A Note on Feminist Utopian Thought
What
comes to mind when you hear the word utopia? A hippie commune of the 1960s? An
old English sci-fi novel? Maybe a fantasy island? Generally speaking, the term
utopia means ‘a perfect society’.
The
French Revolution had its vision of a perfect society which was based on the
principles of liberty, equality, and fraternity. However, as if there was a plot
twist, it did not bring about the revolution it had set out to. It certainly
didn’t for women; liberty and equality remained only for the few.
Later
in history the world witnessed socialist utopias turned into oppressive states
at the hands of totalitarian governments. Again, like a plot twist, the pursuit
of women’s liberation took a turn for the worse as the ruling bureaucracy reinterpreted
the role of women and the socialist family.
Themyscira Paradise
Island, home of the Amazons
http://www.comicvine.com/themyscira/4020-56187/images/ |
History
has demonstrated that political elitism, interest, and power are at the heart
of utopias, making utopia complex in character: self-contradictory and full of
tension; a paradox. The utopia can be about a vision of equality, while at the
same time decisions are in the hands of the few people who claim to fight for that
vision. While the vision could be about freedom, at the same time the minds of
many become imprisoned by a compulsory way of thinking.
In
its extreme, some view that utopia will—out of fear of
the Other—produce a zombie-like collective which will eventually destroy
itself. This is based on the notion that through perfecting itself the society
will ultimately dismantle as uniformity and oppression become the norm. From
this anti-utopia perspective, the self-destructive nature of utopianism as a
paradise in disguise is inevitable. Using the Soviet socialist experiment to
support the view that utopia is a failed project, the death of utopia was
proclaimed by those sharing this view.
From
another point of view, utopia is seen achievable through a linear process
culminating in the postindustrial society. With the deification of scientific
progress following the Industrial Revolution, utopian ideas became increasingly
irrelevant for those supporting this view of progress. The future was considered
no longer imaginary and was deemed within reach.
Both
perspectives favor the end of utopia. However, these views—which are often
sustained to support a political-economic end—rest on the notion of one universal utopia. On the contrary,
as I discuss below, various utopian ideas
play an important part in human development. I begin first by drawing on the
case of feminist utopian thought as an example of “the Other” utopia which has gained
relevance in policy development.
Feminist Utopia and Policy
Feminist
utopian thought is found in utopian fiction novels and feminist theories. Utopia
is a term meaning ‘a good place’ and at the same time ‘no place’. The term was
famously coined by Thomas More in his novel of the same title in 1516 about a
society on an imaginary island in the Atlantic. This novel made quite an impact
on the literary world and popularized utopia as a literary genre throughout 16th–19th
century Europe. Utopia fictions reflect what is lacking and what should be
fulfilled in society; they serve as a critique of the present and provide a
vision of how the future should be.
As a critique of patriarchal society, feminist utopian
novels in Europe and America developed in the 19th to the 20th
century. Reoccurring topic of interests in feminist utopian novels include the
family, motherhood, biological and social reproduction, sexual division of
labor, social relations, social organization, citizenship, and social justice. Feminist
utopian writers disturb convention by rejecting the “naturalness” of
patriarchy. One of the foremothers of this literary genre is Charlotte Perkins
Gilman who is author of the pioneering Herland
(1915), a novel about an all-female egalitarian society where women procreate
parthenogenetically and are no longer at the mercy of their biological capacity
nor at the mercy of men.
On
the nonfiction side, second wave feminism represents an epoch of the vast
development of feminist radical visionary theories of postpatriarchal societies. Feminist theorist Shulamith Firestone in her
book, The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution (1970),
developed what she envisioned as a society that would free women from their
biological-rooted oppression, such as child bearing and rearing as well as
domestic labor, through the development of technology and the transformation of
caring ideals.
wikipedia.org |
As
fanciful as feminist utopian ideas may seem to be then or even now, they raise
issues that are relevant to the real world that we live in today. Many
gender-related policies have their root in feminist utopian thought which has
influence the way policy is framed. For example, feminist utopians link
reproduction to production, labor, human development, human rights, citizenship,
technology, and the environment. They link gender norms to social injustice and
political, cultural, and legal transformation. They look at care and unpaid
labor as critical areas for social change and economic transformation.
In
general we find the issues above manifested in policies concerning political
quotas, women’s participation, poverty reduction, maternity rights, incentives
for care work, the redefinition of caring roles, and the criminalization of
gender violence. Many of these issues have found their way into UN conventions
and national legal instruments. They have also been translated into planning as
well as policy goals, locally and globally, such as through their incorporation
into mid- or long-term national, regional, or international development agenda.
For example, Scandinavian countries have been developing political agendas and
policy approaches that are guided by principles of equality, including gender
equality, where social reproduction is an area of policy focus and
transformation.
Revisiting Utopia
Utopia
as discussed here is not about waiting for a messiah or the coming of a golden
age. Utopia is about bringing forward human agency. People had fought for what
they saw as a better society—for democracy, egalitarianism, equality, justice;
putting it simply, for utopia: not a
perfect place but a better place. Utopia, however, should not be seen as being
one and universal. Instead, we should acknowledge many utopias—utopias of
different cultural groups and the utopia of nonprivileged groups, which are
often suppressed by the utopia of a dominant group.
There
is a western bias in the interpretation of utopia where there is the
presumption that progress is measured by industrialism, information technology,
and materialism. Feminist scholars argue that the concept of utopia suffers
from white colonialism which treats “non-white utopias” as dangerous. Thus, we
should be aware of hegemonic utopias which deny the presence of different
utopias. It was noted by scholars, nevertheless, that such bias is apparent in earlier
western feminist utopian thought. However, contemporary feminist utopian
thought acknowledges that various utopias (or heterotopias, in Foucault’s term)
should coexist and inform policymaking, not to achieve a final state of
progress but to negotiate their future in order to achieve a better state.
Utopia
is well and alive if it is seen as a process of achieving transformative change
and not of arriving at a predetermined destination. The existence of universal
education, universal social protection, and of accessible basic health
facilities in some countries today all started from a vision transformed over
time and which will continue to transform. In many parts of the world today, however,
they still remain a vision.
Utopia
should not be viewed as stagnant. Instead, it should be seen as dynamic. To
achieve universal health coverage may still be part of the utopia of some
countries but was once part of the utopia of other nations who are now in an
ongoing inclusive process of improving the implementation of their health policies,
which may subsequently redefine their utopia.
As
political reforms lead to new political elites and vanguards, voices of the
most marginal—e.g., the poorest women—should always inform policymaking. It is
this challenge of bridging different groups in policymaking that must find
support by way of political action. A feminist utopia as a blue print for
political action should be founded on inclusion and diversity, rather than
uniformity and suppression.
On
the other hand, the view that utopian ideas should be cast out—because utopian
societies will turn into time bombs that will eventually lead humanity to
self-destruction—is often used politically to prevent the rise of certain
socio-political possibilities which may lead those in power to their deathbed.
We need to be aware that suppression of different utopias will result in
unchallenged uniformity and blind conformity, which at its worst will lead to political
and cultural tyranny at the cost of civilization.
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