seraphcelene: (by violetsmiles)
Hmmmm ...

So, I've been reading about feminism and all of its sundry categories and derivations. And ... wow ... Just ...

Radical feminism and feminist seperatism leave me totally floored. Although I recognize and deeply appreciate the necessity for radical extremes against which the center may be balanced, aiding, indeed inciting, the progression of social, political and economic change, I am stunned by the levels of pure-D hatred and intolerance.I always thought that I was a feminist, or at least had feminist leanings, but apparantly I am a brain washed, enslaved sheep complicit in the degradation and subservience that women are subject to.

I ought to be ashamed.

Too bad that I'm not.

Date: 2008-03-27 09:16 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] katharine-b.livejournal.com
Okay, warning: long comment ahead. First of all, yay for reading feminist theory & history!

I wouldn't identify myself as a radical feminist either, though I'm sure plenty of morons on the right would be happy to label me that way, because I do believe that patriarchal power structures exist, and I do believe that many men fear and despise women, whether consciously or not.

But oh, I can't say how sad it makes me when women our age see feminism as something too extreme to identify with. My students, too, said this all the time -- "I'm not a feminist, I don't think we need feminism any more," as if the decades since the '70s have wiped out all traces of the oppression of women. And I just don't get that!

I know what you're saying is different, and I can understand finding particular movements/moments within the history of feminism really offputting and strange from a contemporary perspective. (Which is not to say that there aren't still radical feminists and separatists writing & working today, just that it definitely seems more '70s/second-wave feminist to me than contemporary, on the whole.) But: I am a feminist. Sometimes, when I see the way men (or women) treat women, I am furious. I also live with a man and wear skirts; I'm not brainwashed, but I do think I have been shaped by my society to do and want certain things, and I'd rather be aware of it than not.

Do you read <a href="http://blog.iblamethepatriarchy.com/>Twisty</a>? She's a radical feminist who lives in Austin. I don't agree with everything she writes; she floors me sometimes, too. But I think that reaction, that feeling of being shocked back in your seat, is worth it, even if you'll NEVER agree with the thing that shocked you, for exactly the reason you say about the radical extremes broadening the center. I've read lots of theory that I don't agree with, but even some of the essays I hated have changed the way I think. Am I making any sense? I guess all I want to say is: I'm so glad you're reading and having this reaction. And, um, please be a feminist! ;)

Re: OMG!!!! LJ !!!

Date: 2008-03-28 03:04 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] katharine-b.livejournal.com
Ah, I understand much better now what you mean and how you were feeling about reading radical feminist texts. Reading something and feeling pretty sure that the author would think unkindly of you is... yeah, not good. Especially when you do share lots of concerns and goals with the author, and might otherwise sympathize with her, at least on some fronts.

Sorry that my first response missed your point somewhat -- I do just get so frustrated sometimes with my students and their reluctance even to consider labeling themselves as feminists. (ARGH.) Okay, better now.

And hey, a tongue-in-cheek response is good.

I have also really liked the Judith Butler I've read, on the whole! I read Undoing Gender for a theory class and liked it quite a bit.

Re: OMG!!!! LJ !!!

Date: 2008-03-28 04:26 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] katharine-b.livejournal.com
You know, the sad thing is, I've never been smart-mouthed with my students about feminism -- just standing at the front of the class and telling them I'm a feminist is shocking enough for some of them. Really. *headdesk* I swear, they're thinking: But you're not scary...

Good luck to your sister -- that must suck to deal with. Bah.

Date: 2008-03-31 05:50 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] my_daroga
my_daroga: Mucha's "Dance" (louise brooks)
I know exactly what you mean. I get this look from people--including my husband--when I claim feminist as a label because they're thinking of the above. And I always say, look--if people like me don't claim it, it's only claimed by people who, in my opinion, it's impossible to work with. What do I claim instead?

I think that once you've gone so far that there's no way to even discuss the matter--the way that extreme feminists decry the entirety of civilization--you've gone too far. What's the point if you refuse to relate to actual people?

Date: 2008-04-01 05:44 pm (UTC)From: [personal profile] my_daroga
my_daroga: Mucha's "Dance" (Default)
It's a singularly pessimistic view, too, to basically say we must reject all MEN as part of the problem (I know not everyone says precisely this, but it's so often implied). That doesn't seem like an approach I want to take to anything. I mean, how would that work in the Middle East?

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