Sunday, May 17, 2020

How Is Socialist Feminism Different from Other Types of Feminism

Socialist feminism, which connected the oppression of women to other oppressions in society, became increasingly important in the feminist theory that crystallized into academic feminist thought during the 1970s. How was socialist feminism different from other kinds of feminism? Socialist Feminism vs. Cultural Feminism Socialist feminism was often contrasted with cultural feminism, which focused on the unique nature of women and highlighted the need for woman-affirming culture. Cultural feminism was seen as essentialist: it recognized an essential nature of women that was unique to the female sex. Cultural feminists were sometimes criticized for being separatist if they tried to keep womens music, womens art, and womens studies apart from mainstream culture. The theory of socialist feminism, on the other hand, sought to avoid separating feminism from the rest of society. Socialist feminists in the 1970s preferred to integrate their struggle against womens oppression with the struggle against other injustice based on race, class, or economic status. Socialist feminists wanted to work with men to correct the inequities between men and women. Socialist Feminism vs. Liberal Feminism However, socialist feminism was also distinct from liberal feminism, such as that of the National Organization for Women (NOW). The perception of the term liberal has changed over the years, but the liberal feminism of the womens liberation movement sought equality for women in all institutions of society, including government, law, and education. Socialist feminists critiqued the idea that true equality was possible in a society built on inequality whose structure was fundamentally flawed. This criticism was similar to the feminist theory of radical feminists. Socialist Feminism vs. Radical Feminism However, socialist feminism was also distinct from radical feminism because socialist feminists rejected the radical feminist notion that the sex discrimination women faced was the source of all of their oppression. Radical feminists, by definition, sought to get at the root of oppression in society in order to drastically change things. In a male-dominated patriarchal society, they saw that root as the oppression of women. Socialist feminists were more likely to describe oppression based on gender as one piece of the struggle. Socialist Feminism vs. Socialism or Marxism The critique of Marxism and conventional socialism by socialist feminists is that Marxism and socialism largely reduce womens inequality to something incidental and created by economic inequality or the class system.  Because the oppression of women predates the development of capitalism, socialist feminists argue that womens oppression cannot be created by class division.  Socialist feminists also argue that without dismantling womens oppression, the capitalist hierarchical system cannot be dismantled.  Socialism and Marxism are primarily about liberation in the public realm, especially the economic realm of life, and socialist feminism acknowledges a psychological and personal dimension to liberation that is not always present in Marxism and socialism. Simone de Beauvoir, for example, had argued that womens liberation would come primarily through economic equality. Further Analysis Of course, this is just a basic overview of how socialist feminism differed from other kinds of feminism. Feminist writers and theorists have provided in-depth analysis of the underlying beliefs of feminist theory. In her book Tidal Wave: How Women Changed America at Centurys End (compare prices), Sara M. Evans explains how socialist feminism and other branches of feminism developed as part of the womens liberation movement. Further Reading: Socialist Feminism, The First Decade, 1966-1976 by Gloria Martin  Capitalist Patriarchy and the Case for Socialist Feminism edited by Zillah Eisenstein  The Socialist Feminist Project: A Contemporary Reader in Theory and Politics edited by Nancy Holmstrom

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