Susan Gal
Feminism and Civil Society1
When the end of state socialism in 1989 provided
the opportunity for increased contact between women of Eastern Europe,
Western Europe and the United States, the result was a profound surprise
and dismay by all participants at the expectations voiced from the "other
side(s)." 2 As a participant in some of these interactions, I can
report that Eastern European women often saw Western feminists as proselytizers:
messianic, implicitly universalizing, and thus imperialistic. On
the other hand, Eastern European women were often seen by Western feminists
as disappointingly undeveloped politically; backward and ignorant
in their rejection of Western feminism, and sometimes simply apolitical
(see also Funk and Mueller 1993). The disappointment was made particularly
sharp by the widespread expectation, in the West, that once the establishment
of civil society gave women the liberty and opportunity to organize on
their own behalf, feminist movements would easily and "naturally" emerge,
given the obvious and much recognized wage-differentials and other economic
disadvantages of women vis-a-vis men in Eastern Europe.
Significantly, scholarly commentary
has moved beyond simply noting the genuine difficulty of dialogue.
As I argue below, a salutary result is a renewed questioning of the concept
of "civil society" in Eastern Europe, indeed an awareness of the need to
rethink it in gendered terms. A further important effect is the growing
understanding, paralleling other work on non-Western feminisms, that feminism
is not some automatic reflex of gender identity, nor simply an outgrowth
of women's opportunity to organize in response to economic and political
oppression. Indeed, we cannot assume that "woman" denotes an unproblematic,
self-evident, political category, or that such a political category is
stable across social formations. It has become clear that feminism
itself refers to forms of political activism that emerge in specific historical
conjunctures, and, like other political movements, bear the mark of their
particular cultural and historical contexts.3
Thus, the difficulties of communication
between Eastern European women and American or Western European feminists
raise important theoretical issues about the nature of political communication.
They also point up a painful irony. Just when American feminism is
engaged in extensive self-examination concerning its understanding of diverse
feminisms and culturally different women's movements across the globe,
it still seems hard to recognize and respect the specific stands of Eastern
European women when they say they are not feminists, or not in the ways
that Americans expect. There seems to be a kind of reverse racism
operating. Many American feminists who are particularly interested
in Eastern Europe are the daughters and granddaughters of European migrants.
More broadly, as a result of immigration patterns to the United States
in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many white Americans, even social
scientists, tend to think of Eastern European women as "like us."
Indeed, in the familiar trope that renders the past another country, they
are implicitly seen as "our grandmothers," and thus part of an imaginary
genealogy of European feminism, even if temporarily dislocated.4 Perhaps
this is, in part, what makes it more difficult to credit their difference
than to acknowledge the stances of women whose cultures and genealogies
are routinely viewed (by Americans) as more racially different, more distant,
and more exotic.
But this only contributes to the
urgency of understanding why, at the very moment when the introduction
of civil society supposedly made voluntary organizations, interest groups,
lobbies of every kind possible in Eastern Europe, feminism has largely
remained a dirty word in the region, even an object of ridicule.
Before looking more closely at several lines of explanation for this phenomenon,
it is important to note that this is not a general political apathy or
lack of social and political consciousness on the part of women in the
region. An ethnographic example will illustrate my point.
In the town in southern Hungary where
I have been conducting fieldwork since 1987, three women ran for office
in the first multi-party local election in 1990, along with 20 men.
All three women were elected, in a town council of 10. The women,
like the men, were already among the moral leaders of the community:
a bank vice-president, an accountant, a language teacher. Like the
men who were elected, each of the women represented a form of expertise,
but note that in no case was this the stereotyped feminine expertise of
nurturing found in professions such as nursing or early education.
One of the first acts of the local
government, now working with a very limited budget, was to close the town's
daycare center. There were very few children in it, most mothers
were home on maternity leave anyway, and the center was expensive to maintain.
Although the women elected to the local government did not oppose this
move, the five women working in the daycare center did. They organized
and marched into a meeting of the town council, arguing vociferously:
they had heard that a foreign entrepreneur was being lured to this small
town and would establish a biscuit factory there. Indeed, they had
heard that the town council was considering renting the daycare's building
to the new entrepreneur. The women proposed that in exchange for
their government-funded daycare jobs, they be guaranteed jobs in this new
factory.
The five women got what they demanded,
but the sad end of the story was that the entrepreneur could not make a
quick profit, and a few months later closed shop and left town. My
point is not the outcome, however, but the organizing itself. Notice
that the women acted politically, and in concert with free-market changes
in which they wanted their share. They justified their demands, however,
in terms of socialist as well as gendered values. On the one hand,
they felt they had a right to work and so the provision by the government
of a replacement job was seen as part of their entitlement and, on the
other, this particular solution would allow them to keep working close
to home, for the sake of their own children. These women, along with
the ones elected to the local government, are part of a much larger pattern
in Hungary of women active in newly formed local governments. Indeed,
women often represent over 50% of non-elected, part-time members of local
policy commissions. More significantly, a comparison of per capita
social spending of local governments since 1990 shows significantly higher
spending on childcare, day care, homes for elderly and other social support
services in that minority of localities where women are a majority on the
decision making body (Szalai 1995).
This kind of evidence suggests that
we should look for other explanations of Eastern European women's current
neglect of various forms of Western feminism than a general lack
of interest in public action, or in social issues more generally.
Recent scholarly literature points to two kinds of factors.
First, because the gender regime
of state socialism was differently configured than that of various parliamentary
(welfare) states, women in "East" and "West" experienced the difficulties
of their lives in distinct ways. As several astute analyses of the
German case have argued, while both East German and West German women before
1989 developed grass roots feminist movements, these created quite different
diagnoses about the sources of women's oppression (see Ferree 1995, Rosenberg
1991). First, East German women's already deep involvement in the
labor force prevented them from seeing wage work as the solution to gender
inequality that it was taken to be in the West. Rather, they analyzed
their problem as the extensive intrusion of the state into their lives
and bodies, and as a usurpation by the state of men's role in families.
The paternalist state of state-socialism provided benefits such as generous
maternity leaves for women, but also infantilized the entire population,
taking over the "paternal role" of men directly through support of children
and the socialization of some household functions.
In contrast, the gender regimes of
parliamentary welfare states more standardly work by delegating power over
women to individual men in families. These states support the relative
power of men by indirect involvement in families through tax law, property
and family law, and in allowing or encouraging the different bargaining
power of men and women in labor markets among other means. In these
kinds of systems, women experience gender inequality as arising from the
actions of individual men, from whom they want to gain independence, autonomy,
and non-interference. Indeed, women often turn to the state as individuals
who have claims to rights, thereby seeking legislative and other help in
gaining leverage against individual men. The juxtaposition of the
two German cases provides a particularly clear example of the way in which
feminisms are political movements that are perforce embedded in the particular
gender regime and historical moment from which they emerge.
Despite the lack of any large, popular
feminist movement in Hungary,5 my ethnographic work in urban and rural
contexts reveals that the everyday analysis women developed about their
own problems during and immediately after state-socialism took just the
form one would predict: it neatly matched that of East German feminists,
while contrasting with that of West German feminists. This became
clear in conversations around the abortion issue, when the lenient law
of the socialist period was challenged in the 1990s, and a more restrictive
one proposed in Parliament.
Hungarian women were appalled that
restriction of abortion ever became a political issue because they had
come to see relatively liberal abortion regulation as an entitlement.
Given the dearth of alternative contraceptive techniques, most saw it as
a necessity in planning their lives, and in doing right by those children
they did have. But, unlike supporters of legal abortion in the United
States, for instance, they did not see this as a matter of women's privacy,
control over their own bodies, or independence. Far from wanting
sexual or social autonomy for such a decision, Hungarian women wanted men
to be more involved in decisions to abort. Indeed, in public opinion
polls, large percentages of women were willing to support the idea that
men of the family must be legally obligated to participate. What
they strongly rejected, on the other hand, was the state's involvement
in abortion decisions. One woman voiced to me the opinion of many:
"If the state makes me have the baby, the state ought to pay for its upbringing."
Another said: "Who is going to provide the extra seat at the kitchen
table for this extra child?" Both statements implied that since the
post-socialist state was not about to take economic responsibility for
children, it should stay out of the decision to abort (Gal 1994).
These analyses help to explain why
East and West German feminists famously clashed over a variety of issues,
although in some sense both sides believed that the "personal is political."
Similarly, if American abortion rights activists were to sit down to discuss
abortion with some among the vast majority of Hungarian women, their understandings
of the issues would surely differ fundamentally, even though, on the face
of it, they share the same goal: safe, cheap, and easily accessible
abortions for women who want them. More generally, it is important
to remember that the meaning of key terms such as "private," "public,"
"rights," and "needs" are hardly self-evident, stable or transparent;
debate about their meaning makes politics (Fraser 1990). Any conversation
about them that crosses the boundaries of states, political economies,
and gender regimes is a productive, active, process of intertextuality
that itself can promote or prevent mobilization or cooperation. This
is because communication across such boundaries always depends on decontexualization
of political terms and issues -- tearing them out of one political situation
-- and their recontextualization or reinsertion elsewhere, into often quite
differently constructed discourses. This recontexualization changes
the meanings of arguments. It is a quite general semiotic process
to which feminism is no exception (see Briggs and Bauman 1992). Thus,
by focussing on the historically embedded way in which political issues
are framed and understood, these examples provide insight into the structural
sources of misunderstanding.
But the cases I have discussed so
far do not address the question of why feminism as a social movement (with
varying issues and arguments) is currently rejected in so many countries
of Eastern Europe. For this, it is important to analyze the notion
of "civil society" in gendered terms. Contrary to the popular, reigning
theory, civil society in Eastern Europe is not a neutral space vacated
by the state in which any kind of organization can flourish. Rather,
I suggest we understand "civil society" not simply as a set of organizations
or even a space for organizations, but as the ideological construction
of boundaries between the economic and political "public" on the one hand,
and the domestic "private" on the other. And these categories are
far from new in Eastern Europe. Indeed, during state socialism the
social field between family and state was organized by an array of discourses
and practices focused on shifting definitions of the "natural" in gender
relations. Public and private were themselves linked to this "nature."
In many countries of the region, an official discourse stressing the homogeneity
and equality of all workers, regardless of gender, coexisted uneasily with
another discourse that, though unofficial, was nevertheless supported by
the state. The unofficial but sanctioned discourse stressed naturalized
sexual difference and blamed "selfish," "overly competitive" women for
the ills of men and children, and for the failings of the socialist economy
(see Ferge 1987, for an example of such unofficial discourse in Hungary:
Gáspár and Várkonyi 1985). Ironically, gender
difference was also part of an oppositional argument against communism
that looked back nostalgically to the bourgeois nuclear family as the ideal
of "natural" gender relations. This oppositional analysis decried
social homogeneity, charging that communism was illegitimate in part because
it violated laws of nature that were more fundamental than those of any
society. It was in such a complex and shifting discursive field --
hardly an empty space -- that the political changes of 1989 were embedded.
Newly emerging political parties and movements built on and engaged these
existing formulations, in order to create "the political."
It follows from this understanding
of civil society that what can be legitimately political depends not only
on people's perceptions of inequality, nor on the wherewithal to organize,
important though these are. It depends as well on what identities
and activities can count as part of the "public" in various historical
versions of civil society. And, at the moment, all colors of
political activity in Eastern Europe -- the national, the neo-liberal,
and the neo-socialist -- implicitly or explicitly support a naturalized
gender order in which, by various convergent logics, men are public figures
and women, as a social category, are depoliticized.
In the current configuration, no
political subjectivity for women is readily available that is neither the
homogenized worker-with-reproductive-responsibilities of the state-socialist
era, nor the privatized, sexualized, naturalized, and thus unpolitical,
woman of nationalist discourse and neo-liberal civil society. In
other words, as Watson (1996) shrewdly points out that in Poland and other
parts of Eastern Europe today there is "an absence of a specifically political
dimension to women's social identity as women." The descriptions,
by Czech scholars such as Hanna Havelkova, of public issues in the Czech
Republic provide important corroboration and expansion of this point.
For women as well as men, social problems such as increased prostitution
and violence against women, which would perhaps be framed as "women's issues"
in Western Europe and the United States, are understood in gender-neutral
terms as problems of increased border traffic, and as the disorder unhappily
but inevitably produced by rapid economic changes. Women in the post-socialist
societies feel a sense of equality with men as workers that they retain
from the official ideology of state socialism. Relying on this, and
being as eager as anyone else to be part of a capitalist democracy, women
too want to think of themselves not as some special category of person
but primarily as "individuals" and equal "citizens" of a new society.
Thus, what has not been discursively constructed, at least for the moment,
is the political category of "woman" seen not as a worker-recipient of
communist entitlements, nor as the naturalized, sexualized private being
of civil society, nor as the sacred and inert mother of nationhood, but
as an independent subject whose interests and issues can be publicly defined
and debated.
The case of Eastern Europe provides
striking illustration for a number of general propositions. Far from
being an essential and ahistorical reflex of women's identity or of gender
inequality, feminism is a social movement marked by the particular historical
contexts in which it emerges. Although feminism clearly varies in
content (hence the necessity of using the plural: feminisms), it
is always predicated on a specifically political identity for women that
must be discursively constructed. As feminist political theorists
in the West have argued, this construction of political identity for women
itself depends on challenging neoclassical notions of civil society (e.g.
Pateman 1988, Bloch and Bloch 1980). In particular, it requires the
questioning of assumptions about the linkage of maleness with the public,
femaleness with the private; about the coding of the public as political
and politics as a masculine endeavor. When analyzed from the perspective
of this strand of feminist theory, then, civil society in the West is hardly
a neutral space in which women can organize. Nor has it been so in
Eastern Europe. Even before the withdrawal of the state, there were
myriad informal organizations and a discourse about persistent natural
sexual difference that, intertwined and counterposed to the official line
asserting homogenization, organized gender relations in socialism.
The optimistic expectation that civil society would provide a neutral social
space in Eastern Europe was made possible not only by omitting feminist
critiques from the discussion of civil society, but by ignoring how this
quite active, but unofficial, set of ideas and practices around sex, "nature,"
and the "public/private" distinction which had enabled and legitimated
state-socialism could have new political effects in a changed political
economy.
References Cited
Bloch, Maurice and Jean H. Bloch (1980):
"Women and the Dialectics of Nature in 18th Century French Thought."
In Nature, Culture, and Gender. C. MacCormack and Marylin Strathern eds.,
pp25-41. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Briggs, Charles and Richard Bauman (1992):
"Genre, Intertextuality and Social Power." In Journal of Linguistic
Anthropology, 2(2): 131-72.
Butler, Judith (1992): Contingent
Foundations: Feminism and the Question of "Postmodernism." In Feminists
Theorize the Political. Judith Butler and Joan Scott eds., pp3-22.
New York: Routledge.
diLeonardo, Micaela(1991): "Introduction:
Gender, Culture and Political Economy: Feminist Anthropology in Historical
Perspective." In Gender at the Crossroads of Knowledge. Micaela diLeonardo
ed., pp1-50. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Ferge, Zsuzsa (1987): "Kell-e Magyarországon
feminizmus? [Do We Need Feminism in Hungary?]" In Ifjúsági
Szemle, 2: 3-8.
Ferree, Myra M. (1995): "Patriarchies
and Feminisms: The Two Women's Movemens of Post-Unification Germany."
In Social Politics, 2(1): 10-24.
Fraser, Nancy (1990): "Talking About
Needs: Interpretive Contests as Political Conflicts in Welfare State Societies."
In Feminism and Political Theory. Cass Sunstein eds., pp159-184.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Funk, Nanette and Magda Mueller eds. (1993):
Gender Politics and Post-Communism. London: Routledge.
Gal, Susan (1994): Gender in the
Post-Socialist Transition: The Abortion Debate in Hungary. In East
European Politics and Societies, 8(2): 256-286.
Gáspár, Judit B. and Zsuzsa
E. Várkonyi (1985): "Két második nem [Two Second
Sexes]." In Valóság, 7: 67-76.
Jayawarda, Kumari (1986): Feminism
and nationalism in the Third World. London: Zed Books.
Mohanty, Chandra et al. eds. (1991):
Third World Women and the Politics of Feminism. Bloomington: Indiana.
Pateman, Carol (1988): "The Fraternal
Social Contract." In Civil Society and the State. J. Keane ed., pp101-128.
London: Verso.
Rosenberg, Dorothy (1991): "Shock
Therapy: GDR Women in Transition from a Socialist Welfare State to a Social
Market Economy." In Signs, 17.
Scott, Joan and Cora Kaplan eds. (1996):
Transitions, Environments, Translations: The Meanings of Feminism
in Contemporary Politics. Routledge, New York. (in press)
Szalai, Júlia (1995): "Women
and Democratization: Some Notes on Recent Changes in Hungary." Manuscript.
Watson, Peggy (1996): "Civil Society
and the Politicization of Difference." In Transitions, Environments,
Translations: The Meanings of Feminism in Contemporary Politics.
Joan Scott and Cora Kaplan eds. Routledge, New York. (in press)
Notes
1 Excerpt from a chapter to be published
in Scott and Kaplan (1996).
2 Although such regional contrasts are
often reduced to "East vs. West," it is important to remember that there
are multiple centers involved, and a range of feminisms within each region.
3 The sociopolitical "embeddedness" of
feminism is cogently argued by diLeonardo (1991). Whether or not
feminism is a Western export, what definitions of it are legitimate, and
for whom, are questions raised recently by non-Western feminist movements,
as well as non-white women's movements in the United States (see, for instance,
Jayawarda 1986, Mohanty, Russo, and Torres 1991). For a discussion
of the constructedness of categories such as "woman," and the implications
of this for feminist activism, see among many others Butler (1992).
4 Thanks to Cora Kaplan for this phrasing.
5 Note that there are several, and increasingly
more, small but important women's organizations in the capital. For
instance, one of entrepreneurial women, another of university women, another
that mobilized around the abortion issue. A small circulation journal
is now in operation, as well as a hotline. In addition, there is
at least one organization of nationalist right wing women.
Please send your comments to: replika@c3.hu