Is the Women's Movement in Trouble?
by Roberta
Lynch
(Editors Note: This article originally appeared in Working Papers
on Socialism & Feminism published by the New American Movement
(NAM) in 1976. NAM was a mixed gender organization heavily influenced
by socialist feminism. A number of CWLUers were associated with it.)
"Reports of my death are greatly exaggerated."-
Mark Twain
Well, I guess it's official. The cover story of the November Harper's
magazine has broken the news: the women's movement is dead. In "Requiem for the Women's
Movement," Veronica Geng argues that women in the movement are engaged in
a host of meaningless activities to cover up their fear of confronting male power.
She dissects the cultural feminists and the political feminists and even her
own version of the socialist feminists until there don't seem to be any feminists
left. This sense of disillusionment is becoming a common theme in the literature
on the women's liberation movement. There must be something happening--or not
happening--to bring it on.
This past year most of the-published news of the women's movement
has been bad: splits and spats within the major women's organization,
NOW; dramatic
defeats
for the ERA in New York and New Jersey; a growing "women's anti-abortion
movement"; short shrift compromises for women at the Democratic Convention.
The women's press has also contributed to a sense of gloom and doom.
Off Our Backs, the most consistent voice of the radical women's movement,
has lately persisted in filling its pages with tirades over who has authorship
rights to what documents; fights about women's health clinic ownership,
and tired debates
over whether men should be considered eternally hopeless. All in all, it's
enough to make you think you can't do anything but get out your mourning
garb.
But is that all? It's true, there is painful strife within the movement,
and as a social force its power seems diminished. But those who dwell
on these
facts of the movement fail to note some more important facts of life.
Movements do
not simply get born, flourish, and die. They go forward and are beaten
back. They retreat, regroup, and advance again. And movements do not
exist in a
vacuum of internal dynamics or the wishes and whims of their leaders.
They are fixed
in history as much as they help to make it.
On thinking about it, the striking thing about the current crop of
articles performing the last rites for the women's movement is their
divorce from
the social context
in which the movement has had to eke out its existence for the past
few years.
The women's liberation movement emerged in the late 1960's--the product
of a social movement that stressed equality and in a climate that promised
jobs
and
income for all. As the 1970's dawned, the Nixon-Ford era was unfolding.
The hallmark of this period has been political reaction coupled with
economic recession--rising unemployment; the gutting of affirmative-action
programs;
the emergence of
right-wing
movements; massive social welfare cutbacks. In the face of this array
of heavy artillery from corporate and governmental powers, nearly all
progressive
movements
began to wither and to suffer the internal dissension that so often
accompanies defeat.
With all this, it's amazing that the women's movement managed to
survive at all. But survive--in some forms--it did. Beyond the media
spokespeople,
some
women
continued to build. Around the country hundreds of small projects (health
centers, rape counseling, etc.) are run by feminists or drew their
initial inspiration
from the women's movement. (The most recent example of this indirect
influence is the rash of articles and activities that have sprung up
to defend battered
wives.) The Coalition of Labor Union Women, though top-heavy with trade
union officials who have their own narrow agendas, continues to function
and could
yet be transformed into a meeting ground for the growing numbers of
working women.
On another front, the National Congress of Neighborhood Women has
been formed to bring together the thousands of women who have been
in the
heart of local
community struggles.
The movement has grown politically as well. Many in NOW have rejected
the traditional interest group approach to politics and have taken
as an informal
slogan the
motto: We don't just want a bigger piece of a rotten pie. And just
a year and a half ago, nearly two thousand women came together from
across
the
country in a conference to discuss the relationship of feminism and
socialism and
how
to
work for both.
Despite these and other hopeful signs, there is no doubt that on
the whole the women's movement today is weak, disorganized, and often
disoriented.
The blame
for this situation cannot be laid entirely on external factors, either.
Geng and the host of other critics are right in some respects. Mistakes--some
of them quite serious--have been made in the women's movement over
the past
years.
While different wings of the movement are guilty of different failures,
there is a big picture that emerges in looking back.
The movement refused to look at the differences among women, and
so identified the needs of its own members as the needs of all women.
It called for
abortion without calling for an end to forced sterilization and enforced
birth control.
It called for women bank officers without calling for higher wages
and better working conditions for bank office workers. It called for
the
ERA without
calling for the extension, rather than the obliteration, of protective
legislation.
And the movement itself was full of contradictions. It inveighed
against leaders and so ended up with a self-appointed stock of them.
It stressed
lifestyle
and so excluded those who weren't able to change their lives. It often
saw itself
in opposition to other social movements, and so ended up isolated.
Yes, the women's movement is in trouble. But is it really dying?
I doubt it. Some women in the movement are already working to overcome
its weaknesses.
But more basically, it seems to me that the women's movement will go
on because expectations
and consciousnesses have been raised too high--and we're still too
far from even the most meager of our goals.
Women total over 40 percent of the workforce, yet remained locked
into certain low-paying positions. Women make up over 50 percent of
our
population, yet
our major elected officials are over 90 percent male. (Only the barest
gains were
made for women in the recent election.)
And women are still held inferior in the eyes of the law, in the
dictums of social custom, and in their most intimate relationships.
We expected
so much
more that
it's hard to believe we'll settle for this much less.
Some predict that the Carter presidency will help to revive the women's
movement because it will open up new terrain for struggle. This may
well happen. But
the women's movement cannot simply be "born again" on a new wave in its
old form. In order to survive and grow the movement desperately needs to change.
It needs to develop a political approach that does not just serve to provide
refuge or advancement for a few, but can fight for concrete changes in the day
to day lives of the majority of women. And it needs to develop strong, ongoing
organizational forms. The lack of such organizations has made strategizing difficult
and pressure tactics weak.
In the end, it is a question of power. Can a movement be built to
involve and influence enough women so that it has the strength to challenge
the corporate and governmental power that rules our lives. I don't
know whether
it can,
given
all the obstacles along the way. But I'd make a small bet on this:
the movement for women's liberation--preferably in new forms and
with
new
directions-will rise again. All plans for the funeral are premature.
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