Janet Jakobsen, "Introduction: Feminism is Dead (Long Live Feminism)" (page 2 of
4)
The Scholar and The Feminist Conference
One of the things that we hope this issue of Scholar and Feminist
Online can do is to provide alternative views of the history of
feminism by providing various views of the history of the conference.
Just as feminism is not - and never was - a single movement led by single
individuals, the history of feminism is not a single story. It is not
the coherent narrative of forward progress, by which all things always
get better; neither is it a story of a direct rise to a pinnacle
followed by a certain descent. Rather, it is a history full of
controversy and struggle, starts and stops, bursts of energy and periods
of quiescence. But, it would be a mistake to read the messiness of this
history, its failure to conform to the dominant progress narrative, as a
failure of the movement. Rather, it is through the difficulties and
struggles, the wrong turns and the right actions, that the movement has
been sustained over these last thirty years. Feminists and feminisms
have both learned from the struggle. How could social change be any
other way?
The history of the conference reflects this complicated history of
feminism. It is true that the early days were quite heady. As the
photos of conference participants waiting in lines that stretch
across the campus and of an absolutely packed gymnasium show, thousands
of people came to those early conferences, and more than one person who
was there has reported that the experience was life-changing. For
example, Nancy Evans, founder of ivillage.com, one of the first spaces
on the Internet dedicated to women's issues, tells the story of being a
graduate student at Columbia University, when she went to the Scholar
and Feminist conference. The energy, passion, and ideas that the
conference brought forward made her realize that her life could be
something different than what she had imagined. She could be a
feminist. She changed course virtually immediately and began the path
that led to her to be a leader in claiming the Internet as a space for
women and women's issues.
The high and the low points of the conference happened simultaneously
in 1982 with the Scholar and Feminist IX, "Towards a Politics of
Sexuality." More has been written about this conference than any other,
and in many ways it was the flash point for a revolution in how
feminists could approach questions of sexuality. As participants
report, in planning for the conference it seemed radical simply to be
able to talk about sex as an issue of import and the subject of academic
analysis, and the planners decided to keep a diary of their experiences
in planning the conference and publish it for conference goers. The
diary - which includes minutes from the planning meets and workshop
descriptions by leading scholars like Muriel Dimen, Mary Ann Doane,
Ellen Dubois, Faye Ginsburg, Linda Gordon, Esther Newton, Gayle Rubin,
Kaja Silverman, and Hortense Spillers, among others - became a journal of
writings and art work that illustrated the excitement and new insights
that taking up the politics of sexuality produced.
Because the conference was breaking new ground, it also became the
subject of intense controversy. The conference happened at a moment
when battle lines were being drawn among feminists over the meaning of
sexuality. The two sides came to be called "pro-sex" and
"anti-violence," and the great irony of the controversy is that such a
division was created in part over a conference that was trying to
address the fact that women were both subject to sexual violence
and denied the right to sexual pleasure. Pleasure and
Danger, the title Carole Vance gave to her anthology of papers from
the conference, (an anthology that unlike previous books was published
separately from the Center) succinctly captures this connection. But as
Vance reports in her epilogue to the book, as does Jane Gould, then
Director of the Center in her book, Juggling, as soon as
controversy arose around the conference, the College went into a panic.
The College attempted to confiscate the diary of the planning process,
which was to have been distributed in the packets given to each attendee
at the conference. In the end, the College agreed to reprint the diary
without Barnard's name and allow it to be distributed after the
conference. In other words, the College effectively paid thousands of
dollars to have Barnard's name taken off of the document, thus removing
the College's connection to this important body of work. As a result,
we do not reprint the diary here, having lost the right to claim this
work on behalf of the College, despite its importance to the history of
the conference and to feminism.
As Lisa Duggan says in the film commissioned by the Center for the
30th anniversary of the conference, what came out of the 1982
conference, was crucially important for feminist movement: "what went
forward . . . as a really useful conversation that actually progressed so that
the feminist discussion got to a better place in and through that
particular debate." Since the conference, sexuality has become a
central subject of feminist theory and practice, and lesbian and gay,
queer and now transgender studies have provided successive waves of
vitality for both academic and activist undertakings. "Gender and
sexuality" has become one of the major ways of understanding the field,
and numerous academic programs have taken up this title. The Scholar
and Feminist IX was the leading edge of new ways of knowing and
acting.
Nor, was sexuality the only issue that engendered controversy at or
around the conference. As Temma Kaplan notes in the film a number of
issues, like gender and religion, proved controversial. A willingness to
take on controversy is signaled by conference titles like "Motherhood
vs. Sisterhood" (1988), "Apocaylpse Now?: Race and Gender in the
Ninties," (1990), and "Our Families: A Feminist Response to the Family
Values Debate" (1996).
These controversies were not necessarily easy. In many cases, and
particularly in the case of the Scholar and Feminist IX and the
College's response, the controversy was destructive as well as
productive. And yet, these controversies are a crucial part of the
struggle that makes for social change.
One of the themes running through the panel discussion on
transnational resistance at the 30th anniversary conference was the need
for an honest accounting of feminism's failures as well as its
successes. Several panelists argued that history is a tremendous
resource, but only if we can address it honestly. Barbara Ransby talked
about the ways in which history of social movements, like the civil
rights movement, can be sustaining, but that sustenance can be
maintained only if we address the ways in which that legacy is currently
being looted by the right wing, as the language of civil rights is
appropriated to turn back the victories of the very movements who made
this language important. Similarly, a number of the panels brought up
the appropriation of feminism and the language of women's liberation for
right-wing purposes, including support for the U.S. wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq. Minnie Bruce Pratt took the brave step of revisiting her own
past, rereading her generative essay in the groundbreaking 1984 volume
Yours in Struggle, and assessing not just its accomplishments,
but its limits in light of intervening struggles. In doing so, she
hoped to show how feminism has had to change over these last twenty
years and also how feminism needs to keep changing.
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