The Precarious Union of Anarchism and
Feminism: A Response to ‘Re-defining Radical
Feminism’
by Red Sonja
(NEFAC-Boston)
Traci Harris’ article 'Re-defining
Radical Feminism' was published in NEA#4
(http://www.illegalvoices.org), opening the
discussion
about revolutionary feminism. My reply
is an attempt to continue that discussion. Harris'
article solidly outlines three important facets of this
discussion, which I will address here: that it is our
job to (1) Redefine Patriarchy and Radical Feminism for
revolutionaries; (2) Show how forms of domination are
connected; and (3) Redefine Radical Feminism in
practice. My main criticisms are that Harris' agenda
boils down to a multicultural liberalism and lacks a
class-rooted analysis. Harris wants to re-define
revolutionary feminism to a strategy (already
problematic) - that of attacking white supremacy, all
the while arguing for an analysis which recognizes the
interconnectedness of oppressions. Attacking white
supremacy is certainly a critical issue for
revolutionaries, but what does this say about women's
oppression explicitly?
Revolutionary feminism's
strength has only come when it has an independent
analysis, autonomous demands, and a searing critique of
every social, economic, and cultural arrangement that
exploits women. If anarchists are to have a strong
critique of hierarchy and domination, culminating in the
"triple oppressions" so often referred to, then a
strategy of focusing on issues where these issues
intersect is a more relevant point of revolutionary
potential.
In 'Re-defining Radical Feminism'
patriarchy is defined by Carol Pateman as "a political
system of power based on a "social contract." Pateman
also equates the origin of women's subordination with
the creation of this "social contract" and the
consolidation of government of men. This is arguably not
the case but the origin of patriarchy is not the issue
in this discussion. Certainly the bourgeois revolutions
outline this development with the creation of a civil
society of men -- in both the French and American
revolutions women's exclusion is well known. Also, the
development of a public sphere / private sphere division
is well known as the entry point of women into a
subordinate position, yet whether this was created
during the negotiation of the social contract Pateman
assesses is doubtful. But let's not rely on the
'Rousseauan' concept of the social contract to describe
a world-wide phenomenon of the exploitation of the
female sex. We cannot work under the assumption that
there is some universal and monolithic Patriarchy that
affects social, economic and cultural relations
globally. Women are not a homogenous group and our
Western understanding of women's oppression cannot begin
to describe other people’s lives in the world. There are
however grand paint strokes we can make that in general
women occupy the lowest social rung in the various
societies in the world, and feminists have grappled with
this contradiction for a number of decades now.
Since its coinage by "second wave" feminists,
the feminist movement has been persistently plagued with
the inadequacy of the term Patriarchy. It has become
even more unwieldy for those revolutionaries intent on
smashing it. A recent two-day conference on the subject
held by revolutionary anarchists had so much difficulty
hammering out this concept that it became impossible to
reach any sort of conclusion about what to do about this
"patriarchy." The attempt to hone Patriarchy as a useful
word to describe what exactly is oppressing women has
stretched from narrowly defining it as a "reign of
brothers" (like Pateman) to expanding it to a
"Capitalist-Patriarchy" (Mies), to Bell Hooks' "white
supremacist, capitalist, and patriarchal social
hierarchy," to Sheila Rowbotham's wholesale rejection of
the term as misleading. I agree with Maria Mies that
though inadequate and often inaccurate (for it literally
means "rule of the fathers"), "patriarchy" denotes a
continuity which has a historical framework and so
thankfully it is not a universal constant; and having
been embraced by feminists as a tool for describing
women's position it is useful enough to continue to
tinker with it.
Importantly 'Re-defining Radical
Feminism' is a positive step in framing Patriarchy in a
way that makes sense to us, but I'd like to direct the
argument specifically towards revolutionary anarchists.
Without getting lost in labels, it is still important to
clarify also the many distinctions within feminism which
most anarchists do not understand. We can’t talk about
redefining "radical feminism" without understanding its
own particular history, one which is distinct from
anarchist or socialist feminisms (though some lines are
blurry).
Most feminist works have outlined the
differing perspectives on the position of women in
society: Conservative (i.e. sexual division of labor is
natural and women's subordinate role is summed up by
"biology is destiny"); Liberal (seeks equal status under
current system or within the "social contract");
Traditional Marxist; Radical; Multicultural; Global; and
Socialist. Traditional Marxism ignores the exploitation
of women in the private sphere, ultimately denying the
existence of Patriarchy. Radical Feminism developed in
part as a response to the lack of a feminist analysis in
traditional Marxism and Socialism, and in contrast to
Liberal feminism's reformism. Radical feminists
developed the analysis of Patriarchy as the primary
oppression in the world, and for the first time advanced
a critique of gender and sexuality as social forms which
are culturally constructed. They do not believe that
women's oppression will end with the abolition of class
society as the traditional Marxists argued. Rather,
there is almost no class analysis - that all women,
despite race, class, ethnicity, etc., share the same
oppression. Also problematic for anarchists is the lack
of a critique of the State. In fact there were some
radical feminists proposing a women-only government as
the cure-all for society. Their ideology also tends to
rely on biological-determinism notions - that women are
by nature superior to men. It is obvious that we would
want to re-define "true" radical feminism if we must use
this term at all! "Revolutionary Feminism" is a more
appropriate term in this discussion
Socialist
feminism tries to bring together the best of Radical
feminism and a class analysis of women's exploitation,
arguing that both class stratification (i.e. capitalism)
and patriarchy must be eliminated in order for women to
be truly free. Anarchist feminism, in its very small
ranks, stands near this perspective, but furthers the
socialist critique by pointing to the State (as a
culmination of hierarchy and authoritarianism) as a
third "tier" of oppression. It is our job to trace the
exact nature of how Patriarchy, Capitalism, and the
State interact to cause the various oppressions we want
to overthrow. In a broad sense anarchist feminism is the
critique of domination in all its forms, similar to the
analysis offered by "multicultural feminism," but with a
clear anti-capitalist and anti-statist position. In this
way 'Re-defining Radical Feminism' is emphasizing what
is already that broad anarchist position: that
revolutionary praxis "must be focused on the eradication
of domination."
Solid examples of how different
forms of domination are connected are found in Harris'
essay, quoting Bell Hooks, Angela Davis, and radical
abolitionist Angelina Grimke, and giving historical
examples in the US context. Anarchists often struggle to
resolve our critiques of the "triple oppressions" -
race, class, sex - with our overarching critique of
domination "in all its forms" while explicitly pointing
to Capitalism and the State. In fact the discussion here
should not be which direction for the "radical feminist
movement" (which should be closer toward anarchist
politics!) but how the anarchist movement has so far
failed to update its own praxis to offer something
relevant to overcome these problems.
'Re-defining Radical Feminism' seems to be
coming from this direction yet unearths a "hierarchy of
oppressions" by pulling white supremacy out as the
"strategic" point of departure. There is a triple
oppression and we cannot view patriarchy and white
supremacy as mere contradictions, or secondary
afterthought to the class analysis. They do function as
"divisive mechanisms of capital" yet are independent of
that. Nor are white supremacy, colonialism, and racism
footnotes to women's oppression. We have to consistently
challenge this creeping idea among white leftists or run
the played out mistake of a doomed revolutionary
analysis. But to discard the class lens with which we
view these oppressions is to imitate multicultural
liberalism which does no one any favors. "A class rooted
analysis is where I begin in all my work" says bell
hooks.
Valuable in 'Re-defining Radical
Feminism' is its North American focus, which is not
often a popular perspective but revolutionaries here in
North America cannot import European or Third World
examples to the unique social conditions of the US.
Harris' analysis of race and the struggle against white
supremacy as the lynch-pin to revolution flows from this
position, and rightly that is one crucial point of
departure. Some white anarchists, and other leftists
have their heads in the sand hoping the Black/White
problem will solve itself without any real effort. Any
revolutionary struggle in the US requires true
solidarity, principled alliances, solid long term work
on the part of white revolutionaries and white
anarchists to cross this divide, some of which is just
beginning to be built. The same can be said for white
revolutionary feminists and this is Harris' point, but
she is also redefining revolutionary feminism to a
narrow "strategy," that of attacking white supremacy.
Yes it should be part and parcel of the feminist agenda
. But to redefine the whole thrust of revolutionary
feminism towards attacking white supremacy doesn't say
very much about how women's oppression functions in
society or more importantly, how to overcome it. The
revolution is not going to be split open by only
focusing on one oppression, just as 'true' radical
feminism would have you believe. There are many points
of departure and one thing that revolutionary feminists
have at least learned is that the issue of women's
exploitation is the first to get left behind.
In
our attempt to re-visit revolutionary feminism and
lessons that can be learned for anarchists the most
glaring necessity is to retain a class analysis. Harris
states: "Feminism can no longer be seen as a lifestyle
choice but it must be seen as a political commitment.
Focusing on this political commitment and resistance to
domination will engage us in revolutionary praxis and
avoid the typical pitfall of resorting to narrow,
stereotyped perspectives of feminism." 'Re-defining
Radical Feminism' hopes to get feminism out of its
lifestylist (i.e. cultural) rut, but the lesson for
Western feminism stuck in the cultural context, which is
expressed by emphasis on education, language, psychology
(which liberal anti-racism is also suffering from) is
the lack of understanding of economic production
relations which will always trump any cultural advances.
We will not get feminism out of its perceived cultural
rut by broadening its goals to the extent that is has no
coherent analysis of women's particular oppression. The
strength of the feminist movement, at least the
revolutionary end of it, has been its autonomy. The
lesson is there to learn from: men, even our supposed
comrades, will not hand us our dignity and freedom
whenever we politely ask for it. A women's movement
which subsumes its demands for the greater good will be
betrayed by the promise of a united front in class,
anti-colonial, or national struggles. The plainest
examples are the anti-colonial and revolutionary
struggles such as those in Algeria, Cuba, Vietnam, China
and the Soviet Union. In the case of a successful
anti-colonial struggle or revolution, no matter what
gains women may have made in the space created by the
waging of the struggle, the force of the necessity to
reorganize the economy expediently will again push women
to the exploited "subsidiary" sectors or are "sent back
to the family." Unless concrete change in the material
production relations occurs, even raised consciousness
of sex relations will not stand to the weight of
economic realities. "Production" that unsavory term,
needs to be understood to include that work that takes
place in the private realm to include women in the
family and what Rowbotham calls the "production of self
through sexuality." Only when that social division
between public and private and the sexual division of
labor has been contested, alongside the cultural and
social consciousness necessary for revolutionary change,
will gains for women stick.
In terms of concrete
action, an alternate strategy might be to focus on an
issue in which the "triple oppressions" intersect in
order to make these connections apparent. Anti-poverty
issues are clearly arenas in which sex oppression and
racism are pivotal, whether it is in housing,
homelessness, in the workplace, or around welfare.
Recent marriage incentive laws for women on welfare,
restrictive codes on single women's behavior in housing
projects all expose Patriarchy in the grossest, most
racist ways. As is understanding why the fastest growing
prisoner population is young girls - usually Black,
Latina, poor. This is a strategy which is revolutionary,
and feminist, for the 21st century.
====================
The Northeastern
Anarchist #5 (Fall/Winter 2002): Magazine of the
Northeastern Federation of Anarcho-Communists (NEFAC)
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The following comments are
owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible
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comment by non
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, October 26 2002 @ 11:35 AM
PDT
It's great to see this discourse
fleshing itself out in such well-written pieces!
The author's
main point is this text (as I read it) is that the feminist movement
has become a cultural ghetto of sorts, which is more concerned with
"education, language, psychology" than a revolutionary movement or
economic oppression. This statement is very true and the reasons for
this lack of revolutinary or class-based analysis owes itself to a
multiplicity of reasons: the middle-class nature of the radical
feminist movement, the influence of postmodernism, and the tendency
of revolutionary/class-struggle groups to pay lip-service to
feminism while ignoring the broader feminist critique.
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, October 26 2002 @ 03:59 PM
PDT
as a white (read: colonized celtic)
queer, male-identified green-anarchist-feminist
i think
it's really important to note that radical feminism as well as the
classical anarcho-feminism, have shaped the discourse of
classical-anarchism, post-modern, situ, and contemporary anarchist
movements. As well as, eco-feminism, which most of the contemporary
green-anarchist and 'primitivist' movement hales from.
also,
it's interesting that anarchists who write about feminism seem quite
out of touch with it's contemporary theory and praxis. there is an
emergence of a newer wave of feminism that seems to of surfaced
along with the newer anarchy and anti-glob/capitalist movements,
called, 4th wave, transgendered feminism, or gender-queer
feminism.
i think bell hooks sum of white-supremacist
capitalist patriarchy is a good sum of domination in the obvious
systems of oppression. however when we talk about patriarchy. we
talk about male-gendered-supremacy. As well, as i think, we must
inheritly be speaking of the totality of patriarchy--from the
silencing and proliferation of gender, as well as patriarchal
civilization and the linear, and domination-logic, that legitimizes
it.
Anarchists (read: total liberationists) need to start
thinking beyond just capitalism, or that other forms of oppression
are seperate or legitimized becuase of capitalism. if we fight for
total liberation, we fight anything and everything can be defined
under the logic of domination.
i feel as though the
contemporary anarchist movement, is still just paying lip service to
patriarchy. Even if we do admit it's existance, it is over shadowed
by attempts to connect it to the comfortable known areas of
struggle, even when we still havent figured them out yet either.
(read: class and race)
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, October 26 2002 @ 06:54 PM
PDT
as a human.. ok just
kidding.
As well as, eco-feminism, which most of the
contemporary green-anarchist and 'primitivist' movement hales
from
I find it odd that in one sentence you pay homage to
post-modernist thought, then in the next you refer to eco-feminism,
when in my mind the two are somewhat contradictory.
As I
know, ecofeminism hales internal, essential nature of women as
inherently opposed to destructive patriarchal practices like
capitalism, ecological destruction, war, and other forms of
domination.
Post-modernism, on the other hand, is the school
of thought which recognizes that Aristotelean, Western philosophy,
with its emphasis on the eternal, internal, unchanging essence of
arbitrarily-defined objects is problematic.
I find the two
contradictory because ecofeminism not only arbitrarily defines a
duality between male and female natures, but essentializes the
characteristics of one of those natures.
Maybe my
understanding is faulty. If so, feel free to comment.
Now
I'll get up on my soapbox. If you ask me, this essentialization is
one of the faults of the "primitivist" school of thought. To put it
differently, its basically a Aristotelean reading of
anti-Aristotelean texts. It essentializes abstract systems like
technology, mediation, and civilization without critically examining
them. It imposes defined, unchanging characteristics on these
systems for ideological purposes, and unfathomably connects the
destruction of these systems with the destruction of the negative
characteristics it has imposed on them! It seems that they're
reading Heidegger rather than Derrida! Heidegger believed he could
take the whole problematic history of Western philosophy and smash
it, and a purer phoenix would rise from the ashes. Instead, he ended
up replicating its very problems. I believe this to be similar to
some of the same faults of the primitivist critique, which holds
that the death of oppression will accompany the end of
civilization.
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, October 27 2002 @ 08:57 PM
PST
The only real problem with this
essay is that it talks about class. Anarchism isn't about class. Its
about doing nothing all the time and calling NEFAC totalitarian,
well except when I'm calling Love & Rage past totalitarianism.
Or when I'm accusing FRAC of soon to be totalitarianism. Or when I'm
saying that NWFAC are going to be totalitarian after they have their
first conference. By the way, Bring The Ruckus? Totalitarian. AFAAD?
Crypto-totalitarian. AAAAGH!THERE ARE TOTALITARIANS IN MY CLOSET AND
UNDER MY BED!!!!
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, October 27 2002 @ 09:34 PM
PST
Actually, the fact that somebody
thinks I'm so important that they take the time to find all my posts
and make parodies of them is kind of flattering. Thanks, whoever you
are.
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, October 29 2002 @ 05:47 AM
PST
If we look at the origins of the
(oxymoron) "postmodern feminism", it is rooted in the ideas of the
psychoanalyst Jacque Lacan.
Lacan suggested that women occupy
the "imaginary" while men occupy the "symbolic". He's essentially
arguing a mind-body dualism (but he uses different language to make
him sound original).
The conclusion of his argument, is
essentialism: Because they occupy different realms of thought, men
cannot possibly understand women and vice versa.
This sounds
like Lacan was a mysoginous. And he was. But "postmodern" feminists,
basically use his argument to justify creating "feminine
culture".
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, February 20 2003 @ 01:20 AM
PST
you might be able to find the
article somewhere, but there are better things to be reading. The
paper is circular in its "reasoning" - saying that fighting white
supremacy is feminist because traci says so, with out-of-context
quotes from bell hooks and angela davis to bolster her non-argument.
Better to re-read Audre Lorde.
The author's main point is this text (as I read it) is that the feminist movement has become a cultural ghetto of sorts, which is more concerned with "education, language, psychology" than a revolutionary movement or economic oppression. This statement is very true and the reasons for this lack of revolutinary or class-based analysis owes itself to a multiplicity of reasons: the middle-class nature of the radical feminist movement, the influence of postmodernism, and the tendency of revolutionary/class-struggle groups to pay lip-service to feminism while ignoring the broader feminist critique.