Humanism, Gynocentrism and Feminist Politics
Humanism, Gynocentrism and Feminist Politics
Humanism, Gynocentrism and Feminist Politics
December 1978. At a mostly male conference I hug. women’s oppression as the devaluation and repres-
chat. eat. drink. listen with my sisters in philosoph! sion of women’s experience.by a masculinist Culture
My body avalanches from its recent maternal that exalts violence and indtvidualism. It argues for
svvellinps to the plateaus of a folded uterus. milkless the superiorit), of the values embodied in tradition-
breasts. 1 left my baby daughter in Chicago. who ally female experience. and rejects the values it finds
used to suckle 90 minutes at a time while I read T/W in traditionall!, male dominated institutions. Gyno-
U’ornen’s Room. For the first time in fifteen months centric feminism. 1 suggest. contains a more radical
that warm red flow moves through my clitoral critique of male-dominated society than humanist
canals. No quiet transition. but a body revolution feminism. But at the same time. especially within
throbbing my back and neck. Clouded in this the social context of anti-feminism backlash.
privately womanstate. I glide around the chande- however. its effect can be quieting and accommodat-
liered ballroom finding one vvoman’s face and ing to official powers.
another and another. Fervently u’e comerse about
the da\‘5 papers and each other’s questions. M’s
1
catch up on the news about each other’s lovers or
children or jobs. Humanist feminism consists in a revolt against
That night in m! restless sleep 1 dream. A femininity. Patriarchal culture has ascribed to
ballroom filled with women. hundreds under the women a distinct feminine nature by which it has
chandeliers. a reception after business at the Societ! justified the exclusion of women from most of the
for \.omcn in Phil!-\oph: 1 flit from one group of importan? - d creative activit\ of societ\-science.
women to another. in smiling comfort. As I turn to politics. invention. industr!,. commerce. the arts. B\
find another friend I see her tall figure across the defining women as sexual objects. decorat&
room. as though o\,erlookinp the sisterl!, crowd: charmers. and mothers. the patriarchal culture
Simone de Beauvoir. Then. lust hefore I \yake. a enforces behavior in women that benefits men b\
single object. shimmerins: a glass of milk. providing them with domestic and sexual servants.
No other u’oman can occup! our dreams as the b’omen’s confinement to femininity stunts the
mother of feminist philosophi (n,ho in her time. in development of their full human potential. and
her view. could only be a writing mother b! leaving makes women passive. dependent and weak.
her hod! out of motherinr. and I think she was Humanist feminism defines femininity as the
right). Yet most feminists-in the U.S. today find primary vehicle of women’s oppression. and calls
irredeemable flaws in Beauvoir’s star!’ of women’s upon male dominated institutions to allow women
oppression and her hope for liberation. L+‘hat has the opportunit! to participate full! in the public
happened between the childhood and puberty of our world-making activities of industry. politics. art and
feminist revolution? science.
In this essay I explore the shift in feminist thinking Women’s liberation. on this vieu. consists in
from a Beauvoirian sort of position which I define as freeinf women from the confines of traditional
humanist feminism to an analysis which I call femininity. and making it possible for women to
gyocentric feminism. Humanist feminism defines pursue the human projects that have hitherto been
women’s oppression as the inhibition and distortion dominated by men. Am assumptions that women
of women’s human potential b!, a society that allo\vs are not capable of achieving the excellence that men
the self-development of men. Most feminists of the hav’e attained must be suspended until women are
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. including allowed to develop their full potential. When gender
feminists of the earl\ second wa\.e. ha\,e been differences are transcended in this manner. persons
humanist feminists. in recent years a different will be able to choose whatever activities the!, wish
account of women’s oppression has pained influ- to pursue. will be able to develop their full human
ence. however. partl! groaing,from a critique of potential as individuals. Women’s liberation consists
humanist feminism. Gvnocentrtc feminism defines in elimmating a separate women’s sphere. and
17-l IRISMARIO\ YOUNG
giving women the opportunity to do what men have restricts women to immanence and being defined as
done. This implies that men will have to do more of the Other. Whereas a man exists as a transcending
the work traditionally assigned to women. subject who defines his own individual projects,
I call this position humanist feminist because it patriarchal institutions require a woman to be the
defines gender difference as accidental to humanit!,. object for the gaze and touch of a subject. to be the
The goal of liberation is for all persons to pursue self pliant responder to his commands.
development in those creative and intellectual Beauvoir discusses several respects in which
activities that distinguish human beings from the rest femrninit!, confines women‘s existence to imma-
of nature. W’omen’s liberation means sexual nence and the repetition of the species rather than
equality. Sexual equalit!, means bringing women individual existence. She finds female biology itself
and men under a common measure. judged b! the as in part responsible for rootrng women in
same standards. W’e should judge all b! the immanence: women’s reproductive processes limit
standards according to which men have judged one her individual capacities for the sake of the needs of
another: courage. rationalit!. strength. cunning. the species. But gender determines women’s
quick wittedness. oppression more significantly than biology. What-
Humanist feminism. in one version or another. ever might be her position in the world. and
has dominated feminist accounts for most of the whatever her individual accomplishments. a woman
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The feminist is appraised first as a cc’onta~r. and only aftervvards
classics of Wollstonecraft. Mill and Taylor. as well for her individual position or accomplishments.
as the views of many of the suffragettes in Others will evaluate her beaut), or lack of it.
nineteenth-centur!, England and the United States. ascertain whether her clothes are tasteful and
exhibit the main outlines of humanist feminism. becoming. whether her smiles, gestures and manner
Until recently humanist feminism was also the of speech exhibit charm. Whether a woman
dominant strain in contemporar! feminism. Simone conforms to the requirements of feminine attrac-
de Beau\,oir‘s description of the oppression of tiveness. is indifferent to them. or rebels against
women and her vision of liberation in T/IE Secorrti them. both her and other people’s attitudes toward
Se.r (Beauvoir. (19521 1974) stands as one of the her will be determined by this definition. Women
most theoreticallv grounded and thorough articu- ha\,e been barred from the important business of
lations of humamst-feminism. government and commerce. or from fashioning
Beauvoir’s account of women’s oppression de- products that achieve recognition. and instead have
pends on the distinction between trancendence and been expected to expend most of their energ!
immanence. Transcendence designates the free keeping a home for husband and children. From
subjectivit! that defines its own nature. and makes earl! childhood women learn that the world of
projects that bring new entities into the world. The indt\,idual achievement is closed to them and that
free subject mov’es out into the vvorld. takes their primar!- vocation is to please and serve men.
imtiative. faces the world boldlv creates his own Thus women learn to be deferential. accommodat-
individualized life. According to. Beauvoir. patriar- ing. and attentive to the desires of others.
chal society allows only men such transcendence. The expectations of femininit!, vvhich circumscribe
Masculinity entails no particular attributes. but in the li\,es of women inhibit the development of their
patriarchal societ!, is identified aith transcendence. human possibilities. Beauvoir describes how in their
free acttvit!, that fashions artifacts and htstorb. A childhood girls learn early that the world of action
man is confined to no parncular nature. but has all and daring is closed to them. and learn not to move
manner of projects open to him-he can be a soldrer freel! and openly and do not develop an ability to
or an artist. a politician or a chef. a scientist or a fight (cf. Young. 1980). Women’s sexual being is
gambler. To be sure. Beau\ oir understands the class clouded with masochism (cf. Bartk!,. 1984). a desire
and race oppression that puts more limits on the to lo\,e the strong actor but not be actors
possihilrties of some men than others. Gender does themselves. Women often become timid and lacking
not restrict oppressed men. however. The possibilrt! in confidence. or fear that success will conflict with
of action IS still open to oppressed men. in the form their femininit!.
of wile! sabotage or open rebellion. Masculinit! More than merelv inhibiting their human possi-
entails indi\,idual existence. where the person bilities. in Beau&r’s account femininitv often
defines his own individual projects and creates his produces mutilated or deformed persons.- In rn!
own nature. view this is the most ingenious aspect of Beauvoir’s
Patriarchal culture confines women. on the other account. She explains characteristics that many have
hand. to immanence. Immanence designates being found undesirable about women as the effects of
an object. a thing with an already defined nature imprrsonment in femininity. Despite the culture’s
lined up within a general category of things with the denial. women are human subjects. full of creative
same nature. Femininity is an essence. a set of energ!. intelligence. and the desire to make their
general attributes that define a class. and which mark on the world. Patriarchal institutions. how-
Humanism. Gyocentrism and Feminist Politics 175
ever, restrict their recognized activity to caring for her impressive and often sympathetic account of
their appearance. for a household, and for children. how patriarch!, has victimized women is her
Women thus channel their creativity into these descriptions of the free subjectivity she claims it
activities. They try to make a human project out of gives to men. Boys roam. climb. play rough. and
turning themselves into mannequins. keeping a very importantly for Beauvoir. learn to fight.
house clean. orderlv and pleasing. and raising
‘Violence is the authentic proof of each one’s
children. These aciivities. however. belong to
loyalty to himself. to his passions, to his own will;
immanence. to objectification and mere life
radicalI> to deny this will is to deny oneself an)
maintenance. Trying to make them the freely
objective truth. it is to wall oneself up in an
chosen projects of a transcending subject only
abstract subjectivity: anger or revolt that does not
produces a monstrous caricature of expressiveness
pet into the muscles remains a figment of the
and individuality: the haught! vanity of a woman
imacgination. It is a profound frustration not to be
preoccupied with her image in the mirror: the
able to register one’s feelings upon the face of the
shrewish women who will not allow living action to
world’ (p. 371).
occur in her house. for fear it will soil the rug or
knock over a plant: the clutching mother who tries Men are allowed, encouraged. to be daring. to reach
to mould her child’s life according to her own plan. out and accomplish a project. Men are supposed to
To summarize. Beauvoir defines women’s be rational. inventive and creative. Thus, the great
oppression as the confinement and mutilation of achievements of humanity have been accomplished
women’s human potentialities by patriarchal re- almost entirely by men: exploring the world.
quirements that she be a pleasing and deferent charting and mapping it. formulating theories of the
object for men. Unlike femininity. masculinity does universe. writing great plays. developing constitu-
not entail confinement to an essence or nature. but tions and ruling cities and states. Even less
the freedom to make oneself and assert oneself in renowned or accomplished men have a privilege not
the world. Women’s liberation consists in freeing accorded to women. the privilege of bein? in public:
women from the confines of traditional femininity. they can achieve some public recogmtlon in the
and making it possible for women to pursue the workplace. among comrades or cronies at the bar.
human projects that have hitherto been dominated Men’s situation allows or encourages them to be free
b! men. subjects. transcendingthe given to bold new futures.
While Beauvoir’s book remains one of the most confronting other subjects as equals.
sensitive. thorough and theoretically grounded The distinction between transcendence and
descriptions of women’s oppression l.lnder patri- immanence ensnares Reau\oir in thp ver!’ definition
archy. most feminists today find it deeply marred by of woman as a nonhuman Other which her brllllant
at least two related factors. Beau\,oir does not call analysis re\eals as patriarchal. Defining humanit\ as
into question the definition of being human that trancendence requires setting human being. in
traditional Western society holds and she desalues opposition to non-human object5 and in particular
traditionally female activity in the same way as does nature. Full! human. free subjectlvit! transcends
patriarchal culture. mere life. the processes of nature whtch repeat in an
Beauvoir fierce+ rails at the male privilege that eternal cycle without indi\,iduaht! or histor!. Thu\
restricts such transcendence to men. but she does risking life and being willing to kill are cardinal
not question the value of the activities through marks of humanit!. for Beauvoir as for Hegel.
which men compete with one another and achieve Takincg control over one’s needs and fashioning
recognition. Power. achievement. individual ex- objects to satisf! them. confronting and mastering
pression. rationality. master! of natural processes. the forces of nature that threaten one’s life or
are for her as for the patriarchal culture she comfort. thehe are the aims of human projects
criticizes. the most human \,alues. She is a socialist. (Hartsock. 1983. Appendix 2). Humanit!, achie\,es
of course. and therefore asserts that the achieve- its greatest freedom. however. in the creation of
ment of full humanity by both men and women moral ideals and norks of art. For ihese express a
requires the elimination of capitalist domination. wholly ne\! and un-natural u’av of being in the
She calls for a participation of women in these public world. Beau\oir’s ontology reprdduces the Western
world making achievements. but does not question tradition’s oppositions of nature and culture.
the prominence male-dominated society gives to freedom and mere life. spirit and hod!.
achievement itself. and to public activities of With those distinctions Beauvoir brilliantI\, shows
politics. competition and individual creativity. that patriarchal culture has proiected onto-women
Beauvoir‘s humanism identifies the human with all those aspects of human existence that participate
men. She points out herself in several places that in mere life. She does not. however. as DinnersteIn
whereas women experience a contradiction between (1976) rereading her later does. call upon a
being human and being feminine. men do not transformation of culture in the direction of a
experience such a contradiction. The other side of greater acceptance of life. the hod!. and mortalit!.
176 IRISMARIONYOUNG
Instead. she herself devalues women’s lives insofar McBride. 1985: Young. 1979).
as she finds them closer to nature and the body than Beauvoir’s concrete descriptions of women’s lives
men’s are full of insights. sympathv and an understanding
Beauvoir mirrors patriarchal culture in her of the variations in each individual existence. (She
exposition of the experiences of the female body. does not. however. systematically examine varia-
The young girl finds her pun! clitoris less glorious tions in women’s situation due to structural
than the boy’s more apparent penis. At puberty girls considerations such as class and race.) The over-all
react to menstruation with shame and disgust. picture she offers, however. portrays woman only as
though Beauvoir asserts this is due to the social victim-maimed. mutilated. dependent. confined
status of femininit!, rather than to any natural to a life of immanence and forced to be an object.
reaction. Female sexualit! is passive and masochistic She rarely describes the strength that women have
(see Fuchs. 1980): had and the earthly value of their work: ways
women have formed networks and societies among
‘Feminine sex desire is the soft throbbing of a
themselves. the lasting beauty of the caring social
mollusk. Whereas a man is impetuous. woman is
values women often exhibit. While she expresses
only impatient: her expectation can become
outrage at the selfishness, blindness and ruthlessness
ardent without ceasing to be passivre: man dives
of the men who benefit from the mutilation of the
upon his prex like the eagle and the hawk: woman
personhood of half the human race. she finds little to
lies in wait lake the carnivorous plant. the bog. in
criticize in the modern humanist conception of
which insects and children are swallowed up. She
individualitv and freedom.
is absorption. suction. humus. pitch and glue. a
passive influx vaguely feels herself to be’ (p. 431).
II
Pregnancy is an ‘ordeal’ (p. 559) in which the
woman submits to the species and must suffer Gynocentric feminism defines the oppression of
limitations on her capacity to indi\,idualize herself. women very differently from humanist feminism.
Beauvoir expresses with understandin: and sympa- Women’s oppression consists not in being prevented
thy how man! women take pleasure tn prepnanc!’ from participating in full humanity. but in the denial
and nursing. But clearly she regards such pleasures and devaluation of specifically feminine virtues and
as examples of women’s resignation to their activ,ities by an overlv instrumentalized and authori-
condition of immanence. one among many ways tarian masculinist culture. Unlike humanist femi-
women agree to relinquish their freedom (0 Brien. nism. gynocentric feminism does not focus its
1981: 67-76). That pregnant!’ itself can be a human analysis on the impediments to women’s self-
project (Young. 1984) is tmpossible in her onto- development and the exclusion of women from
logical framework. spheres of power. prestige and creativity. Instead.
Beauvoir also devalues traditionall! feminine gynocentric feminism focuses its critique on the
activit!. such as housework and mothering. The values expressed in the dominant social spheres
woman is imprisoned in her home. and since she is themsebes. The male-dominated activities with the
deprived there of activit!. she loses herself in things greatest prestige in our society-politics. science.
and becomes dependent on them. Though she technology. warfare. business-threaten the sur-
recognizes that housework and mothering are vival of the planet and the human race. That our
arduous and important tasks. in her account the! society accords these activities the highest value onl!
have no trul! human value. Housework has a indicates the deep perversity of patriarchal culture.
negative basis: one gets rid of dirt. eliminates Masculine values exalt death. violence. competition.
disorder. and in performing it the woman is selfishness. a repression of the body. sexuality and
condemned to endless repetition that issues in no affectivitv.
product. no work. Beauv,oir finds cookin! to be Gynocentric feminism finds in women’s bodies
something of an exception here. and explams that and traditionally feminine activity the source of
women thus rightlv take pride in culinar! achieve- more positivae values, Women’s reproductive pro-
ments: but even these are only to be consumed. not cesses keep us linked with nature and the promotion
to stand as lasting artifacts. of life to a greater degree than men. Female
As a wife. the woman is abjectly dependent. not eroticism is more fluid. diffuse and loving than
in control of her life. This makes her dangerous for violence-prone male sexuality. Our feminine social-
raising children. since she tends to be smotheringI> ization and traditional roles as mothers give to us a
possessive or brutallv resentful. Even the best of capacity to nurture and a sense of social cooperation
mothers. on Beau&r’s account. do not attain that may be the only salvation to the planet.
transcendence-that is. full humanity-by, caring Gynocentric feminism thus defines the oppression of
for and loving their children: they only make it women quite differently from the way humanistic
possible for their children to do so. Beauvoir thus feminism defines it. Femininity is not the problem.
devalues women’s reproductive labor (Jaggar and not the source of women’s oppression. but indeed
Humanism. Gvnocentrism and Feminist Polttics 177
within traditional femininitv lie the vlalues that we late seventies this mode of feminism had become
should promote for a better society. Women’s increasingly influential even among those who might
oppression consists in the dev,aluation and repres- in other ways be called liberal feminists. In the
sion of women’s nature and female activity by the herstory of the contemporary women’s movement 1
patriarchal culture. find at least three factors that have produced this
In distinguishing between humanist feminism and shift from humanistic to gynocentric feminism: anti-
gynocentric feminism I intend to mark out two feminist reaction to femmism. the emergence of
tendencies or poles of feminism. which are held in black feminism, and the development of women’s
various forms and degrees by different feminists. historv and feminist anthropology.
Feminism of the nineteenth-century in the United Anti-feminists have identified feminism solelv
States was marked by an oscillation between with humanist feminism. In their perception
humanist and gynocentric feminism. For most of the feminists eschew femininity. devalue traditional
period of the suffrage movement the humanist womanhood and want to be equal to. that is. like. in
position prevailed. but the movements of moral identity with. men. Anti-feminist women have
motherhood and social housekeeping had a more sneered at such a naive claim to eliminate
gynocentric cast. In contemporary feminism both difference. and have argued without difficulty that
tendencies have been present. often in uneasy treating men and women equally will often lead to
union. Nevertheless I think it is appropriate to injustice for women (Wolpast. 1978). Early during
distinguish periods of contemporary feminism when the second wave of the women’s movement.
one of these tendencies has been stronger. Until the moreover. anti-feminists protested what they
late 1970s feminism in the U.S. was predominantly regarded as feminist denigration of women. Many
humanist feminism. but in the mid and late 1970s women take pride in the homes they decorate and
feminism has shifted more in the direction of bring warmth to. and regard their carmp for children
gynocentrism. as a noble vocation. they claimed. They dress well
The distinction between humanist feminism and and do their hair to please themselves. not because
gynocentric feminism cannot be mapped onto the men require it of them. How dare you feminists
more commonly held way of classifying feminism claim these activities lack value. entail imprison-
into liberal. radical and socialist (Jaggar. 1983). The ment. they exclaimed. And furthermore. the\
set of position often referred to as liberal feminism is asserted. we don’t want to be like men, competitive.
indeed a species of humanist feminism. and to the unfeeling. petting high blood pressure and ulcers at
degree that these positions are still held by many the office or cancer in the factory. Anti-feminists
feminists. hlimanist feminism is 41 a ctrong -still screech this line. even though contemporar\
tendency among feminists. Many of those who feminism has changed considerably in response to
called themselves radical feminists in the early and such protests of anti-feminist women.
mid-seventies. however. asserted something similar One of the first jobs of black feminists was to
to the humanist feminist position I have identified as attack the victim/dependent image of women’s
Beauvoir‘s. They found women’s oppression as situation that held swav in the women’s movement
located primarily in confinement to femininity. in the early 1970s. Our women. they said. have
which they claimed made women dependent on men rareI> had the luxury to be housewives. kept
and inhibtted women’s self-development. and they relatively comfortable by men. having their capacity
often called upon women to develop skills and to act smothered by diapers. corsets and girdles. On
attributes traditionallv associated with men-phy- the contrary. to survive. black women tvpicall\
sical strength. mechanical ability. assertiveness. etc. learned to be tough. physically strong. clevyer. but
Similarly. until recentI\, most feminist3 who called usually also vvarm. sexy and nurturant. Black
themselves socialist feminists held humanist feminist women have suffered endless injustice and humilia-
positions like that of Beauvoir. Thev took socialism tion. but it has not maimed their spirits. for they
as a necessary but not sufficient condition of the self- have acted with brilliance. courage and righteous-
development of all human beings. and took the goal ness (Stack. 1975: Davis. 1981). Through such
of feminism to be the elimination of gender discussion the women’s movement learned that the
differences and the requirements of femininity typical account of femininity as entailing weakness
which inhibit the full devjelopment of women’s and dependence had a class and race bias.
human capacities. The work of feminist historians also promoted
Starting about the mid- to late-seventies. many of awareness of the differences in women’s situations
those called radical feminists and those called and the historical specificity of bourgeois femininitv .
socialist feminists increasingly moved toward a more as well as a sense of women as active participants in
gynocentric feminism and several of the writers history. We discovered the mother rulers of
treated in this section are self-identified socialist Mycinae and the wisdom of the witches. We found
feminists. Those calling themselves radical feminists that in most cultures women’s work contributes as
moved toward gynocentric analysis first. but by the much as or more than men’s work to the subsistence
178 IRISMARIONYOUNG
of the family and village. and we recovered the she argues that gender socialization creates in
contributions women have made to agricultural women a relational communal orientation toward
development, diplomacy. healing. art. literature, others. while it creates in men a more oppositional
music, philosophy. We reconstructed the lives of and competitive mode of relating others. These
peasant and proletariat women and saw them as gender differences produce two different forms of
providing crucial strength and foci of resistence for moral rationality, a masculine ethic of rights and
dominated classes. From the protests of some justice. and a feminine ethic of responsibility and
feminists against the humanist image of women as care. Traditional moral theory has ignored and
forced to be inactive. less than human. and from repressed the particularistic ethic of care as pre-
these concrete studies of women’s lives and action. a moral. Women’s moral oppression consists in being
new focus on the positivity of women’s culture vvas measured against male standards, according to
born. Gilligan. in the silencing of women’s different voice.
Gynocentric feminism has received a number of The dominance of those male centered values of
expressions in the U.S. women’s movement in abstract reasoning. instrumentality and individual-
recent years. Artists and poets have been among the ism, moreover. produce a cold. uncaring. competi-
leaders of developing the images of celebration of tive world. Both the liberation of women and the
this more positive understanding of women’s history restructuring of social relations require tempering
and contemporary self-understanding. Judy these values with the communally oriented values
Chicago’s The Dinner Part?. for example. laborious- derived from women’s ethic of care (cf. Gould.
ly and beautifully recovers whole aspects of 1983). While Gilligan herself would reject the label
women’s history and locates them within images of of gynocentric feminist, her work has exerted an
female genitalia and objects that rely on tradi- enormous influence on feminists in fields as diverse
tionally female arts. as mathematics and philosophy. providing the
Within the sphere of political activism, gynocen- foundation for a revaluation of attributes associated
tric feminism perhaps is best represented in the with femininitv,.
feminist anti-militarist and ecology movements of Mary O’Brien (1981) articulates a gynocentric
the last five years. In the Women’s Pentagon Action critique of traditional political theory starting from
or the action at the Seneca Army Depot, for the biological fact that the reproductive process
example. a major aspect of the political protest has gives women a living continuity with their offspring
been the use of symbols and actions that invoke that it does not give men. Women thus have a
traditional labor. such as weaving. spinning. temporal consciousness that is continuous. whereas
birthing. mothering. Feminist anti-militarist and male temporal consciousness is discontinuous.
ecological analysis has argued that the dangers to Arising from the alienation from the child they
the planet that have been produced by the nuclear experience in the reproductive process. masculine
arms race and industrial technology are essentially thought emphasizes dualism and separation. Men
tied to masculinist values (Blumenthal. 1981: establish a public realm in which they give spiritual
Young. 1983). The burgeoning movement of birth to a second nature. transcending the private
feminist spirituality entails a similar analysis. and realm of mere physicality and reproduction to which
promotes values associated with traditional they confine women. Patriarchy develops an
femininity. ideology of the male potency principle. which
A number of prominent recent theories of installs the father as ruler of the family and men as
contemporary feminism express a gynocentric rulers of societv. and substitutes an intellectual
feminism. I see Susan Griffin‘s U’onran and Nature notion of creativity for the female principle of life
(1978) as one of the first written statements of a generation. The contemporary women’s movement
gynocentric feminism in the secgnd wave. Jt shows has the potential to overturn such a conception of
that one of the first steps of gynocentrism is to deny politics that is separated from life continuity because
the natureculture dichotomy held by humanists out of female reproductive consciounsness can come
such as Beauvoir. and affirmativelv assert the a politics based on women’s experience of life
connection of women and nature. Daly’s GytiEcol- processes and species continuity.
og~’ (1978) I see as a transition work. In it Daly Nancv Hartsock’s theory (1983) of the feminist
asserts an analysis of the victimization of women by standpoint from which she analyses patriarchal
femininity that outdoes Beauvoir. but she also culture is a more sweeping version of gynocentric
proposes a new gynocentric language. feminism. She argues that the sexual drvision of
Carol Gilligan’s critique ( 1981) of male theories of labor provides men and women with differing
moral development has had a strong influence on experiences that structure different standpoints
the formation of gvnocentric analysis. She questions upon nature and social relations. Based on
dominant assumptions about moral valuation and Chodorow’s theory of the development of gender
affirms forms of moral reasoning associated with personalities. Hartsock argues that men experience
traditional femininity. Following Chodorow (1978). the relation of self and other as one of hostility and
Humanism. Gynocentrism and Feminist Politics 179
struggle. The sexual division of labor also removes a number of other contemporary, French thinkers.
men from the needs of the body. from the Irigarary (1980. 1981a. b) describes phallocentric
vulnerability and basic demands of children and the culture as preoccupied by a metaphysics of identit!
aged. and provides men with an instrumentally dominated by visual metaphors. Male thinking
calculative relation to nature. This division of labor. begins by positing the One, the same. the essence.
she argues. produces a way of thinking about the that generates binary oppositions in which the
world Hartsock calls abstract masculinity. which second term is defined by the first as what it is not.
organizes experience and social relations into binary thus reducing to its identity. Phallogocentric
oppositions in which one term carries greater value discourse defines the opposition male/female in just
than the other. This standpoint of abstract this way. woman is only not a man. a lack. a
masculinity has determined the primary structure of deficiency. Preoccupied with the straight. the true.
Western social relations and culture. This male the proper. men establish relations of property and
dominated culture’s values are both partial and exchange in which accounts are balanced. Women in
perverse. It embodies sexuality where desire for the phallocentric system have been silenced and
fusion with other takes the form of domination of separated. exchanged as goods among men. lriparay
the other. Masculine consciousness denies and fears proposes that women must find and speak the
the body and associates birth with death. The only specificity of female desire, which has completeI!
sense of community generated by abstract mascu- different values from those of phallic thinking.
linity. moreover. is the commumry of warriors in Women’s eroticism is neither one nor two but
preparation for combat. plural, as women’s bodies themselves experience
From women’s experience Hartsock claims we arousal and pleasure in a multiplicity of places that
can both criticize masculinist values and concep- cannot all be identified. Touch. not sight. predomi-
tualization, and develop a better vision of social nates. the auto-eroticism of vaginal lips touching
relations. The gender personalities women develop clitoris. of intimate bodies touching. A genuineI>
in relation to their mothers give them a propensit!, feminine language moves and twists. starts over
to feel more connected with others than men. The again from different perspectives. does not go
experiences of menstruation. coitus. pregnancy and straight to the point. Such a language can displace
lactation. which challenge body boundaries. give the sterility and oppressiveness of phallopocentric
women a greater experience of continuity with cateporizanon (on Irigaray. see Gallop. 1981: Berg.
nature. Women’s labor in caring for men and 1981: Kuykendall. 1983.)
children and producing basic values in the home. Kristeva. (1980. 1981a. b) also focuses on
finally. gives them a grcated rnntedness in nature language. and the repression of specifically female
than men’s work gives them. a more basic experience. Language has tbo moments. the
understanding of life processes. These attributes of symbolic. the capacity of language to represent and
women’s experience can ground. Hartsock argues. a define. to be literal. and the semiotic. those
form of conceptualization which does not depend on elements of language that slip and plav in
dichotomous thinking and which values connections ambiguities and nuance. Certain linguistic praciices.
among persons more than their separation. as does such as poetry. make most explicit use of the
abstract masculinit! semiotic. but for the most part the playful. musical,
While Sara Ruddick (1980. 39833 is careful to in language is repressed in Western culture and the
claim that anv recovers and revaluation of symbolic . rational. legalistic discourse rules. For
traditionally feminine attfrbutes must be infused Kristeva this repression concerns the repression of
with a feminist politics. her notion of maternal the body and the installation of order. hierarchy and
thinking provides another example of a gnocentric authority. Repression of the bodv and the semiotic
feminist analysis. She argues that the specific dail\ entails repression of the pre-oedjpal experience of
practices of mothering generate specific modes of the maternal body before the subject emerges with a
thinking motivated by the interests in preservation. self-identical ego. as well as denial by the culture of
growth. and the acceptability of the child to the the specificity and difference that the female hod!
society. Maternal practice -is not restricted to exhibits. Challenge to the dominant oppressions, to
mothers. but exists wherever such nurturing and capitalism. racism, sexism. must come not only from
preservation interests prevail. She suggests that specific demands within the political arena. but from
maternal thinking provides anti-militarist values that changing the speaking subject.
feminists can use in promoting a politics of peace. Kristeva finds in the repressed feminine the
Writing within a very different intellectual current potential for such change. where feminine means at
than American feminists. using rather different least two things. First. women’s specific experience
assumptions and style. several women in France in as female bodies. the daughters of mothers, and
recent years have developed distinctive versions of often mothers themselves, an experience of a
gynocentric feminism (Jardine. 1982). 1 shall decentered subject. Second. the aspects of language
mention only Lute Irigaray and Julia Kristeva. Like and behavior Western culture has devalued and
180 IRIS MARIONYOUNG
repressed: the poetic. rhythmic. musical. nurturant humanist feminists. such as Beauvoir, have been
and soothing. but also contradictory and shifting socialists. and have called for radical transformation
ways of being. that fickleness the women have been of economic and political institutions. The argument
accused of. This revolution of the feminine Kristeva for such socialism. however, is that only publicl}
finds in a number of male avant garde writers. The controlled and democratic economic and political
women’s movement. however. also carries the institutions will make it possible to realize the ideal
possibility of displacing the rigidity of a subject that of equality and self-development promised by
loves authority. provided that women do not fall liberalism. Even socialist versions of humanist
into that humanist feminism by which they simpl! feminism. then. stand in continuity with the modern
demand getting in on the masculinist power game. humanist tradition insofar as it seeks to realize the
To summarize, humanist feminism defines values articulated by that tradition for all persons.
femininity as the source of women’s oppression. and including and especially women (Eisenstein. 1980).
calls upon male dominated institutions to allow Gynocentric feminism confronts humanist
women the opportunity to participate fu,llv in public, feminism on one of its core assumptions, namely.
world-making activities of industry, polltIcs. art and that the ideal for feminists is a universal humanity m
science. In contrast. gynocentric feminism questions which all persons equally realize their potential for
the values of these traditional public activities that self-development. Nearly every term in this sen-
have been dominated by men. Women’s oppression tence can be put to pynocentric feminist critique. but
consists not in being prevented from participating in I will restrict myself to the notion of universal
full humanity. but in the denial and devaluation of humanity. On the humanist feminist view uttered by
specifically feminine virtues and activities by an Beauvoir. differences between men and women are
overly instrumentalized and authoritarian mascu- sociallv enforced oppressions. In their humanity
linist culture. Femininity is not the problem. for there Is no essential difference between men and
gynocentric feminism. and indeed is the source of a women. and we look forward to a society in which
conception of society and the subject that can not sex difference will make no difference.
only liberate women. but all persons. Gynocentric feminism can reveal this ideal of
universal humanity as both unrealistic and oppress-
ive. This ideal proposes to measure all persons
according to the formal standards of rationality and
III
rights. But the material differences among persons
The polarIt\ bet\seen humanist and gynocentric determined by history. region or bodies continue to
feminism might be considered part of the logic of operate. so some will measure differently. Only,an
feminism itself. Feminism consists in calling explicit affirmation of difference and social plurahty.
attention to and eradicating gender-based oppres- ggnocentric feminism suggests. offers the hope of
sion. Humanism and pynocentrism are the two most overcoming sexism, racism. ethnic oppression. Such
obvious positions to take in that struggle. Either affirmation of difference is difficult and threatening.
feminism means that we seek for women the same however. because it challenges modes of individual
opportunities and privileges the societ! gives to and communit!, self-identification.
men. or feminism means that ue assert the As I alread\ pointed out in discussing Beauvoir.
distinctive value of womanhood against patriarchal humanist feminism focuses its investieation primari-
denigration. While these positions need not be I! on uomen’s situation and criticizes patriarch!
mutually exclusive. there is a strong tendency for because of its specificall!, destructive effect on
both feminists and non-feminists to make them so: women’s li\es. without questioning the dominant
Either we want to be like men or we don’t. culture’s basic assumptions about the good human
I think that contemporar) gynocentnc feminism life. Gynocentric feminism. on the other hand. takes
has a number of aspects that make it a better a much broader look at our society. It seeks to
analvsis than humanist feminism. At the same time. uncover and throu into question some of the most
I think the swing toward gynocentnsm has left basic assumptions of the Western tradition of
behind some important elements of feminist politics thought of which modern humanism is a part-the
that humanist feminism has emphasized. We need to distinction between nature and culture. spirit and
rethink our analysis. not to form a synthesis of the hod\. the universal and particular. Gynocentric
two. but to cook up a better mixture out of some of feminism links masculinist culture’s equation of
the old ingredients. humanit! with rationality. on the one hand. to the
Since it was first uttered in the eighteenth centur!‘. repression of life spontaneity and the development
humanist feminism has assumed the liberation of of an oppressi\,e web of social controls and
women as an extension of the values of liberalism. organizational hierarchy. on the other. In these
The ideal of universal humanit\. that all persons ways It is similar to and stands in the same category
have equal rights whatever their station or class. with critiques of Western culture uttered b!
should be extended to women. To be sure. man! Nietzsche. Adorn0 and Horkheimer. Foucault and
Humanism. Gynocentrism and Feminist Politics 181
artists. inventor or scientist. and have recognized nineteenth century feminism: a resegregation of
only other men worthy to compete for the accolades women to a specifically women’s sphere, outside the
that reward excellence. If the activities which men sites of power, privilege and recognition. For me the
have dominated really are less valuable than those in symptom here is what the dominant culture finds
which women have traditionally engaged, as more threatening. Within the dominant culture a
gynocentric feminism suggests. then in what does middle-aged assertive woman’s claim to co-anchor
male privilege consist? The other side of gynocen- the news alongside a man appears considerably
trism’s denial of the damaging consequences of more threatening than women’s claim to have a
femininity is its denial of the growth promoting different voice that exposes masculinist values as
aspects of traditional masculinity. If we claim that body-denying and selfish. The claim of women to
masculinity distorts men more than it contributes to have a right to the positions and benefits that have
their self-development and capacities. then again hitherto been reserved for men, and that male-
the claim that women are the victims of injustice dominated institutions should serve women’s needs.
loses considerable force. is a direct threat to male privilege. While the claim
Within the context of anti-feminist backlash. the that these positions of power themselves should be
effect of gynocentric feminism may be accommo- eliminated and the institutions eliminated or
dating to the existing structure. Gynocentric restructured is indeed more radical. when asserted
feminism relies on and reinforces gender stereotypes from the gynocentric feminist position it can be an
at just the time when the dominant culture has put objective retreat.
new emphasis on marks of gender difference. It does Gynocentrism’s focus on values and language as
so. moreover, by relying on many of those aspects of the primary target of its critique contributes to this
women’s traditional sphere that traditional patri- blunting of its political force. Without doubt, social
archal ideologv has most exploited and that change requires changing the subject. which in turn
humanist feminists such as Beauvoir found most means developing new ways of speaking. writing
oppressive-reproductive biology. motherhood. and imagining. Equally indubitable is the gynocen-
domestic concerns. Even though its intentions are tric feminist claim that masculinist values in Western
subversive, such renewed attention to traditional culture deny the body. sensuality and rootedness in
femininity can have a reactionary effect on both nature. and that such denial nurtures fascism,
ourselves and our listeners because it may echo the pollution and nuclear games. Given these facts.
dominant claim that women belong in a separate however. what shall we do? To this gynocentrism
sphere. has little concrete answer. Because its criticism of
Humanist feminism calls upon patriarchal society existing society is so global and abstract. gynocentric
to open places for women within those spheres of critique of the values. language and culture of
human activity that have been considered the most masculinism can remove feminist theory from
creative. powerful and prestigious. Gynocentric analysis of specific institutions and practices and
feminism replies that wanting such things for women how concretely they might be structurallv changed
implies a recognition that such activities are the in directions more consonant with our visions.
most humanly valuable. It argues that in fact.
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