1. The document discusses patriarchy as a hierarchical social system that promotes male privilege through male domination and control. It is organized around the oppression of women through gender norms.
2. Gender norms are core principles that are socially enforced from childhood through adulthood to police masculine and feminine social roles and status. They are used to maintain patriarchal control.
3. Second-wave feminism in the 1960s-1970s aimed to analyze and challenge patriarchy through consciousness raising and activism. It was later fragmented by neoliberalism's emphasis on individualism over collective action and identity politics over structural issues.
2. 1. to âthe rule of the fatherâ: hierarchical social system
2. Based on sex stereotypes that fix dominant/submissive
social roles (and status) for males and females respectively
3. to womenâs inequitable status arising from sex differentials
which are naturalised and socially policed from the cradle to
the grave
4. to punishment for transgression of these gender norms
3. A society is patriarchal to the degree that it
promotes male privilege by being male
dominated, male identified, and male
centred. It is also organised around an
obsession with control and involves as one of
its key aspects the oppression of women.
(Allan G. Johnson)
4. Male-dominated: think of leaders of institutions,
businesses, organisations, opinion-makers
Male-centred: think of any films you know that are not
about men, for men, by men
Male-identified: menâs ideas and actions are
foregrounded, womenâs are in the background,
exceptions or outsiders (e.g. malestream media)
5. How does patriarchy endure?
Roots: Core principles (obsession
with control, male is central
defining measure of things & focus
of attention, male privilege, etc.
Trunk: Institutions, economy, media,
State, Church, Justice, etc.
Branches: groups, organisations,
businesses, schools, family, etc.
Leaves: individuals who participate in
the system (or not)
6. Gender norms: a core principle
Sex Gender
A biological category:
the anatomy of an
individual's
reproductive system
and secondary sex
characteristics
A cultural category:
expectations, beliefs, behaviours
deemed to express some
essence about oneâs biological
sex ; lead to social roles based
on the sex (gender roles:
masculinity v femininity)
11. In patriarchy everything labelled as "feminine" is despised,
seen as weak and pathetic. What is actually labelled as
"feminine" are the very traits that make you human
(capacity for love, empathy, sorrow, intimacy, connection).
(Gail Dines)
12. 1. a hierarchical social system based on primacy of
male sex class
2. facilitated by sex class differentials (gender roles)
that fix primary/secondary social status for the two
sexes respectively
3. maintained by cultural (and value-laden) gender
norms which are naturalised and socially policed
from the cradle to the grave
4. and transgression of gender norms is âpunishedâ
In sum ...
14. Second Wave: 1960 and 1970
ï Began with Simone de Beauvoir: The Second Sex
ï Buoyed by the Civil Rights Movement
ï Key components: Consciousness Raising, collective action
ï Access to publishing i.e. Spare Rib, Virago, Women Press
ï Resulted in theories & analyses of patriarchy
ï Called Womenâs Liberation Movement
ï Feminist activism: for abortion rights, lesbian/gay rights,
against pornography, objectification (Miss World), unpaid
labour, the glass ceiling at work, the pay gap, sexual
stereotyping, domestic violence, rape, and more ...
15. Second Wave Feminisms
Liberal feminism Radical feminism
A belief that the patriarchal
system can be changed from
within by attending to laws
that discriminate against
women.
Working with men was
important to achieve these
aims.
A belief that action must aim at
the root (hence radical) of the
system.
A belief that the male sex class
is the root of the problem and
working with men is a pointless
exercise as they will protect
their privileges. Women-Only
spaces; political lesbianism.
16. Second Wave Feminisms
Socialist feminism Black feminism
A belief that the damage done
to women by their low status
as economic subjects needs
also be addressed; the
economic class system is part
of the problem.
Augmented by theories of
Marxist Feminists who analyse
the dual oppression of
womanâs sex class & economic
class on Marxian terms.
At this time little attention was
paid to the very different
experiences of Woman of
Colour who thus tended to
organise amongst themselves.
White feministsâ privilege was
recognised but accepted late
in the day. A major
contribution made by the
Combahee River Collective &
energises feminist action today.
20. Death of the collective Freedom to ... spend
âPolitical freedom cannot
exist without economic
freedom, a free mind and a
free market are corolloraries.â
i.e.
Freedom to replaces freedom
from injustice, oppression,
inequality ...
âCollectivism, as an
intellectual power and a
moral ideal, is dead. But
freedom and individualism,
and their political
expression, capitalism, have
not yet been discovered.â
(Ayn Rand)
21. Feminism moves into Ivory Towers
ï Academia replaces Womenâs Studies with
âGenderâ Studies; womenâs liberation
disappears from purview.
ï Some academics write on Marxist Feminism
trying to merge sex-class, race-class and
economic class analysis
ï Some academics take positions/promote
issues such as pro-prostitution, pro-porn, etc
22. Intersectionality arrives
ï the idea that every individual at any one time will be
subjected to the combined forces of either sex-class,
and/or race-class and/or economic class discrimination.
Other forces which may also act on the person are age-
class, heteronormativity or able-bodiedness.
ï the notion was first posited by Black sisters in the
Combahee River Collective in 1974 and subsequently
taken up by Kimberley Crenshaw.
23. Enter the Third Wave (neoliberal)
ï Spearheaded by young women who had only ever known
individualism, choice and freedom to (do whatever)
ï A feminist is someone who has a vagina; provided you
have one you are a feminist â if you want to.
ï Prostitution is sex âworkâ and result of agency & choice
ï Pornography is empowering (agency & indiv choice)
ï No need for feminism anyway; women are liberated and
can be whatever they want to be
ï Young women celebrate âslut-walksâ to show they are
individuals agents exercising choice and freedom
24.
25. some women beg to differ
ï Stop Porn culture â an international campaign challenging the
ÂŁbillion sex industry which commodifies bodies and sexual
relations, serving up blueprints for violence & exploitation.
ï End Demand â an international campaign to criminalise sex
buyers, challenging the sex trade which exploits vulnerable
women and girls fostering sex trafficking of women and
children from around the world.
ï Campaigning against cuts in womenâs services, domestic
violence support & refuges, support for survivors of rape, legal
aid, childcare support and more ...
26. Women still doing it for themselves
ï Challenge male privilege & supremacy (#meto)
ï Fight objectification of women (Page 3, OBJECT)
ï Fight racism
ï Replace identity politics with analysis of power relations
ï End Ecocide/WEN (ethical consuming, protection of envir.)
ï 50:50 campaign to get women into Parliament
ï STEMS (girls into maths, sciences, engineering)
ï Support for womenâs campaigns around the world (FGM,
child brides, breast-binding, period poverty, trafficking, etc.
ï FILIA womenâs annual conference
27. For further reading
ïGerda Lerner: The Creation of Patriarchy
ïAllan G. Johnson: The Gender Knot
ïFinn Mackay: Radical Feminism
ïChimamanda Adiche: We should all be Feminists
ïRose McGowan: Brave
ïBeatrix Campbell: The End of Equality
ïHeather Brown: Marx on gender & the family
The End