- The left and feminism
Early
feminists and advocates ofwomen’s rights were closely connected to positions that were politically radical and of the left in their time. Feminist pioneers likeMary Wollstonecraft were influenced by and in turn influences on politically radical thinkers likeThomas Paine andJohn Stewart Mill . A divide between this radical, leftist current of feminism and a more right-wing current can be traced to the relationship between feminism and theAbolitionist movement. In1840 , at theWorld Anti-Slavery Conference , feminists spoke about the connection between women’s rights andslavery . Other, more right-wing,white feminists, however, rejected this connection.Similarly, in Britain, there was a divide between feminists on the left who connected the struggle for female
suffrage with the struggle for thecivil rights ofworking class men and for universalmale suffrage , and those in thesuffragette movement who wanted to restrict voting rights tomiddle class women. The divide between left and right feminists can be illustrated by the split ofSylvia Pankhurst ’sWomen's Suffrage Federation (WSF, laterWorkers Socialist Federation from Emmeline andChristabel Pankhurst ’sWomen's Social and Political Union (WSPU). While the WSF called for the extension of civil rights to working class men and women, and fiercely opposedWorld War I , the WSPU was essentially abourgeois organisation which took apatriotic line during the war and called a truce in its campaign.Many important leftists have also been feminists. Examples include
Marxist sClara Zetkin andAlexandra Kollontai andanarchist Emma Goldman . Some important feminists have also been active on the left. Examples includeHelen Keller , aCommunist , andAnnie Besant who was involved in varioussocialist groups.When contemporary feminism emerged, with the
Women's Liberation Movement , it was closely connected to theNew Left and othernew social movements (e.g. theblack power movement) that challenged the orthodoxies of theOld Left but shared key values with the left as a whole. As this movement split into different currents, some were closer to the left than others.
*’’Socialist feminism ’’ (e.g. theBeyond the Fragments group,Freedom Socialist Party ,Radical Women ) and ‘’Marxist feminism ’’ (e.g.Selma James , see alsomaterialist feminism ) saw themselves as very much within the left, even though they challenged itsmale-dominated andsexist structures.
*’’Liberal feminism ’’ is closely related toleft-liberal ism, the left-wing side of mainstream politics. (Example: theNational Organization for Women Fact|date=July 2008, which has supported liberal politicians like Bill andHillary Clinton .)
*’’Radical feminism ’’ (e.g.Mary Daly ) is harder to place on a left-right spectrum; it has more in common with currents likedeep ecology which reject this axis.The left, on the whole, has supported
women's rights .Anarchists ,Communist s, andsocialist s have been strong supporters of the idea that men and women were equal, and should be treated the same in the workplace. Left of centre governments have often introduced legislation to remove gender inequalities in work.ee also
*
Feminism
*History of feminism
*Left-wing politics
*Marxist feminism
*Socialism and LGBT rights
*Socialist feminism
*Triple oppression
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