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- From: tittle@netcom.com (Cindy Tittle Moore)
- Subject: soc.feminism Terminologies
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- Summary: This post contains a description of a variety of feminist
- groups and ideas. It is intended to give readers of
- soc.feminism a common basis for understanding different terms
- that get thrown around. These definitions are *not* to be
- considered definitive.
- Approved: tittle@netcom.com,news-answers-request@mit.edu
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-
-
-
- A variety of movements in feminism means that calling one's self a
- feminist can mean many things. In general, members of the following
- categories of feminism believe in the listed policies; however as with
- any diverse movement, there are disagreements within each group and
- overlap between others. This list is meant to illustrate the
- diversity of feminist thought and belief. It does not mean that
- feminism is fragmented (although it often seems that way!). Much of
- the definitions presented here are inspired from _American Feminism_
- by Ginette Castro; there is a definite American bias here. Other
- sources were _Feminist Frameworks_ (2nd ed.) by Jaggar and Rothenberg
- (which is a worthwhile but incomplete reader that tried to sort out
- these various schools of feminist thought). Any additional, balancing
- information from other countries and/or books is more than welcome
- (and will be incorporated).
-
- Defining various kinds of feminism is a tricky proposition. The
- diversity of comment with most of the kinds presented here should
- alert you to the dangers and difficulties in trying to "define"
- feminism. Since feminism itself resists all kinds of definitions by
- its very existence and aims, it is more accurate to say that there are
- all kinds of "flavors" and these flavors are mixed up every which way;
- there is no set of Baskin Robbins premixed flavors, as it were.
-
- Amazon Feminism
-
- Amazon feminism is dedicated to the image of the female hero in
- fiction and in fact, as it is expressed in art and literature, in
- the physiques and feats of female athletes, and in sexual values
- and practices.
-
- Amazon feminism is concerned about physical equality and is
- opposed to gender role stereotypes and discrimination against
- women based on assumptions that women are supposed to be, look or
- behave as if they are passive, weak and physically helpless.
-
- Amazon feminism rejects the idea that certain characteristics or
- interests are inherently masculine (or feminine), and upholds and
- explores a vision of heroic womanhood. Thus Amazon feminism
- advocates e.g., female strength athletes, martial artists,
- soldiers, etc. [TG]
-
- Anarcho-Feminism
-
- Anarcho-feminism was never a huge movement, especially in the
- United States, and you won't find a whole lot written about it. I
- mention it mostly because of the influential work of Emma Goldman,
- who used anarchism to craft a radical feminism that was (alas!)
- far ahead of her time. Radical feminism expended a lot of energy
- dealing with a basis from which to critique society without
- falling into Marxist pleas for socialist revolution. It also
- expended a lot of energy trying to reach across racial and class
- lines. Goldman had succeeded in both. Radical feminist Alix
- Schulman realized this, but not in time to save her movement.
- She's put out a reader of Goldman's work and a biography, both of
- which I recommend highly. [JD]
-
- Cultural Feminism
-
- As radical feminism died out as a movement, cultural feminism got
- rolling. In fact, many of the same people moved from the former
- to the latter. They carried the name "radical feminism" with
- them, and some cultural feminists use that name still. (Jaggar
- and Rothenberg don't even list cultural feminism as a framework
- separate from radical feminism, but Echols spells out the
- distinctions in great detail.) The difference between the two is
- quite striking: whereas radical feminism was a movement to
- transform society, cultural feminism retreated to vanguardism,
- working instead to build a women's culture. Some of this effort
- has had some social benefit: rape crisis centers, for example; and
- of course many cultural feminists have been active in social
- issues (but as individuals, not as part of a movement). [JD]
-
- Cultural feminists can sometimes come up with notions that sound
- disturbingly Victorian and non-progressive: that women are
- inherently (biologically) "kinder and gentler" than men and so on.
- (Therefore if all leaders were women, we wouldn't have wars.)
- I do think, though, that cultural feminism's attempts to heighten
- respect for what is traditionally considered women's work is an
- important parallel activity to recognizing that traditionally male
- activities aren't necessarily as important as we think. [CTM]
-
- I have often associated this type of statement [inherently kinder
- and gentler] with Separatist Feminists, who seem to me to feel
- that women are *inherently* kinder and gentler, so why associate
- with men? (This is just my experience from Separatists I know...I
- haven't read anything on the subject.) I know Cultural Feminists
- who would claim women are *trained* to be kinder and gentler, but
- I don't know any who have said they are *naturally* kinder. [SJ]
-
- As various 1960s movements for social change fell apart or got
- co-opted, folks got pessimistic about the very possibility of
- social change. Many of then turned their attention to building
- alternatives, so that if they couldn't change the dominant
- society, they could avoid it as much as possible. That, in a
- nutshell, is what the shift from radical feminism to cultural
- feminism was about. These alternative-building efforts were
- accompanied with reasons explaining (perhaps justifying) the
- abandonment of working for social change. Cultural feminism's
- justification was biological determinism. This justification was
- worked out in great detail, and was based on assertions in
- horribly-flawed books like Elizabeth Gould Davis's _The First Sex_
- and Ashley Montagu's _The Natural Superiority of Women_. So
- notions that women are "inherently kinder and gentler" are one of
- the foundations of cultural feminism, and remain a major part of
- it. A similar concept held by some cultural feminists is that
- while various sex differences might not be biologically
- determined, they are still so thoroughly ingrained as to be
- intractable. There is no inherent connection between
- alternative-building and ideologies of biological determinism (or
- of social intracta- bility). SJ has apparently encountered
- alternative-builders who don't embrace biological determinism, and
- I consider this a very good sign. [JD]
-
- I should point out here that Ashley Montagu is male, and his
- book was first copyright in 1952, so I don't believe that it
- originated as part of the separatist movements in the '60's.
- It may still be horribly flawed; I haven't yet read it. [CTM]
-
- Erotic Feminism
-
- [European] This seemed to start (as a movement) in Germany under
- the rule of Otto von Bismarck. He ruled the land with the motto
- "blood and iron". In society the man was the _ultra manly man_ and
- power was patriarchal power. Some women rebelled against this, by
- becoming WOMAN. Eroticism became a philosophical and metaphysical
- value and the life-creating value. [RG]
-
- Eco-Feminism:
-
- This branch of feminism is much more spiritual than political or
- theoretical in nature. It may or may not be wrapped up with
- Goddess worship and vegetarianism. Its basic tenet is that a
- patriarchical society will exploit its resources without regard to
- long term consequences as a direct result of the attitudes
- fostered in a patriarchical/hierarchical society. Parallels are
- often drawn between society's treatment of the environment,
- animals, or resources and its treatment of women. In resisting
- patriarchical culture, eco-feminists feel that they are also
- resisting plundering and destroying the Earth. And vice-versa.
- [CTM]
-
- This is actually socially-conscious environmentalism with a tiny
- smattering of the radical and cultural feminist observation that
- exploitation of women and exploitation of the earth have some
- astonishing parallels. The rest of "eco-feminism" turns out to be
- a variation on socialism. The Green movements of Europe have
- done a good job of formulating (if not implementing) an
- environmentally aware feminism; and while Green movements
- were not originally considered a part of eco-feminism, they
- are now recognized as a vital component. [JD]
-
- (If I remember correctly, a couple of feminist groups, including
- NOW have joined up with Green parties. [CTM])
-
- Feminazi:
-
- This term was "invented" by the radio/tv host Rush Limbaugh. He
- defines a feminazi as a feminist who is trying to produce as many
- abortions as possible. Hence the term "nazi" - he sees them as
- trying to rid the world of a particular group of people (fetuses).
-
- This term is of course completely without merit, but there's the
- definition of it FYI. [CTM]
-
- Feminism and Women of Color:
-
- In _feminist theory from margin to center_ (1984), bell hooks
- writes of "militant white women" who call themselves "radical
- feminists" but hooks labels them "reactionary" . . . Hooks is
- refering to cultural feminism here. Her comment is a good
- introduction to that fractious variety of feminism that Jaggar and
- Rothenberg find hard to label any further than to designate its
- source as women of color. It is a most vital variety, covering
- much of the same ground as radical feminism and duplicating its
- dynamic nature. Yet bad timing kept the two from ever uniting.
- For more information you might want to also read hooks' book and
- her earlier reader, _ain't i a woman?_ Whereas radical feminism
- was primarily formulated by educated white women focusing on
- women's issues, this variety was formulated by women who would not
- (because they could not) limit their focus. What is so
- extraordinary is that the two converged in so many ways, with the
- notable exception that the women of color were adamantly opposed
- to considering one form of oppression (sexism) without considering
- the others. [JD]
-
- I think an important work in the history of feminism and women of
- color is Gloria Anzaldua and Cherrie Moraga's anthology, _This
- Bridge Called My Back: Writings By Radical Women of Color_. It's
- my belief that the unique contribution of women of color, who
- experience at least two forms of discrimination daily, provides
- balance and reality to much of the more theoretical forms of
- academic feminism favored by educated white women. [EE]
-
- Individualist, or Libertarian Feminism
-
- Individualist feminism is based upon individualist or libertarian
- (minimum government or anarchocapitalist) philosophies, i.e.
- philosophies whose primary focus is individual autonomy, rights,
- liberty, independence and diversity.
-
- Lesbianism:
-
- There are a couple of points to make here. First is that
- Lesbianism is not necessarily a *de facto* part of feminism.
- While it is true that merely being a lesbian is a direct
- contravention of "traditional" concepts of womanhood, Lesbians
- themeselves hold a wide variety of opionions on the subject of
- feminism just as their straight sisters do.
-
- On the other hand, Lesbianism has sometimes been made into a
- political point by straight women "becoming" lesbian in order to
- fully reject men. However, it is never accurate to characterise
- all feminists as Lesbians nor all Lesbians as feminists.
-
- The reader should also note that homophobia is as present among
- feminists as it is in any other segment of society. Lesbianism
- and feminism, for all their common points and joint interests, are
- two very different groups. [CTM]
-
- Liberal Feminism:
-
- This is the variety of feminism that works within the structure of
- mainstream society to integrate women into that structure. Its
- roots stretch back to the social contract theory of government
- instituted by the American Revolution. Abigail Adams and Mary
- Wollstonecraft were there from the start, proposing equality for
- women. As is often the case with liberals, they slog along inside
- the system, getting little done amongst the compromises until some
- radical movement shows up and pulls those compromises left of
- center. This is how it operated in the days of the suffragist
- movement and again with the emergence of the radical feminists.
- [JD]
-
- Marxist and Socialist Feminism
-
- Marxism recognizes that women are oppressed, and attributes the
- oppression to the capitalist/private property system. Thus they
- insist that the only way to end the oppression of women is to
- overthrow the capitalist system. Socialist feminism is the result
- of Marxism meeting radical feminism. Jaggar and Rothenberg point
- to significant differences between socialist feminism and Marxism,
- but for our purposes I'll present the two together. Echols offers
- a description of socialist feminism as a marriage between Marxism
- and radical feminism, with Marxism the dominant partner. Marxists
- and socialists often call themselves "radical," but they use the
- term to refer to a completely different "root" of society: the
- economic system. [JD]
-
- Material Feminism
-
- A movement in the late 19th century to liberate women by improving
- their material condition. This meant taking the burden of
- housework and cooking off their shoulders. _The Grand Domestic
- Revolution_ by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is one reference. [RZ]
-
- Moderate Feminism:
-
- This branch of feminism tends to be populated by younger women or
- other women who have not directly experienced discrimination.
- They are closely affiliated with liberal feminism, but tend to
- question the need for further effort, and do not think that
- Radical feminism is any longer viable and in fact rather
- embarrassing (this is the group most likely to espouse feminist
- ideas and thoughts while denying being "feminist"). [CTM]
-
- 'pop-feminism'
-
- This term has appeared several times on soc.feminism. It appears
- to be a catch-all for the bogey"man" sort of feminism that
- everyone loves to hate: you know, the kind of feminism that grinds
- men under its heel and admits to no wrong for women. It is
- doubtful that such a caricature actually exists, yet many people
- persist in lumping all feminists into this sort of a category. [CTM]
-
- Radical Feminism:
-
- Provides the bulwark of theoretical thought in feminism. Radical
- feminism provides an important foundation for the rest of
- "feminist flavors". Seen by many as the "undesireable" element of
- feminism, Radical feminism is actually the breeding ground for
- many of the ideas arising from feminism; ideas which get shaped
- and pounded out in various ways by other (but not all) branches of
- feminism. [CTM]
-
- Radical feminism was the cutting edge of feminist theory from
- approximately 1967-1975. It is no longer as universally accepted
- as it was then, nor does it provide a foundation for, for example,
- cultural feminism. In addition, radical feminism is not and never
- has been related to the Maoist-feminist group Radical Women. [EE]
-
- This term refers to the feminist movement that sprung out of the
- civil rights and peace movements in 1967-1968. The reason this
- group gets the "radical" label is that they view the oppression of
- women as the most fundamental form of opression, one that cuts
- across boundaries of race, culture, and economic class. This is a
- movement intent on social change, change of rather revolutionary
- proportions, in fact. [JD]
-
- Ironically, this get-to-the-roots movement is the most root-less
- variety of feminism. This was part of its strength and part of
- its weakness. It was always dynamic, always dealing with
- factions, and always full of ideas. Its influence has been felt
- in all the other varieties listed here, as well as in society at
- large. [JD]
-
- To me, radical feminism is centred on the necessity to question
- gender roles. This is why I identify current "gender politics"
- questions as radical feminist issues. Radical feminism questions
- why women must adopt certain roles based on their biology, just as
- it questions why men adopt certain other roles based on theirs.
- Radical feminism attempts to draw lines between biologically-
- determined behavior and culturally-determined behavior in order
- to free both men and women as much as possible from their previous
- narrow gender roles. [EE]
-
- The best history of this movement is a book called _Daring to
- be Bad_, by Echols. I consider that book a must! [JD] Another
- excellent book is simply titled _Radical Feminism_ and is an
- anthology edited by Anne Koedt, a well-known radical feminist
- [EE].
-
- Radical feminist theory is to a large extent incompatible with
- cultural feminism. The reason is that the societal forces it
- deals with seem so great in magnitude that they make it impossible
- to identify any innate masculine or feminine attributes except
- those which are results of the biological attributes. (This is
- what I think the [above] "view[s] the oppression of women as the
- most fundamental form of oppression," [is getting at] although I
- don't agree with that statement in its context.) [DdJ]
-
- Separatists:
-
- Popularly and wrongly depicted as Lesbians, these are the
- feminists who advocate separation from men; sometimes total,
- sometimes partial. Women who organize women-only events are often
- unfairly dubbed separatist. Separatists are sometimes literal,
- sometimes figurative. The core idea is that "separating" (by
- various means) from men enables women to see themselves in a
- different context. Many feminists, whether or not separatist,
- think this is a necessary "first step", by which they mean a
- temporary separation for personal growth, not a permanent one. [CTM]
-
- There is sometimes some overlap between separatist and cultural
- feminists (see below). [SJ]
-
- It is equally inaccurate to consider all Lesbians as separatist;
- while it is true that they do not interact with men for sexual
- fulfillment, it is not true that they therefore automatically shun
- all interaction with men. [CTM] And, conversely, it is equally
- inaccurate to consider all separatists Lesbians. Additionally,
- lesbian feminism may be considered a category distinct from
- separatist feminism. Lesbian feminism puts more emphasis on
- lesbianism -- active bonding with women -- than separatism does,
- in its emphasis on removing bonds with men. [EE]
-
- [Other categories? Both formal and informal are welcome.]
-
- Men's Movements:
- [Largely contributed by Dave Gross. Exceptions noted.]
-
- It may seem odd to include some notes on men's movements in a
- description of feminism. However, many of these movements were
- started in reaction to feminism: some inspired by and others in
- contra-reaction to it. In this context, examining men's movements
- tells of some specific reactions to feminism by men. [CTM]
-
- Most men's movement historians date the men's movement back to the
- early seventies. In 1970, according to Anthony Astrachan ("How
- Men Feel" p. 291) the first men's center opened in Berkeley, Calif.
- and the magazine "Liberation" published an article by Jack Sawyer
- entitled "On Male Liberation."
-
- The men's movement equivalent to the catalyst provided to the
- women's movement by Betty Friedan, was "The Male Machine" by Mark
- Feigen Fasteau in 1975. My edition has a forward by Gloria
- Steinem in which she writes: "This book is a complement to the
- feminist revolution, yet it is one no woman could write. It is the
- revolution's other half."
-
- But a reexamination of the male gender role certainly predates the
- 1970s. In fact, the book "The American Male" by Myron Brenton,
- complained that "when the plight of woman is given such intense
- scrutiny, a curiously distorting effect tends to be created.
- Suddenly the world is seen only through the feminist prism." This
- quote, which would be comfortable coming out of Warren Farrell's
- mouth in the 1990s, was published in 1966. The book was essentially
- a male-friendly, pro-feminist examination of the male sex role,
- and started a theme of portraying masculinity as dangerous and
- destructive (physically and emotionally) to men -- a theme that was
- to also provide the basis for the works of Fasteau, Goldberg and
- Farrell in the 1970s.
-
- And R.F. Doyle, who was to form one of the rare traditionalist men's
- groups, was already fighting for male-friendly divorce reform in
- the early 1960s (his Divorce Racket Busters in 1960 is in a direct
- line of parentage to his Men's Rights Association in 1973).
-
- Barbara Ehrenreich in "The Hearts of Men" traces the men's movement
- back even further. She believes that the current men's movement
- is only the latest representation of a long-term male revolt against
- the "breadwinner ethic:"
-
- "I will argue that the collapse of the breadwinner ethic had
- begun well before the revival of feminism and stemmed from
- dissatisfactions every bit as deep, if not as idealist-
- ically expressed, as those that motivated our founding
- 'second wave' feminists." -- p. 12
-
- Furthermore, she writes that
-
- "The great irony... is that the right-wing, antifeminist
- backlash that emerged in the 1970s is a backlash not so
- much against feminism as against the male revolt." -- p.13
-
- In the mid- to late-1950s (although she traces the roots even
- further back than this), non-conformity becomes a hip topic.
- Playboy magazine started publishing in 1953, and by the early
- sixties had started offering "something approaching a coherent
- program for the male rebellion" (p. 50). The magazine's
- trademark T&A was only a side-issue, designed to make the rebellion
- against the male sex role (aka The Playboy Philosophy) a safely
- heterosexual one.
-
- The Beat movement "establish[ed] a vantage point from which the
- 'normal' could be judged, assessed and labeled -- square" (p. 67)
- and then "cardiology... passed its own judgement on the 'normal'
- masculine condition, and [came] down, without fully realizing it,
- on the side of the rebels" (p. 87).
-
- The Human Potential Movement combined with cardiological concerns
- encouraged a change in men's lives; the Vietnam War further
- tarnished the image of masculinity; the 60s counter culture
- allowed androgyny; the second-wave of the women's movement pushed
- for a critique of gender roles; gay liberation groups differentiated
- themeselves from heterosexuals, allowing straight men to change
- their roles without being accused of homosexuality.
-
- Voila! The genesis of the men's movement in a nutshell!
-
- The men's movement, as a movement, has from almost the beginning
- been split into various camps based both on ideology and on
- what concerns the members most wish to concentrate on. What were
- once scattered "consciousness raising groups" have evolved into
- the following sub-movements:
-
- Feminist Men's Movement:
- ------------------------
-
- These groups are closely aligned ideologically with the feminist
- movement. They believe that we live in a patriarchal system in
- which men are the oppressors of women, and that the men's movement
- should identify this oppression and work against it. Most of the
- [City-name] Men Against Rape groups fall under this category. The
- largest feminist men's group is the National Organization for Men
- Against Sexism (Formerly the National Organization for Changing
- Men). Some publications from this viewpoint are "Changing Men,"
- the journal of NOMAS, and the following books: "The Liberated Man"
- by Warren Farrell, "The Male Machine" by Marc Feigen Fasteau, "The 49%
- Majority" ed. by Deborah David & Robert Brannon, and "Refusing to Be a
- Man" by John Stoltenberg.
-
- "For these men," according to James Doyle ("Sex & Gender" p. 341),
- "the question of unfair divorce settlements, child-custody cases,
- and the like are a ruse used by some men who favor perpetuating
- their own dominant status in society." This perhaps is a little
- harsh, but many in the feminist men's movement are suspicious of
- those who would work for men's political concerns without first
- relinquishing the patriarchal reins of political power.
-
- "They may feel only a vague pricking of conscience about their own
- complicity in the imbalance," writes Anthony Astrachan of the
- feminist wing of the movement (How Men Feel, p. 302), "or they may
- openly acknowledge that men as a class (which does not mean all
- men) oppress women as a class (which does not mean all women). In
- either case, what they feel is guilt." (Astrachan dismisses what
- I will call the Men's Liberation movement as "the no-guilt wing.")
-
- As can be expected, there is much debate among feminists, women,
- and other men about the validity or real intentions of such
- groups. The entire question of "feminist men," especially ones
- that disagree with aspects of "conventional feminism" sparks much
- debate. Some accuse them of pandering to the feminist movement,
- others of having a hidden agenda that's really against feminism.
- Female feminists disagree wither men can be feminist, some arguing
- that there is nothing to prevent men from being feminists, and
- others arguing that you have to know what it is like to be a woman
- -- or even BE a woman -- to be a feminist. [CTM]
-
-
- Men's Liberation Movement:
- --------------------------
-
- Other names: Masculist movement, Men's Rights movement. These
- groups, while quite similar to feminists in several areas (gay
- rights, belief in equal opportunity in the workplace, etc.)
- generally do not believe in the theory that we live in a
- patriarchy in which men oppress and women are oppressed.
-
- "My thinking has led me to conclude that men as a class do
- /not/ oppress women as a class. Nor do I believe that women
- as a class oppress men as a class. Rather, I feel that men
- and women have cooperated in the development of contemporary
- male and female sex-roles, both of which appear to have
- advantages as well as disadvantages, but which are
- essentially restrictive in nature, growth inhibiting, and, in
- the case of the male, physically as well as psychologically
- lethal." -- Richard Haddad "Concepts and overview of the
- men's liberation movement"
-
- Characterization of the men's liberation wing as being a
- reactionary or traditionalist movement is common among feminists,
- but doesn't seem to hold under closer observation. Fred Hayward
- addressed this view in his keynote speech to the National Congress
- for Men in 1981:
-
- "We must not reverse the women's movement; we must accelerate
- it... [Men's liberation] is not a backlash, for there is
- nothing about traditional sex roles that I want to go back
- to...
-
- "We must give full credence to the seriousness of women's
- problems and be willing to work toward their solution, but if
- the others do not return the favor, it is they who are the
- sexist pigs. It is they who are reactionary. When I look at
- feminists today, I don't want to call them names -- I only
- want to call their bluff."
-
- Some of the groups with this viewpoint are: Men's Rights Inc.,
- National Coalition of Free Men, National Congress for Men,
- National Center for Men. Some of the publications from this
- viewpoint are "Transitions," the journal of the NCFM, and the
- following books: "Why Men Are the Way They Are" by Warren Farrell
- "The Hazards of Being Male" by Herb Goldberg "Men's Rights" by
- Bill & Laurie Wishard "Men Freeing Men" ed. by Francis Baumli.
-
- Mythopoetic Men's Movement:
- ---------------------------
-
- These are the ones you see on TV and in magazines wearing masks
- and beating drums. Robert Bly, the father-figure of this
- movement, says:
-
- "I see the phenomenon of what I would call the 'soft male' all
- over the country today. They're not interested in harming
- the Earth, or starting wars, or working for corporations.
- There's something favorable toward life in their whole
- general mood and style of living. But something's wrong.
- Many of these men are unhappy. There's not much energy in
- them. They are life-preserving, but not exactly
- life-giving...."
-
- "Men are suffering right now -- young males especially. But
- now that so many men are getting in touch with their feminine
- side, we're ready to start seeing the wild man and to put its
- powerful, dark energy to use. At this point, many things can
- happen."
- -- interview by Keith Thompson
- Utne Reader, Nov/Dec 1989
-
- This talk of "powerful, dark energy" worries some, including Bly's
- ex-wife, who compared this movement to fascism:
-
- "The men's separatist movement is frightening. Separatism,
- breeds feelings of superiority and imbalance -- male bonding
- usually offers permission to regress."
- -- "The danger in men's groups"
- Utne Reader, Nov/Dec 1989
-
- A more common reaction to these groups by outsiders is
- bewilderment and ridicule. "[T]heir words revealed a kind of
- gooeyness wrapped in clinical psych jargon," wrote Jon Tevlin of
- his Wild Man Weekend. It's possible though, that these groups
- outnumber all other men's groups combined. There are a surprising
- number of magazines, books, journals, retreats and gurus
- associated with the mythopoetic men's movement. "Iron John" led
- sales of hardcover nonfiction longer than any other best seller in
- 1991, according to the 1993 Writer's Market.
-
- "What I'm interested in is the return of mythology, and he
- timportance of initiation -- I think that's essential...
- I'm not interested in all the men having opinions on men's
- rights, and attacking women. I'm not interested in a
- national men's movement."
- -- Robert Bly, quoted by Tim Warren in
- the Baltimore Sun, 28 October 1990
-
- On the other hand,
-
- "I don't want to omit people like Warren Farrell and Herb
- Goldberg who are doing men's stuff; they get omitted far oo
- toften when the Men's Movement is discussed. If Robert
- [Bly] is one of the leaders and perhaps the father of the
- mythopoetic Men's Movement, then Goldberg, Farrell and
- Pleck are the Grandfathers..."
- -- John Lee, quoted by Woody Harper in the
- Men's Council Newsletter, August 1990
-
- This movement is less political than spiritual, and it's difficult
- to identify just what these folks stand for. But if you want to
- try, check out the interviews with Bly and with Shepherd Bliss in
- the Nov/Dec 1989 Utne Reader, or pick up "Men's Council News" or
- Robert Bly's surprise best-seller "Iron John."
-
- The New Traditionalists:
- ------------------------
-
- I don't know much about these groups. The only one I'm aware of
- is the National Organization for Men run by Penthouse columnist
- Sidney Siller. Maybe R.F. Doyle's Men's Rights Association (if it
- still exists) qualifies as well. These groups look, on the
- surface, much like the Men's Liberation groups, but underneath
- there is a current of resentment that the old sex roles have
- dissolved. Some openly say that women just aren't men's equals,
- and should have stayed home with the kids. This is that "male
- backlash" you've probably read about. Read "The Rape of the Male"
- by R.F. Doyle for a good idea of how these folks think (the front
- cover is a picture of the crucifiction). Also, Esther Vilar's
- "The Manipulated Man" (written by a woman in 1972, and pretty
- scary).
-
- The Father's Movements:
- -----------------------
-
- Some people hold that this is a separate group from the Men's
- Liberation Movement. There are some groups that are only
- interested in issues like divorce reform, and ignore issues like
- violence toward men, gay rights, and the draft. Many of these
- groups are very similar to Men's Liberation groups, and only
- differ by their concentration. Some explicitly exclude issues
- like gay rights in order to not risk offending some of their
- members, and this could itself be considered an ideological
- position which would separate them from the Men's Liberation
- groups. Anthony Astrachan ("How Men Feel," p. 311) reports that
- some Father's Rights men boycotted the 1983 National Congress for
- Men meeting in Los Angeles, and speculates that this was because
- men's liberation members had proposed resolutions supporting gay
- rights.
-
- Publications would include: "How to Win Custody" by Louis Kiefer
- "Weekend Fathers" by Gerald and Myrna Silver
-
- --------------
-
- My thanks to:
- Ellen Eades[EE]
- David desJardins [DdJ]
- Jym Dyer [JD]
- Thomas Gramstad [TG]
- Rebecca Grinter [RG]
- David Gross [DG] (incl. all info on men's movements)
- Stacy Johnson [SJ]
- Rudy Zalesak [RZ]
-
- --------------
-
- Please mail in comments, additions, corrections, suggestions, and so
- on to feminism-request@ncar.ucar.edu. I reserve all rights to edit
- material for brevity, clarity, and constructiveness.
-
- --Cindy Tittle Moore
-
- "I myself have never been able to find out precisely what
- feminism is: I only know that people call me a feminist
- whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a
- doormat, or a prostitute." -- Rebecca West, 1913
-
-
-