The Best of Times, The Worst of Times: US Feminism Today
The Best of Times, The Worst of Times: US Feminism Today
The Best of Times, The Worst of Times: US Feminism Today
1
I deeply appreciate the many contributions to this work made by Jan Haaken,
Barbara Laslett, and Bill Resnick. I am also grateful to Perry Anderson and Ellen
DuBois whose critical reading certainly improved the article.
2
In New York City Women Tell The Truth: A Conference on Parity, Power and
Sexual Harassment, hastily planned by a coalition of more than 150 womens organiz-
ations after the Hill-Thomas hearings, was attended by 2,000 while another 2,100 were
turned away for lack of space. New Directions for Women, JulyAugust 1992, p. 3.
102
day; greater personal freedom is accompanied by a frightening vulner-
ability to exploitation and abuse.
The dilemmas facing women in the new gender order for the most part
cannot be resolved through expanding anti-discrimination legislation
and enforcement, no matter how broadly sex discrimination is defined.
Required solutionsa significant redistribution of wealth, reordered
priorities in and expansion of government spending and increased
regulation of employer practicesdirectly threaten powerful capitalist
interests. Feminist organizations, despite their success in defending and
extending the accomplishments of the second wave, have here been
frustrated at almost every turn. Second-wave feminism has come up
against a deep impasse that stretches across US politics, rooted in the
decline of working-class organization in the face of the employers offen-
sive and the increasing centralization and mobility of capital.
In the 1960s and 1970s it was possible for feminism to make gains
alongside a trade unionism that was for the most part bureaucratic
and demobilized. Today feminisms fate is tied to the fate of trade
unionism and other forms of collective resistance to corporate capital.
But the organizations for mobilizing such resistance are weaker than
ever before. Falling profits and competitive demands in an inter-
nationalizing economy have generated capitalist attacks on working
people and their institutions. Meanwhile, the Democratic Party has
no strategy for or interest in confronting corporate capital, and faces
no pressure from below that might even push it in that direction.
Feminist organizations, along with the other interest groupstrade
unions, civil rights organizations, environmental and peace groups
have tended to rely on building relationships with the Democrats in
order to wrest concessions from the state. Now they find themselves
tied to a party abjectly capitulating to capital. And they are powerless
to stop the attack on working-class standards of living and the roll-
back of pro-working-class state interventions demanded by corporate
capital in order to protect profit in an intensely competitive global
economy.3 Working-class women and communities of color have
born the brunt of this assault. The solution to the political impasse
facing feminism cannot come from feminists alone. It will require a
serious and disruptive challenge to capital, a broad and militant rain-
bow movement, including new, more social and political forms of
trade-union struggle and national political organization independent
of the Democratic Party.
3
The Clinton victory, or perhaps more accurately the Bush defeat, was welcome.
However, behind the rhetoric, Clintons programme exemplifies this capitulation to
corporate interests. Proposed spending on job creation, social services, and education
is quite small. Clintons reservations about the environmental and labour impacts of
the North American Free Trade agreement are minimal. Clinton garnered business
support unprecedented for a Democrat, partly because he promised government
investment in the domestic economy and an aggressive trade policy, while Bush
seemed ready to sell everything off to the multinationals.
103
legitimated by an ideology of inherent gender differences in talents
and capacities. Womens assignment to the care of dependent indi-
viduals wirhin the private household and their exclusion from public
life were reproduced actively and directly by various exclusionary
rules and practices (governing education, political participation and
the labour market) as well as marriage and property law and legalized
male violence against women. The historic victory of first-wave femin-
ism was to make women citizens. The historic victory of the second
wave has been to make women fully free sellers of our own labour-
power, by substantially dismantling the legal and normative edifice
which had mandated womens subservience in marriage, denied us
rights in our bodies and reproductive capacity, and legitimated our
economic marginalization. This victory has helped to force a reorgan-
ization of the gender ordermaterially, culturally, politically. In the
emerging gender order, womens subordination continues to rest on a
gender division of labour, but one that is reproduced (like the exploit-
ation of wage labour) behind the backs of women through an osten-
sibly gender-neutral system of contractual relationshipsin education
and employment, in sexual intimacy, in household formation.
Women are more free to negotiate their relationships and responsibil-
ities with employers and with men. And some, indeed a significant
stratum of affluent, well-educated women, strike relatively good
bargains. On the other hand, most women negotiate from a one-down
position.
4
The degree to which these solidarities are formed around heterosexual marriage
varies by race, class, sexual orientation. Cross-household networks including biological
and fictive kin are more typical of Aftican-American communities. The networks are
organized around a gendered division of labour, with women assuming primary
responsibility for making and maintaining care-giving relationships. Lesbians and gay
men may rely on friendship networks mote than family networks, although the drive
to legalize same-sex marriage and to force employers to provide benefits to domestic
partners as well as married couples reflects the importance of the household as a
survival unit.
5
In 1988, 35 per cent of married women with children under six were employed full-
104
But even in relatively wealthy countries with strong social-democratic
parties, state provision is still not extensive enough (nor the normal
workday short enough) to undercut the logic of a gender division of
labour in the household.6 Moreover, economic downturns always
lead to cutbacks in state provision, especially in labour-intensive
services (education, healthcare, childcare, care of the elderly, mentally
ill, disabled) and services which meet the needs of the least politically
well-mobilized constituenciesin other words, those services most
important to women and mothers.
5
(cont.)
time, while 18 per cent worked part-time, and 47 per cent were not working for wages
at all. Of course, this represented a phenomenal increase in workforce participation by
mothers of young children. In 1960, only 17 per cent of women in two-parent families
with children under six were employed. Sara E. Rix, ed., The American Woman, 1990
91, New York 1990, Table 17.
6
On this point, see Linda Haas, Equal Parenthood and Social Policy: A Study of Parental Leave
In Sweden, Albany 1992. The structure of careers also shapes choices about taking leave
and working part-time. For instance, in Sweden more men take parental leave in the
industrial and mining area of the North than in the predominantly white-collar South.
7
However, as many feminist economists have pointed out, differences in human
capital can acount for at most 5o per cent of the wage gap between men and women.
Francine D. Blau and Marianne A. Ferber, The Economics of Men, Women and Work, 2nd
edn., Englewood Cliffs 1992, pp. 193195.
105
the collective level, the double day undermines womens capacities for
self-organization in either economic or political arenas, accounting at
least in part for the persistently lower wages of female-dominated
occupations. Historically, womens rates of unionization have been
much lower than mens.8 Female-dominated professions have not
achieved the sort of political clout that has enabled male-dominated
professions such as medicine, law, engineering to use the state to pro-
tect their interests as employees as well as entrepreneurs.9
In many ways the 1980s were like the 1920s: periods of political reac-
tion and capitalist innovation. With capital on the offensive against
the working class, both decades saw fundamental economic disloca-
tions, increasing affluence and misery, celebration of hyperconsumer-
ism and self-seeking individualism, creating a sense of spiritual and
political disorientation in the majority and a marginalized Left. In
both decades working-class organization was decimated by transform-
ing productive structures: the skilled craft unions undermined by
mass-production industries, the industrial unions by an increasingly
mobile and internationalized corporate capital. In both periods the
organization of genderactual relationships between men and women
as well as their cultural representationchanged dramatically. And
in both instances, this reorganization of gender was consistent with
8
In 1985, 22 per cent of men and 13 per cent of women wage and salary workers
belonged to unions. Union Membership of Employed Wage and Salary Workers,
1985, Monthly Labour Review, May 1986, p. 45. Historically, mens rate of unionization
has been substantially higher than it is today.
9
This is not to ignore the lack of support and outright opposition from men that
women have faced when organizing. I am only arguing that overcoming this opposi-
tion is more difficult because of womens double day.
106
economic reorganization while also responding to womens struggles
against the old gender order .10
10
For this point, on the 1920s, Rayna Rapp and Ellen Ross, The 1920s: Feminism,
Consumerism, and Political Backlash in the Unired States, in J. Friedlander et al.,
eds., Women in Culture and Politics: A Century of Change, Bloomington 1986; on the 1980s,
Judith Stacey, Sexism By A Subtler Name? Postindustrial Conditions and Postfeminist
Consciousness, Socialist Review 96, NovemberDecember 1987, pp. 730.
11
I focus on middle-class women because they were the major social base for feminist
organization. For more on this point and on how these changes affected working-class
women and Black women, see J. Brenner and B. Laslett, Gender, Social Reproduc-
tion, and Womens Self-Organization: Considering the US Welfare State, Gender &
Society, vol. 5, no. 3, September 1991, pp. 311333.
12
Between 1950 and 1965, the labour force participation of older women increased
dramatically, from 37.9 per cent to 50.9 per cent for women aged 4554 and from 27.0
per cent to 41.1 per cent for women aged 5564. By comparison, increases in the pro-
portion of younger women working for wages between 1950 and 1965 (i.e. women
whose children were not yet in their teens) were much smaller (from 34 per cent to 38.5
per cent for women 2534 and from 39.1 per cent to 46.1 per cent for women 3544.
Sara E. Rix, The American Woman, 198889, New York 1988, Table 10.
13
Between 1960 and 1968 the number of women receiving college degrees doubled. Jo
Freeman, The Politics of Womens Liberation, New York 1975, p. 29. By the late 1960s
almost half of all women high-school graduates continued on to institutions of higher
education and almost one-quarter of all women 2021 years old were enrolled in
school. National Center for Educational Statistics, Digest of Educational Statistics, 1979,
Table 5 and 1992, Table 171.
107
professionals were key players in mainstream feminist organizations,
while the radical organizations of the second wave found a social base,
facilities, and institutional resources in and around colleges and
universities. 14
The new woman of the 1980s, the all too familiar superwoman, like
her counterpart of the 1920s, responds to the new opportunities and
experiences of affluent middle-class white women and selectively
incorporates feminist aspirations. She also reflects the changing reali-
ties of working-class womens lives due to the dislocations of a
restructuring capitalist economy. The long-term demand for female
labour, declining wages of working-class men, and the rise of indus-
tries marketing downscale as well as upscale services, further com-
modifying personal life, have increased the number of mothers
working a double day. The new gender order promises to transcend
the oppression of the male-breadwinner nuclear family and the gender
division of labour in private and public life. In place of gender roles
legitimated on biological grounds, the modern ideal family is made up
of freely contracting autonomous individuals negotiating exchanges to
meet each others material, emotional, and sexual needs and to care
for their children. Women (and men) can make their own identities,
competing on the labour market and choosing lifestyles, limited only
by talent, drive, personal resources and the ability to calculate the
timing of marriage, motherhood and career moves. The reality, of
course, is a bit different: the drudgery of a double day, the impover-
ishment of single parenthood, the emptiness of identities realized in
expanded consumption are hardly liberation. But if the new gender
order makes promises that will not be delivered, the question remains
whether, as in the period from the 1920s until the 1960s, women will
experience the lived contradictions of gender arrangements as per-
sonal failures rather than as issues to be resolved by collective action.15
Yet, even in this worst of times, US feminism has neither been forced
underground nor definitively marginalized as in the 1920s. No longer
a social movement, feminism can still mobilize women in a way that
would never have been possible in the twenties (or the thirties, forties
or fifties, for that matter). Demonstrations for the ERA held simul-
taneously in Washington, DC and Los Angeles in March 1986 mobil-
ized a hundred thousand women. Recent marches in the Capitol to
14
Educated working women who had participated in the surviving womens organiz-
ations of the 1950s were key organizers of the early mainstream movement. Leila J.
Rupp and Verta Taylor, Survival in the Doldrums: The American Womens Rights Move-
ment, 19451960, New York 1987. At the National Womens Conference in 1977 70 per
cent of the delegates were employed either by government or by non-profit social wel-
fare organizations, 63 per cent were employed full-time, 15 per cent had bachelors and
39 per cent had graduate degrees. Alice S. Rossi, Feminists in Politics, New York 1982, p.
81. Women professionals in social work and mental health mobilized resources for the
battered womens movement at both local and national levels. Kathleen J. Tierney,
The Battered Women Movement and the Creation of the Wife Beating Problem,
Social Problems, vol. 29, no. 3, February 1982, pp. 207220. For more on this point, see
Brenner and Laslett.
15
For one perspective on contemporary white working-class womens experience and
consciousness, see Judith Stacey, Brave New Families: Stories of Domestic Upheaval in Late
Twentieth Century America, New York 1990.
108
defend legal abortion had huge turnouts of six hundred to seven hun-
dred and fifty thousandthe largest womens rights demonstrations
ever held in this country.
16
White middle-class womens organizations with commitments to advancing
womens equality were never extinguished; but they had no mass base. Even in those
instances, such as the New Deal Administration, where an elite of professional and
activist women were well-posirioned politically, they could not turn personal influence
and expertise into legislative or policy victories. For a more complete discussion of this
point, see Brenner and Laslett.
109
roots, local, voluntary political activism. But women organized to
advocate for women are part of the political scene to a degree unpre-
cedented in our history.
Although poll data always have to be taken with a grain of salt, public-
opinion surveys seem to demonstrate strong support not only for
feminist ideas but for womens self-organization. In 1985 the majority
of women felt they did not have an equal chance with men in becom-
ing business executives or entering prestige professions. More women
felt that they were excluded from leadership responsibilities (46 per
cent) in 1985 than in 1970 (31 per cent). In 1974 64 per cent of women
had agreed that being taken care of by a loving husband was more
important than making it on ones own, compared to 48 per cent of
women in 1985. Although most women are working to support them-
selves and their families, the majority (66 per cent) would continue to
work even if they didnt have to. A marriage where husband and wife
share responsibilities is preferred to the male-breadwinner family by
57 per cent of all women.2o But many women are also conscious of
mens resistance to this idea: more than half agreed that men are will-
ing to let women get ahead, but only if women still do all the house-
work at home.21
17
Rayna Rapp, Is the Legacy of Second Wave Feminism Post-Feminism?, Socialist
Review, JanuaryMarch 1988, pp. 3137.
18
They dont yet have children or their older children demand less time. In 1988 33
per cent of all children born were born to mothers in their thirties compared to 19 per
cent in 1976. New York Times, 22 June 1989.
19
That Back/ash, Susan Faludis biting liberal feminist tract delineating the gains of
the conservative counter-attack against feminism, could also be a very successful best-
seller graphically expresses the current balance of forces.
20
Ethel Klein, The Diffusion of Consciousness in the United States and Western
Europe, in The Womens Movements of the United States and Western Europe, eds. Mary
Fainsod Katzenstein and Carol McClurg Mueller, Philadelphia 1987.
21
New York Times, 20 August 1989.
110
important decisions are being made. About 25 per cent of the
younger women, far more than in older groups, agreed that nothing
is slighted when a woman combines work, marriage and children.22
And even more of the women under forty-five (71 per cent) than over
forty-five (60 per cent) agree that a strong womens movement to
push for changes that benefit women is necessary.23
22
Of course, that so many women still perceive work/family conflicts tells us nothing
about how they respond to the dilemma. Some may conclude that women have an
obligation to put their families first, while others may believe that women deserve
more help from employers, government, spouses.
23
New York Times, 20 August 1989. Black women were more supportive of a strong
womens movement than white women (85 per cent to 64 per cent). In a 1989 survey,
62 per cent of women polled agreed that feminism has been helpful to women,
although only 33 per cent considered themselves feminists. Time, 4 December 1989.
24
New York Times, 21 August 1989. Women living alone may also feel isolated and
insecure, as Deborah Rosenfelt and Judith Stacey argue. (Second Thoughts on the
Second Wave, in Karen V. Hansen and Ilene J. Philipson, eds., Women, Class, and the
Feminist Imagination, Philadelphia 1990.) On the other hand, there is some evidence that
single motherhood reduces womens domestic burdens, since they no longer must take
care of husbands in addition to children. Heidi I. Hartmann, The Family as the Locus
of Gender, Class and Political Struggle: The Example of Housework, Signs: Journal of
Women in Culture & Society, vol. 6, no. 3, spring 1981, pp. 36694.
25
1980s youth culture, AIDs notwithstanding, incorporated and legitimized an ideal of
female sexual assertiveness. Like the flapper and the vamp, young women of the 1980s
seem to have embraced feminist demands for sexual self-determination but forgotten
the feminist critique of male power. Yet unlike the 1920s, even in the dominant male
111
images creates a far more diverse popular culture than the hegemonic
celebration of female domesticity and middle-class family life that
helped to marginalize feminism after 1920. Competing represent-
ations reflect and reinforce the contestation over gender identities that
second-wave feminism opened up.
Most women still read the traditional womens magazines (which have
a combined circulation of forty million compared to three million for
the newer magazines).28 But the seven sisters also reflect the new
realities of womens lives and shifting constructions of womanhood,29
Good Housekeeping began its New Traditionalist campaign [for the
contemporary woman who has made a new commitment to the tradi-
tional values (husband, children, home) that some people thought
were old-fashioned] by glorifying the past: My mother really knew
what she was doing, But the campaign quickly evolved to feature
well-educated women who have quit fast track for slower-track
careers: working as consultants, or establishing their own business in
order to better combine career with motherhood, hardly a return to
the traditional family, A recent ad showed a divorced and remarried
mother working full time in a traditionally male blue-collar craft job
(another unrealistic image given that only 2 per cent of those jobs are
held by women).30 While the seven sisters counsel women to deal
with conflicts between waged and unpaid work by putting family
first, the new magazines promise career women that market forces
are on their side: companies will become more flexible, offer more
25
(cont.)
domains of rap and rock, male power has not gone unchallenged, as contemporary
Black women rappers and white women rockers confront their male counterparts on
issues of violence against women and abortion rights. Ms., JulyAugust 1991, p. 93.
26
What Women Want to Read, Newsweek, 23 February 1987; Sara E. Stern, Work-
ing to Meet Womens Multiple Roles, Advertising Age, 3 October 1985.
27
1988 figures.
28
Newsweek, 23 Feruary 1987. In 1990, Ms., floundering politically and losing money,
was reorganized as an ad-free, reader-supported publication, with a relatively high
subscription and cover price. It has more than survived, claiming a circulation of
150,000, well above the break-even point of 75,000 readers, but well below the
readership of the other magazines. Deirdre Carmody, Power to the Readers: Ms.
Thrives Without Ads, New York Times, 22 July 1991.
29
Patrick Reilly, Service Magazines Adapt to Market, Advertising Age, 7 March 1988.
30
Time, 4 December 1989; New York Times, 10 May 199o.
112
benefits such as childcare, in order to hold on to their highly valued,
highly educated and experienced women workers.31
Combining work and motherhood is an issue for all women in the US,
but womens resources for coping differ widely by race and class. In
fact, over the 1980s the disparities in the lives and life chances of
women have grown.32 Educated women are reaping the benefits of
the struggle for equal access to education and employment that femin-
ists waged in the 1970s. The restructuring economy created increased
demand for workers in professional and managerial jobs and expand-
ing places in professional schools. But without other changes, eco-
nomic restructuring alone would simply have increased opportunities
for men in management and the professions.
31
Karen Rubin, founder, publisher and editor of Making It! The Careers Newsmagazine:
Now that a select group of companies have begun to introduce flexible policies, and
women in valued positions are setting precedents, observers predict that the varied
options will filter down throughout organizations, and from top companies to up and
coming firms until they are finally entrenched as part of the American way of life. Ms.,
March 1987.
32
These disparities exploded in Clintons face when he was forced to back away from
his nominee for Attorney-General, Zoe Baird, once it was disclosed that she had
illegally employed undocumented workers as live-in servants. Typically, mainstream
feminists leapt to Bairds defence on the ground that she had little choice and suffered
from the same dificulties as any other working mother seeking quality care for her
child. This opened the way for a completely unauthentic, but effective, anti-feminist
attack by conservatives in the name of the majority of working mothers.
33
Rix, 198889, p. 363. By 1990, women were 31 per cent of graduating dentists, 34
per cent of medical doctors and MBAS, 42 per cent of lawyers. Digest of Educational
Statistics 1992.
34
Rix, 198889, p. 222.
35
Rix, 198788, p. 218.
113
27 per cent of all professional/managerial workers, but 40 per cent in
1985; in 1975 women were 22 per cent of all managers, and 54 per cent
in 1986. The proportion of all women workers in professional and
managerial employment rose from 27 per cent to 32 per cent, while for
men the proportion declined from 34.6 per cent to 29.4 per cent. And
this increase was not due simply to expanding employment in tradi-
tional womens professions: schoolteaching, social work, nursing.36
The average earnings of professional/managerial women increased
faster than those of professional/managerial men between 1975 and
1986: 10.9 per cent compared to 8.3 per cent.37 It appears that
women were taking a larger share of the better paid professional/
managerial jobs in the 1980s.38
36
In 1989 44 per cent of women professionals worked in five predominantly female
professions compared to 59 per cent in 1970. Blau and Ferber, p. 123.
37
Barnet Wagman and Nancy Folbre, The Feminization of Inequality: Some New
Patterns, Challenge, NovemberDecember 1988, pp. 5659.
38
During the 1970s, the incomes of highly educated women workers increased at the
same rate as their male counterparts. Bur during the 1980s, womens incomes rose
much faster than mens. For instance, among full-time workers over 25 years old with
four years of college, between 1970 and 1979, womens median income rose 65 per
cent, mens median income 69 per cent in currenr dollars. Between 1979 and 1989,
womens median incomes almost doubled in current dollars, while mens incomes rose
72 per cent. See Digest of Educational Statistice 1991, US Department of Education, Table
357.
39
Rix, 199091, p. 217. According to a Business Week survey, entry-level jobs for
women MBAS paid 12 per cent less than those of their male counterparts.
40
Rix, 198788, pp. 216217.
41
ABA Journal, March 1989, p. 8.
42
One study of female executives found one in five never married, 20 per cent
separated or divorced, 46 per cent have children, while 99 per cent of male executives
are married and 95 per cent have children. Ms., 1987, p. 31.
43
Tamar Lewin, Partnership Awarded to Woman in Sex Bias Case, New York Times,
16 May 1990. Throughout the 1980s accounting and law firms had argued that partner-
ship involves such special personal relationships that courts cannot intervene in a
firms decision-making. The Federal Court found in favour of the woman plantiff who
had been denied partnership in Price Waterhouse, one of the nations largest account-
ing firms, although she had brought in more business rhan any of the other eighty-eight
all-male candidates, because the partners considered her unfeminine.
114
equally competing with men because of the persisting gender division
of labour and womens continuing responsibility for children (and
other family members).
115
The differential experiences and resources of women workers are
reflected in the market. There are upscale and downscale versions of
fast food and frozen food, childcare, healthcare and business wear.
For example, fees at Harvard Universitys seven childcare centres
average $750 a month, while the average clerical worker earns only
$1,500.49 Management employees at Campbell Soup Companys
headquarters office, dissatisfied with the quality of childcare provided
by Kindercare, a for-profit chain, forced the company to set up an in-
house programme. The new programme provided more parental
input, smaller group sizes, and increased pay for staff. Many working
parents lack the clout of these managers. About 25 per cent of all
children under five in daycare are in childcare centres. For-profit
chains like Kindercare, which operates 1,700 centres with low wages,
high children-to-staff ratios and high turnover, are taking an increas-
ing share of the market.50
49
Kenneth B. Noble, Union Seeking Affordable Day Care at Harvard, New York
Times, 28 February 1988.
50
New York Times Magazine, 29 January 1989. In 1988, the National Child Care Staff-
ing Study found the average hourly wage for chains was $4.10 per hour and the average
annual turnover of staff 74 per cent. New York Times, 27 June 1991.
51
New York Times, 30 July 1990. A study of pro-choice activists in California found
that over half earned incomes in the top 10 per cent of all working women, and 10 per
cent had an annual personal income in the top 2 per cent. Thirty-seven per cent had
undertaken some graduate work, 18 per cent were doctors, lawyers, or PhDs. Kristin
Luker, Abortion and the Politics of Motherhood, Berkeley 1984, p. 195.
52
Between 1960 and 1980 human services employment accounted for 41 per cent of
the increase in employment of women; 39 per cent for white women and 58 per cent
for Black women compared to 21 per cent for men. Women in the professions are
more than twice as dependent as men on social welfare employment. It is estimated
that 6070 per cent of all human services employment is directly or indirectly gener-
ated by state-sector spending. Steven P. Erie et al., Women and the Reagan Revolu-
tion: Thermidor for the Social Welfare Economy, in Irene Diamond, ed., Families,
Politics, and Public Policy, New York 1983.
116
workers, teachers, nurses, administrators, advocate for their pro-
grammes in the name of the working-class women and women of
colour whom they serve.
56
Major players include the Womens Legal Defense Fund, Womens Rights Project
of the American Civil Liberties Union, the Center for Reproductive Law & Policy,
NOWs Legal Defense and Education Fund, the National Womens Law Center. The
Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund (Latinas Rights Initiative), the
Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, and the NAACP Legal Defense
and Education Fund are also active litigators on issues pertaining to minority women.
118
insiders.57 At state and federal levels, organizations and their lobby-
ists form ad hoc coalitions whose membership shifts with different
legislative efforts.58
57
The Congressional Caucus for Womens Issues represents the Womens Lobby in
Congress. Formed as the Congresswomens Caucus in 1977, the group changed its
name to the Caucus for Womens Issues and opened membership to men in 1981 when
several Republican women refusecfto join after Reagans election, while others who
did join refused to challenge the President. Currently, 26 congresswomen constitute
the Caucus Executive Committee, while 126 Congressmen are members. In order to
coordinate better with the Caucus, in 1985 major organizations of the Womens Lobby
established a Council of Presidents that establishes a Womens Agenda for the Con-
gressional session. Rix, 199091, pp. 281282.
58
Twenty-six states have Womens Agenda Projects which coordinate lobbying in the
state legislatures and encourage women to run for office. Ms., vol. 1, no. 1 (July-August
1990), p. 90.
59
Multi-issue Washington-based organizations include the Center for Women Policy
Studies, founded in 1972, the National Womens Law Center (1981), the Womens Research
and Education Institute (1977), the Institute for Womens Policy Research (1987).
60
For example, the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, founded in 1978,
represents about three-fourths of the 1,200 crisis lines, battered womens shelters and
safe home networks in the country. Wider Opporrunities for Women, Inc. advocates for
a network of 300 employment and training programmes for women in forty states; the
National Womens Health Network represents 500 womens and health organizations.
61
Older womens organizations were important conduits for the womens lobby in the
early years of the second wave. They include the League of Women Voters, successor
to the National Woman Suffrage Association, founded in 1920, the National Feder-
ation of Business and Professional Women (1919), the American Association of Uni-
versity Women (1882). Although not as radical as the second-wave activists, many of
these organizations were founded originally for feminist reasons (and were repoliti-
cized in the 1970s). For instance, the National Council of Jewish Women was estab-
lished in 1894 after Jewish women wishing to participate in the Columbia Expositions
Parliament of Religions were admitted only as hostesses. United Methodist Women
was established to sponsor single women missionaries, after male church leaders
banned them from missions. (Anne N.Costain, Representing Women: The Transition
119
educational, social, and charitable activities, they also mobilize mem-
bers for political actions, primarily lobbying legislators and working
to elect sympathetic candidates.62
61
(cont.)
from Social Movement to Interest Group, E. Bonaparth and Emily Stoper, eds.,
Women, Power and Policy, 2nd edn., New York 1988, pp. 2647.) The National Council
of Negro Women was founded in 1935 to give political voice to Black womens
numerous social, professional, and educational organizations. Paul Giddings, When
and Where I Enter: The Impact of Black Women on Race and Sex, New York 1984, p. 205.
62
In 1989, for instance, the AAUWs volunteer Capitol Hill Lobby corps made more
than 1,000 visits to congressional offices. 1,500 AAUW members visited congressional
offices in June to lobby for the family leave bill; 50 AAUW division presidents lobbied
their members of congress to pass the Civil Righrs Act of 1990. AAUW, Outlook, vol. 84,
no. 3, fall 1990, p. 16.
63
For example, the American Nurses Associarion, the National Federation of Specialty
Nursing, the American Medical Womens Association (for women physicians and
medical students), the National Association of Social Workers, Women in Communi-
cations, National Association of Women Judges, Association of Women in Science,
the National Association of Women Deans, Administrators, and Counsellors, the
National Association for Female Executives. Six hundred organizations were founded
in the 1980s. Time, 4 December 1989.
64
For instance, midwives and nurse practitioners have organized to challenge doc-
tors total control of health services by expanding the kinds of practice they are
licensed to provide.
120
woman for vice-president on the 1984 Democratic ticket.65 Recently,
feminist lawyers organized within the American Bar Association to
pass a resolution putting the ABA on record in support of legal
abortion.
65
Hartmann, p. 174.
66
In the 1920s, equal-rights feminists initiated the drive to pass the ERA but were
opposed by social feminists concerned about the impact of the ERA on legislation pro-
tecting working women. This split continued into the 1940s when the Republicans (in
1940) and the Democrats (in 1944 over the objection of the trade unions, including
women trade unionists) adopted ERA in their platforms. By the late 1960s, trade-union
women had dropped their opposition to the ERA, partly because the 1964 Civil Rights
Act was already being interpreted to nullify gender-specific labour laws. (J. Mansbridge,
Why We Lost the ERA, Chicago 1986, pp. 819.) By 1980, right-wing Republicans had
forced the party to come out in opposition to the ERA. However, many Republican
women voters still favoured the ERA and worked for its passage in their states.
121
the Supreme Courts anti-abortion rights Webster decision opened a
new opportunity for the kind of single-issue nationally orchestrated
campaign that NOW prefers. Members and their dues dollars poured
into the organization, raising membership to 270,000 and the budget
to $10.6 million.67 Even so, NOWs activist base remains very small
relative to the total membership. Members can be mobilized for single
events or actions around highly visible issues, such as the massive
demonstrations for abortion rights held between 1989 and 1992.
Otherwise, the relationship between members and organizations is
similar to that of traditional interest groupsmost members pay dues
in order to be represented in Washington by paid staff, lobbyists, and
sympathetic legislators.
67
Oregonian, 1 July 1990. The first mobilizations were held in the spring of 1989, even
before the decision, in anticipation of an unfavourable ruling.
68
There are also 63 centres for research on women and 360 womens centres (provid-
ing services to students).
69
Perhaps nor surprisingly, the public universities have been more hospitable envir-
onments than the elite private universities and private colleges in general. The oldest,
most well-funded and largest Womens Studies programmes are located in public uni-
versities. Student interest is more likely to determine curriculum (and thus the intro-
duction of womens studies courses into departments) in those institutions where
departmental funding is enrolment-driven.
70
Four hundred and twenty-five programmes offer a minor, certificate, or area of
concentration. Similarly, while programmes are rapidly expanding at the graduate
level, from 23 offering graduate work in 1986 to 102 in 1990, almost all of these pro-
grammes offer a minor or concentration to accompany a graduate degree awarded
through a traditional department.
122
profession and to support feminist scholarship, holding annual con-
ferences and founding feminist journals. These journals, along with
several interdisciplinary publications, are crucial supports for femin-
ist scholarship and thus for the careers/jobs of feminist faculty.71 The
interconnected networks of feminist faculty, womens studies pro-
grammes and centres for research on women, professional associa-
tions, and publications create the institutional space for feminism in
academia. In this space, oppositional and marginalized faculty (radical/
socialist/Marxist feminists, out lesbians, women of colour) can some-
times find shelter. And from this space, feminist scholarship has
begun to permeate the disciplines, graduate education, and under-
graduate coursework.72
For all that, academic feminism retains a political cut. The impact of
71
The main interdisciplinary journals are Signs: A Journal of Women, Culture & Society,
Feminist Studies, National Womens Studies Association Journal, Frontiers.
72
As with feminism more generally, the glass is half empty and half full here. There is
disagreement about how well feminist scholarship is doing and how feminist is the
scholarship that has been accepted into the disiplines. Whatever the case, most would
agree that autonomous organizations and journals are still crucial for protecting and
promoting feminist scholarship.
73
Students and college graduates are the social base of the direct action groups
(Womens Health Action Movement, Womens Action Coalition) and the Third
Wave (a New York-based organization aspiring to be a national young womens
group) that have sprung up in response to the right-wing attack on abortion rights.
Campuses also supply volunteers for shelters and crisis lines, mainstream organiz-
ations such as the National Abortion Rights Action League, and electoral campaigns of
feminist candidates.
74
On the tensions between academics and activists in the National Womens Studies
Association, see Robin Leidner, Stretching the Boundaries of Liberalism: Democratic
Innovation in a Feminist Organization, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society,
vol. 16, no. 2, 1991, pp. 263289.
123
a feminist teacher on students cannot be underestimated. And femin-
ist faculty are far more likely than other faculty to be politically active
off-campus. Women academics and professionals contribute their
knowledge as consultants and advisors to womens programmes and
political organizations, helping to develop legislation and policy
recommendations and providing the scientific expertise necessary to
justify and sell reforms: feminist social workers in making the femin-
ization of poverty a political issue; feminist economists and sociolo-
gists in expanding the concept of equal pay to include equal pay for
jobs of comparable worth; feminist psychologists in promoting an
analysis of domestic and sexual violence that shifts responsibility from
women and children to men; feminist lawyers in challenging equal
treatment divorce policies around custody, alimony, child support.
75
Founded in 1896, the National Association of Colored Women represented fifty
thousand women in 28 federations and over a thousand clubs by 1916. Organizations
founded in the second wave, e.g. the National Black Feminist Organization (1973) and
the National Coalition of 100 Black Women (1981) were self-identified as feminist, but
also conscious of their political differences with mainstream white womens organiz-
ations. Giddings, pp. 95, 344, 353.
76
By the late 1980s, in the American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees 33 per cent of local union presidents and 45 per cent of local union officers
were women. Women were presidents of 15 per cent of Communication Workers of
America locals and 12 per cent of IUE locals. The number of United Autoworkers of
America locals with women presidents doubled between 1979 and 1987. Ruth Needle-
man. Women Workers: A Force for Rebuilding Unionism, Labor Research Review, vol.
7, no. 1, spring 1988, p. 6.
124
projects, and to directly challenge the male trade-union officials
around union policies and priorities. The women trade-union offi-
cials, who won the fight, focused CLUWs efforts on training women
for leadership and promoting them into union office.77
77
Although it has tremendous potential for mobilizing rank and file trade-union
women, until now CLUW activists, for the most part, have been staff and local officials.
For a history and analysis of CLUW, see Diane Balser, Sisterhood and Solidarity, Boston
1987.
78
CLUW NEWS (March-April and May-June 1992).
79
In 1987 only 50 per cent of ex-husbands paid tbe full amount owed their ex-wives,
while 25 per cent paid nothing. Improved enforcement makes the most difference in
living standards for women with more affluent ex-husbands, since the amount of the
award varies according to husbands earnings. In Oregon, a father earning $18,000
125
1974 Equal Credit Opportunity Act and the Business Womens Act of
1988 that required banks to apply the regulations of the 1974 act to
women seeking business loans; the Civil Rights Restoration Act of
1988 and the Civil Rights Bill of 1991 (in coalition with labour and
civil-rights groups) which had to pass with a two-thirds majority in
order to override the Presidents veto;80 1991 legislation permitting
(but not requiring) women in the military services to fly combat mis-
sions.81 The failure of the Equal Rights Amendment in the early 1980s,
although a significant loss, did not reflect decreased support for anti-
discrimination legislation. Requiring three-quarters of the states to
ratify, a constitutional amendment can easily be defeated by a minority
in this instance missing the three-quarters mark by only one state.
Except for Illinois, which required a three-fifths majority to ratify the
amendment, all the states that refused to support the ERA were either
rural or had large fundamentalist (or Mormon) minorities.82
79
(cont.)
pays $372 per month compared to $1,283 for a father earning $70,000. Oregonian, 29
July 1991. Given Black mens economic marginality, Black women are least likely to
benefit from higher mandated payments or more vigilant enforcement of court orders.
Mary Jo Bane, Household Composition and Poverty, in Fighting Poverty: What Works
and What Doesnt, ed. Sheldon H. Danziger and Daniel H. Weinberg, Cambridge,
Mass. 1987, p. 231.
80
The Civil Rights Restoration Act overturned a Supreme Court ruling that permitted
educational institutions to continue receiving federal funds although they had been
found guilty of discrimination (within three years of the ruling the Department of Edu-
cation had dropped or curtailed more than 500 discrimination complaints). The 1991
Civil Rights Act expanded remedies available to victims of job discrimination and
reversed several recent Supreme Court decisions that have made it more difficult to
prove discrimination in employment. However, the Act places a cap on the amount of
punitive damages plaintiffs can be awarded in cases of sex, although not race,
discrimination.
81
In 1948 Congress enacted legislation excluding women from all combat duties. The
new law would not affect combat jobs in the infantry or other ground units, or aboard
warships. Currently, Congress is considering legislation that would open all combat
positions to women.
82
J. Mansbridge, pp. 1314.
83
The picture below the federal level is a bit better. For example, by August 1987
twenty states and 166 localities had implemented some kind of comparable worth
adjustments for government employees (at an average cost of 24 per cent of state
payrolls) and an additional 26 states had begun to investigate wage disparities among
comparable jobs. Intersecting networks of female leaders have been important in the
passage of pay equity laws. Sara Evans and Barbara Nelson, Wage Justice: Comparable
Worth and the Paradox of Technocratic Reform, Chicago 1989, pp. 164, 173.
126
need childcare.84 Legislation that would improve womens incomes
such as requiring private employers to pay equal wages for com-
parable jobs or raising the minimum wage significantly has got
nowhere and proposals to increase welfare benefits were rejected
completely in legislation reforming the welfare system, the Family
Support Act of 1988.85
84
New York Times, 7 October 1992. There are still no national standards for staffing
and facilities. Federal standards are important because state standards vary widely,
depending on the balance of political forces in each state. For instance South Carolina
requires only one adult for every eight infants, Kansas and Maryland one for every
three infants. Texas requires one adult for every seventeen three-year olds, but in New
York and North Dakota there must be an adult for every seven three-year old children.
Tamar Lewin, Small Tots, Big Biz, New York Times Magazine, 29 January 1989. Clin.
ton has proposed increased funding for the HeadStart programme (childcare for poor
pre-school children), but even in the very unlikely event his proposal were to pass,
HeadStart would not be fully funded to serve all the potentially eligible children until
1998. Moreover, current per capita funding is not sufficient to guarantee programmes
of adequate quality.
85
Nearly two-thirds (63.4 per cent) of all minimum wage workers are women and 40
per cent of all women paid at hourly rates and maintaining families work in jobs that
pay at or just above the minimum wage. National Womens Law Center, Minimum
Wage and Women (March 1989). Over the last twenty years, the average welfare
grant has declined 27 per cent in real dollars. (New York Times, 30 March 1992, 88
Welfare Act is Falling Short, Researchers Say. Clintons proposals for welfare reform
similarly neglect this issue.
86
Susan M. Hartmann, From Margin to Mainstream: American Women in Politics Since
1960, Philadelphia 1989, p. 78. Some organizations simply promote women candi-
dates, while others, like the National Womens Political Caucus, endorse only women
candidates who are pro-choice, support public funding for abortions and birth con-
trol information, passage and ratification of the ERA and publicly and privately funded
child care programs. (CAWP News & Notes, vol. 9, no. 1, winter 1993, p. 16.) NOW gener-
ally funds women candidates, but will also support pro-feminist men. For example,
NOW endorsed Democrat Barney Frank rather than Republican Margaret Heckler for
Congress and stayed neutral in the 1990 Democratic Party primary race between
Diane Feinstein and John Van de Kamp for governor of California. (NOW supported
Feinsteins campaign against Republican Pete Wilson.)
87
New York Times, 24 May 1992; Rix, 199091, p. 387; National Womens Political
Caucus 1988 Convention Brochure.
127
high of fifty-nine.88 Thus, by 1992, many more women were poised to
challenge for national office. Contrary to the image of the 1992 women
candidates as outsiders, most were experienced activists with polit-
ical credentials and party connections.89 On the other hand, 1992
opened unusual opportunities for women candidates: the retirement
of many incumbents, redistricting, and a surge of contributions from
many women who previously had not donated to electoral campaigns,
increased the womens chances to win in both primaries and the
general election.90 In 1992, a record 108 women ran for Congress; 47
were elected to the House (an increase of 19 seats), five to the Senate
(an increase from two to six seats). Of course, women are still grossly
under-represented in Congress (6 per cent of the Senate, 11 per cent of
the House).91
88
AAUW Outlook (FebruaryMarch 1991), p. 10. Women have done better at state-wide
appointed office than elections, holding 23 per cent of all state cabinet appointments.
National Womens Political Caucus, Governors Appointment Survey, 198991,
April 1992.
89
CAWP News & Notes, pp. 12. Of the 24 women newly elected to the House of Repre-
sentatives in 1992, 17 had held elected office at the local or state level; three had held
appointed political offices. CAWP Fact Sheet, Women in the US House of Representatives 1993.
90
Most of the newly elected Senators and Representatives did not run against incum-
bents. Of the five new women Senators, three were elected to open seats and one
defeated an interim Senator. In the House, 22 of the 24 women candidates who won
election did not run against incumbents, while 23 incumbent women won re-election.
Reproductive Freedom News, Center for Reproductive Law & Policy, vol. 1, no. 10
(November 1992), pp. 34. On the surge of new donors, Wall Street Journal, 6 January
1992.
91
In 1992 2,373 women ran for state legislature (1,399 Democrats and 961 Republic-
ans). 1,374 won election (59 per cent of the Democrats; 57 per cent of the Republicans),
increasing their proportion of state legislators to 20 per cent. CAWP Fact Sheet.
92
In 1992, only six of the 54 Republican women candidates running in the primaries
for the House of Representatives opposed abortion. New York Times, 24 May 1992.
93
At the 1992 Convention, women party activists unsuccessfully organized to chal-
lenge the anti-abortion plank in the party platform. In addition to forming an organiz-
ation, the National Republican Coalition for Choice, they established a Republicans
for Choice PAC (to fund and endorse candidates) and a new fund-raising group, WISH
(Women in the Senate and the House) to raise money for Republican pro-choice
candidates. Although Bushs defeat will probably open up some opportunities for the
moderates, the right wing is very well-entrenched at the grassroots of the party.
128
Party, reconstituted in 1983, sponsored several projects to help
develop candidates and prepare speakers. A third of the major speak-
ers at the 1984 Convention were women. In 1988 the proportion of
women delegates fell back to 35 per cent, perhaps reflecting the
increasing control of state party organizations by the Right. Serious
arm-twisting by the White House in 1992, although apparently begun
rather late in the game, did push the number of women delegates back
up to 43 per cent. Efforts are already under way to do better in
1996.94 In 1986, more women ran for Congress as Republicans than
as Democrats (37 against 33).95 It appears, though, that the political
dominance of the Right has retarded the emergence of Republican
women candidates. By 1992, the number of women Republican
candidates for Congress remained at 37, while 71 women ran on the
Democratic ticket.96
From the early 1970s, NOW, NWPC and NARAL organized to wield
influence in the Democratic Party. Rules adopted in 1976 mandated
that women would be half of the delegates. At the 1980 Convention,
20 per cent of the delegates were members of either NOW or NWPC
and by 1984 feminists had clear control of the party platform.97 In
1988, partly because of rule changes, feminists faced more significant
opposition, but they actually won a platform fight with Dukakis
forces.98 However, Dukakis, like many other Democratic candidates,
did not campaign on the platform. Following the November election,
disaffection with the Dukakis campaign and the party was running
deep among NOW militants. In addition to the marginalization of
feminist issues in the campaign, the NOW leadership was concerned
by the clear commitment of the Democratic leadership to undercut
the power of constituencies within the Democratic Party and return
control to party elites. Molly Yard, president of NOW, caused a brief
flap by calling for the formation of a womens party. Yard had no
intention of leaving the Democrats, but was attempting to increase
feminist leverage by threatening to bolt. NOW members, however,
took her proposal seriously. NOW has the most radical and best
organized membership of any of the mainstream feminist organiz-
ations. Chapters are relatively small and they vary politically. But
chapter activists go to the annual conferences and elect the national
officers. Responding to the militants (and perhaps recognizing an
opportunity to pressure the Democratic Party from the outside), at
the 1989 national conference the NOW leadership supported a resolu-
tion to investigate the possibility of forming a third party based on an
Expanded Bill of Rights for the 21st Century.99 At the NOW annual
94
J0 Freeman, Whom You Know versus Who You Represent: Feminist Influence in
the Republican and Democratic Parties, in Katzenstein and Mueller, p. 232. Personal
communication from Karen Johnson, National Federation of Republican Women.
95
Ruth B. Mandel, The Political Woman, in Rix 198889.
96
Although half of the Democrats won election, only one-third of the Republican
women candidates won. CAWP News & Notes, p. 24.
97
Freeman, pp. 230, 234.
98
In 1988 49 per cent and in 1992 49.7 per cent of the delegates were women. Demo-
cratic National Committee Office, personal communication.
99
The Bill of Rights outlines a broad social-welfare agenda including freedom from
discrimination based on sex, race, sexual orientation, religion, age, disability; rights to
129
conference in the summer of 1992, the membership voted to endorse
the formation of the 21st Century PartyThe Nations Equality Party
and recommended that NOW Political Action Committee contribute
funds. The resolution emphasized that NOW PAC should continue to
support feminist candidates of all political parties and that nothing in
the resolution will prevent or inhibit NOW members from endorsing
and working for womens rights candidates of other parties, or
prevents NOW members from affiliation or activity with other polit-
ical parties. This wording makes clear that NOW is pursuing an
inside/outside strategy, which centres on shifting the Democratic
Party to the left rather than breaking from it. In the months between
the convention and the November elections, NOW PAC ploughed
money into the campaigns of Democratic women candidates.1oo
99
(cont.)
a decent standard of living, a clean and protected environment, freedom from violence
including the violence of war.
100
In 1992, NOW PAC contributed funds and staff to Lynn Yaekels successful come
from behind primary race against a conservative Democrat. Yaekel went on to
narrowly lose to Arlen Specter, who led the prosecution of Anita Hill during the Senate
confirmation hearings on Clarence Thomas. NOW contributed funds and volunteers to
African-American feminist Carol Moseley Braun who defeated incumbent Alan Dixon
in the Illinois primary election for Senator. Dixon was one of two northern Democrats
who had voted to confirm Clarence Thomas. Patricia Ireland, The State of Now, Ms.,
July-August 1992, p. 27. Overall, NOW contributed more than a half-million dollars to
women Democratic Party candidates in the 1992 elections. CAWP News & Notes, p. 11.
101
There are now 42 PACs which either give money predominantly to women candidates
or have a predominantly female donor base. There are 11 national PACs. Four of the 31
state/local PACs focus on women of colour (HOPE-PAC, Latina PAC in California; Aint I a
Woman PAC in Pennsylvania and African American Womens PAC in Los Angeles). In
1990 womens PACs contributed $3.1 million, 68 per cent to female candidates. In 1992 the
PACs raised $11.8 million, 98 per cent for female candidates. CAWP News & Notes, pp. 1011.
130
the principle of individual liberty, arguing that women have a
fundamental right to bodily autonomy (keep your laws off my body)
and, more broadly, that control over reproductive capacities is
necessary for women to be self-determining. That today so many
women understand abortion rights this way is an accomplishment of
the womens movement. On the other hand, fears about womens
sexual and social autonomy have been central to the anti-feminist
backlash and the growth of the New Right. The New Right first
discovered sexual politics as an organizing tool in their fight against
the Equal Rights Amendment, when they argued that the ERA would
force women into the draft, legalize homosexual marriages and
guarantee abortion on demand.102 STOP ERA mobilized the same sorts
of women now so prominent in the campaign against legal abortion,
whose activists are 80 per cent female: housewives/mothers and
women with strong religious convictions.103 While the anti-abortion
forces grew in organization and visibility, most women felt their right
to abortion would be protected by the Supreme Courts 1973 Roe v.
Wade decision making unconstitutional laws limiting a womans
right to abortion in the first two trimesters of pregnancy.104 Feminist
activism around abortion dropped off, leaving the field open for
the anti-abortion forces. The pro-life movement made consistent
gains in passing restrictive legislation at the state level and, perhaps
more importantly, successfully reframed the public discourse on
abortion.
102
Although the Right has successfully organized a constituency through sexual poli-
tics, the country is not more anti-abortion or anti-gay than in the past. Despite the
highly visible attacks on abortion clinics and the unprovoked attacks by youth gangs
on gay men in many cities, despite the hysteria around AIDS, almost two decades of
legal abortion and the gay rights movement have moved attitudes in a more tolerant
direction. Two-thirds of adults under 45 (compared to only one-third over 45 ) know
someone who had an abortion; 58 per cent of them favoured keeping abortion legal as
it is now. E.J. Dionne, Jr., Poll on Abortion Finds the Nation Is Sharply Divided,
New York Times, 26 April 1989. Opinion polls taken since 1977 show support growing
for equal job opportunities for gays and lesbians71 per cent in 1989 compared to 59
per cent in 1982 and 56 per cent in 1977. On the other hand, homophobia is still quite
strong: only a minority said homosexuals were appropriate as high school teachers,
clergy or elementary school teachers (47, 44 and 42 per cent) although these levels of
approval are also higher than in 1977. New York Times, 25 October 1989. Again,
national data conceal important variations. While protestant fundamentalist churches
are at the centre of anti-gay political mobilizations, the Episcopal Church recently
approved the ordination of a lesbian living in an open committed monogamous rela-
tionship. Peter Steinfels, Lesbian Ordained Episcopal Priest, New York Times, 6 June
1991. Campaigns to extend employee benefits to include partners (gay and hetero-
sexual) as well as spouses have won in some instances with private employers and local
governments. Phyllis Kriegel, Making a Federal Case: Lesbian and Gay Couples Gain
Spousal Benefits, New Directions for Women, May-June 1991, p. 1. Four statesConnec-
ticut, Massachusetts, Wisconsin and Hawaiihave passed gay rights laws. Sojourner,
May 1991, p. 29.
103
Luker, p. 138; Hartmann, p. 143. Religiosity (measured by frequency of church
attendance and whether respondents think religion is very important or extremely
important in their lives) is one of the strongest predictors of opposition to abortion.
M. Combs and S. Welch, Blacks, Whites, and Attitudes Toward Abortion, Public
Opinion Quarterly 46 (1982), pp. 51020.
104
Roe v. Wade argued that the state had a compelling interest in foetal life only in
the last trimester of pregnancy. Regulation of abortion in the second trimester was
allowed, but only to protect the health of the pregnant woman.
131
In 1977 Congress passed, and President Carter refused to veto, the
Hyde Amendment which excluded abortion from the free healthcare
available to women on welfare. That law was found constitutional by
a pre-Reagan Court. Only thirteen states have passed legislation
directing the state government to replace the lost federal funds for
poor womens abortions. Parental notification and consent laws,
some more punitive than others, were passed in thirty-seven states.
Several states passed legislation banning publicly funded hospitals
from performing abortions.105 The Reagan administration promul-
gated a gag rule, prohibiting healthcare providers who receive
federal funds from discussing abortion as an option with pregnant
patients.106 Such laws and regulations predominantly affect young
women and poor women who are dependent on public institutions
rather than private doctors for their healthcare. In rural states threats
against local doctors have pressured them into refusing to perform
abortions. Women have to travel hundreds of miles to the one abor-
tion clinic available, usually in the main City.107 Blockades, occupa-
tions, and bombings of abortion clinics were widespread during the
1980s, and forced clinics to close, again mostly in smaller cities and
rural areas.1o8 Thus the anti-choice movement has been most success-
ful in denying or limiting access to abortion for the most politically
powerless women: rural women, young women, poor women, women
of colour.
132
Pro-choice forces have demonstrated considerable strength. It seems
clear that the current Supreme Court will not strike down Roe. In
deciding on a restrictive Pennsylvania law, three Reagan/Bush
appointees, OConnor, Kennedy and Souter, joined Roe supporters
Stevens and Blackmun in striking down a spousal notification provi-
sion and argued against overturning Roe. The justices acknowledged
that their decision was affected by the visible waves of protest.
Arguing that an entire generation has come of age free to assume
Roes concept of liberty in defining the capacity of women to act in
society and to make reproductive decisions, a reversal would, they
said, cause significant damage to the stability of the society as well as
profound and unnecessary damage to the Courts legitimacy. It is
unlikely that they will find constitutional the state laws criminalizing
abortion which will come before them in 1993. On the other hand,
OConnor, Kennedy and Souter left the door open for many different
kinds of restriction, arguing that the states could regulate abortion at
any time during pregnancy in order to protect foetal life, even if the
effect was to make it more difficult or more expensive to procure an
abortion, as long as the regulation did not impose an undue burden.
This new undue burden standard was interpreted to uphold provi-
sions of the Pennsylvania law which required a minor to have paren-
tal consent, mandated a 24-hour waiting period and a so-called
informed consent requirement that physicians must inform a preg-
nant woman seeking abortion about the medical risks associated with
carrying the pregnancy to full term, inform her of the possible
detrimental effects of abortion, show her state-prepared materials that
include pictures of foetuses, lists of alternatives to abortion, and
explain that the father is legally required to assist in supporting the
child.109
109
In 1983, similar resrrictions had been found unconstitutional by a different Supreme
Court (Akron Center for Reproductive Health v. City of Akron). The concept of
informed consent originated with the patients rights and womens health move-
ments. In this instance it has been coopted and distorted by the anti-abortion forces.
110
In 1989, 11 state senates and 13 state assemblies were likely to vote for legal abortion
but by 1990 22 state senates and 24 assemblies were in the yes column. NARAL, Who
Decides?
133
continued this trend, the overall picture remains cloudy at best. In
1990, only twenty states were solidly pro-choice (both houses support-
ing legal abortion), while seventeen could be expected to pass legisla-
tion outlawing abortion if Roe v. Wade were overturned. In a much
larger number of states, the anti-abortion forces seem strong enough
to pass parental consent, waiting periods, biased counselling require-
ments, and other laws restricting access to abortion.
However important legal rights to abortion may be for all women, for
111
The limitations of family privacy as a defence were also clear in the Courts Hard-
wick decision. Following the logic of Roe and Griswold, which ruled unconstitutional
state limits on married couples access to contraceptives, the Court upheld Georgias
criminal statute against sodomy (when practised by homosexuals) on the ground that
privacy rights inhered only in family, marriage, or procreation. R.P. Petchesky, Abor-
tion and Womans Choice, rev. ed., Boston 1990, p. 315. For discussion of the progressive
and conservative aspects of privacy see Petchesky and Rhonda Copelon, From Pri-
vacy to Autonomy: The Conditions of Sexual and Reproductive Freedom, in Fried.
112
The Fund for the Feminist Majority, founded by former NOW president Ellie Smeal,
recently received ten million dollars from a wealthy supporter, to organize for abortion
rights. As the abortion issue heated up, Smeal used Fund resources to organize two
national campaigns, one against parental notification and consent laws and another
for legalization of RU486, the abortion pill currently banned because of pressure from
the Right. Both campaigns were run in the top-down method Smeal pioneered in NOW.
134
most women real choice about childbearing requires much more than
the right to make decisions about carrying a pregnancy to term. It is
understandable that, facing a movement which wants to make mother-
hood compulsory and control womens sexual expression, feminists
have emphasized womens right to avoid pregnancy. For the young,
white, women college students and college graduates who have
flooded into the pro-choice movement, being denied access to abor-
tion is so enraging precisely because it is a flagrant violation of the
privileges and opportunities they have come to assume are theirs. But
for working-class women, poor women, and women of colour, the right
to be mothers is also under attack. Lack of quality health care and
childcare, homelessness, low wages, the social isolation and poverty of
single parents, pressures on women in the welfare and public health-
care system to get sterilized, all deny many women the material
conditions necessary to have children and to raise their children in
dignity and health.
135
And only a movement with a broad political agenda can respond to
the deep ambivalence about abortion that the anti-abortion move-
ment has both fostered and exploited. While fewer than one in five
women and men in the United States want to ban abortion entirely,
only 31 per cent will agree that abortion should be legal under any
circumstances. Those in the middle believe that women pregnant
from rape or incest, and women whose pregnancies threaten their
physical health or life, ought to have the right to abort. The exceptions
for rape and incest indicate clearly how anxieties about womens
sexual autonomy shape the way people think about abortion: only
women who are forced to engage in sexual intercourse should be freed
from bearing the consequences of an unwanted pregnancy.115 Fears
about women abandoning their care-giving roles are also expressed in
the pervasive sense that abortion should not be too easy or too
available. Fewer than half of those polled agree that in cases where
the woman feels she cant care for the child or the pregnancy
interferes with work or education a woman should be allowed to get
an abortion.116
The fight over abortion is not only about whether women should or
should not have the right to make a decision. It is about the condi-
tions under which women make decisions, the reasons women make
these decisions, and the consequences of these decisions. And it is the
symbolic focus of a much broader conflict. One can hardly imagine a
more compelling representation of vulnerability than the defenceless
and innocent foetus. Invoking womens responsibilities to the unborn
child and decrying convenience abortions, the anti-abortion move-
ment manipulates real concerns about care-giving, real fears about
economic survival, real anxieties about the loss of community and the
alienation of daily life in late capitalism.117 The right-wings visiona
return to the world we have lostis so compelling, in part, because
it is the only other worldview available. Many women reject the anti-
abortion movements reactionary model of community based on tra-
ditional family households and gender roles. But they are also suffer-
ing in the world as it is. Rather than offering women an alternative
vision, the single-issue pro-choice movement has tried very hard to
narrow the debate, to shift attention away from complex and con-
troversial questions of moral obligation and social responsibility, of
the distribution of social and economic resources, of the appar-
ently inevitable losses that women are experiencing in moving from
115
See Petchesky for a development of this point.
116
The right-wing attack on lesbian and gay rights combines similar elements. On the
one hand, anxieties about maintaining sexual boundaries and sexual order are
expressed in the constant invocation of homosexuality as promiscuous and perverse
(i.e. not tied to reproduction). On the other hand, campaigns focus on gay school-
teachers and adoptive parents, invoking images of innocent children and our respon-
sibility to protect them (from the presumed dangers of homosexual recruitment and
sexual abuse).
117
For more on this point, see Alan Hunter, Children in the Service of Conservatism:
Parent-Child Relations in the New Rights Pro-Family Rhetoric, Institute for Legal
Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Working Papers Series 2, April 1988. On
how these dilemmas bring women into the anti-abortion movement, see Faye D. Gins-
burg, Contested Lives: The Abortion Debate in an American Community, Berkeley 1989; and
Luker.
136
traditional to new gender roles. Yet these concerns are at the centre of
many womens lived experience. In place of compulsory motherhood,
late capitalism offers the insecurities of an increasingly predatory and
competitive economy, disintegrating neighbourhoods, impoverished
public institutions. In place of unpaid care by wives, daughters and
mothers in the familyKentucky-fried childcare, kids left too much
on their own, the isolation of single people, an abandoned old age. In
place of sexual repression and hypocrisythe commodified sexuality
of MTV, date rape, and teen-pregnancy.
Classic liberalism argues that women are not essentially different from
men and that equality depends on womens capacity to freely compete
and contract, thus requiring equal treatmenti.e. without prejudice
or favour. This claim has undergirded real gains for womennot
only through dismantling exclusionary practices118 but also by
expanding the definition of discriminatory behaviour, for instance, to
include unequal pay for comparable male and female jobs and sexual
118
Most recently, the Congress agreed to allow women to fly combat missionsa first
step toward opening combat roles to women in the military.
137
harassment.119 In the mid 1970s feminist organizations launched a
long educational and legal campaign to define sexual harassment as a
form of sex discrimination in employment and education covered by
the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The first speakout, organized by Working
Women United, a grassroots group in Ithaca NY, was held in 1975; in
1977 NOW established a project on sexual harassment in education; in
1980 womens organizations prevailed upon the EEOC to issue guide-
lines and regulations against sexual harassment for employers. The
Supreme Court ruled in 1986 that sexual harassment is a form of sex
discrimination, making employers and educational institutions liable
for incidents.12o Yet feminists have also discovered that equal treat-
ment does not always establish the conditions for equality.
119
In 1984 only four states had carried out pay equity adjustments for state workers
and 27 had taken no action; by 1988 20 had begun to make adjustments and only seven
had taken no action at all. National Committee on Pay Equity, 1988, p. 14. Pay equity
legislation that would apply to private sector workers has made no headway at either
the state or federal level. Rix, 199091, p. 392.
120
Anita Hills nationally televised testimony raised awareness among both employers
and women, even though the Senators appeared to disbelieve her. Following the hear-
ings, complaints to federal and state regulatory commissions increased substantially,
while many employers began or expanded programmes to educate management and
workers about the issue. Washington Post, 12 March 1992.
121
These policies have been widespread. Twenty per cent of the large chemical and
electronics companies in Massachusetts restricted womens but not mens employment
options on the grounds of possible risk to their reproductive health in 1988. Rix,
199091, p. 50.
122
This case was brought by the United Autoworkers Union, who argued that both
men and women should be protected from the harmful effects of lead, and no one
should have to choose between their health and their job. But because the case was
fought and decided substantively on the issue of protection versus equality, at least
some feminists die not regard the decision as a victory. See Ruth Rose, What Feminist
Victory in the Court?, New York Times, 1 April 1991 and Nancy Reeves, letter to the
editor, New York Times, 24 April 1991. For an overview, see Cynthia Daniels, Gender
Difference, Fetal Rights, and the Politics of Protectionism: Workplace Issues, in Fried.
123
For instance, Delawares 2/20 alimony law limited to a maximum of two years if a
couple had been married for less than 20 years. A coalition of women attorneys, the
Womens Section of the American Bar Association and the state Womens Commission
138
of young children was always awarded to the mother has been
abandoned on the ground that automatic preference for the mother
violates the principle of equal treatment before the law.124 On the
argument that all workers should be treated equally, employers have
resisted laws mandating maternity leave, and under womens equal
right to contract, lawyers have defended surrogacy, the practice of
hiring women to bear children for infertile couples.125 In response,
some feminists have argued against equal treatment strategies on the
ground that women are different from men and their special needs
and capacities should be recognized and protected. They argue that
asserting the value of the mother-child bond or the uniqueness of
pregnancy would defend womens claims to maternity leave, alimony
and child support, rights to have custody of their children in divorce
or surrogacy cases.126 Opponents of special treatment strategies have
argued that they tend to reproduce the gender division of labour in
the home and reinforce an essentialist ideology of sexual difference.
Proponents claim, however, that equal treatment approaches accept
male-defined, abstract standards of justice and attempt to assimilate
women to male norms.
123
(cont.)
drafted and successfully passed a revision that set the allowable years for alimony at 50
per cent of the marriages length. AAUW Outlook, January-February 1989, pp. 2021.
124
Martha Fineman, Dominant Discourse, Professional Language, and Legal Change
in Child Custory Decisionmaking, Harvard Law Review, vol. 101, no. 4, February 1988,
pp. 738739. The impact on women is not primarily that they lose custody of their
children (although fathers appear to be winning more contested custody cases than in
the past) but that the possibility of winning custody has given men increased leverage
in bargaining divorce settlements with their ex-wives. Ellen Lewin, Claims to Mother-
hood: Custody Disputes and Maternal Strategies, in Negotiating Gender in American
Culture, ed. Faye Ginsburg and Anna Tsing, Boston 1990. Obviously, this hits women
from the middle and upper class hardest, since most working-class and poor families
have little property or wealth to bargain over, although working-class women do have
to bargain about the amount of child support awards.
125
Corporations challenged a California law requiring employers to grant unpaid
maternity leave on the grounds that employers who did not provide similar benefits
for other workers with other kinds of temporary disabilities would be discriminating
against male and in favour of female employees. In California Savings and Loan Asso-
ciation v. Guerra, the Court upheld the maternity leave law. Lise Vogel, Debating
Difference: Feminism, Pregnancy, and the Workplace, Feminist Studies, vol. 16, no. 1,
spring 1990, pp. 932. On surrogacy, see Carmel Shalev, Birth Power: The Case for Surro-
gacy, New Haven 1989.
126
For representative arguments see Phyllis Chesler, The Sacred Bond, New York 1988,
and Mothers on Trial, New York 1986.
127
Throwing Like a Girl and Other Essays in Feminist Philosophy and Social Theory, Bloom-
ington 1990, p. 134.
139
assimilate women to a male standard (equal treatment) nor universal-
ize gender differences (special treatment) have been argued as a way
out of the dilemma.128 Men do not get pregnant and pregnancy is not
an illness. But men are likely to experience other conditions which
affect their participation at work. Justice requires all employees to
receive temporarily changed job assignments or paid time off when
changed circumstances require it, not dismissal or lost wages. The
demand for paid parental leave assumes that men as well as women
have family responsibilities. It also recognizes that employees are dif-
ferentsome are raising children, some are not. These differences
should be recognized rather than holding all employees to the same
standard-treating them as if they had no responsibilities for children
(or as if the employer had no responsibility for subsidizing and sup-
porting the raising of children). In divorce a rule that gave preference
for child custody to the primary parent would not assume a special
mother/child bond. It would also prevent men from using contested
custody as a lever against their ex-wives, because in the vast majority
of cases, wives are mainly responsible for caring for their children.129
128
Deborah L. Rhode, Definitions of Difference, in Theoretical Perspectives on Sexual
Difference, New Haven 1990.
129
On alimony and custody, see Martha Fineman, Harvard Law Review, pp. 770774
and Implementing Equality: Ideology, Contradiction and Social Change: A Study of
Rhetoric and Result in the Regulation of the Consequences of Divorce, Wisconsin Law
Review 1983; on pregnancy and employment, see Vogel. A gender-neutral approach
would not rule out taking into account biological differences. For instance, Barbara
Katz Rothman argues that pregnancy is a social relationship, that expectant fathers as
well as expectant mothers can participate in that relationship, but the pregnant
woman is the primary parent, because she has the closest and most consistent
relationship to the developing foetus. On this ground, she would support custody
rights for birth mothers in cases of adoption and surrogacy agreements. Recreating
Motherhood, New York 1989.
130
By 1990, only four states had passed family leave laws requiring employers to
grant unpaid leave to male or female workers. Congressional Caucus for Womens
Issues, Update, 5 June 1990, p. 12.
140
justifies their opposition to abortion leads right-to-life organizations
and the Catholic hierarchy to support maternity leave and to oppose
legalizing surrogate pregnancy. There is no easy choice between mak-
ing alliances with these forces or leaving women unprotected. If
womens jobs paid better, were respected and gave them real control
over their working conditions, it might not be necessary to criminal-
ize prostitution or ban surrogacyfar fewer women would wish to be
surrogate mothers or prostitutes. If the value of care-giving work were
recognized, quality childcare and eldercare would be subsidized, paid
parental leave available, paid time off for doing things with children
or other people in our care would be available to men as well as
women, women would be less likely to structure their employment deci-
sions around their childcare responsibilities, would not be penalized
by caring for children and would not end up having to depend on hus-
bands and ex-husbands for support. But these conditions are hardly on
the immediate horizon. So the pressures in favour of special treatment
strategies are intense. Still, most women are pragmatic in how they
approach these issues, adopting whatever arguments and strategies
seem to work. The same woman might argue an equal treatment posi-
tion in relation to demanding womens access to military combat
positions but a special treatment position in relation to legislation for
paid maternity leave. Crafting a consistent strategy out of these con-
tradictory impulses will not be likely to happen until there is a move-
ment that can shift the balance of political forces, challenge corporate
interests, and make it more possible to win gender-neutral policies.
131
For an overview of feminist writing by women of colour, Gloria Anzaldua, ed.,
Making Face, Making Soul, Hacieno Caras: Creative and Critical Perspectives by Women of
Colour, San Francisco 1990; Patricia Hill Collins, Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Con-
sciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment, Boston 1990. For the impact of feminist
women-of-colour writers on feminist theory, compare, for instance, the first and
second editions of the feminist theory text, Feminist Frameworks, by Alison Jaggar and
Paula Rothenberg, New York 1978 and 1984.
132
Eleanor J. Bader, NOW Confronts Racism, New Directions for Women, November-
December 1990, p. 3. Progress has been slow, partly because mainstream organiz-
ations are more willing to recruit women of colour than they are to share power with
organizations of women of colour. For example, women-of-colour reproductive rights
groups have protested their exclusion by NOW in planning the April 1991 March for
Womens Lives. Their statement, distributed at the march, has been reprinted in
Radical America, vol. 24, no. 2, June 1992.
141
Jackson campaigns, especially the campaign of 1988 in which the
militants in the mainstream feminist groups, and particularly NOW,
were more marginalized in the Democratic Party and therefore more
willing to join Jacksons primary bid, helped to push in the same
direction. The National Congress of Neighborhood Women, the
National Welfare Rights Union, the National Black Womens Health
Project and women of colour from CLUW have pressured the womens
lobby to consider issues of concern to women of colour and poor/
working-class women. Feminist organizations, inside academia and
outside it, have responded, but in somewhat limited ways.133 There is
often more lip service than substance to the idea of diversity.134
133
Chela Sandoval, Feminism and Racism: A Report on the 1981 National Womens
Studies Association Conference, in Anzaldua, ed., 1990. A protest over the firing of
the only African-American member of the National Womens Studies Association staff
rocked the 1990 annual meeting. When negotiations collapsed after two days, many
members of the Women of Color Caucus resigned from the organization and later
founded the National Women of Colour Association. The director of NWSA subse-
quently resigned; and the 1991 annual meeting was cancelled. The new director, an
African-American woman, and a new national board have worked quite hard to
reshape NWSA in response to the criticisms expressed: Protests by women of colour
also forced racism onto the agenda of the 1991 founding convention of the National
Organization of Lesbians.
134
As Bernice Johnson Reagon put it, You dont really want Black folks, you are just
looking for yourself with a little color to it. Coalition Politics: Turning the Century,
Home Girls: A Black Feminist Anthology, Albany 1983.
135
Barbara Omolade, Black Women and Feminism, Hester Eisentein and Alice Jar-
dine, eds., The Future of Difference, New Brunswick 1985.
136
Hartmann, p. 177. Although the mainstream organizations have made efforts to
recruit and promote women of colour within their organizations, they have proved
quite resistant to sharing power with organizations of women of colour. NOW has an
especially poor record on this account. Whos Sorry NOW? Women of Color Protest
Pro-Choice March, Ms., July-August 1992, pp. 8889.
142
far more prominent. Kimberle Crenshaw makes the point that white
feminist defenders of Anita Hill explained her silence only in terms of
her fear that her career would be ended, a fear she would share with
similarly placed white women. Content to rest their case on a raceless
tale of gender subordination, white feminists missed an opportunity
to span the chasm between feminism and anti-racism. They failed to
address the fact that many Black women stay silent for fear that their
stories might be used to reinforce stereotypes of Black men as sexually
threatening, and/or for fear of ostracism from other Black people if
they do speak out.137 In a moving and impressive expression of solid-
arity and political commitment, 1,603 Black women signed a state-
ment, No one will speak for us but ourselves, defending Hill and
protesting the Thomas appointment as part of a broad-based attack
on working people.138 Their ability to mobilize so quickly and their
willingness to speak out publicly reflects the growing organization
and confidence of Black feminism. Their initiative reminded us, once
again, that the hegemony of white feminism cannot be overcome with-
out a strong, self-organized Black feminist presence. It also signalled
that combatting racism, on the part of white feminists, has to go
beyond self-examination to include active support, material as well as
political, for the self-organization of women of colour.
143
The Lesbian Challenge
140
The Second Stage, New York 1981.
141
The huge march in Washington for gay/lesbian/bisexual rights in the spring of 1993
(estimates varied from six hundred thousand to a million) reflected the breadth, polit-
ical self-confidence and organization of queer activism.
142
Recently, Congresswoman Pat Schroeder joined the new Democrats of Clintons
Progressive Policy Institute and conservatives of the Family Research Council in sup-
port of braking mechanisms such as mandated waiting periods, before couples with
children can obtain a divorce. New York Times, 1 May 1991.
143
Two representative, and widely read, texts are Sylvia Ann Hewlett, A Lesser Life:
The Myth of Womens Liberation in America, New Yotk 1986, and Suzanne Gordon, Pris-
oners of Mens Dreams: Striking Out for A New Feminine Future, Boston 1991.
144
on their interconnection.144 At the very least, this means breaking
with traditional definitions of the family, insisting that alternative
householdsthose formed by single mothers, lesbian/gay couples,
and non-related individuals are functional, sane, healthy, good for
children and adults. Further, they deserve the same economic and
social support from the community that we are demanding for
heterosexual couple families. More broadly, it requires that we assert
the value of freely chosen sexual and parental relationships, while
demonstrating how both sexual autonomy and access to material
resources (not least, time and money) are fundamental to achieving
them. This strategy has yet to be adopted by mainstream feminists.
From the 1960s up through the mid 1970s, the womens movement
was divided between insiders and outsiders, between liberal femin-
ist groups oriented toward gaining position and power within existing
144
Patricia Hill Collins, 1990, has called this a both/and politics. See also Ann Fer-
guson, Sexual Democracy, Boulder 1991, chapter 11.
145
state institutions, including political parties, and the autonomous
womens movement oriented to revolutionary change, including radi-
cal feminist, lesbian separatist, socialist-feminist and anarcha-feminist
currents. Insiders were divided between moderates and militants.
Moderates tended to rely on building influence at elite levels and on
court suits using the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The militants (primarily
the National Organization for Women) used those tactics but were
not afraid of grassroots organization and popular mobilizations
rallies, marches, speak-outs.
146
childcare advocates defending state subsidies not on the ground that
quality care by adults in addition to mothers frees women and is
healthy for children but because mothers are forced to work. Main-
taining alliances requires reciprocitybeing careful not to publicly
criticize a law and order district attorney who enforces restraining
orders against batterers but fails to discipline racist police officers;
endorsing a powerful legislator who supports state programmes for
vocational training to displaced homemakers but opposes pro-
labour legislation. Third, powerfully situated individuals are reluctant
to deal with organizations that cant control their rank and file,
whether they are students, employees, volunteers, union members.
This puts pressure on leaders to carefully monitor participation to
ensure that people who are too naive, not part of the team, or possibly
irresponsible, are not empowered to make decisions which would
potentially disrupt carefully nurtured relationships. The dangers of
too broad a participation gradually overwhelm the earlier feminist
commitment to eliminating hierarchy and creating fully democratic
structuresnot that the tensions inherent in trying to build these
egalitarian structures were ever or could ever be resolved, but now
they are seldom even struggled with. This is the experiential context
within which the political currents of the autonomous womens move-
ment have evolved.
145
For instance, DSA co-chair, writer Barbara Ehrenreich, was a key propagandist for
the feminization of poverty campaign which sought to convince mainstream femin-
ists that poverty is a womans issue. Barbara Ehrenreich and Karin Stallard, The
Nouveau Poor, Ms., July-August 1982.
146
There are still many socialist-feminists active in grassroots projects organizing
women as workers, welfare recipients, healthcare consumers, community members
(e.g. the Womens Economic Agenda Project in California, Muheras Obreras in New
Mexico, Womens Health Action Movement in New York, reproductive rights pro-
jects in Boston, Detroit and Portland, movement publications such as Labor Notes and
Rethinking Schools). But they are too small in number, too isolated from each other, too
strapped for money, at least for the moment, to affect the larger political scene.
147
male and female jobs. The concept of revaluing womens jobs inspired
many working women and union activists, potentially questioned
hierarchies of pay and market ideology, appeared to open up radical
possibilities for organizing women workers.147 Instead, most efforts
to implement these policies for government workers at the state level
became focused on fairly technical negotiations over job evaluation
schemes which engaged academic experts, management and union
representatives and went on pretty much over the heads of the
workers. 148
148
More generally, the distinction between a revolutionary (socialist-
feminist) and a reform (social-welfare feminist) strategy lies not in
whether one organizes to wrest some concession from the state but in
how that effort fits into an overall strategy. Unfortunately, the femin-
ist debate over the state has rarely been posed in this way, but rather
as a choice between being outside or inside the state, between working
for reforms or working to build alternative institutions.153 Feminists
inside the state gain personal and institutional points of influence/
power that can be an asset for constituencies trying to win something
from the state. But these very routes of access to political resources
impose their own logic on those who try to use them. This logic shapes
not only what is understood to be possible but also what is understood
to be desirable. Without a counter-force, this logic will come to domi-
nate reform efforts. 154
153
See, for instance, Frances Fox Piven, Women and the State: Ideology, Power, and
Welfare, in Lefkowitz and Withorn.
154
See, for instance, Alice Kessler-Harriss candid exposition of how the rules of the
game at the university pressure Womens Studies directors to jettison the interests of
non-traditional, community-based scholars in order to advance those of the tenure-
track faculty. See also Hester Eisensteins delineation of the pressures on femocrats,
feminists working in the Australian state bureaucracy, Gender Shock: Practicing Feminism
on Two Continents, Boston 1990.
155
Although Ann Bookman and Sandra Morgens volume, Women and the Politics of
Empowerment, is not directly concerned with this strategic issue, many of the essays
document the vitality of working-class womens trade-union and community organiz-
ations.
149
potentially pleasurable as well as dangerous, its dangers loom very large
these days, especially given the apparently unchangeable material con-
ditions of womens lives. Making matters worse, in the early 1980s,
the movement was wracked by a highly factionalized sex debate that
reflected but utterly failed to resolve this dilemma.156 By its rancour,
the fight between the anti-pornography and pro-sex factions under-
mined enthusiasm and activity, further weakened the grassroots sup-
port available to the programmes providing services and advocacy on
the issue of violence against women and increased the felt isolation of
those continuing to work in the area.
From the late 1970s the shelters and crisis lines had struggled to
survive as federal and state money, much of it from the last remnants
of the poverty programmecommunity block grants and CETA
declined. But as funding for social programmes dried up, money
became available through anti-crime programmes, like the Law
Enforcement Assistance Act and victims assistance programmes.157
Feminists had always seen the need to challenge the practices of police
and courts which tended to protect rather than punish perpetrators of
sexual violence. But that challenge was never expected to constitute
the cornerstone of the strategy to stop male violence, any more than
was protesting the sexual objectification of women in the media. The
empowerment of women, not their protection, was the key. As confi-
dence in the movements ability to win the material and political
conditions of power for women ebbed, reliance on the coercive arm of
the state came to play a more central part in the aims and accomplish-
ments of those advocating around the issue.
156
For a summary of the debate and an unusually balanced and sensible intervention
in it, see Ann Ferguson, The Sex Debate in the Womens Movement, Against the
Current (September-October 1983 ), pp. 1017 and Blood at the Root: Motherhood, Sexuality
and Male Dominance, London 1989, chapter 10.
157
Kathleen J. Tierney, The Battered Women Movement and the Creation of the
Wife Beating Problem, Social Problems, vol. 29, no. 3 (February 1982).
158
Elizabeth Pleck, Domestic Tyranny: The Making of Social Policy Against Family Violence
from Colonial Times to the Present, New York 1987, p. 200.
159
Traditionally, police called to the scene of a domestic dispute tended to cool off
the batterer and leave, except in cases of severe injury or death. In a pro-arrest policy,
officers called to a domestic dispute will make an arrest if there is any evidence at all
of physical abuse. A 1982 study in Minneapolis found that arresting batterers signifi-
cantly reduced recidivism, even if the batterer never was formally charged or received
court punishment. Rix, 198889, pp. 298299.
160
S. Hartmann, p.170. Stiffer arrest policies were also encouraged by large damage
awards to victims of domestic violence who sued local governments for not providing
them with adequate police protection.
150
workplaces, harassing them, and so on) has been simplified. Many
urban police departments automatically arrest barterers for violating
a restraining order. Most states have revised or enacted new rape stat-
utes, prohibiting cross-examination of the victim about her previous
sexual history and eliminating the traditional requirement for corrob-
orationa witness or proof of physical resistance.161 By the mid
1980s twenty-three states had made it a crime for a man to force his
wife to have sexual relations.
The impulses that have framed this state response are contradictory,
marrying feminist analysis to paternalistic protectiveness and repress-
ive attitudes toward sexuality. Feminist standpoints are articulated in
the mix but do not/predominate. At first, the right-wing opposed
legislation funding shelters for battered women, which were, accord-
ing to one conservative senator, nothing more than outposts for
feminist missionaries who would wage war on the traditional
family, 162 But by the mid 1980s Eagle Forum (one of the major anti-
feminist organizations of the far Right) had formed its own Coalition
for Abused Women, to compete with feminist organizations for fund-
ing, In 1985 the Eagle Forum protested award of a Department of
Justice grant to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence for
an education project on the grounds that NCADV was a subversive
group of radical lesbian feminists. Attorney-General Meese banned
the use of the word lesbian in all publications for the project and
required the coalition to submit all work to the Department of Justice
for approval.163 The NCADV terminated the agreement rather than sub-
mit to censorship. The next year, Schlafleys group received $625,000
to study the effects of domestic violence on traditional women.164
161
Although rape convictions, especially where the victim and perpetrator are
acquainted, are still difficult to obtain, as juries often prefer to believe the accused
rather than the womans story. See e.g., the recent acquittal of three white fraternity
members at St. Johns University who sodomized a Black woman student. According to
Manhattan sex crimes prosecutor Linda Fairstein, however, conviction rates are
improving, ranging from 50 to 75 per cent. E.R. Shipp, Bearing Witness to the
Unbearable, New York Times, 28 July 1991.
162
Pleck, p. 197.
163
But some members of the NCADV opposed that decision and split off to form a
group called the National Womens Abuse Prevention Project which compromised on
the lesbian issue and received the funding.
164
Congressional Caucus on Womens Issues, Update, 20 October 1986, p. 11.
151
dependence on men. So, for instance, conservative and feminist
womens groups have both organized for government programmes to
collect the child-support owed women by their ex-husbands, for
higher mandated child-support awards and for the reestablishment of
alimony.165
I65
There is every reason to hold men responsible, but it is necessaty to do so in a way
that does not reinforce the traditional marital bargain. Child-suppott enforcement legis-
lation does little to inctease the incomes of women formerly married to low-income
men or women receiving state benefits who are allowed to retain only $50 a month of
the child-support collected from their ex-spouses. Given the severe political and eco-
nomic constraints under which feminists are working, there has been little energy for
devising alternative strategies for ensuring divorced women and single mothers an ade-
quate standard of living and empowering women and children within the family.
166
The gap between academics and activists on this issue is truly vast. Radical feminist
analyses of sexuality and strategies for ending male violence dominate popular writing
and thinking in the anti-violence movement. In contrast, the now extensive feminist
literature analysing sexuality from social constructionist and psychoanalytic perspectives
is often inaccessible in style and, even more important, takes very little responsibility
for movement strategy, for outlining how in the short run as well as the long run femin-
ists can organize to defend women against sexual violence and sexual exploitation.
167
As Arlene Stein points out, urban lesbian communities are no longer so unitary,
politically or spatially, as they once were. Sisters and Queers: The Decentring of Les-
bian Feminism, Socialist Review, vol. 22, no. 1 (January-March 1992). Despite this
diversity, lesbian organizations and networks still play a critical part in maintaining
the women-identified institutions that sustain this womens culture.
152
the energy of the lesbian community. They are the disk jockeys who
play the music on community radio stations, the producers who bring
the performers to town, the organizers and audiences at womens
music festivals that provide national exposure for new musicians and
groups.168 This culture is woman-identified but not separatist,
although in it are expressed the whole range of radical-feminist poli-
tics, including lesbian separatism.
Most of the local feminist newspapers and newsletters are gone, but a
few national feminist publications that are informed by radical-/
socialist-feminist ideas have survived: Sojourner and Off Our Backs pub-
lish regularly with circulations around twenty-five thousand.169 Here
you can still find debates about pornography, separatism, racism in
the womens movement, about whether feminists should support
legalizing prostitution or surrogacy or adopting babies from the third
world, about whether a book reviewed or an article printed was class-
ist. Here you find stories about welfare mothers, poor women,
working-class working women, women of colour, lesbians, commun-
ity organizing projects, union drives, and successful protests. Here
you will see profiled women who are community organizers and activ-
ists rather than businesswomen, politicians or administrators. These
papers give expression to a radical sensibility but their relatively small
readership signals the marginal status of that politics.
153
Yet the womens spirituality movement which claims to recover
ancient pre-patriarchal women-centred communalism has a political
cut. Woman of Power, a journal of the womens spirituality movement
(with a growing circulation not too far from that of the second-wave
socialist-/radical-feminist publications Sojourner and Off Our Backs) was
founded as a journal of spirituality and politics. Feminist/anarchist
witches like the writer and speaker Starhawk have large followings.
Her political paganism introduced many to an anti-capitalist critique,
and asserted the value/possibility of a participatory and democratic
social, economic, political life. Although political activism may be a
minor current and the dominant voice in the womens spirituality
movement is cultural feminism, the same women who organize a sum-
mer solstice ritual might organize an all-women affinity group that
joins a Take Back The Night march, a protest against nuclear weapons
or a chemical dumping site.
172
Janet Biehl, Rethinking Ecofeminist Politics, Boston 1991.
154
Currents outside mainstream feminism always had a relatively narrow
social base: countercultural communities, young people, students.
This is even more true now. Feminists and feminism have real
influence within the radical wing of the peace/anti-imperialist/anti-
nuclear/ecology movements.173 But there is a huge gulf between these
radical movements and the rest of US political life.
What Next?
In the face of the severe constraints on the reforms that can be won
under the current political balance of forces, the survivors of the
second wave, the organizations of the womens lobby, have conceded
to intense conservatizing pressures. These pressures will only be
reversed when feminists can challenge in practice the now dominant
interests in the state. However, this challenge cannot be organized by
feminists alone nor with old forms of feminist organization. It
requires a broad and militant mobilization from below incorporating
movements for democratic rights that are far more inclusive, new
more social and political forms of trade-union struggle, and national
political organization(s) independent of the Democratic Party. We
have no choice but to stake our future on this possibility. To limit our
political horizons otherwise leaves us defenceless against conservatiz-
ing pressures and will blind us to the instances of creative resistance,
albeit molecular and disparate, that, as we know from past exper-
ience, are the seedbeds of a larger mobilization.
173
Barbara Epstein, Political Protest and Cultural Revolution: Nonviolent Direct Action in the
1970s and 1980s, Berkeley 1991.
155
support. Mainstream political currentsthe possessive individualism
of the moderate Republicans, the repressive communitarianism of the
religious Right, the technocratic and defensive welfarism of the new
Democratsexpress but cannot transcend the apparently irreconcil-
able conflict between material security and individual liberty.
156
combat rising levels of male violence. All these forms have in common
a feminist practice that organizes women around their interests/needs as
women not in separation from but in relation to their needs and
interests as workers and members of oppressed communities.
174
For a more extensive discussion of this point, see Johanna Brenner, Finding Hope
in Hard Times: Feminisms Revolutionary Promise, Socialist Register 1989.
157
organization of paid employment, including more flexible working
hours and paid time off.
158
and practice.175 Their expressive activism may amuse, anger or shock,
but their defiance also undermines the conservatives power to domi-
nate the terrain of political discourse. Like their 1960s counterparts,
however, contemporary sex-radicals draw on a political tradition of
radical individualism that is itself limited. The assertion of an individ-
ual right to sexual self-expression can be more easily marginalized by
conservatives when the movements promoting it are silent about the
ways in which late capitalism consistently denies the conditions of
self-determination to most people.
175
Lisa Duggan, Making It Perfectly Queer, Socialist Review, vol. 22, no. 1 (January-
March 1992).
159