Women
and the Subversion of the Community
Mariarosa
Dalla Costa
(1971)
These observations
are an attempt to define and analyze the “Woman Question”, and to
locate this question in the entire “female role” as it has been
created by the capitalist division
of labour.
We place foremost
in these pages the housewife as the central figure in this female role.
We assume that all women are housewives and even those who work outside
the home continue to be housewives. That is, on a world level, it is
precisely what is particular to domestic work, not only measured as
number of hours and nature of work, but as quality of life and quality
of relationships which it generates, that determines a woman’s place
wherever she is and to whichever class she belongs. We concentrate here
on the position of the working-class woman, but this is not to imply
that only working-class women are exploited. Rather it is to confirm
that the role of the working-class housewife, which we believe has been
indispensable to capitalist production is the
determinant for the position of all other women. Every analysis of women
as a caste, then, must proceed from the analysis of the position of
working-class housewives.
In order to
see the housewife as central, it was first of all necessary to analyze
briefly how capitalism has created the modern family and the housewife’s
role in it, by destroying the types of family group or community which
previously existed. This process is by no means complete. While we are
speaking of the Western world and Italy in particular, we wish to make
clear that to the extent that the capitalist mode of production also
brings the Third World under its command, the same process of destruction
must be and is taking place there. Nor should we take for granted that
the family as we know it today in the most technically advanced Western
countries is the final form the family can assume under capitalism.
But the analysis of new tendencies can only be the product of an analysis
of how capitalism created this family and what woman’s role is today,
each as a moment in a process.
We propose
to complete these observations on the female role by analyzing as well
the position of the woman who works outside the home, but this is for
a later date. We wish merely to indicated here the link between two
apparently separate experiences: that of housewife and that of working
woman.
The day-to-day
struggles that women have developed since the Second World War run directly
against the organization of the factory and of the home. The “unreliability”
of women in the home and out of it has grown rapidly since then, and
runs directly against the factory as regimentation organized in time
and space, and against the social factory as organization of the reproduction
of labor power. This trend to more absenteeism, to less respect for
timetables, to higher job mobility, is shared by young men and women
workers. But where the man for crucial periods of his youth will be
the sole support of a new family, women who on the whole are not restrained
in this way and who must always consider the job at home, are bound
to be even more disengaged from work discipline, forcing disruption
of the productive flow and therefore higher costs to capital. (This
is one excuse for the discriminatory wages which many times over make
up for capital’s loss.) It is this same trend of disengagement that
groups of housewives express when they leave their children with their
husbands at work.* This trend is and will increasingly be one of the
decisive forms of the crisis in the systems of the factory and of the
social factory.
[*
This happened as part of the massive demonstration of women celebrating
International Women’s Day in the US, August 1970.]
* * * *
In recent years,
especially in the advanced capitalist countries,
there have developed a number of women’s movements of different orientations
and range, from those which believe the fundamental conflict in society
is between men and women to those focusing on the position of women
as a specific manifestation of class exploitation.
If at first
sight the position and attitudes of the former are perplexing, especially
to women who have had previous experience of militant participation
in political struggles, it is, we think, worth pointing out that women
for whom sexual exploitation
is the basic social contradiction provide an extremely important index
of the degree of our own frustration, experienced by millions of women
both inside and outside the movement. There are those who define their
own lesbianism in these terms (we refer to views expressed by a section
of the movement in the US in particular): “Our associations with women
began when, because we were together, we could acknowledge that we could
no longer tolerate relationships with men, that we could not prevent
these from becoming power relationships in which we were inevitably
subjected. Our attentions and energies were diverted, our power was
diffused and its objectives delimited.” From this rejection has developed
a movement of gay women which asserts the possibilities of a relationship
free of a sexual power struggle, free of the biological social unit,
and asserts at the same time our need to open ourselves to a wider social
and therefore sexual potential.
Now in order
to understand the frustrations of women expressing themselves in ever-increasing
forms, we must be clear what in the nature of the family under capitalism
precipitates a crisis on this scale. The oppression of women, after
all, did not begin with capitalism. What began with capitalism was the
more intense exploitation of women as women and the possibility at last
of their liberation.
The origins
of the capitalist family
In pre-capitalist
patriarchal society the
home and the family were central to agricultural and artisan production.
With the advent of capitalism the socialization of production was organized
with the factory as its centre. Those who worked in the new productive
centre, the factory, received a wage. Those who were excluded did not.
Women, children and the aged lost the relative power that derived from
the family’s dependence on their labour, which was seen to be social
and necessary. Capital, destroying the family and the community
and production as one whole, on the one hand has concentrated basic
social production in the factory and the office, and on the other has
in essence detached the man from the family and turned him into a
wage labourer It has put on the man’s shoulders the burden of
financial responsibility for women, children, the old and the ill, in
a word, all those who do not receive wages. From that moment began the
expulsion from the home of all those who did not procreate and service
those who worked for wages. The first to be excluded from the home,
after men, were children; they sent children to school. The family ceased
to be not only the productive, but also the educational centre.*
[*This
is to assume a whole new meaning for “education”, and the work now
being done on the history of compulsory education - forced learning
- proves this. In England teachers were conceived of as “moral police”
who could (1) condition children against “crime” - curb working-class
reappropriation in the community; (2) destroy “the mob”, working-class
organization based on a family which was still either a productive unit
or at least a viable organizational unit; (3) make habitual regular
attendance and good timekeeping so necessary to children’s later employment;
and (4) stratify the class by grading and selection. As with the family
itself, the transition to this new form of social control was not smooth
and direct, and was the result of contradictory forces both within the
class and within capital, as with every phase of the history of capitalism.]
To the extent
that men had been the despotic heads of the patriarchal family, based on a strict division of labour, the
experience of women, children and men was a contradictory experience
which we inherit. But in pre-capitalist society the work of each member
of the community of serfs was seen to be directed to a purpose: either
to the prosperity of the feudal lord or to our survival. To this extent
the whole community of serfs was compelled to be co-operative in a unity
of unfreedom that involved to the same degree women, children and men,
which capitalism had to break.* In this sense the unfree individual,
the democracy of unfreedom**
entered into a crisis. The passage from serfdom to free labour power
separated the male from the female proletarian and both of them from
their children. The unfree patriarch was transformed into the “free”
wage earner, and upon the contradictory experience of the sexes and
the generations was built a more profound estrangement and therefore
a more subversive relation.
[*
Wage labour is based on the subordination of all relationships to the
wage relation. The worker must enter as an “individual” into a contract
with capital stripped of the protection of kinships.
**Karl
Marx, “Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of the State”, Writings
of the Young Marx on Philosophy and Society,
ed. and trans. Loyd D. Easton and Kurt H. Guddat, N.Y., 1967, p. 176.]
We must stress
that this separation of children from adults is essential to an understanding
of the full significance of the separation of women from men, to grasp
fully how the organization of the struggle on the part
of the women’s movement, even when it takes the form of a violent
rejection of any possibility of relations with men, can only aim to
overcome the separation which is based on the “freedom” of wage
labour.
The class
struggle in education
The analysis
of the school which has
emerged during recent years particularly with the advent of the students’
movement-has clearly identified the school as a centre of ideological
discipline and of the shaping of the labour force and its masters. What
has perhaps never emerged, or at least not in its profundity, is precisely
what precedes all this; and that is the usual desperation of children
on their first day of nursery school, when they see themselves dumped
into a-class and their parents suddenly desert them. But it is precisely
at this point that the whole story of school begins.*
[*We
are not dealing here with the narrowness of the nuclear family that
prevents children from having an easy transition to forming relations
with other people; nor with what follows from this, the argument of
psychologists that proper conditioning would have avoided such a crisis.
We are dealing with the entire organization of the society, of which
family, school and factory are each one ghettoized compartment. So every
kind of passage from one to another of these compartments is a painful
passage. The pain cannot be eliminated by tinkering with the relations
between one ghetto and another but only by the destruction of every
ghetto.]
Seen in this
way, the elementary school children are
not those appendages who, merely by the demands “free lunches, free
fares, free books”, learnt from the older ones, can in some way be
united with the students of the higher schools.* In elementary school
children, in those who are the sons and daughters of workers, there
is always an awareness that school is in some way setting them against
their parents and their peers,
and consequently there is an instinctive resistance to studying and
to being “educated”. This is the resistance for which Black children
are confined to educationally subnormal schools in Britain.** The European
working-class child, like the Block working-class child, sees in the teacher
somebody who is teaching him or her something against her mother and
father, not as a defense of the child but as an attack on the class.
Capitalism is the first productive system where the children of the
exploited are disciplined and educated in institutions organized and
controlled by the ruling class.***
[*
“Free fares, free lunches, free books” was one of the slogans of
a section of the Italian students’ movement which aimed to connect
the struggle of younger students with workers and university students.
**In
Britain and the US the psychologists Eysenck and Jensen, who are convinced
“scientifically” that Blacks have a lower “intelligence” than
whites, and the progressive educators like Ivan Illich seem diametrically
opposed. What they aim to achieve links them. They are divided by method.
In any case the psychologists are not more racist than the rest, only
more direct. “Intelligence” is the ability to assume your enemy’s
case as wisdom and to shape your own logic on the basis of this. Where
the whole society operates institutionally on the assumption of white
racial superiority, these psychologists propose more conscious and thorough
“conditioning” so that children who do not learn to read do not
learn instead to make molotov cocktails. A sensible view with which
Illich, who is concerned with the “underachievement” of children
(that is, rejection by them of “intelligence”), can agree.
***
In spite of the fact that capital manages the schools, control is never
given once and for all. The working class continually and increasingly
challenges the content and refuses the costs of capitalist schooling.
The response of the capitalist system is to re-establish its own control,
and this control tends to be more and more regimented on factory-like
lines.
The
new policies on education which are being hammered out even as we write,
however, are more complex than this. We can only indicate here the impetus
for these new policies:
(a)
Working-class youth rejects that education prepares them for anything
but a factory, even if they will wear white collars there and use typewriters
and drawing-boards instead of riveting machines.
(b)
Middle-class youth rejects the role of mediator between the classes and
the repressed personality this mediating role demands.
(c)
A new labour power more wage and status differentiated is called for.
The present egalitarian trend must be reversed.
(d)
A new type of labour process may be created which will attempt to interest
the worker in “participating” instead of refusing the monotony and
fragmentation of the present assembly-line.
If
the traditional “road to success” and even “success” itself
are rejected by the young, new goals will have to be found to which
they can aspire, that is, for which they will go to school and go to
work. New “experiments” in “free” education, where the children
are encouraged to participate in planning their own education and there
is greater democracy between teacher and taught are springing up daily.
It is an illusion to believe that this is a defeat for capital any more
than regimentation will be a victory. For in the creation of a labour
power more creatively manipulated, capital will not in the process lose
0.1 per cent of profit. “As a matter of fact,” they are in effect
saying, “you can be far more efficient for us if you take your own
road, so long as it is through our territory.” In some parts of the
factory and in the social factory, capital’s slogan will increasingly
be: “Liberty and fraternity to guarantee and even extend equality.”]
The final proof
that this alien indoctrination which begins in nursery school is based
on the splitting of the family is
that those working-class children who arrive (those few who do arrive)
at university are so brainwashed that they are unable any longer to
talk to their community.
Working-class
children then are the first who instinctively rebel against schools
and the education provided in schools. But their parents carry them
to schools and confine them to schools because they are concerned that
their children should “have an education”, that is, be equipped
to escape the assembly line or the kitchen to which they, the parents,
are confined. If a working-class child shows particular aptitudes, the
whole family immediately concentrates on this child, gives him the best
conditions, often sacrificing the others, hoping and gambling that he
will carry them all out of the working class. This in effect becomes
the way capital moves through the aspirations of the parents to enlist
their help in disciplining fresh labour power.
In Italy parents
less and less succeed in sending their children to school. Children’s
resistance to school is always increasing even when this resistance
is not yet organized.
At the same
time that the resistance of children grows to being educated in schools,
so does their refusal to accept the definition
that capital has given of their age.
Children want everything they see; they do not yet understand that in
order to have things one must pay for them, and in order to pay for
them one must have a wage, and therefore one must also be an adult.
No wonder it is not easy to explain to children why they cannot have
what television has told them they cannot live without.
But something
is happening among the new generation of children and youth which is
making it steadily more difficult to explain to them the arbitrary point
at which they reach adulthood. Rather the younger generation is demonstrating
their age to us: in the sixties six-year-olds have already come up against
police dogs in the South of the United States. Today we find the same
phenomenon in Southern Italy and Northern Ireland, where children have
been as active in the revolt as adults. When children (and women) are
recognized as integral to history, no doubt other examples will come
to light of very young people’s participation (and of women’s) in
revolutionary struggles. What is new is the autonomy of their participation
in spite of and because of their exclusion from direct production.
In the factories youths refuse the leadership of older workers, and
in the revolts in the cities they are the diamond point. In the metropolis
generations of the nuclear family have produced youth and student movements
that have initiated the process of shaking the framework of constituted
power; in the Third World the unemployed youth is often in the streets
before the working class organized in trade unions.
It is worth
recording what The Times of London (1 June 1971) reported concerning
a head-teachers’ meeting called because one of them was admonished
for hitting a pupil: “Disruptive and irresponsible elements lurk around
every corner with the seemingly planned intention of eroding all forces
of authority.” This “is a plot to destroy the values on which our
civilization is built and of which our schools are some of the finest
bastions”.
The exploitation
of the wageless
We wanted to
make these few comments on
the attitude of revolt that is steadily spreading among children and
youth, especially from the working class and particularly Black people,
because we believe this to be intimately connected with the explosion
of the women’s movement and something which the women’s movement
itself must take into account. We are dealing here with the revolt of
those who have been excluded, who have been separated by the system
of production, and who express in action their need to destroy the forces
that stand in the way of their social existence, but who this time are
coming together as individuals.
Women and children
have been excluded. The revolt of the one against exploitation through
exclusion is an index of the revolt of the other.
To the extent
to which capital has recruited the man and turned him into a wage labourer,
it has created a fracture between him and all the other proletarians
without a wage who, not participating directly in social production,
were thus presumed incapable of being the subjects of social revolt.
Since Marx,
it has been clear that capital rules and develops through the wage,
that is, that the foundation of capitalist society was the wage labourer
and his or her direct exploitation. What has been neither clear nor
assumed by the organizations of the working-class movement is that precisely
through the wage has the exploitation of the non-wage labourer been organized.
This exploitation has been even more effective because the lack of a
wage hid it. That is, the wage commanded a larger amount of labour than
appeared in factory bargaining. Where women are concerned, their
labour appears to be a personal service outside of capital.
The woman seemed only to be suffering from male chauvinism, being pushed
around because capitalism meant general “injustice” and “bad and
unreasonable behaviour”, the few (men) who noticed convinced us that
this was “oppression” but not exploitation. But “oppression”
hid another and more pervasive aspect of capitalist society. Capital
excluded children from the home and sent them to school not only because
they are in the way of others’ more “productive” labour or only
to indoctrinate them. The rule of capital through the wage compels every
able-bodied person to function, under the law of division of labour,
and to function in ways that are if not immediately, then ultimately
profitable to the expansion and extension of the rule of capital. That,
fundamentally, is the meaning of school. Where children are concerned,
their labour appears to be learning for their own benefit.
Proletarian
children have been forced to undergo the same education in the schools:
this is capitalist leveling against the infinite possibilities of learning.
Woman on the other hand has been isolated in the home, forced to carry
out work that is considered unskilled, the work of giving birth to,
raising, disciplining, and servicing the worker for production. Her
role in the cycle of social production remained invisible because only
the product of her labour, the labourer,
was visible there. She herself was thereby trapped within pre-capitalist
working conditions and never paid a wage.
And when we
say “pre-capitalist working conditions” we do not refer only to women
who have to use brooms to sweep. Even the best equipped American kitchens
do not reflect the present level of technological development; at most
they reflect the technology of the nineteenth century. If you are not
paid by the hour, within certain limits, nobody cares how long it takes
you to do your work.
This is not
only a quantitative
but a qualitative difference from other work, and it stems precisely
from the kind of commodity that this work is destined to produce. Within
the capitalist system generally, the productivity of labour doesn’t
increase unless there is a confrontation between capital and class:
technological innovations and co-operation are at the same time moments
of attack for the working class and moments of capitalistic response.
But if this is true for the production of commodities generally, this
has not been true for the production of that special kind of commodity,
labour power. If technological innovation can lower the limit of necessary
work, and if the working-class struggle in industry can use that innovation
for gaining free hours, the same cannot be said of housework; to the
extent that she must in isolation
procreate, raise and be responsible for children, a high mechanization
of domestic chores doesn’t free any time for the woman. She is always
on duty, for the machine doesn’t exist that makes and minds children.*
A higher productivity of domestic work through mechanization, then,
can be related only to specific services, for example, cooking, washing,
cleaning. Her workday is unending not because she has not machines,
but because she is isolated.**
[*We
are not at all ignoring the attempts at this moment to make test-tube
babies. But today such mechanisms belong completely to capitalist science
and control. The use would be completely against us and against the
class. It is not in our interest to abdicate procreation, to consign
it to the hands of the enemy. It is in our interest to conquer the freedom
to procreate for which we will pay neither the price of the wage nor
the price of social exclusion.
**
To the extent that not technological innovation but only “human care”
can raise children, the effective liberation from domestic work time,
the qualitative change of domestic work,
can derive only from a movement of women, from a struggle of women:
the more the movement grows, the less men-and first of all political
militants can count on female baby minding. And at the same time the
new social ambience that the movement constructs offers to children
social space, with both men and women, that has nothing to do with the
day care centers organized by the state. These are already victories
of struggle. Precisely because they are the results
of a movement that is by its nature a struggle, they do not aim to
substitute any kind of co-operation for the struggle itself.]
Confirming
the myth of female incapacity
With the advent
of the capitalist mode of production, then, women were relegated to
a condition of isolation, enclosed within the family cell, dependent
in every aspect on men. The new autonomy of the free wage slave was
denied her, and she remained in a pre-capitalist stage of personal dependence,
but this time more brutalized because in contrast to the large-scale
highly socialized production which now prevails. Woman’s apparent
incapacity to do certain things, to understand certain things, originated
in her history, which is a history very similar in certain respects
to that of “backward” children in special ESN classes. To the extent
that women were cut off from direct socialized production and isolated
in the home, all possibilities of social life outside the neighborhood
were denied them, and hence they were deprived of social knowledge and
social education. When women are deprived of wide experience of organizing
and planning collectively industrial and other mass struggles, they
are denied a basic source of education, the experience of social revolt.
And this experience is primarily the experience of learning your own
capacities, that is, your power, and the capacities, the power, of your
class. Thus the isolation from which women have suffered has confirmed
to society and to themselves the myth of female incapacity.
It is this
myth which has hidden, firstly, that to the degree that the working
class has been able to organize mass struggles in the community, rent
strikes, struggles against inflation generally, the basis has always
been the unceasing informal organization of women there; secondly, that
in struggles in the cycle of direct production women’s support and
organization, formal and informal, has been decisive. At critical moments
this unceasing network of women surfaces and develops through the talents,
energies and strength of the “incapable female.” But the myth does
not die. Where women could together with men claim the victory – to
survive (during unemployment) or to survive and win (during strikes)
– the spoils of the victor belonged to the class “in general”.
Women rarely if ever got anything specifically for themselves; rarely
if ever did the struggle have as an objective in any way altering the
power structure of the home and its relation to the factory. Strike
or unemployment, a woman’s work is never done.
The capitalist
function of the uterus
Never as with
the advent of capitalism has the destruction of woman as a person meant
also the immediate diminution of her physical
integrity. Feminine and masculine sexuality had already before capitalism
undergone a series of regimes and forms of conditioning. But they had
also undergone efficient methods of birth control, which have unaccountably
disappeared. Capital established the family as the nuclear family and
subordinated within it the woman to the man, as the person who, not
directly participating in social production, does not present herself
independently on the labour market. As it cuts off all her possibilities
of creativity and of the development of her working activity, so it
cuts off the expression of her sexual, psychological and emotional autonomy.
We repeat:
never had such a stunting of the physical integrity of woman taken place,
affecting everything from the brain to the uterus. Participating with
others in the production of a train, a car or an aeroplane is not the
same thing as using in isolation the same broom in the same few square
feet of kitchen for centuries.
This is not
a call for equality of men and women in the construction of airplanes,
but it is merely to assume that the difference between the two histories
not only determines the differences in the actual forms of struggle
but brings also finally to light what has been invisible for so long:
the different forms women’s struggles have assumed in the past. In
the same way as women are robbed of the possibility of developing their
creative capacity, they are robbed of their sexual life which has been
transformed into a function for reproducing labour power: the same observations
which we made on the technological level of domestic services apply
to birth control (and, by the way, to the whole field of gynaecology),
research into which until recently has been continually neglected, while
women have been forced to have children and were forbidden the right
to have abortions when, as was to be expected, the most primitive techniques
of birth control failed.
From this complete
diminution of woman, capital constructed the female role, and has made
the man in the family the instrument of this reduction. The man as wage
worker and head of the family was the specific instrument of this specific
exploitation which is the exploitation of women.
The homosexuality
of the division of labour
In this sense
we can explain to what extent the degraded
relationships between men and women are determined by the fracturing
that society has imposed between man and woman, subordinating woman
as object, the “complement” to man. And in this sense we can see
the validity of the explosion of tendencies within the women’s movement
in which women want to conduct the struggle against men as such* and
no longer wish to use their strength to sustain even sexual relationships
with them, since each of these relationships is always frustrating.
A power relation precludes any possibility of affection and intimacy.
Yet between men and women power as its right commands
sexual affection and intimacy. In this sense, the gay movement is the
most massive attempt to disengage sexuality and power.
[*
It is impossible to say for how long these tendencies will continue
to drive the movement forward and when they will turn into their opposite.]
But homosexuality
generally is at the same time rooted in the framework of capitalist
society itself: women at home and men in factories
and offices, separated one from the other for the whole day; or a typical
factory of 1,000 women with 10 foremen; or a typing pool (of women,
of course) which works for 50 professional men. All these situations
are already a homosexual framework of living.
Capital, while
it elevates heterosexuality to a religion, at the same time in practice
makes it impossible for men and women to be in touch with each other,
physically or emotionally-it undermines heterosexuality except as a sexual,
economic and social discipline.
We believe
that this is a reality from which we must begin. The explosion of the
gay tendencies have been and are important for the movement precisely
because they pose the urgency to claim for itself the specificity of
women’s struggle and above all to clarify in all their depths all
facets and connections of the exploitation of women.
Surplus
value and the social factory
At this point
then we would like to begin to clear the ground of a certain point of
view which orthodox Marxism, especially
in the ideology and practice of so-called Marxist parties, has always
taken for granted. And this is: when women remain outside social production,
that is, outside the socially organized productive cycle, they are also
outside social productivity. The role of women, in other words, has
always been seen as that of a psychologically subordinated person who,
except where she is marginally employed outside the home, is outside
production; essentially a supplier of a series of use values in the
home. This basically was the viewpoint of Marx who, observing what happened
to women working in the factories, concluded that it would have been
better for them to be at home, where resided a morally higher form of
life. But the true nature of the role of housewife never emerges clearly
in Marx. Yet observers have noted that Lancashire women, cotton workers
for over a century, are more sexually free and helped by men in domestic
chores. On the other hand, in the Yorkshire coal-mining districts where
a low percentage of women worked outside the home, women are more dominated
by the figure of the husband. Even those who have been able to define
the exploitation of women in socialized production could not then go
on to understand the exploited position of women in the home; men are
too compromised in their relationship with women. For that reason only
women can define themselves and move on the woman question.
We have to
make clear that, within the wage, domestic work produces not merely
use values, but is essential to the production of surplus value.* This
is true of the entire female role as a personality which is subordinated
at all levels, physical, psychological and occupational, which has had
and continues to have a precise and vital place in the capitalist division
of labour, in the pursuit of productivity at the social level.
Let us examine more specifically the role of women as a source of social
productivity, that is, of surplus value making. Firstly within the family.
[*Some
first readers in English have found that this definition of women’s
work should be precise. What we meant precisely is that housework as
work is productive in the Marxian sense, that is, is producing
surplus value.
We
speak immediately after about the productivity of the entire female
role. To make clearer the productivity of the woman both as related
to her work and as related to her entire role must wait for a later
text on which we are now at work. In this the woman’s place is explained
in a more articulated way from the point of view of the entire capitalistic
circuit.]
A. The
productivity of wage slavery based on unwaged slavery
It is often
asserted that, within the definition of wage labour, women in domestic
labour are not productive. In fact precisely the opposite is true if
one thinks of the enormous
quantity of social services which capitalist organization transforms
into privatized activity, putting them on the backs of housewives. Domestic
labour is not essentially “feminine work”; a woman doesn’t fulfill
herself more or get less exhausted than a man from washing and cleaning.
These are social services inasmuch as they serve the reproduction of
labour power. And capital, precisely by instituting its family structure,
has “liberated” the man from these functions so that he is completely
“free” for direct exploitation; so that he is free to “earn”
enough for a woman to reproduce him as labour power.* It has made men
wage slaves, then, to the degree that it has succeeded in allocating
these services to women in the family, and by the same process controlled
the flow of women onto the labour market. In Italy women are still necessary
in the home and capital still needs this form of the family. At the
present level of development in Europe generally, in Italy in particular,
capital still prefers to import its labour power-in the form of millions
of men from underdeveloped areas-while at the same time consigning women
to the home.**
[* Labour power
“is a strange commodity for this is not a thing. The ability to labour
resides only in a human being whose life is consumed in the process
of producing . . . To describe its basic production and reproduction
is to describe women’s work.” (From Selma James’ introduction)
** This, however,
is being countered by an opposite tendency, to bring women into industry
in certain particular sectors. Differing needs of capital within the
same geographical sector have produced differing and even opposing propaganda
and policies. Where in the past family stability has been based on a
relatively standardized mythology (policy and propaganda being uniform
and officially uncontested), today various sectors of capital contradict
each other and undermine the very definition of family as a stable,
unchanging, “natural” unit. The classic example of this is the variety
of views and financial policies on birth control. The British government
has recently doubled its allocation of funds for this purpose. We must
examine to what extent this policy is connected with a racist immigration
policy, that is, manipulation of the sources of mature labour power;
and with the increasing erosion of the work ethic which results in movements
of the unemployed and unsupported mothers, that is, controlling births
which pollute the purity of capital with revolutionary children.]
And women are of service not only because they
carry out domestic labour without a wage and without going on strike,
but also because they always receive back into the home all those who
are periodically expelled from their jobs by economic crisis. The family,
this maternal cradle always ready to help and protect in time of need,
has been in fact the best guarantee that the unemployed do not immediately
become a horde of disruptive outsiders.
The organized
parties of the working-class movement have been careful not to raise
the question of domestic work. Aside from the fact that they have always
treated women as a lower form of life, even in factories, to raise this
question would be to challenge the whole basis of the trade unions as
organizations that deal (a) only with the factory; (b) only with a measured
and “paid” work day; (c) only with that side of wages which is given
to us and not with the side of wages which is taken back, that is, inflation.
Women have always been forced by the working-class parties to put off
their liberation to some hypothetical future, making it dependent on
the gains that men, limited in the scope of their struggles by these
parties, win for “themselves”.
In reality,
every phase of working-class struggle has fixed the subordination and exploitation of women at a higher
level. The proposal of pensions for housewives* (and this makes us wonder
why not a wage) serves only to show the complete willingness of these
parties further to institutionalize women as housewives and men (and
women) as wage slaves.
[*Which
is the policy, among others, of the Communist Party in Italy who for
some years proposed a bill to the Italian parliament which would have
given a pension to women at home, both housewives and single women,
when they reached 55 years of age. This bill was never passed.]
Now it is clear
that not one of us believes that emancipation, liberation, can be achieved
through work. Work is still work, whether inside or outside the home.
The independence of the wage earner means only being
a “free individual” for capital, no less for women than for men.
Those who advocate that the liberation of the working-class woman lies
in her getting a job outside the home are part of the problem, not the
solution. Slavery to an assembly line is not a liberation from slavery
to a kitchen sink. To deny this is also to deny the slavery of the assembly
line itself, proving again that if you don’t know how women are exploited,
you can never really know how men are. But this question is so crucial
that we deal with it separately. What we wish to make clear here is
that by the non-payment of a wage when we are producing in a world capitalistically
organized, the figure of the boss is concealed behind that of the husband.
He appears to be the sole recipient of domestic services, and this gives
an ambiguous and slavelike character to housework. The husband and children,
through their loving involvement, their loving blackmail, become the
first foremen, the immediate controllers of this labour.
The husband
tends to read the paper and wait for his dinner to be cooked and served,
even when his wife goes out to work as he does and comes home with him.
Clearly, the specific form of exploitation represented by domestic work
demands a corresponding, specific form of struggle, namely the women’s
struggle, within the family.
If we fail
to grasp completely that precisely this family is the very pillar of
the capitalist organization of work, if we make the mistake of regarding
it only as a superstructure, dependent for change only on the stages
of the struggle in the factories, then we will be moving in a limping
revolution that will always perpetuate and aggravate a basic contradiction
in the class struggle, and a contradiction which is functional to capitalist
development. We would, in other words, be perpetuating the error
of considering ourselves as producers of use values only, of considering
housewives external to the working class. As long as housewives are
considered external to the class, the class struggle at every moment
and any point is impeded, frustrated, and unable to find full scope
for its action. To elaborate this further is not our task here. To expose
and condemn domestic work as a masked form of productive labour, however,
raises a series of questions concerning both the aims and the forms
of struggle of women.
Socializing
the struggle of the isolated labourer
In fact, the
demand that would follow, namely “pay us wages for housework”, would
run the risk of looking, in the light of the present relationship of forces in Italy, as though we wanted
further to entrench the condition of institutionalized slavery which
is produced with the condition of housework-therefore such a demand could
scarcely operate in practice as a mobilizing goal.*
[*Today
the demand of wages for housework is put forward increasingly and with
less opposition in the women’s movement in Italy and elsewhere. Since
this document was first drafted (June ‘71), the debate has become
more profound and many uncertainties that were due to the relative newness
of the discussion have been dispelled. But above all, the weight of
the needs of proletarian women has not only radicalized the demands
of the movement. It has also given us greater strength and confidence
to advance them. A year ago, at the beginning of the movement in Italy,
there were those who still thought that the state could easily suffocate
the female rebellion against housework by “paying” it with a monthly
allowance of £7-£8 as they had already done especially with those “wretched
of the earth” who were dependent on pensions.]
The question
is, therefore, to develop forms of struggle which do not leave the housewife
peacefully at home, at most ready to take part in occasional demonstrations
through the streets, waiting for a wage that
would never pay for anything; rather we must discover forms of struggle
which immediately break the whole structure of domestic work, rejecting
it absolutely, rejecting our role as housewives and the home as the
ghetto of our existence, since the problem is not only to stop doing
this work, but to smash the entire role of housewife. The starting
point is not how to do housework more efficiently, but how to find a
place as protagonist in the struggle: that is, not a higher productivity
of domestic labour but a higher subversiveness in the struggle.
To immediately
overthrow the relation between time-given-to-housework and time-not-given-to-housework:
it is not necessary to spend time each day ironing sheets and curtains,
cleaning the floor until it sparkles or to dust every day. And yet many
women still do that. Obviously it is not because they are stupid: once
again we are reminded of the parallel we made earlier with the ESN school.
In reality, it is only in this work that they can realize an identity
precisely because, as we said before, capital has cut them off from
the process of socially organized production.
But it does
not automatically follow that to be cut off from socialized production
is to be cut off from socialized struggle: struggle, however, demands
time away from housework, and at the same time it offers an alternative
identity to the woman who before found it only at the level of the domestic
ghetto. In the sociality of struggle women discover and exercise a power
that effectively gives them a new identity. The new identity is and
can only be a new degree of social power.
The possibility
of social struggle arises out of the socially productive character
of women’s work in the home. It is not only or mainly the social services
provided in the home that make women’s role socially productive, even
though in fact at this moment these services are identified with women’s
role. But capital can technologically improve the conditions of this
work. What capital does not want to do for the time being, in Italy
at least, is to destroy the position of the housewife as the pivot of
the nuclear family. For this reason there is no point in our waiting
for the automation of domestic work, because this will never happen:
the maintenance of the nuclear family is incompatible with ‘the automation
of these services. To really automate them, capital would have to destroy
the family as we know it; that is, it would be driven to socialize
in order to automate fully.
But we know
all too well what their socialization
means: it is always at the very least the opposite of the Paris Commune!
The new leap
that capitalist reorganization could make and that we can already smell
in the U. S. and in the more advanced capitalist countries generally
is to destroy the pre-capitalist isolation of production in the home
by constructing a family which more nearly reflects capitalist equality
and its domination through co-operative labour; to transcend “the incompleteness
of capitalist development” in the home, with the pre-capitalist, unfree
woman as its pivot, and make the family more nearly reflect in its form
its capitalist productive function, the reproduction of labour power.
To return then
to what we said above: women, housewives, identifying themselves with
the home, tend to a compulsive perfection in their work. We all know
the saying too well; you can always find work to do in a house.
They don’t
see beyond their own four walls. The housewife’s situation as a pre-capitalist
mode of labour and consequently this “femininity” imposed upon her,
makes her see the world, the others and the entire organization of work
as a something which is obscure, essentially unknown and unknowable;
not lived; perceived only as a shadow behind the shoulders of the husband
who goes out each day and meets this something.
So when we
say that women must overthrow the relation of domestic-work-time to non-domestic-time
and must begin to move out of the home, we mean their point of departure
must be precisely this willingness to destroy the role of housewife,
in order to begin to come together with other women, not only as neighbours
and friends but as workmates and anti-workmates; thus breaking the tradition
of privatized female, with all its rivalry, and reconstructing a real
solidarity among women: not solidarity for defense but solidarity for
attack, for the organization of the struggle.
A common solidarity
against a common form of labour. In the same way, women must stop meeting
their husbands and children only as wife and mother, that is, at mealtimes
after they have come home from the outside world.
Every place
of struggle outside the home, precisely because every
sphere of capitalist organization presupposes the home,
offers a chance for attack by women; factory meetings, neighbourhood
meetings, student assemblies, each of them are legitimate places for
women’s struggle, where women can encounter and confront men-women
versus men, if you like, but as individuals, rather than mother-father,
son-daughter, with all the possibilities this offers to explode outside
of the house the contradictions, the frustrations, that capital has
wanted to implode within the family
A new
compass for class struggle
If
women demand in workers' assemblies that the night-shift be abolished
because at night, besides sleeping,
one wants to make love-and it's not the same as making love during the
day if the women work during the day-that would be advancing their own
independent interests as women against the social organization of work,
refusing to be unsatisfied mothers for their husbands and children.
But
in this new intervention and confrontation women are also expressing
that their interests as women are not, as they have been told, separate
and alien from the interests of the class. For too long political parties,
especially of the left, and trade unions have determined and confined
the areas of working class struggle. To make love and to refuse night
work to make love, is the interest of the class. To
explore why it is women and not men who raise the question is to shed
new light on the whole history of the class.
To
meet your sons and daughters at a student assembly is to discover them
as individuals who speak among other individuals; it is to present yourself
to them as an individual. Many women have had abortions
and very many have given birth. We can't see why they should not express
their point of view as women first, whether or not they are students,
in an assembly of medical students: (We do not give the medical faculty
as an example by accident. In the lecture hall and in the clinic, we
can see once more the exploitation of the working class not only when
third class patients exclusively are made the guinea pigs for research.
Women especially are the prime objects of experimentation and also of
the sexual contempt, sadism, and professional arrogance of doctors.)
To
sum up: the most important thing becomes precisely this explosion of
the women's movement as an expression of the specificity of female interests
hitherto castrated from all its connections by the
capitalist organization of the family. This has to be waged in every
quarter of this society, each of which is founded precisely on the suppression
of such interests, since the entire class exploitation has been built
upon the specific mediation of women's exploitation.
And
so as a women's movement we must pinpoint every single area in which
this exploitation is located, that is, we must regain the whole specificity
of the female interest in the course of waging the struggle.
Every
opportunity is a good one:
housewives of families threatened with eviction can object that their
housework has more than covered the rent of the months they didn't pay.
On the out-skirts of Milan, many families have already taken up this
form of struggle.
Electric appliances in the home are lovely things to have,
but for the workers who make them, to make many is to spend time and
to exhaust yourself. That every wage has to buy all of them is tough,
and presumes that every wife must run all these appliances alone; and
this only means that she is frozen in the home, but now on a more mechanized
level. Lucky worker, lucky wife!
The question
is not to have communal canteens. We must remember that capital makes
Fiat for the workers first, then their canteen.
For this reason
to demand a communal canteen in the neighborhood without integrating
this demand into a practice of struggle against the organization of
labor, against labor time, risks giving the impetus for a new leap that,
on the community level, would regiment none other than women in some
alluring work so that we will then have the possibility at lunchtime
of eating shit collectively in the canteen.
We want them
to know that this is not the canteen we want, nor do we want play centers
or nurseries of the same order.* We want canteens too, and nurseries
and washing machines and dishwashers, but we also want choices: to eat
in privacy with few people when we want, to have time to be with children,
to be with old people, with the sick, when and where we choose. To "have
time" means to work less. To have time to be with children, the
old and the sick does not mean running to pay a quick visit to the garages
where you park children or old people or invalids. It means that we,
the first to be excluded, are taking the initiative in this struggle
so that all those other excluded people, the children, the old and the
ill, can re-appropriate the social wealth; to be re-integrated with us
and all of us with men, not as dependents but autonomously, as we women
want for ourselves; since their exclusion, like ours, from the directly
productive social process, from social existence, has been created by
capitalist organization.
[*
There has been some confusion over what we have said about canteens.
A similar confusion expressed itself in the discussions in other countries
as well as Italy about wages for housework. As we explained earlier,
housework is as institutionalized as factory work and our ultimate goal
is to destroy both institutions. But aside from which demand we are
speaking about, there is a misunderstanding of what a demand is. It
is a goal which is not only a thing but, like capital at any moment,
essentially a stage of antagonism of a social relation. Whether the
canteen or the wages we win will be a victory or a defeat depends on
the force of our struggle. On that force depends whether the goal is
an occasion for capital to more rationally command our labor or an occasion
for us to weaken their hold on that command. What form the goal takes
when we achieve it, whether it is wages or canteens or free birth control,
emerges and is in fact created in the struggle, and registers the degree
of power that we reached in that struggle.]
The refusal
of work
Hence we must
refuse housework as women’s work, as work imposed upon us, which we never invented, which has never
been paid for, in which they have forced us to cope with absurd hours,
12 and 13 a day, in order to force us to stay at home.
We must get
out of the house; we must reject the home, because we want to unite
with other women, to struggle against all situations which presume that
women will stay at home, to link ourselves to the struggles of all those
who are in ghettos, whether that ghetto is a nursery, a school, a hospital,
an old-age home, or a slum. To abandon the home is already a form of
struggle, since the social services we perform there would then cease
to be carried out in those conditions, and so all those who work out
of the home would then demand that the burden carried by us until now
be thrown squarely where it belongs-on to the shoulders of capital. This
alteration in the terms of struggle will be all the more violent the
more the refusal of domestic labour on the part of women will be violent,
determined and on a mass scale.
The working-class
family is the more difficult point to break because it is the support
of the worker, but as worker, and for that reason the support of capital.
On this family depends the support of the class, the survival of the
class-but at the woman’s expense against the class itself.
The woman is the slave of a wage slave, and her slavery ensures the
slavery of her man. Like the trade union, the family protects the worker,
but also ensures that he and she will
never be anything but workers. And that is why the struggle of the woman
of the working class against the family is crucial.
To meet other
women who work inside and outside their homes allows us to possess other
chances of struggle. To the extent that our struggle is a struggle against
work, it is inscribed in the struggle which the working class wages
against capitalist work. But to the extent that the exploitation of
women through domestic work has had its own specific history, tied to
the survival of the nuclear family, the specific course of this struggle
which must pass through the destruction of the nuclear family as established
by the capitalist social order, adds a new dimension to the class struggle.
B. The
productivity of passivity
However, the
woman’s role in the family is not only that of hidden supplier of
social services who does
not receive a wage. As we said at the beginning, to imprison women in
purely complementary functions and subordinate them to men within the
nuclear family has as its premise the stunting of their physical integrity.
In Italy, with the successful help of the Catholic Church which has
always defined her as an inferior being, a woman is compelled before
marriage into sexual abstinence and after marriage into a repressed
sexuality destined only to bear children, obliging her to bear children.
It has created a female image of “heroic mother and happy wife”
whose sexual identity is pure sublimation, whose function is essentially
that of receptacle for other people’s emotional expression, who is
the cushion of the familial antagonism. What has been defined, then,
as female frigidity has to be redefined as an imposed passive receptivity
in the sexual function as well.
Now this passivity
of the woman in the family is itself “productive”. First it makes
her the outlet for all the oppressions that men suffer in the world
outside the home and at the same time the object on whom the man can
exercise a hunger for power that the domination of the capitalist organization
of work implants. In this sense, the woman becomes productive for capitalist
organization; she acts as a safety valve for the social tensions caused
by it. Secondly, the woman becomes productive inasmuch as the complete
denial of her personal autonomy forces her to sublimate her frustration
in a series of continuous needs that are always centered in the home,
a kind of consumption which is the exact parallel of her compulsive
perfectionism in her housework. Clearly, it is not our job to tell women
what they should have in their homes. Nobody can define the needs of
others. Our interest is to organize the struggle through which this
sublimation will be unnecessary.
Dead
labour and the agony of sexuality
We use the
word “sublimation” advisedly. The frustrations of monotonous and
trivial chores and of sexual passivity are only separable in words. Sexual creativity and creativity in
labour are both areas where human need demands we give free scope to
our “interplaying natural and acquired activities”.* For women (and
therefore men) natural and acquired powers are repressed simultaneously.
The passive sexual receptivity of women creates the compulsively tidy
housewife and can make a monotonous assembly line therapeutic. The trivia
of most of housework and the discipline’ which is required to perform
the same work over every day, every week, every year, double on holidays,
destroys the possibilities of uninhibited sexuality. Our childhood is
a preparation for martyrdom: we are taught to derive happiness from
clean sex on whiter than white sheets; to sacrifice sexuality and other
creative activity at one and the same time.
[*Karl
Marx, Das Kapital, Kritik der politischen Okonomie, Band 1, Berlin,
Dietz Verlag, 1962, p. 512. “Large-scale industry
makes it a question of life and death to replace that monstrosity which
is a miserable available working population, kept in reserve for the
changing needs of exploitation by capital, to replace this with the
absolute availability of the individual for changing requisites of work;
to replace the partial individual, a mere bearer of a social detail
function, with the fully developed individual for whom varied social
functions are modes of interplaying natural and acquired activities.”]
So far the
women’s movement, most notably by destroying the myth of the vaginal
orgasm, has exposed the physical mechanism which allowed
women’s sexual potential to be strictly defined and limited by men.
Now we can begin to reintegrate sexuality with other aspects of creativity,
to see how sexuality will always be constrained unless the work we do
does not mutilate us and our individual capacities, and unless the persons
with whom we have sexual relations are not our masters and are not also
mutilated by their work. To explode the vaginal myth is to demand
female autonomy as opposed to subordination and sublimation. But it
is not only the clitoris versus the vagina. It is both versus the uterus.
Either the vagina is primarily the passage to the reproduction of labour
power sold as a commodity, the capitalist function of the uterus, or
it is part of our natural powers, our social equipment. Sexuality after
all is the most social of expressions, the deepest human communication.
It is in that sense the dissolution of autonomy. The working class organizes
as a class to transcend itself as a class; within that class we organize
autonomously to create the basis to transcend autonomy.
The "political"
attack against women
But while we
are finding our way of being and of organizing ourselves in struggle,
we discover we are confronted by those who are only too eager to attack
women, even as we form
a movement. In defending herself against obliteration, through work
and through consumption, they say, the woman is responsible for the
lack of unity of the class. Let us make a partial list of the sins of
which she stands accused. They say:
1. She wants
more of her husband's wage to buy for example clothes for herself and
her children, not based on what he thinks she needs but on what she
thinks she and her children should have. He works hard for the money.
She only demands another kind of distribution of their lack of wealth,
rather than assisting his struggle for more wealth, more wages.
2. She is in
rivalry with other women to be more attractive than they, to have more
things than they do, and to have a cleaner and tidier house than her
neighbors'. She doesn't ally with them as she should on a class basis.
3. She buries
herself in her home and refuses to understand the struggle of her husband
on the production line. She may even complain when he goes out on strike
rather than backing him up. She votes Conservative.
These are some
of the reasons given by those who consider her reactionary or at best
backward, even by men who take leading roles in factory struggles and
who seem most able to understand the nature of the social boss because
of their militant action. It comes easy to them to condemn women for
what they consider to be backwardness because that is the prevailing
ideology of the society. They do not add that they have benefited from
women's subordinate position by being waited on hand and foot from the
moment of their birth. Some do not even know that they have been waited
on, so natural is it to them for mothers and sisters and daughters to
serve "their" men. It is very difficult for us, on the other
hand, to separate inbred male supremacy from men's attack, which appears
to be strictly "political", launched only for the benefit
of the class.
Let us look at the matter more
closely.
1. Women as consumers
Women do not
make the home the center of consumption. The process of consumption
is integral to the production
of labor power, and if women refused to do the shopping (that is, to
spend), this would be strike action. Having said that, however, we must
add that those social relationships which women are denied because they
are cut off from socially organized labor, they often try to compensate
for by buying things. Whether it is adjudged trivial depends on the
viewpoint and sex of the judge. Intellectuals buy books, but no one
calls this consumption trivial. Independent of the validity of the contents,
the book in this society still represents, through a tradition older
than capitalism, a male value.
We have already
said that women buy things for their home because that home is the only
proof that they exist. But the idea that frugal consumption is in any
way a liberation is as old as capitalism, and comes from the capitalists
who always blame the worker's situation on the worker. For years Harlem
was told by head-shaking liberals that if Black men would only stop driving
Cadillacs (until the finance company took them back), the problem of
color would be solved. Until the violence of the struggle-the only fitting
reply-provided a measure of social power, that Cadillac was one of the
few ways to display the potential for power. This and not "practical
economics" caused the liberals pain.
In any case,
nothing any of us buys would we need if we were free. Not the food they
poison for us, nor the clothes that identify us by class, sex and generation,
nor the houses in which they imprison us.
In any case,
too, our problem is that we never have enough, not that we have too
much. And that pressure which women place on men is a defense of
the wage, not an attack. Precisely because women are the slaves
of wage slaves, men divide the wage between themselves and the general
family expense. If women did not make demands, the general family standard
of living could drop to absorb the inflation-the woman of course is the
first to do without. Thus unless the woman makes demands, the family
is functional to capital in an additional sense to the ones we have
listed: it can absorb the fall in the price of labor power.* This, therefore,
is the most ongoing material way in which women can defend the living
standards of the class. And when they go out to political meetings,
they will need even more money!
[*”But
the other, more fundamental, objection, which we shall develop in the
ensuing chapters, flows from our disputing the assumption that the general
level of real wages is directly determined by the character of the wage
bargain . . . We shall endeavor to show that primarily it is certain
other forces which determine the general level of real wages . .
. We shall argue that there has been a fundamental misunderstanding
of how in this respect the economy in which we live actually works."
(Emphasis added.) The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and
Money, John Maynard Keynes, N.Y., Harcourt, Brace and World, 1964,
p.13. "Certain other forces", in our view, are first of all
women.]
2. Women as rivals
As for women's "rivalry", Frantz
Fanon has clarified for the Third World what only racism prevents from
being generally applied to the class. The colonized, he says, when they
do not organize against their oppressors, attack each other. The woman's
pressure for greater consumption may at times express itself in the
form of rivalry, but nevertheless as we have said protects the living
standards of the class. Which is unlike women's sexual rivalry; that
rivalry is rooted in their economic and social dependence on men. To
the degree that they live for men, dress for men, work for men, they
are manipulated by men through this rivalry.*
[*It
has been noticed that many of the Bolsheviks after 1917 found female
partners among the dispossessed aristocracy. When power continues to
reside in men both at the level of the State and in individual relations,
women continue to be "the spoil and handmaid of communal lust"
(Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844,
Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1959, p.94). The breed of "the new
tsars" goes back a long way.
Already
in 1921 from "Decisions of the Third Congress of the Communist
International", one can read in Part I of "Work Among Women":
"The Third Congress of the Comintern confirms the basic proposition
of revolutionary Marxism, that is, that there is no `specific woman
question' and no `specific women's movement', and that every sort of
alliance of working women with bourgeois feminism, as well as any support
by the women workers of the treacherous tactics of the social compromisers
and opportunists, leads to the undermining of the forces of the proletariat
. . . In order to put an end to women's slavery it is necessary to inaugurate
the new Communist organization of society."
The
theory being male, the practice was to "neutralize". Let us
quote from one of the founding fathers. At the first National Conference
of Communist Women of the Communist Party of Italy on March 26,1922,
"Comrade Gramsci pointed out that special action must be organized
among housewives, who constitute the large majority of the proletarian
women. He said that they should be related in some way to our movement
by our setting up special organizations. Housewives, as far as the quality
of their work is concerned, can be considered similar to the artisans
and therefore they will hardly be communists; however, because they
are the workers' mates, and because they share in some way the workers'
life, they are attracted toward communism. Our propaganda can therefore
have an influence over [sic] these housewives; it can be instrumental,
if not to officer them into our organization, to neutralize them; so
that they do not stand in the way of the possible struggles by the workers."
(From Compagna, the Italian Communist Party organ for work among
women, Year I, No.3 (April 2, 1922] , p.2.)]
As for rivalry
about their homes, women are trained from birth to be obsessive and
possessive about clean and tidy homes. But men cannot have it both ways;
they cannot continue to enjoy the privilege of having a private servant and then complain about the
effects of privatization. If they continue to complain, we must conclude
that their attack on us for rivalry is really an apology for our servitude.
If Fanon was not right, that the strife among the colonized is an expression
of their low level of organization, then the antagonism is a sign of
natural incapacity. When we call a home a ghetto, we could call it a
colony governed by indirect rule and be as accurate. The resolution
of the antagonism of the colonized to each other lies in autonomous
struggle. Women have overcome greater obstacles than rivalry to unite
in supporting men in struggles. Where women have been less successful
is in transforming and deepening moments of struggle by making of them
opportunities to raise their own demands. Autonomous struggle turns
the question on its head: not "will women unite to support men",
but "will men unite to support women".
3. Women as divisive
What has prevented
previous political intervention by women? Why can they be used in certain circumstances against strikes?
Why, in other words, is the class not united? From the beginning of
this document we have made central the exclusion of women from socialized
production. That is an objective character of capitalist organization:
co-operative labor in the factory and office, isolated labor in the home.
This is mirrored subjectively by the way workers in industry organize
separately from the community. What is the community to do? What are
women to do? Support, be appendages to men in the home and
in the struggle, even form a women's auxiliary to unions. This division
and this kind of division is
the history of the class. At every stage of the struggle the most peripheral
to the productive cycle are used against those at the center, so long
as the latter ignore the former. This is the history of trade unions,
for example, in the United States, when Black workers were used as strikebreakers
never, by the way, as often as white workers were led to believe Blacks
like women are immediately identifiable and reports of strikebreaking
reinforce prejudices which arise from objective divisions: the white
on the assembly line, the Black sweeping round his feet; or the man
on the assembly line, the woman sweeping round his feet when he gets
home.
Men when they
reject work consider themselves militant, and when we reject our work,
these same men consider us nagging wives. When some of us vote Conservative
because we have been excluded from political struggle, they think we
are backward, while they have voted for parties which didn't even consider
that we existed as anything but ballast, and in the process sold them
(and us all) down the river.
C. The Productivity of Discipline
The third aspect
of women's role in the family is that, because of the
special brand of stunting of the personality already discussed, the
woman becomes a repressive figure, disciplinarian of all the members
of the family, ideologically and psychologically. She may live under
the tyranny of her husband, of her home, the tyranny of striving to
be "heroic mother and happy wife" when her whole existence
repudiates this ideal. Those who are tyrannized and lack power are with
the new generation for the first years of their lives producing docile
workers and little tyrants, in the same way the teacher does at school.
(In this the woman is joined by her husband: not by chance do parent
teacher associations exist.) Women, responsible for the reproduction
of labor power, on the one hand discipline the children who will be
workers tomorrow and on the other hand discipline the husband to work
today, for only his wage can pay for labor power to be reproduced.
Here
we have only attempted to consider female domestic productivity without
going into detail about the psychological implications.
At least we have located and essentially outlined this female domestic
productivity as it passes through the complexities of the role that
the woman plays (in addition, that is, to the actual domestic work the
burden of which she assumes without pay). We pose, then, as foremost
the need to break this role that wants women divided from each other,
from men and from children, each locked in her family as the chrysalis
in the cocoon that imprisons itself by its own work, to die and leave
silk for capital. To reject all this, as we have already said, means
for housewives to recognize themselves also as a section of the class,
the most degraded because they are not paid a wage.
The
housewife's position in the overall struggle of women is crucial, since
it undermines the very
pillar supporting the capitalist organization of work, namely the family.
So
every goal that tends to affirm the individuality of women against this
figure complementary to everything and everybody, that is, the housewife,
is worth posing as a goal
subversive to the continuation, the productivity of this role.
In
this same sense all the demands that can serve to restore to the woman
the integrity of her basic physical functions, starting with the sexual
one which was the first to be robbed
along with productive creativity, have to be posed with the greatest
urgency.
It
is not by chance that research in birth control has developed so slowly,
that abortion is forbidden almost the world over or conceded finally
only for "therapeutic" reasons.
To
move first on these demands is not facile reformism. Capitalist management
of these matters poses over and over discrimination of class and discrimination
of women specifically.
Why were proletarian
women, Third World women, used as guinea pigs in
this research? Why does the question of birth control continue to be
posed as women's problem? To begin to struggle to overthrow the capitalist
management over these matters is to move on a class basis, and on a
specifically female basis. To link these struggles with the struggle
against motherhood conceived as the responsibility of women exclusively,
against domestic work conceived as women's work, ultimately against
the models that capitalism offers us as examples of women's emancipation
which are nothing more than ugly copies of the male role, is to struggle
against the division and organization of labor.
Women
and the struggle not to work
Let us sum
up. The role of housewife, behind whose isolation is hidden social labour,
must be destroyed. But our
alternatives are strictly defined. Up to now, the myth of female incapacity,
rooted in this isolated woman dependent on someone else’s wage and
therefore shaped by someone else’s consciousness, has been broken
by only one action: the woman getting her own wage, breaking the back
of personal economic dependence, making her own independent experience
with the world outside the home, performing social labour in a socialized
structure, whether the factory or the office, and initiating there her
own forms of social rebellion along with the traditional forms of the
class. The advent of the women’s movement is a rejection
of this alternative.
Capital itself
is seizing upon the same impetus which created a movement-the rejection
by millions of women of women’s traditional
place-to recompose the work force with increasing numbers of women. The
movement can only develop in opposition to this. It poses by its very
existence and must pose with increasing articulation in action that
women refuse the myth of liberation through work.
For we have
worked enough. We have chopped billions of tons of cotton, washed billions
of dishes, scrubbed billions of floors, typed billions of words, wired
billions of radio sets, washed billions of nappies, by hand and in machines.
Every time they have “let us in” to some traditionally male enclave,
it was to find for us a new level of exploitation. Here again we must
make a parallel, different as they are, between underdevelopment in
the Third World and underdevelopment in the metropolis-to be more precise,
in the kitchens of the metropolis. Capitalist planning proposes to the
Third World that it “develop”; that in addition to its present agonies,
it too suffer the agony of an industrial counter-revolution. Women in
the metropolis have been offered the same “aid”. But those of us
who have gone out of our homes to work because we had to or for extras
or for economic independence have warned the rest: inflation has riveted
us to this bloody typing-pool or to this assembly-line, and in that there
is no salvation. We must refuse the development they are offering us.
But the struggle of the working woman is not to return to the isolation
of the home, appealing as this sometimes may be on Monday morning; any
more than the housewife’s struggle is to exchange being imprisoned
in a house for being clinched to desks or machines, appealing as this
sometimes may be compared to the loneliness of the twelfth-storey flat.
Women must
completely discover their own possibilities-which are neither mending
socks nor becoming captains of ocean-going ships. Better still, we
may wish to do these things, but these now cannot be located anywhere
but in the history of capital.
The challenge
to the women’s movement is to find modes of struggle which, while
they liberate women from the home, at the same time avoid on the one
hand a double slavery and on the other prevent another degree of capitalistic
control and regimentation. This ultimately is the dividing line between
reformism and revolutionary politics within the women’s movement.
It seems that
there have been few women of genius. There could not be since, cut off
from the social process, we cannot see on what matters they could exercise
their genius. Now there is a matter, the struggle itself.
Freud said
also that every woman from birth suffers from penis envy. He forgot
to add that this feeling of envy begins from the moment when she perceives
that in some way to have a penis means to have power. Even less did
he realize that the traditional power of the penis commenced upon a
whole new history at the very moment when the separation of man from
woman became a capitalistic division.
And this is
where our struggle begins.
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