Eddie Vedder’s Feminism: Flannel-Clad Activism [View all]
Toward the end of Pearl Jams Oct. 16 show in Oklahoma City, Eddie Vedder turned the microphone over to a woman in the front row who wanted to propose to her boyfriend. She got down on one knee, proposed, and kissed the man who had said yes.
Vedder congratulated them and said, Thats beautifulits a modern world.
Vedder has spent his career fighting for a modern world that accepts and promotes womenhes fought for reproductive rights, spoken out against sexual assault, and worked for worldwide safe pregnancy/childbirth. Vedders feminism has followed him from the highest rafters at Lollapalooza in 1992 to being the father of two daughters in 2013.
His politics have never taken second stage, and his feminism has always been a part of what is stereotypically a masculine, male-dominated, female-unfriendly world of rock.
Vedders ethos shaped my adolescence, and normalized feminism. While Pearl Jam as a whole (Jeff Ament, Stone Gossard, and Mike McCready) presented itself as a progressive force in the grunge scene, taking female protagonists and feminist issues to the radio and MTV, Vedders voice and actions made an incredible impact on me as I fully realized my own feminism, even if I couldnt name it at age 10.
Listening to Pearl Jam growing up, I consistently heard songs with female protagonists. I loved reading the lyricsthey werent against me or at me. The lyrics told stories about women and girls facing mental health issues, disappointing relationships, being misunderstood by parents and men, and aging in a small townall from the womans perspective. They commented on the privilege of being white and male in our society, the ramifications of not having that privilege, and the damaging and idealized masculinity of guns.
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