Everyone knows that the male voice has a lower pitch than
the female voice. Whatever the reason, it’s a fact, a biological datum, and is
not a social construction. When a boy reaches puberty his voice drops. When a girl reaches puberty her voice does not drop in pitch.
Thus, the male voice has a more commanding presence and more
authority than a female voice. It is more likely to strike fear in people, as though to say that those who fail to respect it will suffer consequences. For this reason, groups most often choose male
leaders. When groups choose female leaders their enemies tend to see it as a
sign of weakness.
The voice difference has caused singers like Helen Reddy and
Katy Perry sing feminist anthems about strong powerful women who ROAR, like
tigers. In the video for Katy Perry’s song “Roar” the songstress stares down a
tiger with her powerful roar.
Women who hear these songs and who then pretend to be just
as strong as men often learn the hard way that some thoughts should remain in
fiction.
Strictly speaking, all human beings have had the experience
of being exposed to an authoritative female voice. Our mothers have all at some
point spoken to us sternly and authoritatively. They have all gotten angry at
us and have even chewed us out. The same applies to our first schoolteachers,
many of whom have exhibited strength through their voices.
Like mothers, schoolteachers of young children are most
often female. This might have something to do with the fact that women have a
more maternal and nurturing side, thus a skill set that does well in caring for
children. To imagine that women have been consigned to the roles of mother and
schoolmarm because men are afraid to see women in the workforce is absurd on its face.
For all I know mothers have less fearsome voices because we
do not want them scaring the bejesus out of little children. The lower male
pitch adds an element of fear, element that is not as present in the warmer,
more nurturing female voice.
It would appear to be normal that human beings, both male
and female, associate powerful female voices with mothers and schoolteachers. And
yet, people who can exercise authority over children cannot use the same or a
similar voice to exercise authority over adults.
On the most elemental level a woman is stronger than a
child, but weaker than a male. While a child might have something to fear
from an angry older female an adult male will think that he has little to fear
from an angry older female. If voice pitch is innate to the organism, it is the
product of evolution. Thus, it is there for a reason and is not likely to
disappear because a chanteuse can pretend to roar or because a feminist has waved a magic wand at it.
But, this poses a problem for women in the workforce. Very
often a woman in a position of authority will find that her voice gives her
away. It sounds like an affectation, like an ersatz male voice, and this provokes
derision and contempt.
Is this a sign of sexism or does it have something to do with
reality? Everyone knows that men are constitutionally stronger than women. Does
this elementary fact explain why, in our DNA we are more likely to follow the
lead of a strong, firm male voice while disparaging a softer, weaker, more
melodious female voice? How much does this fact constitute a barrier to women
in leadership position in status hierarchies?
Here we assume, for the sake of argument, that women all want to rise up to the top of status hierarchies.
Evidently, Hillary Clinton’s nomination as a presidential
candidate raises these issues, and Jordan Kisner addresses many of them in her
New York Magazine article.
Kisner writes:
Being
“in command” is always the issue, and conversations about the excesses or
insufficiencies of voices tend to rest on assumptions about authority. … When
women are told they undermine their own authority in the workplace by sounding
too sexy or too shrill, this supposes that femininity is anathema to
competence.
Back in the early days of second-wave feminism, it was
easily assumed, thanks to Betty Friedan, that the feminine mystique, thus,
femininity was a plot contrived by the patriarchy to keep women at home and out
of the workforce.
Being feminine has seemed to make it more difficult to be a
leader. One ought to mention that Marissa Mayer has tried to be consciously
feminine and a CEO. We have had and will have occasion to evaluate her success
at this task.
Women are aware of the fact that lilting voices, accompanied
by “uptalk” makes “statements sound like questions.” Women who use it sound less authoritative and
more in doubt about their decisions. Thus some women have tried to learn how to
lower the pitch of their voices and to eliminate the uptalk.
They do so by engaging in what is called vocal “fry.” Kisner
explains:
The tic
that revealed women’s supposed lack of leadership skills in the ’80s and ‘90s
was “uptalk,” a high lilt at the end of the sentence that makes even statements
sound like questions. Today, it’s vocal fry, a gravelly effect that happens
when you falsely lower your
voice to the extent that the vocal cords fail to catch and “fry.” It’s
that creaky, guttural, drawn-out sound at the end of a word.
Unfortunately, vocal fry seems fake to most people. And it
irritates people, especially women:
Critics
of vocal fry often point to a study
by Duke University’s business school indicating that vocal fry
undermines the success of young women in the labor market. While an earlier
study concluded that millennials associated fried voices with upward mobility
and sophistication even though older adults found them “less competent, less
educated, less trustworthy, less attractive, and less hirable,” the Duke study
found that vocal fry was perceived negatively by everyone regardless of age.
The demographic most irritated by vocal fry in younger women in their study,
they added, was older women.
Kisner continues, arguing that vocal fry sounds like an
affectation, a bluff, one that is easily dismissed:
I
noticed it while eavesdropping on a Lean
In reading group meeting in a bookstore in Soho in 2011; every
woman who spoke seemed to try to lower her voice farther than the last to sound
more authoritative (read: more masculine). They sounded like a convention of
jet engines. When I took a job in publishing, I heard the same affectation in
conference rooms — voices lowered until they broke and dragged out, frazzled
like a disaffected teenager’s. As I navigated my first sexist workplace, I
occasionally dropped my own voice, hoping to sound less girlish and more worthy
of serious consideration. I took care to find a timbre that suggested gravitas
without veering into fry. It was the most practical application of my vocal
training yet: playing a young woman someone might take seriously.
Of course, the lilting tone and the uptalk would not exist
if it did not serve some purpose. For all I know these voice tics are
evolutionary adaptations that are designed to attract male suitors. Women who
do not want to attract male suitors, who consciously want to repel them, often
use a guttural and vocal sound that is associated with the “cackle” of a witch.
8 comments:
One of the reasons people took Margaret Thatcher seriously was her authoritative voice, even pitch and confident tone. This is why she was so successful as an early female leader. I'm not sure why more women have not learned this and followed her lead. When Hillary raises her voice, she sounds shrill, even looney.
Stuart: When groups choose female leaders their enemies tend to see it as a sign of weakness.
Laughable projection.
I can equally say when people choose blowhard leaders, their enemies tend to see it as a sign of weakness, a people who are afraid and who think like children.
I do agree that there are different ways of speaking for males and females individually, so a faster and higher-pitched voice in either gender comes across as less confident, and slower and lower-pitched as more confident, higher status, and you can see that people treat you differently based on how you speak, and that itself can raise confidence and status.
Toastmasters will work with that, and I'm sure anyone who wants to participate in leadership positions could use some training in how they project their voice.
Here's example document on voice quality:
http://www.toastmasters.org/~/media/B7D5C3F93FC3439589BCBF5DBF521132.ashx
There are thousands of clubs around the world, and a good chance you can find one close to you. I see there's 20 clubs within 5 miles of my zip code.
http://www.toastmasters.org/Find-a-Club
"Everyone knows that the male voice has a lower pitch than the female voice. Whatever the reason, it’s a fact, a biological datum, and is not a social construction."
If you're interested in the biological reason for a man's lower voice, it stems (as you might expect) from testosterone. The rise in testosterone levels at puberty causes the thyroid cartilage in the throat to thicken and grow larger. This deepens the voice and also causes the cartilage to protrude from the throat region, making the "Adam's apple." If insufficient testosterone is present at puberty, as in females and castrated males, the voice will remain high.
Many years ago, I heard an episode of Audio Oddities and Antiquities (no guarantee that is correct) on public radio, on which was played a record of a castrato singing. I believe it was from the early 1900s. It was a high, pure voice.
Maggie Thatcher was mentioned. How about Golda Meir?
It's not just the pitch, it's the delivery (as with Thatcher).
True story.
A young man in Air Force Officer Training School was doing great in everything except what they called "command presence" - he was an affable, consensus-oriented engineer who just couldn't get the hang of giving orders. So he consulted with the relative who retired from the AF with general's stars; didn't work. He consulted with the relative who ran a company training Pentagon people in operations management. Didn't work. Finally one of his siblings advised him to "just channel Mom."
That worked.
There is also a posture element to a command voice. The voice will be both deeper and have more projection if your spine is straight and the neck is lengthened to where the chin drops. This opens up the airway allowing the diaphragm to have free flow. With the head tilted up, even a bit, the voice becomes more nasally (childish). Of course, shorter men and most women don't naturally find this effect since they rarely are looking down upon another speaker. Taller men can develop this.
I discovered this through learning of the Alexander Technique, which was developed to help with voice projection to the back of the theater. I suspect self-discovery of this is being lost as microphones replace the need to develop voice.
I read an anecdote that Lauren Bacall developed her "voice" on her first movie. She was so nervous, she had to tilt her chin down to keep it from shaking. This gave her voice its distinctive timber that she then cultivated.
I've had to counsel many young officers, mostly female, to not end their commands with a question mark, an uplift in tone. Rather all commands should end in a very hard, very harsh sounding period, cut off the sound suddenly and emphatically. Of course, going about daily life speaking in "command voice" is not a good way to develop consensus or show respect to others, but when commands are needed it is needed in the repertoire.
Anonymous JK Brown said...
Excellent advice, and thanks for the story about Bacall.
My family has done a lot of amateur theater over the years, and I totally agree that the art of voice-projection is just about extinct. However, it is a useful skill on a lot of levels, for instance, when people (e.g., Boy Scouts) need to be directed in the outdoors.
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