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Beyond `feminine’ and `masculine’
By Anna Ochkina, translated by Renfrey Clarke for Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal
[Rabkor.ru published this reply by Anna Ochkina to a polemical article, “Masculine and Feminine”, by Dmitry Zhvaniya. Anna Ochkina is deputy director of Institute for Globalisation Studies and Social Movements (IGSO) and deputy editor of Levaya politika (Left Politics) journal. She is a sociologist based in Penza, where she teaches at the university. Dmitry Zhvaniya is a journalist, based in St. Petersburg and a founding member of Dvizheniye soprotivleniya imeni Petra Alekseyeva (the Piotr Alekseyev Resistance Movement). Zhvaniya's article "Muzhskoe i zhenskoe" ("Masculine and Feminine") is available (in Russian) at http://www.rabkor.ru/debate/3933.html.]
* * *
I
live in a world constructed by men. I realise I have to put up with this,
though sometimes it’s difficult and even painful. Yes, the struggle with
gender, or against gender, is pointless and stupid. Yes, I like being a woman,
and I can’t imagine a life for myself without men. But the things that many
people, including me, find irritating in feminism arose not out of hysteria,
but as a reaction (not always an appropriate one) to the harshness of the rules
in our world, which is not ours. Often this is a cry of despair, and it
deserves understanding, not irony, ridicule, contempt or aggression. This is
why attacks on feminism irritate me so much.
Actually,
I agree with a great deal of what Dmitry Zhvaniya writes. It’s true that when
women come to power, this power doesn’t automatically become humane and
effective. There are no special qualities of kindness and gentleness belonging
to all women without exception, and
the concepts of “women in general” and “men in general” are simply impossible
to analyse. I have personally mocked such attempts, which are made constantly
by the authors of fashionable textbooks on feminology, gender politics and so
forth. I share Dmitry’s dislike for dogmatism and for the unscientific approach
that many feminists adopt. Nevertheless, I have three objections.
In
the first place, he speaks of feminism in general, while criticising only
particular forms, trends and positions within it. That is, he rejects feminism
in principle, and even ridicules it. Meanwhile, feminism has acted as an
ideology of women’s emancipation and as a sociological theory allowing a fuller
study of various aspects of social behaviour, including gender in the analysis
as an organic characteristic of the individual.
Second,
Dmitry reduces sexual discrimination to the status of an economic phenomenon,
and it seems, considers it no longer worthy of mention. This is simply not the
case. The simple truth is that sexual discrimination is now more diverse,
subtle and profound than before formal equality of the sexes was achieved.
Third,
Dmitry, to judge from everything, maintains that the distortions and
exaggerations of feminist theory and rhetoric are linked – solely – to the
personal characteristics of the author of one or another discourse. But the
distortions and exaggerations and radical outbursts are also results of the
pressures which are very clearly felt by women, but which at times are so
difficult to prove. These exaggerations can be mocked, and perhaps angrily
rejected, but they also play a positive role, drawing the attention of society
to acute problems, radicalising public opinion for a time and, as a result,
overturning one or another stereotype. The pressure is thus lessened. This is
the vein in which I write when I address the question of what feminism means
for me personally.
Even
if men cannot agree among themselves about property and status, and if they
oppress or kill each other, there is a great deal in our lives that is subject
to regular streams of testosterone. Laws are changed and the frameworks within
which women can decide their fates are shifted; many conquests have already
been made, and a great deal has been achieved. Sometimes it seems that there is
no longer anything left to fight for. The cries of women for the “right to
orgasm”, about “enslavement by child bearing” or of “refusal to sleep with the
enemy”, the comical struggle against sexual harassment at work or male
chauvinism seem amusing even to most women.
Suddenly,
however, you’ll be told, “But you’re a woman”, and some door will be closed in
front of you, while some other, of which you’ve no need whatever, is obligingly
opened. People let your ideas and thoughts, which you’re convinced (or more
precisely, used to be convinced) are important and interesting, pass by their
ears; then they unexpectedly ask you, very politely, to go and make some
coffee. You’re left as the “eternal deputy”, because “you’re a woman after all,
you don’t need a career as much, you’ll be busy with your family”. Your boss
remains someone who needs a career, and who isn’t preoccupied with his family.
Additional work gets placed on you because your boss isn’t capable of
performing it, despite being of the “appropriate” sex. People “fail to notice”
your professional observations and suggestions, swiftly claiming them as their
own, and in the meantime paying you compliments such as “Ah, what eyes you
have!”
Three
Ks
The
person closest to you, irritated by the fact that you’re constantly so busy and
at the way you’re distracted by “side issues”, will suddenly deny you the right
to search for yourself (“you’ve a family”). On the whole, this person will be
right; the children don’t see enough of you, the home’s a mess, you don’t pay
enough attention to your husband, and somehow the two of you haven’t managed to
agree on equality in everyday life and life in general. And what is there to
agree about? The family, the home – that’s your “natural destiny”, since you’re
a woman after all. There can’t be any talk of your inalienable right to go on
your own creative quest, or of the fact that he doesn’t subject his own life so
rigidly to the rhythm of family life. He’s a man!
Of
course, it’s possible to break through all this; formal equality really can be
achieved. It’s possible to break through and to prove that your ideas are
interesting, that you have the right to pursue your quest, and that it isn’t
your preordained fate to be the deputy. So I’m not saying it can’t be done. I
don’t even argue that all this is easy for men. I’m simply saying that along
with the dictates of society and circumstances, women are subject to the
dictate of gender. And any movement in the direction of career matters, toward
freedom, toward yourself, is more difficult for women than it is for men in
similar circumstances. Women might swim in the same water, in the same style
and for the same distance. But they always swim with a weight around their
feet.
Nevertheless,
it is your gender that always claims the right to decide your fate. The three
Ks [in German, Kinder, Kirche, Küche
– children, church and kitchen], supposedly outmoded for today’s women, lie in
wait for them, entice them, tempt them with the “eternal” and “traditional”.
Let’s
suppose that women don’t want to lead. Fine – this speaks well of them. But
what interests me is how voluntary this “don’t want to” really is. Then, let’s
note that in order to make a professional career for yourself, you don’t have
to become a leader. But for your professional growth, the three Ks are no help
either. Clever, progressive males, in witty and picturesque terms, mock the
absurdity of women’s struggle for independence. “What are they fighting for?
They’re hysterical! Bourgeois provocateurs!” Or: “A woman is born to be a mother
and wife. Her place, and her natural environment, is in the home. Only
degenerates protest against this.” And sometimes, as with Dmitry Zhvaniya,
these positions are curiously combined in a single vessel, sorry, text.
While
talking of the socially determined, even artificial character of gender
conflict, Dmitry at the end of his article suddenly declares, “The patriarchal
traditions of society according to which women are taught that their normal
environment is the home, and that they should feel an attachment to domestic
tasks, are a vestige of women’s ‘ancestral history’”, and later: “The
antagonism between men and women is rooted in their physiology, in their sexual
nature, and in the social history of the sexes. Even if a unified race were to
emerge in the future, as Lenin dreamed, a unified sex would not appear. When
vulgar prejudices concerning the role of men and the role of women are
destroyed in revolutionary fashion, the genuine meaning of the sexes and the
purpose of the division into masculine and feminine will be revealed once
again.”
Natural?
Here,
I simply do not understand: is there, after all, an antagonism? Not the
division of labour, roles and functions, and the differences associated with
this, but a real antagonism, that is, an irreconcilable contradiction?
In
my view, the purpose of the division into masculine and feminine is
understandable even now, before a revolution occurs. There is no natural,
biological antagonism between them; they are complementary. “That’s what nature
intended…” Where such contradictions and ruptures exist is in the social forms
through which these biological differences are perceived.
The
supposedly natural character of domestic and maternal affairs for women is a
marvellous piece of ideology. While men are perhaps still capable of
understanding a dislike for housework, they fail to comprehend, and do not want
to comprehend, the stresses of motherhood. This is natural, instinctive – and
so, the question is off the agenda. But the “instinctive”, biological character
of maternal feelings is greatly exaggerated. Yulian Semenov in his saga about
Stirlitz has the radio operator Kate remark, “You have to learn everything…
even how to cook an omelette… but you don’t have to learn motherhood.” This
myth is widely propagated, and disputing it is almost impossible. All the same,
it’s a myth.
People
have to learn everything, especially how to bear and raise a human being. These
are social processes, tied up in large measure with conscious decisions.
Getting these matters right is difficult; it requires knowledge and ability,
social experience and emotional maturity. It doesn’t happen without mistakes,
despair or feelings of helplessness. Women are not spared this, any more than
men. And on the whole, individual differences are no less important here than
those of gender.
My
sister, a biologist by profession, left me quite shocked by relating that in
laboratory rats the maternal instinct is not uniformly developed; they behave
differently during pregnancy, and look after their pups in different fashions.
The entire litters of some rat mothers can die from poor care, while in the
case of others even weak pups survive. Even rats are individual in this most
ancient and powerful instinct, that of reproduction. So are women really sentenced
by nature to the familiar Kinder, Kirche, Küche?
Sure,
there is some hypothetical, statistically average woman who is used to looking
after her family and home, but there is nothing “innate” or “natural” about
this. The way women are shut up in the framework of housework and private life
is a social and historical phenomenon, which dissipates very quickly when a
woman gets the chance to study, to realise herself professionally, and to
create. No, I assure you, there has never been anything instinctive or innate
to attract women to the kitchen, to force them to cook, wash dishes, clean
stoves and toilet bowls, buy groceries on a daily or weekly basis, and perform
innumerable unnoticed but essential domestic tasks. There is nothing natural,
and hence immutable, that would allow a woman whose life revolves around
housework and caring for a family to receive more pleasure from this than would
a man with a comparable level of education and of intellectual and emotional
development.
It
was not with the sexual revolution or some unseemly emancipation, with radical
fashion (as Dmitry writes), that the emergence of the second wave of feminism
in the West was bound up. Rather, it was with the fact that the “curse of the
three Ks”, which effectively kept women within the bounds of housework and
“women’s destiny”, had survived even though discriminatory rules had formally
been abolished.
Women
do not have any innate attachment to the home, just as men are not destined by
nature to chase after profits. Nor are women doomed by nature to a restricted
existence within an eternal round of everyday chores, just as men are not in
every case drawn by their abilities and biology toward creative endeavour. Nor
is there any innate conflict of the sexes, since there are no mechanisms of
exploitation or acquisitiveness in human nature.
I
risk arousing the indignation of male readers, but in the US, for instance, the
propaganda of even the most absurd feminist slogans has played a positive role.
It has enabled the rise of a model of partnership in the behaviour of couples
within the family, with the career, friends and extrafamilial cares and
concerns of the man no longer having automatic priority. So far, at least this
much has been achieved. A university professor might arrive at an evening
get-together with colleagues bringing his three-month-old son in a basket,
because his wife has urgent work – and everyone accepts this as normal. A
sociologist from Nebraska flies off to a conference in San Francisco with his
virtually newborn daughter, since his wife is preparing to go to work, needs to
replace her work uniform, and cannot stay alone with the child. His colleague
from New York has flown in with his four sons, since his wife has traditionally
devoted these days to catching up with university friends. He has brought the
two children they have in common, and her son from her first marriage, while
his ex-wife has entrusted his son from his first marriage to him, since these
are his “fatherhood days”. I’ve chatted with these men myself, and have found
them astonished at my surprise. “But you’ve also left children behind!” they
say. Yes, but my mother is with them.
I
know a great many women who have foregone many things in their professions,
careers and simply in life “in the name of” their husbands and children, who
have become lost in the three Ks. Very often they have acted in the way they
were programmed to act, and have realised it too late. Feminism, especially in
its reasoned, considered forms, also faces this task, of breaking with the
programs. Are men really afraid of this very thing? It cannot be!
Women’s oppression ` extends far
beyond the bounds of the working class’
I
would like to make clear what is concealed beneath the concepts of the
oppression of women and of discrimination against them, just how keenly women
from the educated, financially secure strata of society feel their inequality.
Within the framework of Marxist analysis, from the positions of left ideology,
it is considered right to feel sympathy for women workers, for their burdensome
work and lower pay compared to men. But inequality between women and men
extends far beyond the bounds of the working class.
Certainly,
women from the nobility and the educated strata did not die of hunger or
overwork, and did not fall into complete destitution. But women as a whole were
deprived of the main thing – the possibility of ordering their lives in
accordance with the needs of their individual personalities. From women’s very
birth, moreover, these requirements took a tightly restricted form. In essence,
they were reduced to one thing: to get married, if possible advantageously.
Just that: not to meet your man and fall in love with him, not to bear and
raise happy children, not to make a life for yourself according to the
principles of love and partnership, but to make a match. Otherwise, there was
the miserable and humiliating existence of the governess, the lady’s companion,
the hanger-on, “kept woman”, and so forth. Here too, of course, money had a
corrective function.
A
wealthy and distinguished woman had opportunities to shift the bounds of her
existence, though this did not mean that these bounds ceased to exist. If, for
example, you were used as a voiceless pawn in a dynastic power play, given in
marriage to a man whom you not only did not love, but had never set eyes on,
this was unfortunate. I do not, however, propose to grieve for wealthy
noblewomen. Let us consider what happened to women somewhat lower on the social
scale, somewhere between the “daughters of Germinal” and Maria Stuart.
If
you did not inherit great wealth and were not interesting from a dynastic point
of view, you were forced to wait until someone turned their attention to you.
With the comic readiness of a Tolstoyan heroine (of his beloved Natasha or
attractive Kitty Shcherbatskaya, for example), you had to fall in love with
anyone, or almost anyone, who formed “serious intentions” in relation to you.
You had to joyfully accept the proposal of a man of any qualities, and
reconcile yourself to anything he might do with you, your life, your body and
your money. Or almost anything.
If
you were so bold as to fall in love, to trust the man and to enter into a
relationship with him without the obligatory ties of wedlock, and then to give
birth to a child as well, you fell irretrievably in the eyes of society. Your
seducer, lover, partner – call him what you will – was accepted as before in
the salons, could make any match, and could live as before. You became a pariah
forever. Recall the way the cat Begemot answers Margarita: “What’s the boss got
to do with it? Is he supposed to have strangled children in the forest?”
Of
course, a woman could write a novel, or become an actress, a revolutionary or
great courtesan, breaking free not only from the restrictions of gender, but
from all other limits as well. She could go off proudly and work in a factory,
disdaining her own class. After all, things are not overly comfortable for men
either in the world they have created, and they face many, often painful choices.
I am simply trying to show that the exclusion of women from normal social life
gave rise to a particular type of discrimination which was superimposed on all
other types, making the pressure exerted on women by society, by the social
system and by circumstances relatively stronger. Often, several times over.
Less
extreme methods of achieving independence were unavailable. A woman could not
acquire a professional education, or work in a multitude of fields.
Lev
Tolstoy was a great supporter of the traditional relationship of the sexes. Yet
he depicted, better than any campaigner for women’s rights, the tragedy of two
gifted and educated women doomed to a woman’s fate that is not of their
choosing. Two women, because Dolly Oblonskaya, already ageing at thirty-three,
bound by duty and social convention to an empty-headed, spendthrift husband, is
too clever not to notice the horror of her situation. She is just as much the
victim of “eternal destiny”, of duty and propriety, as Anna Karenina. Dolly
remains alive and faithful to her stupid, philandering husband, because she
feels her responsibility more strongly, because her upbringing and religion
have taught her “better” that this is how things must be, and because she has
not met her Vronsky. Nevertheless, Tolstoy constantly depicts the spiritual
pain suffered by this quiet, not very noticeable heroine.
Dolly
is oppressed by the injustice of the situation in which she is powerless to
solve the most important problems of her family, at the same time as she bears
all the responsibility for finding solutions. Repeated pregnancies and
childbirth wear her out and prevent her children from being born healthy, and
she feels this. She also understands dimly the injustice of the social
conventions that bind her to this enforced motherhood, at the same time as no one
shares her solitary grief by the little coffin of her son.
Meanwhile,
she can no longer accept this with the quiet fatalism of the peasant woman who
talks to her about her dead daughter: “I used to have a daughter, but the Lord
took her, she was buried this last Lent.” Dolly now understands and feels more
deeply; she starts analysing her situation, and begins to suffer. It is also
clear to her that the society that makes such demands of women’s “honour” and that
is so cruel to “fallen” women, is exceedingly lenient to her dissolute husband.
She understands, though not with her mind but with her agitated feelings. She
does not dare to judge, and resigns herself, but she cannot stop thinking. Anna
Karenina rises in revolt (though from passion rather than from a love of
freedom), and perishes, while Dolly remains true to her class, her sex and her
station. But her story is no less tragic for that.
No
one would dispute that poor women suffered far more than daughters of the
gentry such as Dolly. But while women of different social strata were banished
from social life in different fashion, they were always banished.
Feminism
and class society
As
I recall, feminism began above all as a sociological paradigm, arguing for the
inclusion in sociological theory of the concept of individuals as men or women.
This approach arose as a reaction to the ignoring, in social theories, of
gender as a human characteristic. Meanwhile, the clear or implicit implication
was that the “individual in general” was a man.
If
a great deal in social reality was to be explained, however, a fuller
understanding of the diverse and specific nature of individuals was
indispensable, in particular, an understanding of the social essence of their
membership in different sexes. The inclusion of gender among the reasons for
individual social experience and status provides the key to a more detailed and
profound understanding of social processes, of social behaviour and of the
social structure of society. Biological gender is a basic, inalienable
characteristic of the individual. This approach is especially productive when
we come to study social behaviour in particular spheres. For example, the
labour movement and electoral politics, the areas of reproduction and consumer
affairs, changes to demographic, employment, political and related cultures –
these researches in sociology are now impossible without one or another gender
paradigm, developed out of this or that trend in feminist theory.
On
this level, however, feminism no longer acts merely as a theoretical principle,
but as a so-called middle-level sociological theory, on the basis of which
gender studies proper have developed. Concentrating mainly on the inequality of
the sexes, numerous feminist concepts explain these differences in varied
fashion, constructing models of social relations and of the distribution of
power and influence. Liberal, Marxist and radical feminism, the theory of dual
systems and others analyse the content and causes of women’s oppression in
society from various points of view. Various interpretations are also offered
of the role of men in the system of discrimination against women and of women’s
oppression.
As
Dmitry Zhvaniya justly notes, however, attempts to defend “women in general”
often lead to eccentric positions and even to discrediting the very ideas
involved. Such is the fate of attempts to solve the problem statistically, for
example, through measures to reserve a certain number of positions for women in
government and legislative organs. Women in government and in parliaments will
not automatically start setting in place “feminine” policies (that is, policies
that are more just, even if only in relation to women). Women oligarchs, whose
numbers the Russian establishment feminist Maria Arbatova dreams of augmenting,
will not refrain from exploiting their property, power and exclusive position,
and it is hard to believe they will do this in a more “refined” and “delicate”
manner. Women old and young, beautiful and hideous, “butch” and “femme”, frigid
and passionate, with many children or none at all, are capable of employing
their property, money and power (when they acquire all this) in just the same
way as men, according to the same rules.
And
of course, about male rules – which I describe in this way mainly for reasons
of style. Rules became predominantly male not for biological or physiological
reasons, but for social and economic ones. More precisely, they became male in
the process of the formation and development of private property-based society.
Gradually, as they became set in place, these rules took on a cultural form,
the players acquired social and psychological traits, a powerful ideology of
the ideal Masculine and eternal Feminine arose, and so forth. For thousands of
years the social and economic order has been determined not by the laws of our
psyches or of our hormonal backgrounds, but by the laws of private property.
These laws assume the division of society and the conflict of interests
according to the principle not of gender but of class.
Historically,
feminism has acted not only as a social theory, but also as an ideology of the
emancipation of women, and as a real movement for this emancipation. Initially
this struggle was aimed at winning legislative recognition of equality in the
economic, political, social and professional spheres. Feminist theory and
ideology, however, are not limited to the demand for legislative solutions to
the problems of emancipation; they seek to define the causes of social restrictions
linked to gender, and to find ways of ending them. The greatest problem facing
both feminism and its critics is the fact that the discussion concerns “women
in general” and “men in general”. This presumes that the common gender identity
of members of a particular sex automatically determines every other identity,
from the psychological to the political. Even empirically, however, it is
obvious that this is far from true. Do women have interests in common? If so,
what does this unity of interests consist in, and what is its basis?
Women
as a class?
The
basis for people’s membership in a social community or group is their place in
the social division of labour, which determines the place they hold in the
process of social production, and the form and degree in which they receive
their share of social wealth. This comes directly from Lenin, whose definition
of classes in the “Great Initiative” has become classic. On this basis an
objective commonality of social interests takes shape. In recognition of these
interests and in their consistent defence, a social grouping or class may act
as a political force, influencing authority or winning it.
Is
this what happens with women? Is there a place in social production occupied
exclusively by women? When I posed this question rhetorically in a lecture on
the sociology of gender, one zealous woman student immediately suggested:
“kindergartens”. If this is serious, women have an exclusive role in the
process of reproduction, since women produce human beings physically, and in
this lies their particular role in the social division of labour. In human
society, I repeat, this is not a question of biology but of the social system
and of social relations; that is, it is a social question. Women’s “natural
destiny” is an almost unquestioned tenet of ideology, beneath which numerous
forms of discrimination lie concealed.
In
speaking of human reproduction as an area of social production, I have in mind
the fact that in human society this process has a social character, and the
biological process is simply the mode of its implementation. The fact that
women are locked into the framework of housework and personal life, and their
resultant alienation from social and political life, has also brought about
discrimination. Prior to the revolutionary changes of the twentieth century
this took the form of direct legal prohibition. Later, “trace” remnants of past
discrimination remained in the form of social stereotypes; of the greater
emotional stress for women than for men of having to choose between family and
professional or creative activity; of the demands which society placed on women
to be sexually restrained and good mothers, and so forth.
On
an individual level, the secluded nature of women’s lives and the limitations
on their destinies could often be overcome, and by no means all women were
involved in the process of reproduction. The essential thing is that this was
the sole, unique instance in human history when a natural, inalienable
human characteristic served as the basis for social differentiation,
defining people’s place in the social division of labour. In some variants, the
regime of exclusion associated with this place in the division of labour was
extended to all women, irrespective of whether they fulfilled their “natural
destiny” or not.
It
is, of course, possible to pursue an analogy with racial and ethnic
discrimination, as representatives of “black” feminism have done. Racial
discrimination, however, is more readily overcome -- or at least, it is easier
to expose and prove it, and hence to end it, even if this comes at the cost of
a fierce struggle. Neither racial nor ethnic antagonism gives rise to
self-discrimination, to a painful rift between one’s nature and one’s identity;
it does not present people with the problem of having to make a choice here.
Sexual discrimination, meanwhile, compels just such a choice: to be a woman,
wife and mother, or to be a professionally capable, creative and free
individual, which often means simply to be yourself. The dictates of “eternal
destiny”, coming not only from the direction of society but also from one’s
nearest and dearest, result in the alienation of one’s personality. To overcome
this is possible, but difficult. Moreover, one needs support, and not just from
society in general, but also from a particular male. And he might turn out to
be hostile to feminism.
With
the achieving of formal rights, gender discrimination and gender contradictions
have not come to an end entirely, and understanding their social and class
essence has become much more difficult. It is precisely since the winning of
formal equality of the sexes that notions of a conflict between men and women
have begun to dominate within feminism, that the influence of radical feminism
has been strengthened, and that the ideas of women’s sexuality and the right of
women to sexual realisation, and so forth, have come to be actively discussed.
The
sexual and contraceptive revolution has allowed women to make a decisive
advance toward overcoming their “biological destiny”, but a new system of
contradictions has arisen. These include the contradictions between women’s
productive and family roles; between their professional career ambitions and
their still-dependent position on the marriage market and in the intimate
sphere; between monogamy and free sexuality, and so on.
Now,
the concept of reproductive labour has appeared, that is, of the labour
involved in producing human beings and looking after them. To some degree, this
labour has gradually become an area of social production. Looking after the
sick and elderly, child care, and providing everyday services have become
varieties of paid work. This does not mean, however, that gender discrimination
is being fully overcome, or that it is disappearing. While vitally important to
society, reproductive labour is uninteresting and unproductive from the point
of view of the market economy, and as a rule is badly paid. The people employed
in these sectors (health care, social security and education) are mainly women.
The discrimination against these sectors and discrimination against women are
linked.
In
addition, there is still the localisation of housework, also mainly performed
by women. Domestic servitude is becoming less arduous, but as in the past
presents an obstacle to the full realisation by women of their creative human
potential. There is even a sort of dual discrimination appearing: while engaged
in professional activity in the fields of health care, education and social
work, activity which demands relatively high qualifications and full emotional
commitment, women cannot justify in material terms the fact that they are
burdened and preoccupied with work, since they receive relatively low pay.
Women bear the weight of the “double shift”, in production and in housework, as
well as often suffering from the burden, as women, of feeling themselves
unrealised.
Hence,
a woman may be deprived of many civil and political rights, in order for her to
perform the sole function of producing new citizens and subjects, while ensuring
that housework is performed and order maintained in the succession of property.
Or, she may be allowed entry to the field of social production, and forced to
bear a dual burden of domestic toil and paid work. But one way or another the
discriminatory nature of the productive role in which women are placed by
society, and of the social and economic conditions associated with this role,
create grounds for women to have common social interests.
In
my view, the particular role of women in the reproductive process, and their
leading role in reproductive labour, make it possible to speak of them as a
social group with shared social and political interests. I am opposed to
efforts to reduce the question of gender discrimination and the rights of women
to considerations of “the defence of motherhood and the child”. The issue thus
becomes: social conditions must be changed so that the reproductive function of
women is not, de jure or de facto, an obstacle to their
professional, social and personal realisation.
The
drawing of women into social production must be accompanied by social policy
measures which create adequate conditions for an optimal combination of labour
and parenting obligations. This, in my view, is the essence of the common
interests of women as a social group, and the main purpose of defending their
rights. And here, there are no fundamental, insuperable contradictions with
men. There are, however, a number of subtleties and complexities. Modern
feminism for the most part struggles with these psychological subtleties and
nuances, turning away from the class nature of discrimination and increasingly
shifting the accent to the sphere of psychology, transforming the struggle for
social justice and equality into a war of the sexes or a war against sex.
Meanwhile, the opponents of feminism also speak increasingly of the unchanging
essence of Male and Female, of predestination and innate tendencies, while
ignoring the social and historical essence of both the tendencies and the
predestination.
War
of the sexes?
There
is, however, a sociological fact that is hard to deny and which would seem to
refute all arguments concerning the social nature of the relations and
contradictions of the sexes. This fact makes it impossible to ignore individual
and gender conflicts, while concentrating solely on social and class
contradictions. In reality, feminist practice and emancipated behaviour by
women often encounter resistance from men precisely as members of a biological
sex, not of a particular class. We should not, however, be in a hurry to draw
conclusions.
Socioeconomic
relations, processes and contradictions do not exist outside the activity of
particular people, outside of their individual decisions and actions.
Individual people, meanwhile, are always members of a particular sex. The
biological characteristics of human beings, including their sexual needs, were
acquired socially in the process of historical development, but this does not
mean that they have disappeared from human motivations. Indeed, it is just as
well that they have not. The biological sense of sex can never disappear from
the structure of human motivation, but it always takes a particular social and
historical form, with definite historical boundaries. In individual and social
consciousness, the conditions and restrictions within which the relations of
the sexes develop take the form of relatively durable concepts, stereotypes and
illusions.
Modern
historical boundaries are such that the exploitation of one human being by
another remains, as do the dictates of profit as the goal of social production.
Under these historical conditions the idea of limiting the social opportunities
open to women, and of exploiting women (including sexually) is advantageous for
large numbers of men of all classes. Nor is this solely the case with
biological requirements. It is also advantageous in socioeconomic terms, since
it confers an advantage in competition for jobs and in the struggle for power,
ensures that services are provided and lowers the cost of satisfying sexual
needs. The socio-psychological advantages are also apparent; the sense that at
least the structure of your reproductive system gives you the right to assert
superiority over another being whose genitals are structured differently,
consoles the egoism and self-love even of “losers”.
All
this gives rise to a multitude of individual conflicts, shifting a social
contradiction onto the plane of personal drama, and sometimes of tragedy. So,
however appalling feminist slogans might seem, they did not appear out of a
vacuum. They are the individualisation of gender discrimination, when this
takes the form of the enslavement and oppression of women by men. This must not
be denied or ridiculed, and neither should sad examples be cited of wives
beating their husbands. Behind the individual one should try to see the social,
to understand what represents a private matter and a personal choice, and what
is the object of social changes.
Feminism
and freedom
I
share the displeasure of Dmitry Zhvaniya at the high-sounding nonsense uttered
by prominent feminists. But let us regard this as tactless expression,
incompetence on the part of the speakers, and not as proof that the theory
itself is absurd. We should not categorise everyone under the same heading, or
only confusion will result. Dmitry relies on the argument that Marxism and
Marxists have not accepted feminism. It would be better to say that they have
not accepted its bourgeois-liberal forms. Meanwhile, it is true that the
classics of Marxism responded sharply to feminist attacks, especially on the
topic of sexual freedom.
These
attacks, often shocking or even preposterous, did not emerge out of women’s
caprice, and were not the result of typically female hysteria. They were a
reaction to completely objective socioeconomic and sociocultural circumstances.
Women for a long time were deprived not only of control over their material
assets, and not only of the right to plan their destinies, but also of
ownership of their own bodies. This drove them to revolt, and revolt is often
irrational. Here, Dmitry speaks with respect of the anarchist contempt for life
and love for death… But it is precisely when feminism is at fault that men,
even progressive and democratic men, do not forgive it such distortions, exaggerations,
poses and absurd statements. Meanwhile, women have gone to the scaffold for
feminism just as men have gone there for revolutionary ideas. These too were
the ideas of freedom! The Jacobins even guillotined a number of feminists.
So
far, feminism has annoyed men, and in vain, since in essence, feminism in its
most rational form is not merely a sociological theory, and not just an
ideology for the overcoming of discrimination on the basis of sex. Feminism
also provides women with the training that is indispensable if they are to
develop the habit of freedom. Of a real freedom, for which you need to
understand yourself and others, to answer for yourself and for your actions, in
which you no longer make haste to hide behind a “stone wall”, and do not take cover
behind some “eternal destiny” or the whining excuse that “I’m only a woman.”
This kind of training can turn a woman not only into a lover and wife, but also
into a friend, comrade and partner. And is that such a bad thing?









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