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The Revolt of Adam & Eve
A Green Anarcha-Feminist Perspective
by
Witch Hazel
As a female anarchist I
have for many years thought about and looked around for any
interpretations or writings on "anarcha-feminism." I could
find nothing. Besides a few reprints of writings from the
70s attempting to define the term, and many writings by
anarchist women on various subjects of particular interest
to women (especially women's' health); there just isn't a
whole lot out there.
Green
Anarchy newspaper (and
other GA endeavors) has recently made an effort to integrate
what could be called an "anarcha-feminist"
or anti-patriarchy critique into the overarching
anti-civilization
perspective.
This is a good thing -- even
giving "lip service" to patriarchy as a pillar of
civilization actually goes a long way to opening up the
anti-civ
perspective
-- making it feel more
inclusive of the experiences and perceptions of us women
living in and resisting the control imposed on us by a
patriarchal world. This "lip service" is an honest attempt
to address what some feminists (anarchist and otherwise)
have defined as a "male dominated" and an "irrelevant to
women"
green
anarchist movement, in a way that doesn't compromise an
anti-civ analysis. But as always, we could still be going
much further. Taken to another level, an anti-patriarchy
critique is as relevant to men as to women (and all those
who identify in between, as many people have throughout
pre-history). Anti-patriarchy is not a female issue. We are
not the only ones who suffer under the thumb of enforced sex
roles, division of labor, emasculation of violence, etc. On
the contrary, the devaluation of the feminine archetype
could be considered a parallel to the mind/body split that
enabled so much of humanity to take a drastic turn in
evolution toward domestication and civilization. This
"totality" affects men and women in different ways, but they
could not be compared in terms of quantity.
A main reason I feel so
uncomfortable with a "feminist" identity is that most
feminist thought denies (or is oblivious to) the inherent
feminism in anarchist ideas not to mention in primitivist
anarchy ideas. Liberal feminism seeks to empower itself at
the expense of men. I used to be a liberal feminist. I
studied the theories in college, and I practiced it by
bullying and coercing men to defer to women at all times, as
reparations for thousands of years of patriarchal rule. As I
became an anarchist, this "identity politics" praxis
gradually seemed more and more simplistic and single-issue,
and our tactics started to feel authoritarian. I was still
pissed about male behaviors that revealed a lifetime of male
privilege (and I still do get pissed, by the way), but I
eventually decided that I would interact with sexism in an
entirely different way. Looking back, I understand where my
rage came from, and why I chose to direct it in the way I
did. I even understand where the rage of some of the radical
women in our movements comes from, and I see it as
potentially a step toward truer liberation for them.
As for the male dominance of the
GA "movement", there is undoubtedly a dominance IN NUMBERS
of males over females involved actively as self-defined
green
anarchists. This of course does not mean that the ideas
behind a lot of GA activity are not shared by many
anarchist/radical women, in the same way that those ideas
are shared by many people outside the militant anarchist
subculture. Just like with issues of biotechnology and
agriculture's threat to food security, when I discuss issues
of specific interest to women, such as the loss of control
over our health, childbirth, sexuality, body image, etc., I
do so from an anti-industrial/anti-civ
perspective,
and I find that people genuinely agree with that
perspective.
I make efforts to publicly identify with
green
anarchy, so that those around me - including women -- might
consider the relevance of anti-civ ideas. I want more women
to write for GA -- to speak about the
"totality" of civilization with a specifically woman's
voice.
Where I first started developing
my own brand of "green
anarcha-feminism" (if it has to be labeled) was when I
discovered "eco-feminist" ideas. These ideas most closely
resemble the anti-patriarchal, anti-civilization critique,
but much of it is most definitely not compatible with
anarchy. Glorification of Goddess-worshipping cultures as
indication that a matriarchal society is somehow preferable
to patriarchy, is a bunch of crap. This isn't much different
from the pro-statist liberal feminist idea that a woman
president would save the world. Some of it is even
colonialist (in its co-optation of indigenous wisdom), or
"essentialist" in the way it defines womens' power in terms
of our reproductive capacity. As an anarchist I felt
alienated from much of "ecofeminism," but attracted to some
of it too. Chellis Glendenning put a whole new spin on it
for me.
I have never known self-identified
GA men who dismiss the institution of patriarchy as
irrelevant to anarchism or primitivism. There has been a
LACK of such analysis, but that's simply not the same thing.
The absence of such analysis has indeed been a product of
living in a patriarchal world, as are many things in all our
movements, and I think many GA men have come to recognize
this (all of them I know anyway). This recognition has
seemed to happen partly in response to the insistence of
radical women, and while I despise many of their tactics, I
am actually really pleased to see that those on the
receiving end (which is not all men, by the way) have not
turned away from what I consider to be the issue at hand:
the lack of an anti-patriarchy
perspective.
One of my fears was that the despicable, authoritarian,
manipulative tactics of some women would cause a backlash
against feminist critiques, and obscure the inherent
feminism in anarchy. I used to not care much about the
effects of my feminist rage, and when it's aimed at certain
sectors of the population, I still don't. But when it's
aimed at people striving for total liberation, however
reactionary they may seem when confronted on their privilege
(aren't most of us?), I am pretty convinced at this point
that if we are serious about what we say we are trying to
break down and recreate, in terms of fighting patriarchy we
HAVE GOT to do it together.
This is not to say that "seperatism"
as a method of unlearning patriarchy cannot be useful for
both men and women. I am a firm believer in "men against
sexism" type groups, and "women's safe spaces". I like the
idea of women's' solidarity and "sisterhood" (although I
have seen some power-tripping there), and although the
notion of "brotherhood" kind of scares me, I'm not closed to
the potential for liberation there. Also, I'm not talking
here about confronting sexist violence, misogyny, or
homophobia -- those were never issues of contention in terms
of having tolerance for such behaviors. I'm pretty much
no-compromise when it comes to that.
As a pillar of civilization, the
effects of patriarchy will not be dismantled or eradicated
from our communities anytime soon. As with the lingering
effects of religion, domestication, agriculture, linear
time, and symbolic thought, we are facing a massive
challenge in identifying, much less unlearning, the ways
patriarchy has alienated us from nature, each other, and our
own internal wildness. Much has been said and written about
the effects of patriarchal rule on women today, and I hope
to see that discourse continue. But after nearly ten years
of feminist consciousness raising, mostly with other women,
I'm ready to hear about it from men and talk about it with
men. It's one thing for men to mention patriarchy in the
list of institutions that comprise civilization. It's
another to define what effects patriarchy has had on the
autonomy and social evolution of men in civilized societies,
and to discuss how we can overcome it together, through our
daily interactions, as well as in the ways we fight the
state, support each other when the state fights back, and
develop collective projects that subvert the institutions
that control us. Anti-patriarchy is not an "issue"to take
up. It is a consciousness that should underline our lives as
we struggle against the forces of civilization to revive
ancient ways, while realizing an entirely new way of being
in a post-domesticated world.
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