Jill's excellent post, especially this part of it, makes me want to examine American culture's desire/tendency to punish women. Too frequently, Americans regard our culture as progressive, peaceful and egalitarian, while imagining the Middle East as belligerent, sexist, and regressive. I hope that by examining problematic American behavior and attitudes we can stop exoticizing the Middle East, influenced by Islam, and see universal problems as issues that are common, rather than indicators of difference.
Hypothesis: both American culture and Middle Eastern culture punish women for "inappropriate" displays of sexual agency. America has a culture based on capitalism, in which women are commodified. The Middle East, instead, has a family-based culture, in which women are objectified as property. Americans justify punishing women for their sexual agency for several reasons, all relating to the idea that a woman's sexual agency makes her less valuable as a commodity. Most men seem not to want to have sex with a woman many other men have had sex with, so a woman's value goes down if she has many sexual partners. This is why "slut" is a stinging insult with no male-oriented counterpart: men are not commodities, and so do not need to limit their exercise of sexual agency in order to remain desirable (overall). "Slut" can apply to a woman, even if she has no sexual experience whatsoever, based on the way she dresses or acts, as long as she seems to perpetuate the illusion of being widely sexually available. This use of the label "slut" shows that it is not reality that counts, but the perceived value of the woman as a commodity, not unlike a stock price.
The first thing I thought about when reading the quoted portion of Jill's post was the shaming and ignoring of birth mothers. Do women who become pregnant at inopportune times, especially without being married, experience public shame? Certainly teenagers who become pregnant out of wedlock are commonly considered shameful to their families (see: Bristol Palin, Jamie Lynn Spears). And, once pregnant, there's no win, since being pregnant is shameful and having an abortion means that a girl is not taking responsibility for her actions, apparently. So, if a girl is to take responsibility for her actions, she's supposed to carry the baby to term. I assume it is equally responsible behavior for a girl to give her baby up for adoption as it is for her to raise it.
Why, in a culture where so many people, male or female, have sex before they are married, is accidental pregnancy shameful? Women have sex. Sex makes babies. Birth control is fallible. The only reason I can think of is the devaluation of the woman as a commodity because of the visible results of her sexual agency. And, look how we punish women for the sin of believing themselves the arbiters of their own sexual behavior: we encourage them to bring their pregnancies to term, rather than "selfishly" terminating, and then either encourage them to give up the child and forget they ever had a baby so it can be raised by people who played by the rules (so far as we know), or else allow them to languish in poverty and blame them when their children become criminals. Yet the narrative remains that pregnant women deserve to be pregnant, since it is the natural consequence of having sex, which they shouldn't be having outside of marriage, even though most adults do.
In the Middle East, and in many Muslim-dominated countries, such as Indonesia, women's roles are defined within a family paradigm. A woman's sexuality is regulated not by her market value, but by her position as an agent of honor or shame to her family. Her sexuality is therefore only properly directed toward bearing children in wedlock, or to her husband more generally. How is shaming a woman who makes herself "public", either by actually engaging in adultery or premarital sex, or simply be going out in public alone without shame (thereby allowing people tho believe she has sexual agency and is willing to exercise it outside her family) different in this society than in America? Is it worse for a woman to be defined as property of her family than as a commodity of society? Are the equally threatening, or are most Americans justified in believing themselves to be more progressive in their view of women than Middle Easterners?