Radical Feminism
Radical Feminism
Radical Feminism
INTRODUCTION
→ Radical feminism, therefore, unlike liberal feminism, does not accept that
equality will be achieved for women, provided the legal inequalities and
disabilities are removed from the law. Rather than constructing on specific
legal inequalities, radical feminism challenges the core structure of society
and law by focusing on its patriarchal ordering and its representation of
patriarchal culture and mores.
→ Radical feminism is, thus, deeply critical at the level of society’s structure.
INTRODUCTION
→ From its broadly left-wing political origins in the 1960s and characterized
principally by white, middle-class, heterosexual, academic women, radical
feminism has evolved as a key challenger to the societal status quo.
→ In the 1970s, radical feminists subjected various patriarchal legal and
social attitudes and concepts to analysis, like rape.
INTRODUCTION
→ Radical feminists believe that the bifurcation between male and female
experience means that every society has 2 cultures --- the visible, national,
or male culture and the invisible, universal, female culture.
→ Males define and control all the institutions of all ‘national’ cultures--
including every purportedly socialist nation that has ever existed.
→ The female culture is based on “the cooking, cleaning, and child-raising
chores of the society.”
CULTURE ACCORDING TO RADICAL FEMINISM
→ The male picture conceals the destructive values that underlie the male culture and
obscures the positive contributions of the female culture.
→ According to radical feminists, Liberal and Marxist feminists have internalized the
values of the male culture. They want women to live according to male standards.
→ Radical feminists, by contrast, challenge the values of the male culture. They do
not want women to be like men. Instead, they want to develop new values, based
on women's traditional culture.
CULTURE ACCORDING TO RADICAL FEMINISM
→ They are “proud of the female principle and do not want to deny it to gain
women's freedom.”
→ The only aspects of female culture to be rejected are “all those that keep us
subservient, such as passivity, self-sacrifice, etc.”
→ It is interesting to note that radical feminists seem to share certain values
with the patriarchy. Both patriarchy and radical feminism, for instance,
value power and strength, and neither admires passivity or subservience.
CULTURE ACCORDING TO RADICAL FEMINISM
→ It is perhaps closer to the truth to say that radical feminism rejects some of
the values of the patriarchy outright, but it accepts others with reservations.
→ The reservation depends on a feminist reinterpretation of traditionally
accepted values. Joyce Trebilcot calls these reinterpretations “feminist
reconceiving”
CULTURE ACCORDING TO RADICAL FEMINISM
→ Thus, radical feminists seek new values around which to organise society.
They are looking for a way of expressing their vision of wholeness, which
will transcend the patriarchal dualisms of self and world, nature and spirit,
reason and emotion.
→ In part, radical feminist values are inspired by women's spiritual or
mystical experiences of connectedness with non-human nature or with
other women.
PUBLIC VS. PRIVATE SPHERE
→ One meaning of this slogan is that sexual politics, the systematic male
domination of women, and women's resistance to this domination occurs in
the so-called private as much as in the so-called public sphere.
→ For radical feminists, the slogan has an additional meaning: that women's
experience in personal life can provide the inspiration and the basis for a
new vision of politics.
THE RADICAL FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF WOMEN’S
OPPRESSION
(1) Patriarchy:
The radical feminist analysis of women’s oppression exposes the
destructive quality of women’s relations with men and shows how that
destructiveness is rooted in the systematic coercive power that men have
over women.
THE RADICAL FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF WOMEN’S
OPPRESSION
Radical feminists assert that women are forced to be mothers. Patriarchy has many
means of compulsions.
Contemporary patriarchy deprives young women of adequate contraceptive
information, and the contraceptives it does make available are inconvenient,
unreliable, expensive, and sometimes dangerous.
Patriarchy limits abortions and often seeks to deny them entirely, but at the same
time, it subjects women to intense and unremitting pressure to engage in sexual
relations.
THE RADICAL FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF WOMEN’S
OPPRESSION
Even when women engage in paid labour, radical feminists assert that they are often
expected to perform for other adults, the same kind of nurturing tasks that mothers
typically perform for their children.
Mothers under capitalist patriarchy are expected to absorb the impact of two
opposing sets of values. In opposition to our society that values individualism,
mothers are expected to embrace their servitude voluntarily, to sacrifice their own
interests completely to those of others and even to deny that they could have
interests that conflict with those of their children.
THE RADICAL FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF WOMEN’S
OPPRESSION
Or should they foster instead, the dominant patriarchal values that will
enable their children to be accepted and to survive in male culture?
Shulamith Firestone discusses how the emergence of feminity in girls and
masculinity in boys is a response not to the difference in their parents’
anatomy but rather to the difference in power between their mothers and
fathers in the context of a male dominant culture.
THE RADICAL FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF WOMEN’S
OPPRESSION
Men determine whether children are born, under what conditions they are
reared, and what counts as successful child-rearing. Women have
responsibility only for the daily details of a process whose totality is male-
controlled.
(3) Sexual Slavery:
Women, under patriarchy, are sexual slaves. Forced motherhood begins
with sexual coercion.
THE RADICAL FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF WOMEN’S
OPPRESSION
With the partial exception of mothers, the male culture defines women as sexual
objects for male pleasure.
Within the patriarchal culture of advanced capitalist nations, even women's paid
work is sexualised, and “sex appeal” is often an explicitly acknowledged
qualification for “women's jobs.”
Having defined women as sexual objects, men seek possession of those objects.
They use ideological, economic, legal, and physical coercion to gain sexual
possession of women.
THE RADICAL FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF WOMEN’S
OPPRESSION
Radical feminists believe that women, whether they recognise it or not, are
the sexual slaves of men. Consequently, women’s sexual relations with
men are typically that of rape.