“Red Valkyries – Feminist Lesson from Five Revolutionary Women” by Kristen Ghodsee, 2022
This is a good book to read for people who are rejecting
bourgeois feminism. While somewhat
dated, it shows the emancipatory feminist thrust of socialist women connected
to the USSR and Bulgaria. It covers the
stories of the WWII sniper Lyudmila Pavlichenko, the Bolshevik Alexandra
Kollontai, the organizer and educator Nadezhda Krupskaya, the Party worker
Inessa Armand and the partisan and scientist Elena Lagadinova. It could be the start of a whole series on
socialist women from all over the world of course.
Ghodsee defines the huge differences between bourgeois
feminism, which mostly seeks legal equality from the standpoint of upwardly
mobile middle and upper class women; and socialist feminism, which advocates
legal AND social equality in the form of state support for daycare, paid
maternity leave, socialized housework and more. They see that capital is the ultimate source of women's oppression. 3 of the women were typical feminists first, but saw the
limitations. As a Soviet woman, Pavilchenko
observed how U.S. women were trivialized, second class citizens in the 1940s
U.S. and Britain. Lagadinova led the
Women’s Commission in the Bulgarian workers’ state, counseling her 'Western' sisters.
Pavlichenko
killed 309 confirmed Nazis in WWII as a sniper, starting with a
Moisan-Nagant. She was skilled as she
had been practicing marksmanship since she was a kid. She was even a ‘counter-sniper’ whose job it
was to take out German snipers. After
being injured 4 times and taking sick, she was sent on a trip to
the U.S. during the war where she met Eleanor Roosevelt and the U.S.
press. She advocated a 2nd
front, which the U.S. and British ‘Allies’ had delayed for years on purpose.
The questions from the U.S. press were mostly idiotic about whether a ‘woman’
could be a soldier and did she wear makeup and nice underwear and
what-not. 800K women fought in the
Soviet Army as snipers, pilots, parachutists, artillery and other roles that
did not require upper-body physical strength.
Like the color issue in the U.S., Roosevelt saw that the U.S.
treatment of women did not compare favorably to the Soviets. Being one of the smarter women in the U.S.
ruling class, she prompted a 1963 commission which looked at U.S. laws that
discriminated against women.
Kollontai was
appointed the first Commissar of Women in 1917. Prior to that she led the first strike of
Petrograd laundresses against Krensky’s regime.
She wrote profusely and also spurred the first Soviet laws advocating
women’s liberation. These allowed easy
divorce, abortion, gay rights, maternity leave and were against ‘bastard’
designations, while promoting equal pay and jobs, state creation of orphanages,
child care facilities, collective laundries, workplace canteens, and other
social efforts to combat domestic drudgery. She also wrote about the
development of new sexual and romantic relations if inheritance and women’s
oppression were lifted. She avoided the
faction fights and purges of her Old Bolshevik friends in the 1930s by escaping
to diplomatic posts overseas. She saw nearly
all her efforts for women’s liberation reversed by Stalin in 1936. She died in 1952 after a series of strokes.
Krupskaya is
the most interesting of all… as she always operated in Lenin’s shadow. Without
Krupskaya, Lenin would have not been able to function as well as he did. She maintained the home and the many
relocations, and also translated, took dictation, organized correspondence,
paid bills, edited Iskra, did
cryptography and minutes, and other aspects of logistics. While the Bolsheviks were politically for
women’s liberation, the ‘old’ ways still persisted in personal contexts.
Krupskaya, due to her extensive experience teaching workers
and peasants, became a seminal advocate of progressive educational
principles. She was an inspiration for
Paulo Freire, for instance and supported a ‘labor-arts’ approach. After the revolution she set up libraries and
reading rooms across the USSR and created a school pedagogy that encouraged
critical thinking, practical skills and the development of individual
understanding and talents. She also set
up kindergartens, the Komosol and the Young Pioneers. Her educational efforts
were reversed under Stalin, who reinstituted rote learning, memorization and
extensive testing. She died in 1939 from
a heart-attack in the aftermath of the Purge trials of her Old Bolshevik
comrades.
Armand
became Lenin’s close confidant and a Bolshevik faction leader, though she grew
sick of his arbitrary and demanding nature prior to 1917. She became a representative of the faction,
did translations, did dangerous courier work and extensive traveling. She edited Rabotnitsa, (Woman Worker) in 1914, which was first issued on
International Working Women’s Day. At
one point she was sent to Paris as a representative of the Zimmerwald left,
which opposed WWI and supported civil war against the respective capitalist
governments. At the same time she had 5 children and this conflict between
personal and political continued her whole life.
She was in a close personal relationship with Krupskaya and
Lenin at times, and the rumors of a ‘ménage a trois’ or something resembling
that still exist. Ghodsee does not find
enough proof for that, though she does explain how traditional marriage and
relationships were looked down upon by some revolutionaries. After the revolution she was a leader of the women’s
department of the CP with Kollontai, the Zhenotdel, but died in 1920 partly due
to exhaustion. The Zhenotdel was later
eliminated by Stalin.
The 'Amazon' - Lagadinova in 1971 |
Lagadinova was a
Bulgarian partisan in WWII as a girl, brought up in a poor peasant family as a
red diaper baby. After the guerilla
triumph in Bulgaria against the fascists and the monarchy, she went on to be highly educated in agro-biology, once developing
a seed hybrid of wheat and barley. She
was selected by the Bulgarian president to head the Women’s Commission in 1968,
as Bulgarian women were legally equal as of 1946 but still labored in two
shifts due to the lack of investment in mothers, daycare, maternity leave and
household support. The problem was a
dropping birth rate. She was ordered to
rectify the situation to make it easier to have children. After 5 years of struggle with her male
comrades in 1973 Bulgaria passed and paid for one of the most comprehensive
systems to aid women and children in the world according to Ghodsee. Lagadinova later became an international
figure, named ‘special rapporteur’ at the 1980 U.N. conference on women in
Nairobi.
Actual
Left Feminism
All these women were socialists who understood the material
roots of the oppression of women in the capitalist system itself, unlike
middle-class and upper-class feminists who avoid that issue. A system which demands free reproductive
labor and cheap female labor to enable profiteering. Ghodsee says that “Women’s bodies were as much a means of production as any textile mill
or steam engine.”
Ghodsee identifies the USSR with the typical language of
‘actually existing socialism’ – which of course might not be actual socialism
at all. She is anti-Stalinist in her perspective, recognizing the anti-female,
conservative and bloody role the rigid Soviet bureaucracy played at that time. She does not
define polyamory or ‘free love’ in her text, seemingly associating them with
something that does not quite rise to that level. At one point she seems to say
that ‘free love’ means not wanting to get married. She notes that 3 of these women came from the
middle-class or lower nobility in Russia, but grew apart from their class to pursue
a revolution that united men and women.
Ghodsee concludes with statistics on the huge improvements in
the lives of working women in the workers’ states during this period. She says these 5 women embodied comradeship,
humility, auto-didacticism, receptivity, aptitude, tenacity and the ability to
create coalitions – skills that a new revolutionary movement will need to succeed.
Prior blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box,
upper left, using these terms to investigate our 15 year archive: “Feminism”
or “Abortion Referendum in
Ireland,” “State Department Feminism,” “Why Women Have Better Sex Under
Socialism” (Ghodsee); “Soviet Women – Walking the Tightrope,” “Really, Rape, Still?”
“Socialist Feminism and the New Women’s Movement,” “Ireland – What’s
Up?” “Fortunes of Feminism” (Fraser); “Weird Conservative Feminism,”
“Freedom Socialist,” “The Queen’s Gambit,” “Revolt. She Said. Revolt
Again,” “Marxism and the Oppression of Women” (Vogel);“Stitched Up,” “Shopping World,”
“Mistaken Identity,” “The Unwomanly Face of War” (Alexievich); “Reflections on the Olympics
2012,” “Women in Soviet Art,” 'Three Essays by Alexandra Kollontai,"
“Without Apology,” ‘What Is To Be Done?” (Chernyshevsky); "Patriarchy of the Wage" (Federici).
And I bought it at May Day Books!
Red Frog
September 27, 2022
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