment on how they, what they think about you and what they
think about what you just said.
And if you said too much, that becomes a danger.
If you said too little, that's a danger also.
And so it is really that very, very fine line between being a shrew on the one hand and
a puppet on the other that any lost re-election in 1998.
There is a sense that a woman has to be gracious and civil and smart and smile.
This is Connie Morella.
Connie served for 16 years as a Republican Congresswoman from Maryland.
But she's got to be strong also and indicate that she's going to persevere.
Like Democrat Carol Mosley-Bron, Connie says at times she struggled to be heard.
In a committee room when I was in chair of the committee, I would respond to a question or a comment
on an issue. And I would say, well, thank you, Connie.
That's great. And then a little later, Representative Smith said the very same thing I did. And it was,
oh, Congressman Smith, that was fabulous. Let the record show that you have accomplished that or whatever. And I think, gee, I just said that.
Connie Morella, Carol Mosley-Bron,
Tully Winston, Deborah Metta,
all these women feel they've experienced bias.
But here's the thing, how do we know, scientifically,
that they're right?
Carol Mosley-Bron's Senate colleagues
may have felt that perception of her was accurate.
The newspaper cartoonist may have felt she really was easily manipulated.
In fact, Carol herself, in her interview with us, listed numerous misstep sheet made as a
campaigner and as a senator.
How can we tell with scientific certainty where the Carol was the victim of bias?
When we look at a woman leader who appears incompetent or shrill,
how do we know if we are seeing reality or just seeing the world through the lens of our own unconscious biases?
This is where laboratory experiments are essential.
They allow us to see precisely what's happening.
We keep everything identical.
We expose people to the various, what we call,
experimental conditions.
And at the end of the day, if we find a difference,
we can say that it has to be due to that thing
that we were studying.
And that's the nature of a controlled experiment.
Stay with us.
When we judge a person's character, we usually think our opinions are based on
fact. What we forget is that the world that enters our brain has been filtered.
Figuring out what those filters are and how they distort our vision has long intrigued
Madeline Hylman.
She's a psychology professor at New York University who focuses on gender stereotypes and bias,
particularly when it comes to leadership.
What we have found consistently is that when we present women and men
with exactly the same credentials, qualifications, and backgrounds,
for a job that is traditionally male, held by men in our culture,
thought to require male attributes,
we consistently find that the woman is seen as more incompetent than the man.
The problem doesn't end there.
Sometimes women really do show their competence and it's unavoidable and we can't, we can't
deny it.
And what happens then?
Well the research that I've done has shown that when women are truly successful in areas
where they're not expected to be, there's a very negative reaction, there's disapproval,
and they are penalized, they're disliked, but they're also seen as really
almost really awful depictions of what kinds of people they are,
words like bitter and choral sum, selfish and deceitful and devious and manipulative and cold.
These are words that are attributed to these women who are successful where they are not
supposed to be, and I should put that in quotes.
They have terms for these people, you know, ice queen and dragon lady and iron maiden
and so on and so forth.
I want to emphasize, these aren't Madeline's opinions.
They are the findings of her experiments.
In one study, Madeline asked volunteers
to evaluate a high-powered manager joining a company.
Sometimes volunteers are told the manager is a man,
other times they're told it's a woman.
When the person was presented as a very high-power person
who was very ambitious.
We found that the person was seen as much more unlikable when it was a woman than when it was a man.
To be clear, the high-powered male and female manager are described in identical terms down to the letter.
The only thing different is that one is said to be a man and the other is said to be a woman.
Madeline has also looked at what happens when someone joins a company but is not said
to be in a position of power.
If we didn't give information about how successful the person was, just had them applying for
a job, we find that the women are as likable as the man, but their scene is less competent.
And that is the rock in the hard place, the double-bine,
that if it's not clear that you're successful,
and you have the same information about a woman and a man,
the woman has seen is less competent.
If you have very clear indication
that there is success, then the woman is rated as unlikeable.
They see her as competent but unlikeable.
Madeline says the double binderizes
because our minds are trying to align our stereotypes
about men and women with our stereotypes about leadership.
We have conceptions of these jobs and these positions
and what is required to do them well.
And there's a lack of fit between how we see women
and what these positions require.
The biases Madeline describes aren't just held by men.
They're held by both sexes, which explains why many female leaders encountered
derision and suspicion from both men and women.
I think that this comes from the social roles that people have played over time.
Women stayed home and they took care, men went out and they took charge of things. That is the kind of origin, I think, of the stereotypes
that we hold. We have very strong feelings about how men and women are, and that leads
to the idea that women are less competent than men in a lot of these fields that we're
talking about.
And we have real strong ideas about how they should be, and that leads to this dislike when they go over the line, when they tread where they're not supposed to be.
There are other aspects to the double-bind. Female leaders can get in trouble for displaying emotion,
but also for not displaying emotion.
Lisa Feldman-Barritt is a psychology professor at Northeastern University
and author of the book, How Emotions Are Made.
There is an implication that if a woman expresses emotion
that she's either unsuitable for leadership or unstable in some way,
or if she doesn't express enough emotion,
she's also seen rather than being seen as rational and kind of level-headed,
she's seen as, you know, not empathic, not warm, and generally not trustworthy.
In one experiment, Lisa showed volunteers pictures of faces
and asked why the subject was expressing an emotion.
She found that the volunteers thought men's emotions were shaped by what was going on
around them, but that women's emotions were shaped by their nature.
Both men and women, when they were looking at female faces expressing emotion, believed
that this was caused by a woman's emotional nature. She's just a neurotic person. She's just
unstable. She's just untrustworthy, as opposed to when they were looking at male faces expressing
emotion, they were more likely to say, oh, he's just having a bad day. Something bad happened to him.
just having a bad day, something bad happened to him. Lots of people have suggested ways out of the double-bind. Some say women should ignore
criticisms about incompetence and plunge full steam ahead. If they then appear unlikable,
they should also go out of their way to demonstrate kindness in order to keep people from seeing
them as competent but cold.
There is something disturbing about these ideas. They ask women who are the victims here
to compensate for the biases of others. Many experts also think that a society changes
our stereotypes will change as well. If more women make it through the labyrinth and
get to the top, fewer people will have trouble seeing women as leaders.
Many countries and organizations are coming to think of leadership as being collaborative rather than dictatorial.
The less we think of leaders as alpha males, the easier it's going to be for our unconscious minds to see women as leaders. If there's one common thread here, it's that ending the double
bind can't be just on the women reaching for high office or the corner office. It has to be on all of us.
This week's episode was produced by Jenny Schmidt and edited by Tara Boyle. A staff includes Parts Shaw, Raina Cohen, Match Watts and Rene Clarre.
If you like this episode, I'm going to ask you to tell two friends, one man and one woman
about our show.
Our unsung hero this week is Anja Grunman.
She's the person who oversees NPR's podcast.
She's always had our back and there's a reason her calendar is always maxed out.
Anja is the very definition of that collaborative leader we were just talking about.
She makes everyone around her better.
You can find more hidden brain on Facebook and Twitter and listen for my stories on your
local public radio station.
I'm Shankar Vitantum and this is NPR.