new internationalist
issue 227 - January 1992
| Simply... a history of feminism The term 'feminism' may belong to modern times - but the roots of feminism go back much further. |
1
Rebels and thinkers
There
have always been independent feminists. In sixth century BC Greece, Sappho
wrote lesbian poetry and ran a girls' school. The fifteenth century French
writer Christine de Pisan is now regarded as a feminist thinker. In the seventeenth
century English adventurer and political activist Aphra Benn was getting embroiled
in the West Indian slave rebellion - and writing 13 novels. The radical way
in which some men were thinking during the Age of Reason incidentally changed
attitudes towards women. Thinkers like Newton, Locke, Voltaire and Diderot
believed that science and reason could explain the world. They began to analyse
women in terms of what they deemed 'natural' rather than what was divinely
ordained. This was not necessarily better for women.
2 Mothers of
the revolution
Women played a major role in the 1789 French Revolution and the ideal
of 'Republican Motherhood' took shape. But, some argued, if women had the
task of 'bringing up the new citizens', they should also have status. Feminist
pamphlets proliferated. In her Rights of Woman, Olympe de Gourges wrote:
'Woman is born free and her rights are the same as those of man... if women
have the right to go to the scaffold, they must also have the right to go
to Parliament.' Parisian women formed political clubs and associations to
campaign on issues affecting them. But the male leaders of the Revolution
were basically hostile and in 1793 they outlawed all women's clubs. A woman's
place was in the home, they ruled. This hostility persisted through the nineteenth
century. The Napoleonic Code gave all management of family funds to the husband.
Not until 1909 did French women have control over their own earnings. Not
until 1944 did they get the vote.


3 Radical sparks
Meanwhile, In North America, women took part in the independence struggle
and exercised their power as consumers to boycott British goods. Even in Britain
there was a rash of radical - and reactionary - writing about women. Closely
watching events in France was British journalist and translator Mary Wollstonecraft.
She worked to support her family but in 1787 came to London to live by her
writing. She joined a radical circle of intellectuals. A year after Thomas
Paine wrote The Rights of Man (1791) Mary Wollstonecraft produced her
A Vindication of the Rights of Women. It was the first fullscale book
favouring women's liberation and was widely read. She was dismissed by the
male conservative press as 'a strumpet'.
4
Missions and manacles
For black women living in slavery in America the late eighteenth century
was a turning point, as Protestant evangelism combined with the anti-slavery
movement. Women made up a large part of revival congregations - both in white
and black churches. Women were not supposed to preach but some - like the
former slave Jarena Lee - ignored this. Black women realized that freedom
from whites was not enough. They had to have freedom from men too. But uniting
white and black women was not easy. When black feminist, Sojourner Truth,
stood before the Second Annual Convention of Women's Rights in Akron Ohio
in 1852 white racist women tried to stop her speaking. There were many black
women activists but Sojourner Truth was the most outspoken, arguing publicly
that black women should have the vote.

5
Industry and protest
During the Industrial Revolution unmarried women were leaving
home to work in the cities, often for low wages in appalling factory conditions.
Meanwhile the idea of female education became firmly entrenched and middle
class women were demanding access to a much wider range of occupations. On
both sides of the Atlantic women started taking part in industrial action.
During the 1808 Weavers Strike in Britain The Times singled out striking
women weavers as 'more turbulent and insolent' than the men. In the US the
first all-women strike took place in 1828 at Cocheco Mill, New Hampshire.
In Britain in 1854 Barbara Leigh Smith drew together for the first time a
group of women who called themselves feminists and campaigned to change laws.
A strike by women in an East London match factory helped create the British
trade union movement.

6 Invasion and rebellion
In Asia and Africa women were resisting both traditional and colonial
oppression. Chinese feminists who joined the Taiping Rebellion of 1850-1864
called for an end to foot-binding and demanded communal ownership of property
and equal rights for women and men. Colonizing Europeans made alliances with
groups that were the most conservative and often most oppressive of women.
So the British in India encouraged the dowry system, arranged marriages and
education for men only. But by 1905 Indian women were participating in the
Swadeshi movement to boycott foreign goods and in 1917 the Women's Indian
Association was set up with links to the British movement for women's suffrage.
In parts of Africa women were banned from entering the cities and their traditional
access to land - as Africa's principle farmers - was also denied. But in 1923
the Egyptian Women's Federation was formed and in 1924 it got the age of marriage
for girls raised to 16.
7
Suffering for suffrage
Women's call for the vote was echoing around the world. It was first
answered in Aotearoa / New Zealand in 1893. In Britain mass meetings organized
by Emmeline Pankhurst and her two daughters Sylvia and Christabel drew crowds
of up to 500,000. Determined militants chained themselves to railings and
caused civil disturbances. In 1908 the Pankhursts were arrested and imprisoned.
They went on hunger strike and were force-fed - causing public outcry. But
only in 1918 did women (over the age of 30) get the vote in Britain. The US
followed in 1920. In India Provincial Assemblies were allowed to enfranchise
women in 1919. And in 1931 the Indian National Congress Party pledged itself
to sexual as well as caste and religious equality in independence. The first
Latin American country to give women the vote was Ecuador in 1929, followed
by Brazil, Argentina, Cuba and Chile during the 1930s.
8
Reds and beds
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels saw women's liberation as part of the
socialist revolution and Rosa Luxembourg, Clara Zetkin and Alexandra Kollantai
became respected political leaders. In 1918 the first Women's Conference was
held in Moscow and during the 1920s- under Lenin - the Soviet Government promoted
equal rights. Marriage, divorce and contraception were made simple. But in
the 19308 and 1940s Stalin turned the clock back. Divorce was made difficult,
abortion banned, contraception restricted. In China the 1949 Revolution brought
formal equality for women and men. But both here and in the USSR women did
the housework as well as their jobs. In the West feminism lay dormant. Radicals
were preoccupied with fighting unemployment, fascism, then McCarthyism.
9
The Second Wave
But during the 1960s feminism burst into life again in the US as part
of a radical culture that included Civil Rights and sexual liberation. Betty
Friedan's The Feminine Mystique was a bestseller in 1963. Feminist
groups campaigned on issues such as childcare, health, welfare, education,
abortion. Consciousness-raising groups proliferated. In Europe, Canada and
Australasia too, new ideas and laws were changing society. Germaine Greer's
The Female Eunuch was an eye-opener. And in 1975 the United Nations
announced an International Decade for Women. Revolutionary movements in Zimbabwe,
Angola, Mozambique and Nicaragua were including women's liberation in their
ideology. In Europe the peace movement became the focus for feminist activism
- especially at the US air base at Greenham Common, UK. And feminism boomed
in Latin America after the restoration of democracy during the 1980s.
All illustrations by ANGELA MARTIN

