when women re-enact learned, sexist behaviors at the expense of other women or themselves. Rooted in sexism, internalized misogyny re-enforces the belief that by being sexist, the user can gain or maintain social capital, despite still being discriminated against.
This video covers the definition of internalized misogyny, examples of it in practice, and what college students had to say about it during a public collage making event.
Listen to Kyra, a third year student at Penn State University, talk about her experiences with gender growing up and the roles that she felt that she needed to fulfill.
Listen to Kyra as she continues to talk about her experiences: what it was like as "a black girl in a white girl town" and how she recognized and unlearned internalized misogyny.
Also with Nathaniel, a Penn State graduate student in Social Psychology and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, who discusses when and how the process of internalizing behavior begins and what is needed for there to be change.
The following articles discuss different aspects of internalized misogyny, including how daily and damaging its behaviors can be, how it pervades in popular culture and our conceptions of color, and how we can start to reflect.