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Essay:
Feminist
theory is faced with two strategic choices: either to
encourage the toleration of ambiguity, ambivalence,
and multiplicity (Flax) or, to develop
coherent analyses of the structures of power in society.
(footnotes
being formatted)
Feminist
theory is faced with two strategic choices: either to
encourage the toleration of ambiguity, ambivalence,
and multiplicity (Flax) or, to develop coherent
analyses of the structures of power in society.
Flaxs assessment of feminist theory as encouraging
toleration of ambiguity, ambivalence and multiplicity
is partly the outcome of feminists reaction to the generalised
view of womens universal inferiority, which came
out of Enlightenment thinking. Respect for rationality
and reason, the search for universals, result in arguments
of the type: my sex does not matter for I am human
just like you 1 This apology
only turns to the assertive I am a woman, and that
does not make me less equal argument at a much later
stage in the development of feminist theory.[Scott:142]
Both arguments make claims for rights, yet the type of
equality versus difference arguments which
they represent appear mutually exclusive. Scott has pointed
out the necessity of both
Feminists cannot give up "difference";
it has long been our most creative analytical tool.
We cannot give up equality, at least as long as we
want to speak to the principles and values of our
political system. [Scott: :142]
and a new combination of these are necessary to make
a feminist theory truly powerful However both are excluding
issues which make up the areas of power and oppression
other than gender. To say I am human just like you
excludes the differences in racial, sexuality, class or
economic status which might exist and may matter more
to the person addressed than gender. To say I am
a woman leaves open not only the previous differences,
but others such as place, time.
It is the attempt to clarify supposed universals such
as human and woman which has led to
attempts to differentiate between types of women, and
in doing so has at times appeared to weaken arguments
for womens equality with men. If woman is not one
category but many, where any theory makes claims which
ask for universality, it lays itself wide open not only
to criticism from every part of Woman which feels left
out, but to accusations of using theory only for its own
political ends. However, to attempt to be all inclusive
women" is historically, discursively
constructed, and always relatively to other categories
which themselves change; woman is a volatile
collectivity in which female persons can be very differently
positioned, so that the apparent continuity of the
subject of women isnt to be relied
on; women is both synchronically and diachronically
erratic as a collectivity, while for the individual,
being a woman is also inconstant, and
cant provide an ontological foundation.[Riley:
1988:2]
leads to a complexity which makes the possibility of
the political difficult.
Theory can only go so far: it can analyse, but cannot
remedy. This calls for political action, whether resistance
or revolution, where theory has to be available as a tool.
Even those who are willing, in pursuit of their own theory,
to deconstruct woman not just to multiplicity
but to invisibility
On a deeper level, however, a woman
cannot "be": it is something that does not even belong
in the order of being.[Riley:1988:2]
admit that when faced with the structures of power in
their everyday forms, the only way to achieve concrete
results is by ignoring the multiplicities which are Woman
and uniting as women
The belief that "one is a woman" is
almost as obscure and obscurantist as the belief that
"one is a man". I say almost because there are still
many goals which women can achieve: freedom of abortion
and contraception, day-care centres for children,
equality on the job, etc. Therefore, we must use "we
are women" as an advertisement or slogan for our demands.
[Kristeva: - in Tong::231]
Taking on the structures of power is obviously not the
same as forming coherent analyses of them; as Benhabib
has pointed out,
For feminist theory, the most important
"knowledge guiding interest" in Habermas terms,
or disciplinary matrix of truth and power in Foucaults
terms, are gender relations and the social, economic,
political and symbolic constitution of gender differences
among human beings[Polity Reader:78]
With the exception of patriarchy, the structures of power
themselves, as opposed to the gender relations between
and within them, are not addressed. Flax feels that the
task of feminist theory should be aimed towards considering
how our thinking may be influenced by and implicated in
existing power/knowledge relationships rather
than analysis of the structures [Flax:1990:54]. In any
case, the scientific reasoning which has been the claim
of most structural analysis which has examined power would
for feminism mean deferring again to the male ideas arising
from the Enlightenment. Flax points out that among other
issues, the acceptance as truth of knowledge acquired
from reason depends again on accepting reason as a basis,
and knowledge as neutral. [Flax:1990:41]
To analyse structures of power, there has to be some
acceptance of universality, if only in that power
itself has to be defined in an abstract way, in that it
must be the same definition in all situations, not power
is x when that of a parent compared to a child,
or y when that of a ruler compared to a subject
race. For this to be so, the language used has to be consistent
and transparent, and the parent, child
ruler subject race the same regardless
of factors such as time, culture, class or gender.
Any coherent structure has to face the issue of language:
there are no neutral concepts which enable us to deal
with power. Our ideas of neutrality lie hidden
behind the masculine, the scientific. Irigaray
has argued, for example, that women lack a language that
enables them to come to selfhood without being mediated
through men: any attempt to define the real
is again back in the Enlightenment issues. Woman is always
at base the Other; a lack ,whether of penis,
or power.
The female body is inscribed socially,
and most often , individually experienced as a lacking,
incomplete or inadequate body...Womens oppression
is generated in part by these systems of patriarchal
morphological inscription that is by a patriarchal
symbolic order or part by internalised representations
of this inscribed body [Gross, Philosophy Subjectivity
and the Body: Kristeva and Irigaray p142]
Creating an artificially neutral voice is
pointless in this context, especially when trying to uncover
the truth about power. Reasoning such as
...women have no political interests
apart from men...As citizens therefore they are sufficiently
represented already. To give them franchise would
just double the number of voters without introducing
any new interest[Anon in Riley: 70]
clearly shows the male self-interest, but the emphasis
placed on reason and rationality itself in that neutral
voice is a masculine emphasis. So if, as Flax points out,
reason and autonomy and freedom are linked together, and
freedom in Enlightenment terms includes the obedience
to laws based on reason, and if reason is universally
masculine, then all laws, all freedom will also be skewed.
Similarly the power which comes from equality is illusory,
in that when we (as women) want to be equal- it is equal
with men in that the norm is sexually specific[Phillips
:20], so that whether we are claiming equality with it,
or asking for our needs(=lacks, deficiencies) to be compensated
for, it is in reference to men. Whether this norm is universal
is not necessarily an issue it is usually at a
local level (whether the workplace, an industry, a country)
that the equality is sought.
But much postmodern, as well as feminist, writing has
been at pains to emphasise that there are no universals,
that the search for coherent structures is
itself not a valid one. Lovibond sees the main forces
of postmodernism as having as their common preoccupation
the aversion to the idea of universality.
This might seem to come closer to reality,
in that it becomes acceptable to examine local self-contained
discursive communities[Lovibond in Boyne
and Rattansi: 169], where power itself may also
be broken down, but the possibility of achieving universal
truths from these is slim. For, as Walby points out, the
dispersal of both power and identity makes it more difficult
to see even the extent to which one social group
is oppressed by another.[Walby:34] At this level,
the mechanisms of power are totally obscured. She claims
that the multiplicities into which postmodernism and postmodernist
feminism has fragmented class, race and gender have produced
an appearance of disorganisation and lack of structure.
She argues that by using an international dimension[Walby:43],
rather than a national or local one, a clearer view of
not only patriarchy, but gender, ethnicity and class can
be seen, thus enabling a more effective analysis.
Power, whether viewed as a structure, as in the old
Marxist traditions, or a discourse based on knowledge,
as in Foucaults analysis, is a concept which cannot
be analysed at any level without acknowledging the interactions
of the multiplicities which make up not only
groups but individuals. To attempt to disguise the multiplicities
is the equivalent of suppressing the differences, but
to concentrate on only these would make any theorising
impossible. Perhaps more important is the completion of
Flaxs quotation that not only should we tolerate
and interpret the ambivalence, ambiguity,
and multiplicity but we should also be looking at
why we continue to feel the need for imposing order
and structure no matter how arbitrary and oppressive these
needs may be[Flax:56]. In that this was for so long
the key aim of (male) philosophers, and both natural and
social scientists, the key issue may be why feminists
are still partly caught up in the project of the Enlightenment,
while decrying its authors.
© 1995 Franni Vincent
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