The characteristics of the current
crisis, as well as the practical and theoretical course of recent
years, have allowed a fruitful dialogue between two of the central
theoretical currents of the last two centuries, feminism and Marxism.
With a past history of marriages and divorces it seems that in recent
years we are witnessing their reconciliation. In the past decade, the
literature that is indebted to both currents has been rediscovering,
as well as overcoming, some of the historical debates that have
marked their relationship.
Undoubtedly, the mass growth of the
feminist movement has contributed to this. And, on the other hand, it
not surprising that during recent years there has been a renewal of
academic and activist interest in Marxism: university seminars
proliferate, the works of classical thinkers have been reissued and
so on.
The global disorder and the
experiences of the systemic crisis we have experienced for more than
a decade (economic crisis, crisis of political legitimacy, crisis of
social reproduction and crisis of the limits of the planet) have
generated a need to understand that cannot be covered by partial
analyses but requires a theory of totality. Marxism then appears as
that old great truth that makes its way through the proclaimed death
of grand narratives to demonstrate, once again, its contemporary
relevance and precision as an analytical tool.
Rather than adopting an exhaustive
approach, which of course would exceed the possibilities of this
article, we have decided to focus on some of the nodes that we
consider central and strategic to theoretically and politically
rearming right now: debates about reproduction, work and class, as
well as taking on how we understand the role of the feminist
movement, together with environmental struggles, in rebuilding a new
emancipatory horizon amid capitalist chaos.
The debates about
reproduction
In the 1970s, feminists of the
second wave, raised with the maxim that the personal is political,
began to focus on the issue of reproduction. It was a complex moment,
marked by the oil crisis and fierce attacks against the conquests won
by the working class in the post-war period. In this framework of
development and subsequent consolidation of a new type of capitalism
(neoliberalism) there was a substantial transformation of the labour
market, the role of the state and the distribution of time and work,
with a consequent impact on the mechanisms of gender identity
construction. If we put the focus on the countries of the global
North, where the feminists of the second wave were acting and
writing, we find the following cross-linked phenomena:
• The destruction of employment
in sectors traditionally occupied by men, such as mining or heavy
industry.
• An increase in the rate of exploitation and a
generalized reduction of wages, the so-called family wage which
allowed certain sectors of the class to cover the vital needs of the
male worker and his family, keeping the wife in the role of
housewife, disappearing almost completely.
• The large-scale
entry of women into the labour market, seeking to complement the
reduced income of the husband with an auxiliary and supplementary
salary or access their own life and economic independence.
•
The rejection, by non-negligible sectors of women, of the burden
imposed by domestic tasks, seeking to develop personally through
formulas traditionally more linked to male identity construction:
professional career, economic success and so on.
With the path opened by all the
theoretical production already carried out by the second wave around
the politicization and social problematization of gender roles,
personal relationships and the sexual issue, a series of debates
occurred that we can place between the debate about domestic work and
the problematization of reproduction. These debates were based on
several findings that have now become part of feminist common sense,
but fifty years ago they were only beginning to be sketched: that
unpaid work done by women in homes is essential for social survival,
that the equalization of work and employment prevents the
politicizing of domestic work, and that the articulation of the
political struggle solely through wage-labour conflict leaves out
important parts of the class, mainly women. Broadly speaking, two
concerns motivated these reflections.
On the one hand, trying to discern
who was the beneficiary of the unpaid work performed by women and
who, therefore, was the main enemy. For Christine Delphy and the
so-called materialist feminists, it was men who economically
exploited women through the marriage contract, thus configuring a
mode of autonomous domestic production of the capitalist mode of
production (Delphy, 1976). However, Mariarosa Dalla Costa and other
Marxist-trained feminists originating from autonomist currents argued
that the real beneficiaries of domestic work were employers and the
state (Dalla Costa, 2009: 21-52). Although both positions advocated
the construction of an autonomous feminist movement, the political
difference was fundamental: the materialists conceptualized women as
a class, they pointed out patriarchal exploitation as an experience
that unified their lives and understood the struggle against
patriarchy and against the exploiting class (men) as the first task;
Marxists recognized the differential factor of the social class in
the concrete experience of gender oppression and, in addition to
defending the autonomy of the feminist movement, they also opted for
the participation of women in the class struggle (Pérez Orozco,
2014: 49 -73).
The second concern, fundamentally
for those feminists who defined themselves as Marxists and who agreed
to articulate domestic work within the capitalist system as a whole,
had to do with the characterization of such work: was it or was it
not productive of commodity labour power? Or, does domestic work
produce (surplus) value? We are not going to go into the details of
this debate, which eventually became entangled in somewhat
unsuccessful theoretical disquisitions, but it is useful to refer to
it because it allows us to understand how Marxist feminists were
trying to expand Marx’s analysis to include the domestic sphere,
conceiving the work of women in the home as an object of specific
critical study.
The most interesting and
theoretically sound contribution would come a few years later, with
the publication of Marxism
and the Oppression of Women. Toward a Unitary Theory by
Lise Vogel in 1983. Vogel based herself on the considerations that
Iris Young had made a couple of years earlier in pointing out how the
study of patriarchal relations as a different system, although deeply
interconnected with capitalism, allowed Marxism to keep intact its
analysis of production relations while treating women’s oppression
as a simple addition. Against this, Young defended the need to
conceptualize gender differentiation as a nuclear element of
capitalist formation, making an effort to develop a unitary theory of
capitalist production and reproduction (Young, 1981). This was the
task taken on by Lise Vogel, with two fundamental contributions that
are at the base of two theoretical developments of current feminism.
In the first place, Vogel breaks
with functionalist explanations that conceive domestic work as
strictly necessary for the reproduction of capitalism and argues that
the origin of gender oppression under capital is not the sexual
division of labour, but the necessity of ensuring social
reproduction. This theory of social reproduction is currently being
developed with great insight by Tithi Bhattacharya (2017) among
others. Secondly, responding to the debate of previous years, Vogel
argues that domestic or reproductive work is not a generator of
(surplus) value since it does not produce exchange values, but use
values. This does not detract from its social importance, but allows
us to understand that, in some way, reproductive work is a special
type of work with its own characteristics. And in this evolution of
the term (domestic work/reproductive work) we arrive at one of the
fundamental concepts of the current known as feminist economics: care
work.
Feminist economics takes up,
consciously or unconsciously, Vogel’s finding that domestic work is
a different type of work from that which, performing apparently the
same activities and tasks, produces exchange values that are offered
in the market. What differentiates the work of a cook in a restaurant
from what that same woman can do at home? The answer given by
feminist economics is the following: although both are reproductive
work, the second is also care work. Care work is understood as an
activity that is defined precisely from the relationship and the
emotional implication that it entails; when this same activity is
carried out in the market, it loses this implication and goes on to
incorporate a different type of human relationship (the commodity
one). Feminist economics redefines the capital-life conflict and
points to carers as the guarantors of social reproduction. Its
political commitment, as we will see later, is to push towards a
reorganization of work and time that breaks with the dynamics of
accumulation and puts life at the centre.
In the first place, Vogel breaks
with the functionalist explanations that conceive domestic work as
strictly necessary for the reproduction of capitalism and argues that
the origin of gender oppression under capital is not the sexual
division of labour, but the need for this It has to ensure social
reproduction. This theory of social reproduction is currently being
developed with great insight by Tithi Bhattacharya (2017) among
others. Secondly, and responding with this to the debate of previous
years, Vogel argues that domestic or reproductive work is not a
generator of (plus) value since it does not produce exchange values
but use values. This does not detract from social importance, but
allows us to understand that, in some way, reproductive work is a
type of special work with its own characteristics. And in this
evolution of the term (domestic work / reproductive work) we arrive
at one of the fundamental concepts of the current known as feminist
economics: care work.
Feminist economics picks up on,
consciously or unconsciously, Vogel’s finding that domestic work is
a different type of work from that which, performing apparently the
same activities and tasks, does produce exchange values that are
offered in the market. What differentiates the work of a cook in a
restaurant from that that same woman can do at home? The answer given
by feminist economics is the following: although both are
reproductive works, the second is also care work. Care work is
understood as an activity that is defined precisely from the
relationship and the emotional implication that it entails; When this
same activity is carried out in the market, it loses this implication
and goes on to incorporate a different type of human relationship
(the commercial one). Feminist economics redefines the capital-life
conflict and points to care as the guarantor of social reproduction.
Its political commitment, as we will see later, is not to claim such
activities as they currently exist, but to push towards a
reorganization of work and times that breaks with the dynamics of
accumulation and puts life in the centre.
Almost five decades of debates
about reproduction have established some ideas, albeit simplified and
devoid of theoretical complexity, in feminist common sense: the
social importance of women’s unpaid work, the recourse to it in
times of crisis, its connection with female precariousness and with
the specific poverty of women and so on. All this is what has come to
the fore with feminist strikes: the vindication of the importance of
the social role and the awareness of the political power it grants
us. It is not a question of simple sectoral mobilizations, but of
processes that, in their development, are transforming and updating
the specific conceptions of work and class.
Updating the concept of
work
As we have seen, under
neoliberalism, work has undergone a great transformation on a world
scale that of course is not homogeneous on an international or
regional scale. In the global North, however, that transformation has
been marked in recent decades by the phenomenon of the so-called
feminization of the workforce, commonly used to explain two different
phenomena but often occur simultaneously. On the one hand, it has
been used to explain the massive entry of women into the labour
market, with the consequences already mentioned and their effect on
the debates of the feminism of the 1970s. But, on the other hand, the
concept of the feminization of the labour force has also been used to
explain the process by which the conditions that working class women
have historically experienced are generalized to broad layers of the
wage mass beyond them. Temporality, high turnover, lack of stability,
complementary wages, sectors with a practical absence of formal
employment rights, informal work and much more are the conditions
that today shape the organization of employment in our society. Of
course, this large-scale process, in addition to configuring the
forms of exploitation, is also reconfiguring the conditions of
reproductive work and, in general, living conditions and their
sustainability.
These considerations have both
theoretical and strategic implications. These forms of work, far from
being a pre-capitalist by-product or a by-product of previous
capitalist forms, are constitutive forms of a capitalism that always
generates margins. Temporary work, formal or informal, among other
formulas, constitutes an area of exploitation that some will consider
to be in the margins of the labour market which today however has
become the rule that dismantles the exception. At the same time,
there has been a process of commodification of activities that were
previously in non-labour spheres, although they always constituted
work in a broad sense, such as the care of the elderly or procreation
itself. Whether the margins are already the rule or because the
reproductive is in the commodification phase, we can verify that the
artificial separation between the productive and the reproductive, as
well as the border between employment and care work, is diluted.
Perhaps this is what has allowed a theoretical expansion in
contemporary Marxism of the concept of work that for a long time was
dominated by the most economist biases.
In addition to the theoretical
implications, these considerations may also have strategic
consequences. Thus, we argue that feminist strikes and women’s
strikes can be considered a central experience for thinking about the
organization, not only of women, but of the bulk of the working
class. Judith Carreras (2018) referred in a recent article to a
relevant quote from Mariana Montanelli: “Feminist perspectives
constitute a privileged point of view for analysing the conditions of
contemporary exploitation.” We could add that they also constitute
a privileged point of view for experiencing new forms of organization
and struggle.
After decades of pact and
concertation trades unionism, the feminist movement is allowing a
process of democratization of the strike tool that is likely to have
long-term consequences. The last two 8 March have allowed a not
insignificant layer of workers to make and organize a strike, in many
cases, for the first time in their life. Self-confidence,
empowerment, accumulated experience and networks established by
thousands of women can be a qualitative leap for the whole class that
can only be evaluated over time. The other element of democratization
is the organization of the strike in jobs traditionally forgotten by
reformist unionism, such as care or consumption, which however did
have importance in the workers’ movement of the beginning of the
20th century: the strikes around the high cost of living or rents are
a good example. In this sense, the democratization of the strike
allows us to experience this tool in the margins of the labour market
that we mentioned earlier and reinforces the idea that these
activities are also and above all work.
Updating the concept of
class
The return of the class question
links to everything we have been saying, however, contains ghosts
that must be tackled by incorporating appreciations of the concept
from critical Marxism, but also from anti-racist thinking and
feminism. If not, we will find ourselves reproducing sterile debates
about the mythical, absolute and unquestionable subject of the class
struggle, of doubtful material or historical existence, that prove to
be much more aesthetic fetish than an understanding of social
dynamics and which inevitably end up confronting real struggles. But
if we understand, on the contrary, that the class is always the
result of the process of struggles and that it does not exist in
isolation but in terms of its relationship of antagonism with the
other class (or that the class struggle precedes the class and that
class and class consciousness are always the last and not the first
phases of the real historical process –Thompson, 1984) the
possibilities that open up are multiple and fruitful.
The historical or heuristic class
formulation proposed by Thompson, in addition to differentiating
itself from a tremendously problematic vision which is static in its
political application, fits with the ideas developed by social
reproduction theorists and allows us to understand one of the
fundamental aspects of Marxist feminism with which we identify: the
view that class is articulated in specific ways in concrete reality,
that the accumulation processes are deployed through mechanisms of
gender, race and so on, and that these phenomena cannot be separated
from the experience of dispossession because they constitute their
own nucleus. There is no capitalism blind to gender or race, just as
there is no degendered or deracialized class. The material
perspective contributed by feminism thus allows us to understand the
way in which the different class experiences (exploited or
exploitative) are embodied in concrete and historically situated
bodies, providing us with a global vision of the development of the
class struggle.
It is evident that this
interpretation separates us from those theories that, also
proclaiming themselves Marxist, start from a static conception of
class, given a priori of historical experience, where the addition of
gender or race distorts or modifies the original mythical subject.
But on the other hand, what we propose here also delimits us from
postmodern readings of intersectionality that are limited to “adding
oppressions”, keeping them as distinct systems that intersect or
intermingle in space (Ferguson and McNally, 2017).
Integrating
phenomena such as racism or hetero-sexism into a unitary analytical
framework allows us not only to affirm, following Himani Bannerji
(2005), that the whole is more than the sum of the parts, but also to
focus on the influence that this has in the historical construction
of class.
The enormous expansion of the
feminist movement experienced in recent years around the world and
the discussion about the emergence or not of a third wave have put
debates around the class at the centre. How does this mass movement
relate to the class struggle, some voices ask? We argue that this
question is poorly posed, as part of the static notion of class and
is not able to understand feminism as more than an external additive.
The use of the strike tool, the centrality of the struggles for
social reproduction, the aspiration to understand the processes of
production and reproduction as an integrated whole, and its
functioning as a vector of politicization and mass radicalization,
make this third feminist wave itself a process of class
subjectivation. And this is so because worldwide the feminist
movement is redefining antagonisms and becoming a feminist class
struggle (Arruzza, 2018). The potential of women to fulfil this role
in the current historical moment does not depend on any essential
identity but is part of our role in the process of social
reproduction, which makes our interests coincide with the interests
of humanity (Facet, 2017).
To those who question this evidence
based on the supposed partiality or unusualness of the phenomenon, we
feminists say that “no model can provide what the true class
formation should be at a certain stage of the process. No actual
class formation in history is more true or more real than another,
and class defines itself in its actual occurrence” (Thompson, 1984:
38-39).
Notes for an emancipatory
rearmament
It is still true that it is easier
to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism, which is
nothing more than a very graphic way of expressing the collapse of an
emancipatory horizon after the defeat of the twentieth century.
However, eco-socialist reflections, together with feminist
experiences and reflections, begin to reconstruct an emancipatory
horizon. A distant horizon that maintains continuities and
discontinuities with the revolutionary and emancipatory experiences
of the twentieth century and also constitutes a terrain of dispute
with fractions of the ruling classes that seek to build their own
agenda in feminist and environmentalist keys in an attempt to suture
the crisis of neoliberal governance.
Aware of the dangers of neoliberal
attempts, it is necessary to trace which elements have more potential
in the new cycle of mobilizations of recent years. To reflect on how
feminism is recuperating slogans such as the division of labours –
this time in the plural – the drastic reduction of the workday
linked to the socialization of reproductive work, rethinking what are
the socially necessary jobs, but also what economic activities should
cease to be destructive to people or the planet and so on. Given
capitalist irrationality and the waste of resources and human energy
that this generates, we must rely on a reorganization of the work in
an eco-social and feminist key. This is a fundamental task in the
phase we are in. The processes of accumulation and the crisis of
neoliberal governance have opened a new, virulent and in many cases
violent cycle that seeks to redefine the mechanisms of exploitation,
domination and oppression. Disputing that redefinition will be key to
its outcome.
>> The article above was written by Julia Camara and Laia Facet. Julia Camara is a leading member of the youth sector in Anticapitalistas, section of the Fourth International in the Spanish state, an activist of the Unizar Feminismo collective in Zaragoza, and participates in the Abrir Brecha process towards the creation of a new group of radical young people in the Spanish state. Laia Facet is a member of Anticapitalistas in the Spanish state.
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144-160.
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