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There have been very great changes in women’s lives in the past few decades - but there is still much to fight for. Here is my manifesto for a 21st century feminism.

Pro Choice protest February 2008

  1. Globalisation and neo liberalism have had a profound effect on the lives of millions of women. Capitalism itself has created new forms and manifestations of women’s oppression.
  2. Women’s oppression is a product of class society which has existed for thousands of years. It was only with the development of capitalism that large numbers of women developed a consciousness of their position and the ability to do something about it.
  3. Women have been drawn into the workforce in millions but working in factories, offices and shops has not led to an improvement in women’s lives far less to liberation. Women suffer exploitation at work as well as still shouldering the double burden of family and childcare as well as paid work.
  4. Women’s traditional role as wives and mothers has not disappeared but has been reinvented to fit in with the needs of exploitation. They are now expected to juggle all aspects of their lives and are blamed as individuals for any failings in family or work life.
  5. The talk of glass ceilings and unfairly low bonuses for women bankers miss the point about liberation, which is that liberation has to be for all working women and not just a tiny number of privileged women.
  6. Although all women suffer oppression and face discrimination, their life experiences are radically different. Women are not united as a sex but are divided on the basis of class. Middle and upper class women share in the profits from the exploitative system in which we live and use this benefit to alleviate their own oppression. Working class women are usually the people who cook, clean and provide personal services for these women, receiving low wages and often neglecting their own families to do so.
  7. Women are more than ever regarded as objects defined by their sexuality. The commercialisation of sexuality with its lad and ladette culture, its pole dancing clubs and its post-modern Miss World contests keeps women being judged as sex objects as if nothing has changed since the 1950s.
  8. This objectification, alongside women’s role as supposedly the property of men, leads to domestic violence, rape and sexual abuse. This abuse is under recognised and under reported. It was only in the 1960s and 70s that these issues began to be viewed as political.
  9. To control their own lives, women must control their own bodies and sexuality.
  10. Capitalist ideology prioritises the family and the subordinate role of women and children within it, while at the same time forcing individual members of the family to sacrifice ‘family life’ because of the pressures of work and migration.
  11. The priorities of the profit system and the existence of the privatised family means that women’s oppression is structured into capitalism. Any genuine liberation has to be connected to a wider movement for human emancipation and for working people to control the wealth that they produce. That’s why women and men have to fight for liberation. Socialism and women’s liberation are inextricably connected.
  12. We will not win without a fight. Every great social movement raises the question of women. In the 19th century the movement for women’s emancipation took its name from the movement to abolish slavery. In the 20th century women’s liberation took its name from the movements against colonialism around the world. 21st century women’s liberation has to fight to change the world and to end the class society which created oppression and exploitation in the first place.

Comments   

 
#1 Guest 2010-03-30 01:44
Women of a working class background will always be looked upon as second class within a capitalist society. Whilst claims that more women are staying at home with their children one must note that these are generally middle classwomen with husbands who can financially support their wives and families on one income. For working class women like myself,who simply have to go to work make ends meet, we end up feeling overworked, undervalued,and living the lives of our mothers back in the fifities and early sixties.Many living with husbands of the same mentality of earlier generations of men.Life for working class women is still as oppressive as it always has been.Wealth has always been the way out of oppressive circumstances and it always will be within a captilalist society.The pressure to end the class society must continue worldwide to ensure a better deal for women particularly those at the working class end of the spectrum.
 
 
#2 Guest 2010-04-30 08:23
While i agree with most of this, it's not a manifesto... Where's the manifesto?
 
 
#3 Guest 2010-04-30 09:30
meehrcat
The last 2 points are directed to what needs to be done. Much of what is needed is implied within the earlier points too. But of course it's undeniable that far more needs to be said about how we achieve change than is possible in a short piece (and indeed Lindsey German has done just that elsewhere). The Counterforum event, with the meeting on this topic on Sunday night (2 May), is a chance to discuss further.
 
 
#4 Guest 2010-05-02 12:32
It's a shame your manifesto makes no mention of patriarchy.
 

31 May - 1 June 2013
an international festival

In the parks, halls and public spaces around Kings Cross

With:
David Harvey, Tariq Ali, Tony Benn, Owen Jones, Nina Power, Sanum Ghafoor, Andrew Murray, Laurie Penny, Lindsey German, Jeremy Corbyn MP, Paul Le Blanc, Terry Eagleton, Paul Gilroy and more...

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Saturday 22 June 2013

9:30am – 5pm

Central Hall Westminster

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