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Saturday, March 09, 2019

Women's Day?


“The woman’s cause is man’s: they rise or sink

Together, dwarf’d or godlike, bond or free”

Tennyson

International Women's Day has come and gone for another year with the inequalities highlighted and expressed by millions of women around the world.

In 1904, long before women possessed the vote in the UK, the Socialist Party said in its Declarations of Principles that “the emancipation of the working class will involve the emancipation of all mankind, without distinction of race or sex.” However, many are surprised to discover that the Socialist Party did not campaign for votes for women, few seek to learn the reason.

Women of the working class are led to believe that the possession of the franchise would enable them – by means of Parliamentary representation – to pass such measures of reform as will ameliorate in no small degree their present economic position. And here we are over a hundred years later with having women acquired the vote, protesting still against the discrimination and prejudice based on gender.

Working class women, by contrast, share with others in their class the condition of wage slavery. Whichever form it takes, whether it is real prostitution or working on the assembly line, they have to sell part of themselves —  their labour power — in order to live. As Marx put it: “Prostitution is only the specific form of the universal prostitution of the working class”. Women ought to be criticising capitalism and working for socialism, a class-free society of common ownership.

Eleanor Marx in 1886 she wrote the article “The Woman Question” where she identified that ‘the position of woman rests on an economic basis’ with ‘no solution in the present condition of society’ but in socialism ‘the woman will no longer be the man’s slave but his equal’.

Eleanor Marx criticised bourgeois women reformers who advocated palliative not remedial measures but in the early 20th century bourgeois women became prominent in the Suffragette movement which campaigned for middle bourgeois women to get the vote on an equal property qualification as men. The Socialist Standard in 1908 wrote that the Suffragettes, who were campaigning in practice for ‘votes for rich women, were ‘a bulwark of capitalism directly opposed to the interests of the working class’ and that ‘the salvation of working class women lies in the emancipation of their class from wage slavery’. The Suffragettes suspended their campaign in 1914 to support the Great War.

The Women’s Movement represents an impetus to the glacial movement of ideas. It is impossible not to agree with some of their attitudes. We must all feel sick at the commercial exploitation of sexual appeal and it says a lot about capitalist society and women’s position in it that this exploitation is so often a women’s sexuality and not a man’s. The aims of the Women’s Movement—a free association between individuals, pure of the contaminations of capitalist society—can be attained only when capitalism is no more. Conditioned as we are to capitalism’s degradations, it is difficult to imagine what the freedom of socialism will be like. How it will feel, for women and men to associate only because they like and respect each other. How it will be when sexual activity is not a matter of conquest and possession, not a suppressive neurosis too easily exploited to sell cars, hairsprays, washing machines, suitcases, toothpaste, politicians—but a pleasure. To reach that we need all of us to be conscious of our role in society and the reasons for it. From there we will not be far from the will to change our roles by changing society.

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