December 1998
Column: Woman as Reason
Feminism and THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO
by Maya Jhansi
This past year, there has been much discussion on Marx inspired by the
150th anniversary of THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO, from journalistic discourses
on Marx's prescient descriptions of globalized capitalism to more scholarly
meditations on its rich history. What is troubling, however, is how little
feminists have participated in these important discussions. Why haven't
feminists felt the need to engage with Marx on this important anniversary?
To some, the answer may seem obvious. The history of Marxism and feminism
has always been a tortured one, with many, if not most, feminists arguing
Marxism to be at best shortsighted on women's liberation and at worst
totally irrelevant.
This is certainly the vantage point of the few feminist discussions of the
MANIFESTO that I have been able to find. Sheila Rowbotham, a
socialist-feminist theorist and author of one of the earliest books of
women's revolutionary history, WOMEN, RESISTANCE AND REVOLUTION, wrote a
piece called "Dear Dr. Marx: A Letter from a Socialist Feminist" published
in a recent book, THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO NOW: SOCIALIST REGISTER 1998 (ed.
Leo Panitch and Colin Leys). In this piece, Rowbotham assumes the persona
of a fictional 19th century woman, Annette Devereux, who writes to Marx
from a utopian Fourierist society called the Wisconsin Associationists in
1851.
The letter is mostly an excuse for Rowbotham's predictable and hollow
criticisms. For example, Rowbotham anachronistically derides Marx for not
recognizing the beginnings of the women's movement in 1848- even though the
MANIFESTO was written before the Seneca Falls Convention. She also
criticizes Marx for assuming that women must wait for their freedom until
the "abolition of the present system" (p. 7). Certainly, this is
hindsighted criticism of a manifesto written for the first of the 19th
century proletarian revolutions.
Rowbotham castigates Marx for not recognizing the need for an autonomous
women's movement, but even feminists were not calling for this in the early
1800s! It is true that there is a rich history of women's activism and
philosophic engagement with the Idea of Socialism dating back before THE
COMMUNIST MANIFESTO. In 1843, for example, a woman, Flora Tristan, called
for a Worker's Union and insisted that the emancipation of proletarian men
was hindered if women remained oppressed in the family. But even Flora
Tristan called for an International of men and women to put an end to the
division between mental and manual labor, not for an autonomous women's
movement.
In the famous section on the "abolition of the family" in the MANIFESTO,
Marx criticizes the bourgeois "for seeing in his wife a mere instrument of
production," arguing that far from introducing a "community of women" to
replace the private property relationship of marriage, "the real point
aimed at is to do away with the status of women as mere instruments of
production." To Rowbotham and others I have read, this section expresses
Marx's inability to see women as active agents of their own
liberation-women are freed as a consequence of (male) proletarian
revolution, not their own revolutionary praxis.
But is that really what Marx is saying here? Does Marx imply that women
should "rely for their emancipation upon men?" (Rowbotham p. 7)
I think it is, in fact, quite the contrary. The very fact that to Marx the
revolution uproots all relations under capitalism, including the
patriarchal and alienated relations within the family, means that
revolution is not stagified but rather total from the start. After the
defeat of the 1848 revolutions, Marx did not back away from this vision of
thorough-going revolution-in his March 1850 Address to the Communist League
he called for "revolution in permanence."
Marx expressed this concept of revolution in permanence in 1844 when he
projected the Man/Woman relationship as the most fundamental human
relationship in need of uprooting. He developed it in the 1850s in a series
of still unpublished notes on women's history. Later, in 1871, Marx wrote
on the centrality of the "feminine ferment" to the extraordinary Paris
Commune, and in the 1880s he focused on women and the Third World in his
ETHNOLOGICAL NOTEBOOKS. Throughout his lifetime, Marx deepened his view of
women's revolutionary activity and reason. It is just not true that women
are excluded or external to Marx's philosophy.
It is all too easy to slough off onto Marx's shoulders the responsibilities
of our age as Rowbotham does. Bringing out explicitly the centrality of
women's liberation to Marx's concept of revolution in permanence is OUR
task. A full 30 years after the Women's Liberation Movement, feminists
still fail to take responsibility for making what is implicit in Marx
EXPLICIT. If we are at all serious about working out a socialist
alternative to this sexist, racist, class-ridden society, then we cannot
afford to shirk this responsibility any longer. The pages of NEWS & LETTERS
are open for such discussion.
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