“Socialist
Feminism and the New Women’s Movement,” by Socialist Alternative (Christine Thomas, Erin Brightwell,
Kelly Belin) – 2019
This is a
basic primer on the history of feminism, with a Marxist take on the reason
women are an oppressed group in capitalist society. It first discusses Engel’s seminal work ‘Origin of the Family, Private Property and
the State’ and ‘the world historic defeat of the female sex’ with its
origins in the development of class society.
It tracks
the divides between different kinds of feminism – which the authors label as
mostly ‘liberal feminism.’ I would describe the varieties as liberal, anti-male,
proletarian and socialist. All of them
overlap on certain issues, like abortion and women’s rights. Liberal feminism concentrates on promoting
the needs of upper-class women.
Anti-male identity feminism blames all men as the enemy, as part of the
patriarchy. Proletarian feminism focuses
on the needs of proletarian women and families, like daycare and equal pay or
equal work opportunities. Socialist
feminism locates the center of oppression for women not in the patriarchy alone
but in the profit system, in which the patriarchy is embedded.
The authors
discuss the ‘three’ historic waves of the women’s movement, with a socialist
take on each. They cover the #MeToo
movement, the renewed push to outlaw abortion behind the appointment of Brett
Kavanaugh, the recent teachers’ strikes, conservative anti-female religion, continued violence
against women and the chauvinism of Trump.
The recent strike by Google
workers regarding sex harassment on the job is one bright spot. Black feminism, NOW, the Hyde Amendment, women
CEOs, ‘lean in’ and ‘glass ceiling’ feminism, women in trade unions, A.
Kollontai and the Russian Revolution all come in for attention.
If you’ve
ever wondered why, even after 233 years as a nation, the U.S. is still
backward on the issue of gender, then a socialist understanding, as represented
in this thin book, might help. At a recent trans-feminist book reading at May Day Books, I commented that capital profits both economically and socially off the second-hand status of women. The attendee I was addressing looked at me stunned and never replied. Perhaps this had never occurred to her. She needed to read this short book!
Other
reviews on this subject below, use blog search box, upper left: “Feminists and Feminists,” “Fortunes of
Feminism,” “Revolt. She Said. Revolt Again,” “Marxism and the Oppression of
Women,” “Stitched Up,” “Shopping World,” “Mistaken Identity,” “The Unwomanly
Face of War,” “Really? Rape? Still?” “Reflections on the Olympics 2012,” “Women
in Soviet Art,” 'Three Essays by Alexandra Kollontai."
And I
bought it after a forum by Socialist Alternative at May Day Books.
It is a part of a large collection of small books/pamphlets that May Day has, authored by various left organizations.
It is a part of a large collection of small books/pamphlets that May Day has, authored by various left organizations.
Red Frog
May 18,
2019
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