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- Newsgroups: misc.test
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!taco!news
- From: nobody
- Subject: Feminism
- Message-ID: <1992Aug28.224605.24372@ncsu.edu>
- Sender: news@ncsu.edu (USENET News System)
- Reply-To: nobody
- Organization: North Carolina State University
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Fri, 28 Aug 1992 22:46:05 GMT
- Lines: 114
-
-
- Daphne de Jong, "The Feminist Sell-Out", New Zealand Listener,
- January 14, 1976, reprinted without permission.
-
- The woman's movement suffers from three classic defense mechanisms
- associated with minority group status: self-rejection, identification
- with the dominant group, and displacement.
-
- The demand for abortion at will is a symptom of group self-hatred
- and total rejection, not of sex role but of sex identity.
-
- The womb is not the be-all and end-all of a woman's existence. But it
- is the physical centre of her sexual identity, which is an important
- aspect of her self-image and personality. To reject its function, or to
- regard it as a handicap, a danger or a nuisance, is to reject a vital
- part of her own personhood. Every woman need not be a mother, but unless
- every woman can identify with the potential motherhood of all women,
- no equality is possible. American Negroes gained nothing by straightening
- their kinky hair and aping the white middle class. Equality began to
- become a reality only when they insisted on acceptance of their different
- qualities--"Black is Beautiful".
-
- Women will gain their rights only when they demand recognition of the
- fact that they are people who become pregnant and give birth--and not
- always at infallibly convenient times--and that pregnant people have the
- same rights as others.
-
- To say that in order to be equal with men it must be possible for a
- pregnant woman to become unpregnant at will, is to say that being a woman
- precludes her from being a fully functioning person. It concedes the point
- to those who claim that women who want equality really want to be imitation
- men.
-
- If women must submit to abortion to preserve their lifestyle or career,
- their economic or social status, they are pandering to a system devised
- and run by men for male convenience. The politics of sexism are perpetuated
- by accommodating to expediential societal structures which decree that
- pregnancy is incompatible with other activities, and that children are the
- sole responsibility of their mother.
-
- The demand for abortion is a sell-out to male values and a capitulation
- to male lifestyles rather than a radical attempt to renegotiate the terms
- by which women and men can live in the world as people with equal rights
- and equal opportunities. Black "Uncle Toms" have their counterparts not
- only in women who cling to the chains of their kitchen sinks, but also
- in those who proclaim their own liberation while failing to recognize
- that they have merely adopted the standards of the oppressor, and fashioned
- themselves in his image.
-
- Oppressed groups traditionally turn their frustrated vengeance on those
- even weaker than themselves. The unborn is the natural scapegoat for the
- repressed anger and hostility of women, which is denied in traditional
- male-female relationships, and ridiculed when it manifests itself in feminist
- protest. Even while proclaiming "her" rights over the fetus, much
- liberationist rhetoric identifies pregnancy with male chauvinist "ownership".
- The inference is that by implanting "his" seed, the man establishes some
- claim over a woman's body ("Keeping her barefoot and pregnant"). Abortion is
- almost consciously seen as "getting back at" the male. The truth may well
- be that the liberationist sees the fetus not as a part of her body but as
- a part of his.
-
- What escapes most liberationist writers is that legal abortion is neither
- a remedy nor an atonement for male exploitation of women. It is merely
- another way in which women are manipulated and degraded for male convenience
- and male profit. This becomes blatantly obvious in the private abortion
- industries of both Britain and America, and the support given to the
- proabortion lobby by such exploitative corporations as the Playboy empire.
-
- Of all the things which are done to women to fit them into a society
- dominated by men, abortion is the most violent invasion of their physical
- and psychic integrity. It is a deeper and more destructive assault than
- rape, the culminating act of womb-envy and woman-hatred by the jealous
- male who resents the creative power of women.
-
- Just as the rapist claims to be "giving women what they want," the
- abortionist affirms his right to provide a service for which there is
- a feminine demand.
-
- Offered the quick expedient of abortion, instead of community support to
- allow her to experience pregnancy and birth and parenthood with dignity
- and without surrendering her rights as a person, woman is again the
- victim, and again a willing participant in her own destruction.
-
- The way to equality is not to force women into molds designed for men,
- but to re-examine our basic assumptions about men and women, about child-
- care and employment, about families and society, and design new and more
- flexible modes for living. Accepting short-term solutions like abortion
- only delays the implementation of real reforms like decent maternity and
- paternity leaves, job protection, high quality child-care, community
- responsibility for dependent people of all ages, and recognition of the
- economic contribution of child-minders. Agitation for the imaginative
- use of glide time, shared jobs, shorter working weeks, good creches,
- part-time education and job training, is more constructive for women--and
- men--torn between career and children, than agitation for abortion.
-
- Today's women's movement remains rooted in 19th-century thinking,
- blindly accepting patriarchal systems as though they rested on some
- immutable natural law; processing women through abortion mills to manufacture
- imitation men who will fit into a society made by and for wombless people.
- Accepting the "necessity" of abortion is accepting that pregnant women
- and mothers are unable to function as persons in this society. It indicates
- a willingness to adjust to the status quo which is a betrayal of the feminist
- cause, a loss of the revolutionary vision of a world fit for people to
- live in....
-
- Human rights are not exclusive. Any claim to a superior or exceptional
- right inevitably infringes on the rights of someone else. To ignore the
- rights of others in an effort to assert our own is to compound injustice,
- rather than to reduce it.
-
-
- Daphne de Jong is a feminist writer and a former president of
- Feminists for Life of New Zealand.
-
-