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If Betty Friedan were to review the Facebook habits of the over-30 set, she would turn over in her grave. By this I mean specifically the trend of women using photographs of their children instead of themselves as the main picture on their Facebook profiles. You click on a friend's name and what comes into focus is not a photograph of her face, but a sleeping blond four-year-old, or a sun-hatted baby running on the beach. Here, harmlessly embedded in one of our favorite methods of procrastination, is a potent symbol for the new century. Where have all of these women gone? What, some future historian may very well ask, do all of these babies on our Facebook pages say about the construction of women’s identity at this particular moment in time?
Many of these women work. Many of them are in book clubs. Many of them are involved in causes. But this is how they choose to represent themselves. The choice may seem trivial, but the whole idea behind Facebook is to create a social persona, an image of who you are projected into hundreds of bedrooms and cafes and offices across the country. Why would that image be of someone else, however closely bound they are to your life, genetically and otherwise? The choice seems to constitute a retreat to an older form of identity, to a time when women were called Mrs. John Smith, to a time when fresh scrubbed Vassar girls were losing their minds amidst vacuum cleaners and sandboxes. Which is not to say that I don’t understand the temptation to put a photograph of your beautiful child on Facebook, because I do. After all, it frees you of the burden of looking halfway decent for a picture, and of the whole excruciating business of being yourself. Your 3-year-old likes being in front of the camera. But still.
These Facebook photos signal a larger and more ominous self-effacement, a narrowing of our worlds. Think of a dinner party you just attended, and your friend, who wrote her senior thesis in college on Proust, who used to stay out drinking till five in the morning in her twenties, a brilliant and accomplished woman. Think about how throughout the entire dinner party, from olives to chocolate mousse, she talks about nothing but her kids. You waited, and because you love this woman, you want her to talk about…what?…a book? A movie? A news story? True, her talk about her children is very detailed, very impressive in the rigor and analytical depth she brings to the subject; she could, you couldn’t help but think, be writing an entire dissertation on the precise effect of a certain teacher’s pedagogical style on her 4-year-old. But still. You notice at another, livelier corner of the table that the men are not talking about models of strollers. This could in fact be a 19th-century novel where the men have retired to a different room to drink brandy and talk about news and politics. You turn back to the conversation and the woman is talking about what she packs for lunch for her child. Are we all sometimes that woman? A little kid talk is fine, of course, but wasn’t there a time when we were interested, also, in something else?
The mystery here is that the woman with the baby on her Facebook page has surely read The Feminine Mystique in college, and The Second Sex, and The Beauty Myth. She is no stranger to the smart talk of whatever wave of feminism we are on, and yet this style of effacement, this voluntary loss of self, comes naturally to her. Here is my pretty family, she seems to be saying, I don’t matter anymore.
I have a friend whose daughter for a very long time wore squeaky sneakers. These sneakers emitted what was to adult ears an unbelievably annoying squeak with every single step she took. I asked my friend once why she put up with the sneakers, and she said, “Because she likes them!” Imagine being in this new generation, discovering with every joyous squeak of your sneakers, that Galileo was wrong, and the sun is not the center of the universe, you are!

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Comments
My friend use a profile of
By: DanB. | Sun, 12/06/2009 - 18:50
My friend use a profile of roommate in Facebook. It's strange and inconvinient. ------------
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My friend used to hide behind
By: Tiara79 | Thu, 12/03/2009 - 05:58
My friend used to hide behind her son too. She said that my son is a treasure for me so I want to show the world how great he is...and there's the photo of her son. Quite reasonable, right. Stuffed animals
Facebook Pages and Kids
By: Thermal Therapy | Mon, 11/16/2009 - 12:26
I should say that I'm a mom and I have photos of my kids on my Facebook profile. I don't use them as my avatar.
Thermal Therapy & Heat Therapy
Clear points
By: tikaputri | Wed, 10/14/2009 - 11:32
Good points on that, I would take my daughters out of my facebook pages for sure. She might found out what I'm doing or have been done, and that might not pretty for a girl of her age. Thanks for sharing this valuable information.
Tika Putri
Depends on the individual
By: carguy | Mon, 10/12/2009 - 12:53
I don't think using children's pictures diminishes the identity of the parent. It's all a matter of personal choice. I would think most mothers consider their children their top priority, above their careers, interests and so on. In fact, emphasizing their pictures is stating as much and I think that's fine. Lexus IS 250
Facebook desease
By: gadgetlook | Fri, 10/09/2009 - 12:21
Facebook is to create a social personal, Facebook.com is a great way to meet friends and keep up on what they are doing.
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I Agree Definitely!
By: oestsetnoc | Fri, 10/09/2009 - 11:47
I totally agree with your point. People should show their real selves not making use of those innocent pics. - oes tsetnoc
reply
By: boed | Mon, 10/05/2009 - 11:50
it's good to read interesting article. Thanks.
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