most of what you hate about feminism are ideas that emerged among feminist women some 50 years ago. many of these same ideas have been criticized, analyzed and dismissed by OTHER FEMINISTS and have not represented the core of feminist thought for over 20 years.
I've been meaning to do this for a while. In my quest to read everything written by bell hooks, I picked up one of her earlier more theoretical books...."Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center". Below are a number of quotes from that book. While I don't expect any anti-feminists here to agree with what she says, the important thing is to recognize that what she says IS more representative of contemporary feminist thought and that what she says runs counter to many anti-feminists conceptions of what it means to be feminist. Keep in mind this book was written in 1984. "Man hating" feminism died out before most of you were born.
AS a black, lformerly-lower-class feminist most of her book is about the following issue: that white, middle- and upper-class bourgeois women who were the figureheads in feminist movement 50 years ago “were ultimately more concerned with obtaining an equal share in class privilege than with the struggle to eliminate sexism and sexist oppression”
she touches on other issues as well, including...
- the failure of 2nd wave liberal feminism
- the postivie functions of the family
- the positive functions of male/female relationships
- Western conceptions of power and their role in the perpetuatino of sexism
- the role of Western individualism in the perpetuation of sexism
- men as "comrades" in feminsist movement
read on:
"Most people in the United States think of feminism, or the more commonly used term “women’s lib,” as a movement that aims to make women the social equals of men. This broad definition, popularized by the media and mainstream segments of the movement, raises problematic questions. Since men are not equals in white supremacist, capitalist, patriarchal class structure, which men do women want to be equal to? Do women share a common vision of what equality means? Implicit in this simplistic definition of women’s liberation is a dismissal of race and class as factors that, in conjunction with sexism, determine the extent to which an individual will be discriminated against, exploited, or oppressed. Bourgeois white women interested in women’s rights issues have been satisfied with simple definitions for obvious reasons. Rhetorically placing themselves in the same social category as oppressed women, they are not anxious to call attention to race and class privilege."
Women in lower-class and poor groups, particularly those who are non-white, would not have defined women’s liberation as women gaining social equality with men, since they are continually reminded in their everyday lives that all women do not share a common social status. Concurrently, they know that many males in their social groups are exploited and oppressed. Knowing that men in their groups do not have social, political, and economic power, they would not deem it liberatory to share their social status. While they are aware that sexism enables men in their respective groups to have privileges that are denied them, they are more likely to see exaggerated expressions of male chauvinism among their peers as stemming from the male’s sense of himself as powerless and ineffectual in relation to ruling male groups, rather than an expression of an overall privileged social status. From the very onset of the women’s liberation movement, these women were su••••ious of feminism precisely because they recognized that limitations inherent in its definition. They recognized the possibility that feminism defined as social equality with men might easily become a movement that would primarily affect the social standing of white women in middle- and upper-class groups while affecting only in a very marginal way the social status of working-class and poor women"
pg. 18-19
The positive impact of liberal reforms on women’s lives should not lead to the assumption that they eradicate systems of domination. Nowhere in these demands is there an emphasis on eradicating the politic of domination, yet it would need to be abolished if any of these demands were to be met. The lack of any emphasis on domination is consistent with the liberal feminist belief that women can achieve equality with men of their class without challenging and changing the cultural basis of group oppression. It is this belief that negates the likelihood that the potential radicalism of liberal feminism will ever be realized.
p. 21
Many feminist radicals now know that neither a feminism that focuses on woman as an autonomous human being worthy of personal freedom nor one that focuses on the attainment of equality of opportunity with men can rid society of sexism and male domination. Feminism is a struggle to end sexist oppression. Therefore, it is necessarily a struggle to eradicate the ideology of domination that permeates Western culture on various levels, as well as a commitment to reorganizing society so that the self-development of people can take precedence over imperialism, economic expansion, and material desires. Defined in this way, it is unlikely that women would join feminist movement simply because we are biologically the same. A commitment to feminism so defined would demand that each individual participant acquire a critical political consciousness based on ideas and beliefs.
p. 26
identity-X - notice nothing is said about feminism being equated with "female domination" or even "being equal" or being looked at as "equal"
Feminism defined in political terms that stress collective as well as individual experience challenges women to enter a new domain – to leave behind the apolitical stance sexism decrees is our lot and develop political consciousness. Women know from our everyday lives that many of us rarely discuss politics. Even when women talked about sexist politics in the heyday of contemporary feminism, rather than allow this engagement with serious political matters to lead to complex, in-depth analysis of women’s social status, we insisted that men were “the enemy,” the cause of all our problems. As a consequence we examined almost exclusively women’s relationship to male supremacy and the ideology of sexism. The focus on “man as enemy” created, as Marlene Dixon emphasizes in her essay: “The Rise and Demise of Women’s Liberation: A Class Analysis,” a “politics of psychological oppression” that evoked world views that “pit individual against individual and mystify the social basis of exploitation.” By repudiating the popular notion that the focus of feminist movement should be social equality of the sexes and by emphasizing eradication of the cultural basis of group oppression, our own analysis would require an exploration of all aspects of women’s political reality. This would mean that race and class oppression would be recognized as feminist issues with as much relevance as sexism.
p. 27
identity-X - in fact, here she explicitly states that a feminist movement aimed strictly at "social equality" is a step backward...
MORE TO COME...