There is
something inherently wrong about wearing a pair of shoes that make you want to
cry. Crushed toes, blistered heels and popping veins like electrical wires
across your feet, which are suspended almost vertically in a pair of 6in
stilettos. And no longer can we choose to wear these crippling monstrosities,
it is now the rule.
The Cannes Film Festival has never been progressive when it
comes to women's rights, even if gender equality was a key theme in many of the
films in this year's selection. For the first time in 28 years, the festival
opened with a film by a female director. However, before the start of another
screening, women not wearing high heelshoes for women were turned away.
Cannes 2015 should have been the year of the women. While
2012 heralded a new low for the film festival, with no female nominees for the
prestigious Palme d'Or, 2015 is making history as Agnes Varda will become the
first woman to win the honorary version of the award, something only previously
given to Woody Allen, Clint Eastwood and Bernardo Bertolucci. That is a
phenomenal achievement, one almost entirely surpassed by the high heel debacle.
At the
debut of Carol, a lesbian romance celebrated for its female-majority cast and
producers, female attendees were hawked over by security guards at the door and
subsequently kicked out. It has even been reported by the Telegraph that a film
producer who has had part of her left foot amputated was stopped for not
wearing luxury leather high heels – despite missing
her big toe and part of her foot.
And this is
the 21st century. Previously considered insurmountable barriers for women have
been broken and glass ceilings smashed, yet we are still fighting over what we
can and cannot wear to an international film festival founded on creativity and
free expression.
Successful
actresses, female producers and directors who have worked against the odds in a
male-dominated industry to get recognition are still forced to totter around on
spikes in order to be deemed "acceptable". Frankly it is ridiculous.
Equal
rights have not progressed as much as we would like to think. Wendy Constance,
a children's author who attended Cannes in the 1970s, tweeted the festival had
never been a shining example of equality. "Back in 1971 when I started
work I asked for the rule about women not wearing trousers to be changed. It
was. Forty-four years later," she wrote.
So why are
high heels such a divisive issue? It is because they symbolise sexuality,
femininity and elegance, and consequently, submissiveness. For some feminists,
women wearing heels cannot be taken seriously. As Sandi Toksvig says in the
anthology Fifty Shades Of Feminism, women "will never meet men on an equal
footing... while they literally cannot stand up for themselves".
It is – or
should be – a personal choice as to whether we wear heels or not. For some
women, heels exude confidence and represent the ultimate in power-dressing. As
was the case in Sex And The City, seeing Carrie Bradshaw and the gang stalking
New York in stilettos glamorised the heel, cementing its association with
wealth and success.
For far too
long, women have been judged not on their personalities, abilities and
achievements but on the length of their legs and the height of their heels. And
it is because of this that high heels have gained the reputation of being
confidence-boosting and a symbol of power. They supposedly increase status by
repositioning the body – shifting the physical appearance of the legs, bottom
and breasts, aiding sexual objectification.
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