Your choice of "wifestyle": be like Kate Moss or Kate Middleton
According to Grazia, being like one of the Kates is the only way for a married woman to behave.
By Rhiannon and Holly Published 02 July 2012 9:28
What does it mean to be a wife in a world where your local market abounds with T-shirts displaying reluctant husbands at the altar above the words "Game Over"? Well, according to Grazia this week, a wife can be many things, united by the fact of all being heavily stereotyped and unrealistic. In case you didn’t catch it (horror of social horrors!), their three-page editorial "Rebel vs Regal: A Tale of Two Wives", in which the differing approaches to "wifeliness" on the part of Kate Middleton and Kate Moss were compared in mind-numbingly tedious detail, ended with a question that we’re sure you’re all dying to answer: which wife-style are you?
"The Kates have become more significant to us as wives than they were as single women", bleats Grazia, who claim their false dichotomy has generated furious debate the length and breadth of the country. Everywhere you go, from a builder’s caff to a dole office to a queue of irate and pay-chequeless Natwest customers, people are talking about whether or not they’re "team Kate" or, er, "team Kate". Both, according to the nameless staffer who wrote the article, epitomise the extreme versions of "modern wifehood" and as such have made us think more deeply about, like, what it means to be a woman and to be married and stuff.
Except it hasn’t. People couldn’t care less. They’re worrying about their mortgages, or their job security, or the cost of childcare, or whether they’ll ever get housing benefit or a pension or where their next shag is coming from. No one is sitting in their house weighing up the relative merits of two women they’ve never met in terms of their marital attributes, except possibly everyone who works for Grazia. We’re all too busy. And that’s the way it should be. Equally, teenage girls haven’t looked at Kate Middleton’s life and immediately been transformed into "smart, well groomed, demure ladies", as a nameless poll in Grazia suggests. Whoever conducted the poll has obviously never been to Watford on a Saturday night - and to suggest that teenage girls are in any way concerned with what some posh lass does of an evening (run William a bath, apparently) is sheer lunacy. What they’re actually doing is worrying whether you can get pregnant off a blowjob or where they put their lip shimmer. Teenage girls, as you were.
According to common social perception, however, a wife is something that every little girl wants to become. Disclaimer: you can only navigate this treacherous path if a man asks you first, and he in turn will only ask when cultural pressure reaches a fever pitch and he runs to the jeweller’s in a sweat of peer-pressure-induced commitment. As the girlfriend (wife-in-waiting), you will of course be sat at home during this time, plotting your latest series of subtle manipulations to make him ask you, with your lonely left hand outstretched. He will run back, panting with the shock of blowing three months' wages on a shiny piece of earth dust, and present you with a ring. Immediately, your sex life will be blown to pieces (in the bad way) and you’ll magically transform into a carbon copy of - God forbid! - your mother.
Where does this leave us women, so often referred to as the "ball and chain" in a wifely context? We know that in the fifties, the ideal was to bake beautiful cupcakes and smile sweetly at dinner parties while refraining from expressing any controversial views, as per the well-known Harry Enfield sketch (women: know your limits!) Since then, we’ve seen movements that have discouraged women from "becoming wives" and entering into such a traditionally patriarchal institution altogether. We’ve also seen a resurgence of what we might deem "cupcake culture", which celebrates the sugar-centred, insufferably twee qualities of fifties housewifery and attempts to recast them in a world where women also have jobs and more meaningful responsibilities. Finally, we’ve seen the rise of and reaction to the "have it all" imperative, which we discussed in detail in last week’s column.
None of these choices are without their respective downfalls, and all of them reflect the day-to-day lives of 90 per cent of the population about as much as the two "wives" to whom Grazia have taken such a "liking" (read: the linguistic equivalent of a rusty machete). Here are two women: a supermodel and a princess, both of whom have traded on their looks to get where they are today, and who are supposed to be telling us something significant about the role of women in modern times. (Clue: the real significance lies in the first part of this sentence.) The suggestion that the rest of us should somehow be aspiring to either one of these "wifestyles" is as out of touch as appointing a well-known tax evader as a government spending advisor (ahem).
As per usual, this false debate surrounding a pair of straw wives says just as much about class as it does about female equality. Perhaps if more young couples were able to afford their rent or mortgages on a sole income, more women would choose to devote themselves to wifely duties - or indeed, men to husbandly ones. While K-Middy may appear to fit the bill of "humble wife", the suggestion that La Moss, a woman who built her own multimillion-pound career from nothing, has somehow become "more significant" since getting married is deeply insulting. Her only crime is to have refused to compromise her lifestyle. The implications in Grazia that her independence means she is somehow falling short assumes that there are modes of behaviour that should come into play the minute a ring is placed on a woman’s finger. Sod that.
Surely it’s as simple as loving one another enough, warts and all, to be able to build a life together? Suddenly becoming a simpering, submissive, desexualised bath-runner the minute you chow down on the marzipan-coated fruitcake means you’re probably not the woman he married anymore. If becoming a "wife" means not only losing your name (and why do that?) but a part of yourself so fundamental that you need to reassess your day-to-day behaviour, then it’s a sacrifice that we’re not willing to make. And guess what, Grazia? Our mothers weren’t either.
Latest tweets
More from New Statesman
- Online writers:
- Steven Baxter
- Rowenna Davis
- David Allen Green
- Mehdi Hasan
- Nelson Jones
- Gavin Kelly
- Helen Lewis
- Laurie Penny
- The V Spot
- Alex Hern
- Martha Gill
- Alan White
- Samira Shackle
- Alex Andreou
- Nicky Woolf in America
- Bim Adewunmi
- Glosswitch
- Kate Mossman on pop
- Ryan Gilbey on Film
- Martin Robbins
- Rafael Behr
- Eleanor Margolis
- Tools and services:
- Polls
- Predictions
- Archive
- Magazine
- PDF edition
- RSS feeds
- Advertising
- Subscribe
- Special supplements
- Stockists





















23 comments
My mother got married solely so she could lose her name. It was Toogood, and she claims all through her adult life people like doctors, dentists and dinner party guests wouldn't shut up making the same stupid joke until she cracked and married someone with an unpronounceable foreign surname. Which i hate: the endless grim patronising routine of spelling it out for everyone...
Frankly, bravo! And as a side-note, speaking as a 25 year old single man, "a simpering, submissive, desexualised bath-runner" is the exact opposite of what I would hope my future partner would be, since I could not love someone I could not respect.
And just think back on the 60s and 70s when we were trying so hard to get rid of sexist stereotypes. The Free Market has undone so much of that... one could get depressed.
I don't think there is any trait less appealing - either in oneself or in a potential object of desire - than being 'demure'.
I don't think there is any action less appealing than sticking a piece of... [...] paper on the wall with pecking order. Especially in the eyes of an object of desire.
They should both have a good meal or two...
cheesy sammich
I am astonished how much men know about so called ''celebrities'', they surely read Grazia! Once I spoke with a guy who knew all Katie Price's husbands first names+surnames! It was awesome. I mean, I couldn't truly verify his testimony, coz I don't know her husbands' names, but it was SO IMPRESSIVE of him!
:-P
The test will be - have these two women( Duchess of Windsor - you can never be too thin or too rich( yes, stolen from another US citizen )) made marriage popular again?
House Trained
just as Martha responded I am shocked that some people able to make $5971 in 4 weeks on the internet. did you read this website HTTP://LAZYCASH24.COM
So it's this or them talking about their cunts, Hobson's choice if there ever was one.
A little rude, don't you think?
I do. But Laurie Penny told me that if I use any other word I am oppressing women and am part of the patriarchal rape culture.
Nnnnono, no, you are the pillar of patriarchal rape culture. Leader, couldda be even. Laurie just doesn't know you're a psycho :-p
Anyhow, you're the endemic type, truth be told - luckily. Wonder if you can bake though? (I can't.) I mean cake, not women, can you bake.
Btw, how many copies of Grazia they print, let's say weekly?
feminists eh? you're damned if you do and damned if you don't...
so who is right? Laurie Penny or the Vagenda grrrls. there's only one way to find out;
FIGHT!!!!
Where does Katy Perry fit into this twaddle?
She's in next week's double-divorce issue: 'Katy vs Katie (Holmes): Which Divorcee Diva Is Most Like You?'
...................and we are supposed to take this seriously?
marvellous. a meaningless trivial article taking to task a meaningless trivial magazine.
well done girls!
Silly little trivial women, talking about silly little trivial things
2 things leap out from your comment TV;
1) you presume to speak for all women.
2) neither Grazia nor your article are silly nor trivial.
seeing as i know an awful lot of those women you imagine you represent i respectfully suggest you don't even come close to sharing their POV.
having 'read' Grazia on a few occasions i view it as yet another hate mag written by women for women. i have yet to see a men's mag that similarly centres itself around trashing what other guys wear or weigh. and rather than take that modus operandi to task, you join in their celebrity-based 'heated debate'. in other words; trivial and meaningless.
so i stand by my initial post. pls can you explain where i have gone wrong? i am willing to learn.
Excellent reply, Jankaas.
Oh good grief - since when did the NS become a debating ground over the merits of an article in Grazia ?