=========================================================================PAGE 1 OF 2
This is part 1 of a two-part discussion of radical feminism that took place on WMST-L in late November/early December 1998. See also the related file Conservative Feminism: An Oxymoron? For more compilations of WMST-L messages, see the WMST-L File Collection.
Greetings: Can we still define radical feminism as the belief that our patriarchal social system is the problem? Can we still believe the radical feminist approach is to get to the root of the problem? I thought that was the essence of radical feminism--until I read a WMST-L post on Monday. I thought radical feminism was about philosophy, not personalities. Betty Friedan can be very outspoken, but she's a liberal feminist, not a radical feminist. I would think that these words from the more understated Gerda Lerner summarized the radical position very well: "Reforms and legal changes, while ameliorating the condition of women and an essential part of the process of emancipating them, will not basically change patriarchy. Such reforms need to be integrated within a vast cultural revolution in order to transform patriarchy and thus abolish it." From "The Creation of Patriarchy", p. 217 It seems that many people still confuse personalities and philosophies. Also, there may be many different types of radicals, ranging from the reformists to the separtists. Until liberal feminist groups start talking about patriarchy, it seems like the *philosophical* deliniation between the two camps is pretty clear. Liberals and radicals may use a similar set of tactics, ranging from undercover to outspoken. They also may work together on many projects. But radicals know that reforms can easily get co-opted. They know that new laws aren't enough. I always thought that most Women's Studies profs had a fairly radical philosophy. You're 1000 times more likely to hear discussions about patriarchy in a WS class than in a NOW or AAUW meeting. ;-) But could I be wrong? Joanne Callahan jmcalla1 AT airmail.net=========================================================================
In answer to the concerns raised by Joanne Callahan: Can we still define radical feminism as the belief that our patriarchal social system is the problem? YES. Can we still believe the radical feminist approach is to get to the root of the problem? YES. THIS IS WHAT 'RADICAL' MEANS. I thought radical feminism was about philosophy, not personalities. IT IS. AS IS ANY FORM OF POLITICAL THEORY. I always thought that most Women's Studies profs had a fairly radical philosophy. But could I be wrong? YES, YOU COULD. Bronwyn bronwyn.winter AT french.usyd.edu.au=========================================================================
Greetings: > I always thought that most Women's Studies profs had a fairly radical > philosophy. But could I be wrong? > ¦ YES, YOU COULD. OK. So what is the predominant philosophy of Women's Studies profs these days? Is it postmodern feminism? Or is it a more sophisticated brand of liberal feminism (i.e.; patriarchy is the problem, but really, men suffer from it just as much as women)? When I said fairly radical, I meant a reformist radical philosophy, not a separtist one. Joanne Callahan jmcalla1 AT airmail.net=========================================================================
On Thu, 26 Nov 1998, Joanne Callahan wrote: > I thought radical feminism was about philosophy, not personalities. > Betty Friedan can be very outspoken, but she's a liberal feminist, not > a radical feminist. Joanne's comment caught my eye because I'm not sure that Betty Friedan is a "liberal feminist." I've been reading some of Friedan's most recent publications and she seems to be a "centrist" or "communitarian" rather than a liberal feminist. In her article on "To Transcend Identity Politics: A New Paradigm" (THE RESPONSIVE COMMUNITY, 6:2 1996), for example, Friedan appears to be more concerned about aging issues for men rather than women. Since ageism (for both sexes) is rampant in the United States, I'm not surprised that Friedan is addressing age discrimination as a society-wide problem. Seems to me, however, that Friedan has shifted her focus to aging problems for men rather than women's aging issues. Thus, Friedan is hardly a liberal feminist in her older years. If I'm misreading or misinterpreting Friedan's most recent publications, I'd appreciate being enlightened by WMST-Lers. niki --------------------------------------------------------- Nijole (Niki) Benokraitis, Professor of Sociology University of Baltimore, 1420 N. Charles St., Baltimore, MD 21201 Fax: 410-837-6051; Voicemail: 410-837-5294; nbenokraitis AT ubmail.ubalt.edu ----------------------------------------------------------=========================================================================
On Fri, 27 Nov 1998 nbenokraitis AT UBMAIL.UBALT.EDU wrote: (cut) > Joanne's comment caught my eye because I'm not sure that Betty Friedan is > a "liberal feminist." I've been reading some of Friedan's most recent > publications and she seems to be a "centrist" or "communitarian" rather > than a liberal feminist. (cut) I'd say the change in Friedan had begun by the time of _The Second Stage_, though I'd call it a change in liberal feminism more generally. (Rosemarie Tong made a similar point; I haven't got the reference here.) Judy Evans------Department of Politics---------jae2 AT york.ac.uk using Dragon Voice Recognition Software------hence any voicoes ---------------------opinions mine----------------------------=========================================================================
At 08:31 AM 11/27/98 U, you wrote: >In answer to the concerns raised by Joanne Callahan: >I finally have decided to weigh in, as someone who has been conducting radical feminist research and written rad fem articles for years. I think that to define something it is useful to look at what partitioners of that set of beliefs actually do. Most of the radical feminists in the academic world (and you can count them on the fingers of one hand in liberal arts, but the radical feminist jurisprudence women i.e. law professors, have a number, because of Kitty mackinnons influence, focus on violence against women. Other kinds of feminists don't because they have this fantasy that somehow men will come around or change or there will be a revolution which will change them. When we started examining violence against women systematically, neither socialist nor liberal feminists though our concerns relatively trivial. It was only because of validaton of the problem from international feminists that other groups started to take it seriously. The exception I can think of is that socialist feminists who were concerned with sexual harassment appreciated the contributions of MacKinnon, and thus didn't join in the general demonization of her, once she took on pornography. Furthermore many women falsely claimed that we were cultural feminists. I remember sharing an apartment with a socialist feminist and pointing out that I read two newspapers a day and listened to four hours of NPR, while she did none oof the above. Yet I was considered apolitical-a cultural feminist. BUlshit!!! We are also less entranced at the opportunity to make coalitions with men, although there are exceptions. We are less entranced by individual solutions e.g. Celia Kitzinger, one of the most brilliant of radical feminists, asserts that therapy, with its emphasis on being non judemental, did great harm to the political edge of radical feminists. A social movement HAS to make judgements. cf Changing Our Minds by Kitzinger and Perkins-an ovular book. We use "have a nice day" ironically. There are of course radical feminists who are outside the academy-writers, poets, artists, who are upfront at the harm done to them by men. Now about Betty Friedan-- She was the first, and I think only, woman I refused to have lunch with. She wrote in the NYTIMes SUnday magazine yet,that the lesbians in NOW were CIA agents, kwhich is why lesbians withdrew, calling themselves "The Lavendar Menace." SHe has never been able to deal with the issue of violence against womken, even though she herself had been abused, or maybe because sh.. I call her a "man junkie" because she has always focussed on men, and how the women's movement would free men, paying no ttention to what they have done to women. She always says that she is against the MacKinnon Dworkin ordinance re pornography, and I can tell from what she says that she hasn't read the ordinance. She generally plays fast and loose with facts and data (OK so I'm an uptight academic). She has a radical background working in the labor union movement which she denies, having painted herself as simply a surbuban housewife (see recent book by Horowitz). It is no accident that she is the favorite of the media. She doesn't say much that threatens them. Yes, she wrote one good book. That it. After that she was mainly, both personally and intellectually a pain in the ass. e.g. when a prominant feminist was being battered and left her batterer, Betty had dinner with the batterer and said that there were two sides to every issue. With friends like that who needs enemies. Pauline Bart pbart AT ucla.edu=========================================================================
Greetings I've been looking at the pattern of the ongoing discussion on defining radical feminism--the image of the blind men and the elephant first comes to mind. Beyond that the thought that one is not so much seeking in that elusive definition a guide for the perplexed as seeking a sound, unifying theoretical model (or construct) for all of feminisn--one that rationally subsumes and justifies all the activities carried out by all kinds of feminists in the name of feminism, e.g., research in academic disciplines (WS), participation in social movements to effect change. If this is so, it will take time--because feminism still has growing pains and is still in a formative healthy and natural state of effervescence to which everyone contributes. All movements go through periods of dizzying excitement, intellectual ferment, name-calling, pettiness, argumentation, serious disagreements, schism, labeling, embarrassments (Friedan just one case in point) . Meanwhile radical feminism will be most clearly defined by what its self-identified practitioners do, and later by historians. It takes some time to sort out the myriad central elements that need remediation in this planet and in the academic world, and then to condense them into neat subelements of an intellectual model. Of all the qualifiers that are applied to feminists--liberal,socialist,separatist,centrist, etc.--"radical" would then be applied to that type of feminist who most rigorously follows the imperatives of a comprehensive existing model. The practical purpose of a good model is that it will provide a rationale for prioritized focussed action and research. The important question is whether the paradigm one selects is the right one. I think Joanne Callahan has it about right--that it's about philosophy. To me it's always been as self-evident as a Euclid postulate that patriarchy is the root philosophical/theoretical paradigm of feminism. This central idea naturally and logically leads to passionate socio-political movements for the extirpation of patriarchy and to the (dispassionate?) intellectual activities that will transform or modify liberal arts and social studies. Is there another paradigm ? herb hersh hhersh AT megsinet.net=========================================================================
Re Joanne Callahan's and Pauline Bart's last posts on this: Pauline said you could count radfem WS profs on the fingers of one hand. Well, yes, that about sums it up. Radical feminism is really caught in a difficult place in relation to academia. On the one hand, the ideas are too subversive for the suits (of both sexes) who run academic institutions to feel comfortable giving their proponents too much space (Catharine MacKinnon's success in terms of tenure, fame etc is practically a one-off; among the many things I admire in her work are what must be her sheer tenacity and clarity of purpose, to manage to get so far in academia without being completely compromised politically.) On the other hand, and in fact conversely, most radfems I know have a very amb ivalent relationship with the academy: while we want our voices to have that sort of forum, we distrust the milieu so much (so healthily, one could say), that many of us have chosen either not to enter it, or once inside it, to be wary of attempts to co-opt us, and thus remain on the margins somewhere. Pauline is also spot on concerning the misrepresentation of radfems as "cultural" feminists: this sort of bullshit has considerable currency in Australia as well. One might also mention the misrepresentation of anti-pornography/prostitution campaigners as "wowsers" or prostitute-haters: Dworkin and MacKinnon get this sort of stuff all the time, both in the US and Australia, as does Sheila Jeffreys: blowing the whistle means becoming a target, and this requires enormous courage and, I think, a strong sense of self-worth, not to be completely undermined by the tremendously vicious attacks that are made on anyone who dares to name the enemy: a case not so much of shooting the messenger but cutting her up into little pieces and *then* riddling her with bullets. I have enormous respect for any woman who continually braves such attacks to speak out for women's right to be human beings. (Such a simple thing to want, really: it is amazing how much aggression expressing such a wish attracts, including from WS). Anyway** What you can't co-opt or silence (even through enormous intimidation and violence), well, misrepresentation is the next step (which is tantamount to silencing, of course**) Re Joanne's further Qs on WS: Joanne wrote: OK. So what is the predominant philosophy of Women's Studies profs these days? Is it postmodern feminism? Or is it a more sophisticated brand of liberal feminism (i.e.; patriarchy is the problem, but really,men suffer from it just as much as women)? When I said fairly radical, I meant a reformist radical philosophy, not a separtist one. Well, I think Joanne's intuitions continue to be right, and would add that postmodern feminism is not really that far from liberal feminism, particularly in the "do-your-own-thingism and stuff the analysis" that is so typical of much postmodern "theory" (in fact, postmodernism often seems to be liberal and some socialist feminists reinventing themselves**). I am a little puzzled, however, at the distinction between "reformist radical philosophy" and "separatism". Does this mean, Joanne, that you believe that a) the single defining characteristic of radical feminism is separatism and b) radical feminists don't think institutional reforms are important? If so, I would say you are wrong on both counts. While all radical feminists exercise some degree of separatism which goes along a continuum from women-only feminist meetings to a life completely without men (in work, home, dealings with tradespeople, whatever**), this is not for me what defines radical feminism. What defines radical feminism is putting women at the centre of the picture and considering male supremacy as what oppresses women (in all sorts of ways, it is not something "separate" from capitalism or racism or homophobia, for example**) Getting to the root of the problem, as you said yourself. Re reformism, Radical feminists have always considered institutional reforms important, because this is what can help make women's lives less difficult in the here-and-now; this also helps to empower women and give us more manoeuvring room to make bigger changes further down the track* Pauline mentioned the Dworkin-Mackinnon ordinance, but there are many many other examples. We know, however, that reforms are at best a piecemeal solution: this is where we *start*, not where we *stop*. Bronwyn bronwyn.winter AT french.usyd.edu.au=========================================================================
Dear Women's Studies List: Thanks for the enlightenment on Betty Friedan. Yes, she has been uneven in recent years and has refused to study patriarchy as a social system. At various times, she'll advocate for women (i.e.; she spoke out strongly against Robert Bly and the mythopoetic men's movement). But I wouldn't exactly call her a beacon for feminism. Nevertheless, she still has a reputation as a feminist. Some people actually think she's a radical feminist because of her outspoken personality. This is no joke. I've put in sweat labor trying to tell friends that feminism is about *philsophies*, not *personalities*. Joanne Callahan jmcalla1 AT airmail.net=========================================================================
Greetings: Continuing the dialogue about radical feminism . . . > On the other hand, and in fact conversely, most radfems I know have a very amb > ivalent relationship with the academy: while we want our voices to have that > sort of forum, we distrust the milieu so much (so healthily, one could say), > that many of us have chosen either not to enter it, or once inside it, to be > wary of attempts to co-opt us, and thus remain on the margins somewhere. If radical feminists are not in the academy, then where are they? > I would say you are wrong on both counts. While all radical feminists > exercise some degree of separatism which goes along a continuum from > women-only feminist meetings to a life completely without men (in work, home, > dealings with tradespeople, whatever**), this is not for me what defines > radical feminism. Bronwyn, now we're getting to the "rub" of it all. I sense this perception that one has to be a woman and a lesbian to be a radical feminist. Now where does leave heterosexuals like me who know the problem is patriarchy? Where does this leave men like Bob Connell, Allan Johnson, and John Stoltenberg? ( BTW, I do know about the pro- feminist label and the unanswered question, "Can a man be *any* type of feminist?) We all know society's stereotype of a radical feminist: the "angry man-hating lezzie feminazi". But I sense that even within the feminist community, there is this view that one is radical only if she lives in a lesbian commune. ;-) I sense this view that a happily married mother of three cannot be a radical feminist even if she knows the problem is patriarchy and doesn't fall for the "equality of oppression" theory. >What defines radical feminism is putting women at the > centre of the picture and considering male supremacy as what oppresses women > (in all sorts of ways, it is not something "separate" from capitalism or > racism or homophobia, for example**) Getting to the root of the problem, as > you said yourself. Exactly! Indeed, any solid analysis about men in patriarchy must talk about how the competitive male bonding which undergirds this system ultimately oppresses women. Men do suffer in patriarchy, but women suffer much more. A radical analysis avoids the fallacious "equality of oppression" theory. I've heard people say, "Patriarchy is the problem" and then, talk about how it oppresses men as much as women. Those of us who say that isn't true are called lots of names, which only reinforces our view that we're still in a patriarchy. ;-) > We know, however, that reforms are at best a piecemeal solution: > this is where we *start*, not where we *stop*. Exactly! I do work with liberal feminists, but I have no illusions about changing the world. Sometimes I wonder if some feminists are somewhere inbetween the liberals and the radicals. ;-) Perhaps we have a radiliberal feminism? I wonder if there are different degrees of radicalism. The conversation continues . . . Joanne Callahan jmcalla1 AT airmail.net=========================================================================
More on the dialogue with Joanne --If radical feminists are not in the academy, then where are they? Some of us are in the academy, but not in women's studies. There are even some quite well-know radfems who are not in women's studies. (Some *are* in WS, of course). Many are on the margins, in both 'work' and "academy' terms: a friend of mine, somebody I consider an intellectual of considerable calibre, earns a living through unemployment benefit and cleaning houses. She has a doctorate and has written a number of books. --Bronwyn, now we're getting to the "rub" of it all. I sense this perception that one has to be a woman and a lesbian to be a radical feminist. Now where does leave heterosexuals like me who know the problem is patriarchy? Where does this leave men like Bob Connell, Allan Johnson, and John Stoltenberg? ( BTW, I do know about the pro- feminist label and the unanswered question, "Can a man be *any* type of feminist?) I know heterosexual radical feminists (but not that many). One does not automatically have to be a lesbian to be a radical feminist, but the connection is, you will no doubt appreciate, a logical one. --We all know society's stereotype of a radical feminist: the "angry man-hating lezzie feminazi". But I sense that even within the feminist community, there is this view that one is radical only if she lives in a lesbian commune. ;-) I sense this view that a happily married mother of three cannot be a radical feminist even if she knows the problem is patriarchy and doesn't fall for the "equality of oppression" theory. Well, it all depends on what the happily married mother of three's take is on marriage and motherhood as sites of women's oppression, doesn't it? --Exactly! Indeed, any solid analysis about men in patriarchy must talk about how the competitive male bonding which undergirds this system ultimately oppresses women. Men do suffer in patriarchy, but women suffer much more. Well, I wouldn't see it as a matter of degree of suffering, but of the type of suffering. Men are not the victims of womanhating, nor is "manhating" the basis of our social organisation. Sure, men can refuse the role, but given the strength of socialisation & "culture" and the way power and privilege are created and maintained, there is only a certain extent to which it is possible for men to refuse to be men in a sociopolitical sense. I give those that do credit for trying, but the bottom line is that whatever their own position in the social hierarchy, and whatever their unwillingness to collude in male domination of women, men *all* benefit to some extent from male supremacy. --A radical analysis avoids the fallacious "equality of oppression" theory. I've heard people say, "Patriarchy is the problem" and then, talk about how it oppresses men as much as women. Those of us who say that isn't true are called lots of names, which only reinforces our view that we're still in a patriarchy. ;-) Indeed. >We know, however, that reforms are at best a piecemeal solution: > this is where we *start*, not where we *stop*. --Exactly! I do work with liberal feminists, but I have no illusions about changing the world. Sometimes I wonder if some feminists are somewhere inbetween the liberals and the radicals. ;-) Perhaps we have a radiliberal feminism? I wonder if there are different degrees of radicalism. Well, there are a lot of feminists who refuse to align themselves with a "tendency". I did for a while, until I found out that what I thought and what radical feminists thought was basically along the same lines. (NB I was *already* a lesbian ;) !). From that day I have called myself a radical feminist, because I figured, why continue with this "nonaligned" bullshit? If the politics fit, wear them, preferably in as loud a colour as possible ;). The conversation continues . . . Bronwyn=========================================================================
ok I'll jump in now... Some of you may know my name from connection with the Women's Presses Library Project -- I'm here now in a very different capacity -- in my own voice. > >--If radical feminists are not in the academy, then where are they? > >Some of us are in the academy, but not in women's studies. There are even >some quite well-know radfems who are not in women's studies. (Some *are* in >WS, of course). Many are on the margins, in both 'work' and "academy' terms: >a friend of mine, somebody I consider an intellectual of considerable >calibre, earns a living through unemployment benefit and cleaning houses. >She has a doctorate and has written a number of books. I'm sure you're aware that feminism -- radical or otherwise -- doesn't only live in "the academy" or reside with women who have doctoral degress!!! I think this points to an issue near and dear to my heart -- the tension between "academic" feminism and "activist" feminism. Now these are not mutually exclusive - obviously. But there are a lot of women not at all associated with the academy (myself included, until recently) who "do" radical feminism -- rather than only write and talk about it. Some of the fiercest radical feminists (oh, yeah, they're lesbians too) I know spend their days cooking and washing dishes in a relatively well-known feminist vegetarian restaurant (Bloodroot in Bridgeport, CT). They also have a bookstore and no interest in media (TV, radio, etc.) -- they're avid readers of everything feminist. I worked there for close to 10 years and some of the most interesting and heated conversations I had about radical feminism and activism were held in their kitchen while chopping vegetables or washing dishes. MANY women who have traveled through the restaurant either as customers or as workers have received large doses of radical feminism mixed in with their mashed potatoes. They "educate" in context -- connected to the very real lives of women living in one of the most depressed cities in the country -- being active in many different ways in their local community. Go there sometime and ask any of the collective members (esp. Betsey) about Mary Daly or Andrea Dworkin (or others) and you'll get more insight than you'd probably get from any grad student! There is obviously some relationship between reflecting and doing -- I think those in the academy may spend too much time reading/thinking and not enough time "doing" in some community activist sense. I'd venture to say that trully radical feminism demands a serious level of "getting your hands dirty." We're out here -- independent of the academy -- doing our work in a myriad of forms -- acting AND reflecting, reading, thinking about what we're doing -- "doing" radical feminism in very concrete ways. Some of us perceive the academy as a trap -- esp. women's studies -- where there seems to be little tolerance for radical feminists (or where we'll get "postmodernized" to death!). I'm in a rather peculiar position myself -- having been the university press columnist for Feminist Bookstore News for more than five years and a worker in feminist bookstores for more than 10 years, I'm all to familiar with feminists writing from the academy. Now (after years of resistance and under somewhat unusual circumstances) I, myself, am now -- at the age of 43 -- beginning as a doctoral student (for an Ed.D.) in -- of all things -- critical pedagogy. Will the academy affect me? no doubt. But I will demand of myself on-going activism as a radical femnist -- which given the indiviudal focus of my program i think I'll be able to do. I'm appreciating this conversation. Mev wplp AT winternet.com=========================================================================
Mev Miller: "I think those in the academy may spend too much time reading/thinking and not enough time "doing" in some community activist sense. I'd venture to say that trully radical feminism demands a serious level of 'getting your hands dirty.'" I agree with much of what you say about the importance of following reflection with doing (and vice versa). I think there's a place and need for some feminist scholars to spend "all their time" thinking and reading and writing, but that portrait leaves out a key component of academics' activist work, and that is teaching, I mean the sort of "critical pedagogy" you mention. I mean teaching to transgress (bell hooks). I mean introducing my students to both academic feminists and those who are "in the community" (a different community than an academic one). I admit that I do most of my work in the classroom setting. Others have spoken on this list about their successes and challenges in arranging meaningful internships and practicums--meaningful for the students and the people who invite them in. Given our various talents and personalities and training, we can and should do radical feminism (undermine patriarchal oppression) in different places and with different outcomes....... Finally, can anyone be an activist without the belief that change is possible? Jane Olmsted (jane.olmsted AT wku.edu) Western Kentucky University=========================================================================
I am a married mother, heterosexual, lesbian, radical feminist. To me, lesbianism is more than a sexual preference, it is a state of women-loving and is life-affirming. I believe there are a few pro-feminist men. In fact, at the recent NY convention of the National Commubication Assn I attended a roundtable on the pro feminist men's movement. The men who chaired the panel were sincere and candid. They also knew they faced numerous road blocks. The big one is the fear that men will take over the feminist movement! My graduate school career has started off rocky, but thanks to help from e-mail mentors and feminist professors I will survive. I take my feminism to the streets and I write and speak out every chance that I get. I plan on having an impact and a good time doing it. -------------------------- Tess, Kick-Ass Liberal Curmudgeon --------------------------=========================================================================
>Mev Miller: "I think those in the academy may spend too much time >reading/thinking and not enough time "doing" in some community activist >sense. I'd venture to say that trully radical feminism demands a serious >level of 'getting your >hands dirty.'" >Jane Olmsted (jane.olmsted AT wku.edu) " >I agree with much of what you say about the importance of following >reflection with doing (and vice versa). I think there's a place and >need for some feminist scholars to spend "all their time" thinking and >reading and writing, but that portrait leaves out a key component of >academics' activist work, and that is teaching, I mean the sort of >"critical pedagogy" you mention. I mean teaching to transgress (bell >hooks). I mean introducing my students to both academic feminists and >those who are "in the community" (a different community than an academic >one). I admit that I do most of my work in the classroom setting. >Others have spoken on this list about their successes and challenges in >arranging meaningful internships and practicums--meaningful for the >students and the people who invite them in. > >Given our various talents and personalities and training, we can and >should do radical feminism (undermine patriarchal oppression) in >different places and with different outcomes....... I'd like to agree that sometimes "radical feminism" is defined more by the place in which one lives, than any other definition posed. What is radical feminism in Connecticut, New York, or California, is a far cry from what radical feminism is in, oh, say, Deep East Texas. I live within easy driving distance of Mt. Enterprise, the home of the charming Reverend Otwell, who's followers carried signs at Matthew Shepherd's funeral claiming Matthew was "now in hell" and who stand with curiously detailed signs *just* off the campus of my institution to protest homosexuality. In the opposite direction, I can drive to Jasper, where James Byrd was dragged to death this summer. In fact, his cousin was in one of my colleagues classes, struggling to stay in school though she was recently denied welfare health benefits for her son's treatment for epilepsy ( the judge thought she was too well-dressed to need the extra money). By declaring myself a feminist at all in this environment, I am "radical." By teaching women writers, I am radical. By thinking women worthy of study and attention, I am radical. Sometimes, just by being a woman with a Ph.D, I am radical. Can we consider "situational radicalism" as part of this everchanging discussion of what it means to define oneself as feminist? Best, Amy=========================================================================
In response to Joanne's last observation about those feminists somewhere between radical and liberal feminism, it might be interesting to consider that in the context of Zillah Eisenstein's early work (late 70s I believe) The Radical Future of Liberal Feminism, published by Longman. Diane L. Fowlkes Director, Women's Studies Institute (Retired) Professor Emerita, Political Science Georgia State University wsidlf AT panther.gsu.edu www.gsu.edu/womenpower=========================================================================
I am abolutely loving this dialogue! As a former student of Mary Daly's at Boston College (of all places!) last year, I was exposed to radical feminism as an undergrad, which profoundly changed my life. As a 22 year old, I find my beliefs to be regarded with suspicion (or blank-ness, which is scarier) among women of my age-group. I have chosen to pursue graduate study in WS with the hope and intention of one day being able to teach radical feminism within the academy. This perhaps may be futile, but I'll be damned if I don't try. I feel that it is imperative to carry on the torch, so to speak, of my fore-sisters. 'Academentia' is more often than not exactly that. The original purpose of WS (feminist studies, really) was to subvert 'traditional' education practices and forge new ground. Feminism (especially radical feminism) is in a precarious place within my generation and I feel that is imperative that we keep it thriving and loud. I would be interested to know if there are other list-members among my generation who feel similarly about radical feminism. Emily Mann esm624 AT aol.com=========================================================================
Emily, and lis(i)sters, no you're not alone. I'm currently working on a dissertation firmly 'grounded' in Irigaray's radical feminism: trying to understand her ethics of sexual difference as a poetics/lens for reading poetry. She definately believes that patriarchy is the problem. I was warned as a masters (sic) student that because of my interests in Irigaray's work (among other interests) that I would be "walking a lonely and steep road." My answer to that person was/is that I have very strong legs. And it's really not so lonely. I also have a question related to this thread, my motive more one of testing the water than of being provactive or troublesome. I have never quite understood: why are liberal and radical feminism cast as at odds with each other? The assumption that patriarchy denies women humanity and the conviction that women need their rights protected seem to me to be natural allies. This is Irigaray's influence talking, but is the line between women's rights and rights specific to women as a gender really so divisive? The radical argument in Irigaray terms is that men have defined Human in terms of their gender, their identity, so 'equal' rights would be problematic as it would require women to 'be' men. Thus, a radical feminist project is for women to determine the sorts of rights that would agree with our gender, our way of being in the world. The difference between these two positions, in *practical* terms, seems to be one of depth. Liberal feminism seems to me to offer a strategy For Now, an immediate and necessary surface response, while radical feminism seems to have a wider, more future oriented horizon, to be a response to the depths of the problem. I understand the content of the tension and the debate, I just don't understand why the tension is there. Some days I think it's a jargon problem mostly. Any comments? -- *~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~* Someday there will be girls and women whose name will no longer signify merely an opposite of the masculine, but something in itself; the feminine human being. --- R.M. Rilke Meaghan Roberts Ph.D. Candidate: Lit&Fem.Philos. University of Texas AT Dallas antiope3 AT airmail.net a paper: http://www.uta.edu/huma/enculturation/1_2/roberts *~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*=========================================================================
Mev wrote "There is obviously some relationship between reflecting and doing -- I think those in the academy may spend too much time reading/thinking and not enough time "doing" in some community activist sense. I'd venture to say that trully radical feminism demands a serious level of "getting your hands dirty." " ---- Of course radfems are not "only" in the academy or women with doctorates. But I am wary of the opposition "academics vs. activists". Among women in the academy, from what I have observed, radical feminists are the ones who keep the closest ties between their academic work and their activism. *Of course* any woman is capable of thinking (and writing), whatever her socioeconomic or "approved intellectual" status. Any woman is also capable of being an activists, "even" academics. Most radical feminists do both, fortunately. Bronwyn=========================================================================
I second the motion that location has an effect on what is defined as "radical" in terms of "feminism." I live in a northern industrial working class city (Erie, PA). It takes very little to be declared "feminist" in such a male dominate area. Its like living in Europe 100 years ago. However, after getting all sorts of local flack for telling female clients they are under no obligation to 1)seek approval from men, 2) submit to their husband's authority 3) accept physical and psychological abuse, etc... People who want to cover up for local perpetrators hate my guts. However, on the other hand, I get all sorts of other flack from sister feminists on the coasts who find my heterosexual, married, with kid, homeschool, artsy-intellectual, computer-geek lifestyle ---- counter-revolutionary. To a degree, I think feminism is self- defined. One knows indeeed how far from local cultural norms one is.... Lili pinteareed AT aol.com FEMINIST BIBLIOGRAPHY 1000 titles http://members.aol.com/PinteaReed/fem_books.html Senior Contributing Editor Feminista! http://www.feminista.com=========================================================================
I like Amy Winks' offering of the term "situational radicalism" because, as her example made so clear, what's radical in one situation or context may not be considered so in another. Expanding the expression to feminism in general, I see that the concept of "situational [or `contextual'] feminism" fits the issues of whether women's resistance to the system in past times (and some current women's activities) could be considered feminist. I remember discussions (if not on this list, perhaps on h-women) of whether or not Roman women's fighting of a particular law, the activities of orders of nuns, and the existence of women's counterparts to Promise Keepers could be classified as feminist--based on some sense of how "feminism" may be defined today. Seeing these activities as "situational feminism" makes sense to me. Actually, I see "situational feminism" as perhaps a more appropriate --or more "radical feminist"? :) -- way of thinking of feminism than by trying to *define* theoretical subcategories, which is--when you think of it--a patriarchal mentality and activity. "Definire" in Latin means "to limit, to determine, to end," all of which involve a more-or-less macho sense of control or mastery. As one of the (male) students in an Honors class I taught last year on "The Archetype of the Femme Fatale" asked, is what we're doing trying to define--to capture, to pin down-- a concept, or more to identify characteristics of something that may have boundaries, but fuzzy boundaries? Now, I'm by no means a die-hard card- carrying PostModernist, but when we question the old rigid gender stereotypes that have imprisoned us (women much, much more than men), when we question whether biological sex should be cast in the either-or/ oppositional woman-man polarity, when we profess to recognize the fuzzy boundaries of gender, race, ethnicity, socio-economic class . . .--are we being consistent with what we might identify as "feminist" ways of thinking when we focus so much time, attention, and energy to trying to determine exactly what a "radical" as opposed to a "liberal" feminist is? I was going to say that such terms, as well as the periodization of Euro-U.S. feminist activity as "waves," are indeed useful for studying feminist from a historical perspective, but I'm rethinking that now. Labels such as these are, of course, useful in understanding history; however, like so many traditional historical labels in the various disciplines (whose rigid boundaries women's studies has been trying to transcend--sorry, I forgot who said this today) which, by the way, were (with few, if any, exceptions) *not* coined by women, such labels are not absolute and are valid for the most part only within certain contexts. In fact, the masculinist propensity to categorize--to "fix" things with conceptual formaldehyde and pin them to the wall, properly labelled, of course--is one of the instruments of abuse (name-calling), control over others, and polemic. [Others might tend to use the term "rhetoric" instead of "polemic," but unless we're talking about a specific form of rhetorical practice--the agonistic, conflict-based manipulation of and control over others by means of words that is the masculinist, though traditionally dominant, form of rhetoric--I prefer not to tar all rhetorical practice, including what we're doing in this very discussion list. This is so particularly because feminism has so often been labelled as "rhetoric"--or "mere" rhetoric--in contrast to the "truth" of ideologies that characterize feminists as "the enemy."] Speaking of which--and I'm sorry, but I just can't resist--we have a perfect example of the masculinist propensity to categorize in Hoff Sommers' _Who Stole Feminism?_, in which she attacks what (or rather "who") she labels as "gender feminists" who, as "ideologues," have "added to the woes of our society and hurt[] legitimate feminism"--which of course is the so-called "equity feminism" whose poor beleaguered forces she has been ordained (by voices, perhaps?) to lead. She makes clear that she isn't at all confusing "the women who work in the trenches to help the victims of TRUE abuse and discrimination with the gender feminists whose falsehoods and exaggerations are muddying the waters of American feminism" (17--emphasis mine). Which brings me to another point--a rather disturbing one that I noticed in some of today's posts: the oppositional positioning of feminism in the academy to that in what is usually called "the real world." This polarization (divide and conquer technique) clearly if often implicitly underlies Hoff Sommers' classification of contemporary feminism. Now, granted, some feminist academic discourse (especially, but not only, that inspired by French feminism) is quite jargony; however, it's not just people who are not in the academy who can get disgusted with both feminist--and, most definitely, non-feminist--discourse that one can't even hack through with a razor-sharp machete! Further, not all feminist academic discourse (including much that is French-inspired) is a densely impenetrable thicket of jargon. In addition, as Jane Olmsted said today, academic feminists don't merely talk and write in sedentary, complacent non-activist lives: "teaching is doing." Now, once again, I'll grant that the activism of teaching in many baccalaureate colleges and universities is situated in a context of privilege. Yet, in places like community colleges and urban baccalaureate colleges, the students are far from privileged, and academic feminists in these places could be characterized (if I may use the war metaphor) as being in the trenches, but only if we're talking about degree. The last thing I'd want to suggest is a "I'm-more-in-the-trenches-than-you" kind of pissing (if I may) contest. As someone else said today, we're all activists in different places, in different ways. Trying to valorize one lifestyle or occupation over another is falling back into the masculinist mentality. We all thus may "educate in context"--not just those who are not in the academy, but all of us, with just different contexts. Contextual (situational) feminism. Finally, I return to rhetoric/language. The opposition of using language (talking or writing about things) to "doing" is yet another heritage of the masculinist tradition with which we're unfortunately plagued. As much as this tradition owes a lot to Plato and Aristotle, they, along with other ancient thinkers (including, as feminist rhetorician Susan Jarratt has demonstrated, the Sophists so unmercifully bashed by Plato) recognized that using language is an act: talking (or writing) IS doing. The Greek word "logos" cannot be adequately translated as "word" or "logic/thought": it incorporated both, as well as a hard-to-translate sense of action. Not only have (at least some) rhetoricians perceived language use as "doing," but so has 20th century Speech-Act Theory. Finally, Catharine MacKinnon in _Only Words_ argues eloquently from a feminist legal standpoint that word use is an act. Feminists "do," whether the means by which we "do" primarily involves language use or getting our hands dirty. But we do, each in our own way. Situational feminism. Connie Ostrowski ostroc AT rpi.edu=========================================================================
Dear Women's Studies List: This has been quite a discussion. I don't think radical feminism is dead. ;-) Perhaps we should think of feminisms in a continuum sense rather than a categorical sense. In other words, liberal and radical feminism aren't neat little boxes where the twain never meets. Rather, they are a line, a river, a journey, a scale. I started out as a liberal feminist. Twenty years ago, I just didn't understand the radicals' ideas. But after seeing liberal feminism's limitations, my philosophy is becoming more radical. To my dismay, the effect of all those crucial liberal feminist reforms was the modernization of patriarchy, not the abolution of it. ;-) However, I wouldn't quite call myself a *really* radical feminist. I feel more comfortable with a term like radiliberal, although much more radi than liberal. ;-) Someone did say feminism is self-defined to a degree. Well, here I am doing it! I think it's crucial to keep these categories fluid. Remember, it's a river, a journey. Rigidity may turn people off to hearing about patriarchy. Twenty years ago, I had a hard time with radical concepts not only because of my background but because of the way the message was presented. Much of the literature sounded harsh and it scared me. The message has been refined since then. Perhaps many WS profs are in that radiliberal category. Who knows! They may be all-purpose radiliberalpomo feminists. Now that may be too fluid. ;-) Joanne Callahan jmcalla1 AT airmail.net=========================================================================
On Wed, 2 Dec 1998, Joanne Callahan wrote: > Perhaps many WS profs are in that radiliberal category. Who knows! > They may be all-purpose radiliberalpomo feminists. Now that may be too > fluid. ;-) > Not too fluid. Joanne's description feels very familiar to me. The term "radiliberalpomo" approaches my description of myself, although upon reflection it seems "pomo" says the largest part of it. It is precisely the fluidity--represented as a decentered self, a multiple-identity, an anti-essentialism--that appeals to me. The accuracy lies in something a little slippery: that in one situation the liberal-ness surfaces and speaks more clearly, in another it is the radical-ness of me that sings. When I am performing radically, it never feels radical, it feels essential--which to me reads as necessary and common and just, in spite of the earlier lessons I have/d learned in the patriarchy. Eventually I have come to rest with the idea that no label captures who I am, how I behave, why I act and when ... So the terms become only marginally interesting. Gill Wright Miller Assocaite Professor of Dance Associate Professor of Women's Studies Denison University Granville, Ohio 43023 millerg AT denison.edu=========================================================================
I'm noticing a certain watering down of the meaning of radical feminism, an equating of radical feminism with all feminism. I always thought undermining patriarchal oppression was what ALL feminists, not just radical ones, were after. If this is so, then radical feminism would include gender studies, queer studies, and other groups who focus on pieces of patriarchal oppression (such as oppressive stereotypes or sexist representation or the privileging of straight sexuality) without actually focusing on women. I also note from discussions on this list that many radical feminists would not recognize these other groups as belonging to the same camp. Twenty years ago it looked like radical feminists were those who saw oppression of women as THE root problem, lying behind oppression by race and class. More recently, radical feminists seem to be those who focus their attention on male violence toward women. Both of these definitions are pretty fuzzy, and often they're hostile definitions--given by detractors. What is a more precise definition? How do radical feminists on this list define yourselves? What theory of oppression or what practices distinguish radical feminists from other feminists? Priscilla Stuckey, Ph.D. pstuckey AT california.com=========================================================================
Priscilla Stuckey makes some good points about radical feminism being watered down by some of the classifications on this list-- and asks for a more precise definition by self-identified radical feminists. As a self-defined radical feminist i want to say that on the one hand, I would like to see the category--and the analysis that it represents be seen and lived an enacted as dynamic. I am not interested in preserving a static historical category which, in itself, has represented different struggles and claims etc. on the other hand, what remains true to me as a radical feminist is that male power remains central to the analysis and critique. ONe reason that radical feminists focus on sexual violence--including pornography and prostitution, a focus that has made radical feminism so contested as a political theory and practice--is that we maintain not only that male dominance is an urgent, central concern for feminism as such but that male dominance needs to be understood in terms of sexual power and men's appropriation (to use a term from French radical feminist Colette Guillaumin) of women. This analysis of male power as "Men possessing women" (as runs the subtitle of Andrea Dworkin's book on pornography) has been highly contested in recent developments in feminist theory (see Judith Butler's stuff on going "beyond the anti-pornography paradigm"), that aim to "go beyond" oppositional categories of oppressor and oppressed. This is a big liability of postmodernism--although it is touted as its strength--and is a very different kind of contestation of radical feminism, in my opinion, than the kind of challenges to earlier radical feminism stemming from, primarily, critiques of racism or white ethnocentrism. It is perfectly possible and infact urgent to develop a radical feminism that maintains its critique of male power and expands its scope and complexity to address capitalism, globalization, etc. Some of this is being done in movements against international trafficking--a place where radical feminism today is actively political and internationalized. So, in short, the liberalism/radicalism divide as once understood (in terms of reformism vs. revolutionary) is not really the central conflict--or way that radical feminism has been contested or defines itself today. Kathy Miriam kmiriam AT cats.ucsc.edu=========================================================================
I think that one of the reasons it is difficult to define radical feminism is that we are so often defined in the academy by those who are hostile to us. Radical feminism has always included an analysis of race and class into its theory and practice and while we may have not always done a great job (mainly because we were building theory and this takes time to develop), we have understood that patriarchy works with other systems of opression. Many early radical feminists came out of the left and thus class was always seen as a major form of opression. Andrea Dworkin is a good example of a radical feminist who has linked different systems of oppression. I also want to add that for all the radical feminist I know, an anti-pornography stance is central to our understadning of violence against women. This has made us very unpopular in liberal and post-modern feminism and has been used against us to define us as simple minded and unsophisticated. I have yet to read a book from "the other side" that does a fair and respectful job of presenting our case. We are caricatured as book burners, anti-sex and in bed with the right. These are all incorrect assertions and fail to capture the reality of our theory and activism. As someone who has lectured and written on pornogrpahy for years, I am often an outsider at feminist conferences and have had trouble getting my work published in academic journals. After making tenure, I, as a radical feminist, have decided to write for non-academic audiences since it seems to me that it is a waste of time trying to get a voice in mainstream women's studies. I think that it is impossible to have a discussion on radical feminism without exploring how our anti-pornography position has marginalized us and caused us to be wary of academic feminism. Gail Dines, whe_dines AT flo.org=========================================================================
Here's an offering to Priscilla Stuckey's request for a more precise definition of radical feminism. Feminism, Radical: 1. The Cause of causes, which alone of all revolutionary causes exposes the basic model and source of all forms of oppression- patriarchy- and thus can open up consciousness to active participation in Movement, Transcendence, and Happiness. 2. Be-ing for women and all Elemental Life, which implies going to the roots of the oppression of all Others. 3. Way of be-ing characterized by (a) an Awesome and Ecstatic sense of Otherness from patriarchal norms and values (b) conscious awareness of the sadosociety's sanctions against Radical Feminists (c) moral outrage on behalf of women as women: WOMAN-IDENTIFICATION (d) committment to the cause of women that persists, even against the current, when feminism is no longer "popular": CONSTANCY source: Mary Daly and Jane Caputi (1987) Webster's First New Intergalactic Wickedary of the English Language. San Francisco: HarperCollins, p. 75 Emily Mann esm624 AT aol.com=========================================================================
See Page 2 for continuation of the discussion.