Summary - Panel 3
Class, Race, and Sex: The Future of Difference
In 1979, The Scholar & Feminist VI: The Future of Difference
showcased formative theories of sexual difference across a range of
disciplines, from psychoanalytic, linguistic and literary criticism to
history and political science. The following year's conference,
Class, Race and Sex: Exploring Contradictions, Affirming
Connections, set out to understand how economic, political and
cultural institutions divide women by class, race and sexual preference.
Moderated by Elizabeth Bernstein, Assistant Professor of
Sociology at Barnard College, this panel explored how notions of
"difference" have evolved over the last thirty years, and how strategies
for securing economic, racial and sexual justice have contributed to
contemporary feminist movements. Panelists included:
- Siobhan Brooks, sex worker organizer
- Leslie Feinberg, author and transgender lesbian activist
- Amber Hollibaugh, author and activist
- Surina Khan, political consultant
Professor Bernstein opened the conversation by inviting the panelists
to speak about their work and the biggest challenges that work presents
to mainstream feminist theorizing and activism. In their candid
discussion of a range of experience - from union organizing for sex
workers to the challenges of introducing radical politics into national,
non-profit organizations - the panelists revisited themes that formed
the foundation of the historic conferences mentioned above: the
challenges of building a movement that truly honors and incorporates
difference, that seeks to build connections that are tensile enough to
allow for divergent, even contradictory, approaches and thoughts. Both
Siobhan Brooks and Surina Khan spoke passionately about the need to
build outward from single-issue movements, while Amber Hollibaugh
addressed the problems of putting that desirable theory into practice:
"we're not a very generous movement when [new or uninitiated] people
enter it," she argued, urging us to "step forward and out into the
places where we don't know everything," where total agreement is not
necessarily a foregone conclusion.
In speaking of the barriers that are easily, often unconsciously or
unintentionally, erected between members of movements who share the same
vision, the same goals, Leslie Feinberg discussed where feminism has
most succeeded in response to difference and where it has most failed.
Siobhan Brooks criticized a narrow version of the second-wave feminist
movement, which seemed blinded to the needs of poor women and women of
color by its single goal of equality: "we need to get beyond equality,"
Siobhan said. Surina Khan echoed this concern by focusing on the
structure of non-profit organizing, claiming that current tax laws help
eclipse the concerns of poor women of color by providing funding to
larger, more established groups that tend to fight for more mainstream,
more middle-class causes; this issue was later revisited during the
question and answer session, as an audience member inspired a lively
discussion of the "non-profit industrial complex." In order to realize
this vision of a more inclusive social and economic justice movement,
Leslie Feinberg reminded us that the "interrelationship[s]" between
various movements that have most fruitful have been the relationships
between "marginalized groups, groups that [were] the most
disenfranchised or downtrodden, or most the target of repression . . . that
[had] just become intolerable." She invited us to consider the history
of the left wings of the gay liberation movement, the civil rights
movement, the women's movement, each of which demanded that its members
stand up not only for themselves but for everyone. Amber
Hollibaugh saw the potential to return to this sort of organizing;
because we live in a time where "the luxury of single-identity politics
is really being moved to the side profoundly," we face the exciting
(and, no doubt, challenging) possibility of crafting a movement that
takes into account the complexity and multi-dimensionality of our lives,
struggles and experiences.
Text: Full Transcript (PDF, 176 KB)
Video Clips:
Play Clip 1
Siobhan Brooks talks about the challenges of claiming a feminist identity in communities of color, and the larger issue of being marginalized within an already marginalized group
Play Clip 2
Surina Khan discusses the need to identify and "[shift] power structures" not only in the systems we're working to change, but also within our own movements
Play Clip 3
Leslie Feinberg identifies the social and political conditions that prove "the most fertile ground for coalition building"
Play Clip 4
Amber Hollibaugh urges each of us to take responsibility for the limitations of the movements to which we belong, and to strive to do the work that those limitations leave undone
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