Toward Socialist Feminism* Barbara Ehrenreich At some level, perhaps not too well articu- lated, socialist feminism has been around for a long time. You are a woman in a capitalist society. You get pissed off: about the job, about the bills, about your husband (or ex), about the kids” school, the housework, being pretty, not being pretty, being looked at, not being looked at (and either way, not listened to), etc. If you think about all these things and how they fit together and what has to be changed, and then you look around for some words to hold all these thoughts together in abbreviated form, you’d almost have to come up with something like “socialist feminism.” A lot of us came to socialist feminism in just that way: we were reaching for a word/term/ phrase that would begin to express all of our concerns, all of our principles, in a way that neither “socialist” nor “feminist” seemed to. | have to admit that most socialist feminists | know are not too happy with the term “socialist feminist” either. On the one hand it is too long (I have no hopes for a hyphenated mass move- ment); on the other hand it is much too short for what is, after all, really socialist internation- alist anti-racist anti-heterosexist feminism. The trouble with taking a new label of any kind is that it creates an instant aura of sec- tarianism. “Socialist feminism” becomes a chal- lenge, a mystery, an issue in and of itself. We have speakers, conferences, articles on “social- ist feminism” —though we know perfectly well that either “socialism” or “feminism” is too huge and too inclusive to be a subject for any sensible speech, conference, or article. People, includ- ing avowed socialist feminists, ask themselves anxiously, “What is socialist feminism?” There is a kind of expectation that it is (or is about to be at any moment, maybe in the next speech, conference, or article) a brilliant synthesis of world historical proportions—an evolutionary leap beyond Marx, Freud and Wollstonecraft. Or that it will turn out to be nothing, a fad seized on by a few disgruntled feminists and female socialists, a temporary distraction. I want to try to cut through some of the mystery which has grown up around socialist feminism. Here | am going to focus on our “theory” —the way we look at and analyze the world. | am not going to deal with our total outlook as socialist feminists because | want to stick as closely as possible to the interface of the two main traditions we grow out of —social- ism and feminism. A logical way to start is to look at socialism and feminism separately. How does a socialist —more precisely a Marxist—look at the world? How does a feminist look at the world? To begin with, Marxism and feminism have something important in common: they are critical ways of looking at the world. Both rip away popular mythology and “common-sense wisdom” and force us to look at experience in a new way. Both seek to understand the world—not in terms of static balances and symmetries (as in conventional social science), but in terms of antagonisms. So they lead to conclusions which are jarring and disturbing at the same time that they are liberating. There is no way to have a Marxist or a feminist outlook and remain a spectator. To understand the reality laid bare by these analyses is to move into action to change it. Here | am going to restrict myself to what | see as the core insights of Marxism and feminism, and state these as briefly and starkly as possible: Marxism (in 20 words or less) addresses itself to the class dynamics of capitalist society. Every social scientist knows that capitalist societies are characterized by more or less severe, systemic inequality. Marxism understands this inequality to arise from processes which are intrinsic to capitalism as an economic system. A minority of people (the capitalist class) own all the facto- ries/ energy sources/resources on which every- one else depends in order to live. The great majority (the working class) must, out of sheer necessity, work, under conditions set by the capitalists, for the wages the capitalists pay. Since the capitalists make their profits by pay- ing less in wages than the value of what the workers actually produce, the relationship be- tween these two classes is necessarily one of irreconcilable antagonism: the capitalist class owes its very existence to the continued exploit- ation of the working class. What maintains this system of class rule is, in the last analysis, force. The capitalist class controls (directly or in- directly) the means of organized violence rep- resented by the state—policemen, jails, etc. Only by waging a revolutionary struggle aimed at the seizure of state power can the working class free itself, and, ultimately, all people. Feminism addresses itself to another familiar inequality. All human societies are marked by some degree of inequality between the sexes. If we survey human societies at a glance, sweep- ing through history and across continents, we see that they have commonly been character-