ized by: the subjugation of women to male authority, both within the family and in the community in general; the objectification of women as a form of property; a sexual division of labor in which women are confined to such activities as childraising, performing personal services for adult males, and specified (usually low-prestige) forms of productive labor. Feminists, struck by the near-universality of these things, have looked for explanations in the biological “givens” which underlie all hu- man social existence: men are physically stronger than women on the average, especially compared to pregnant women or women who are nursing babies. Furthermore, men have the power to make women pregnant. Thus the forms that sexual inequality takes—however various they may be from culture to culture—rest, in the last analysis, on what is clearly a physical advantage males hold over females. That is to say, they rest on violence, or the threat of violence. The ancient, biological roots of male su- premacy —the fact of male violence—are com- monly obscured by the laws and conventions which regulate the relations between the sexes in any particular culture. But they are there, according to a feminist analysis. The possibility of male assault stands as a constant warning to “bad” (rebellious, aggressive) women, and drives “good” women into complicity with male supremacy. The reward for being “good” (“pretty,” submissive) is protection from ran- dom male violence and, in some cases, econ- omic security. | hope | have written these capsule sum- maries of Marxism and feminism in such a way that some similarities of approach show through. Marxism rips away the myths about “democracy” and “pluralism” to reveal a system of class rule that rests on forcible exploitation. Feminism cuts through myths about “instinct” and romantic love to expose male rule as a rule of force. Both analyses compel us to look at a fundamental injustice. If either, or both, make you uncomfortable, they were meant to! The choice is to reach for the comfort of the myths or, as Marx put it, to work for a social order which does not require myths to sustain it. Having gone to the trouble to provide these thumbnail sketches of Marxism and feminism, the obvious thing to do would be just to add them up and call the sum “socialist feminism.” In fact, this is probably how most socialist feminists operate most of the time—as a kind of hybrid, pushing feminism in socialist circles, socialism in feminist circles. Practically speak- ing, | think this is a perfectly reasonable way to operate a lot of the time. One trouble with leaving things like that, though, is that it keeps people wondering “Well, what is she really?” or demanding of us “What is the principal contra- diction?” Such questions often stop us in our tracks: It sounds so compelling and authori- tative and logical: “Make a choice! Be one or another!” Yet we know that there is a political consistency to socialist feminism. We are not hybrids or fence-sitters. To get to that political consistency we have to go beyond the capsule versions of Marxism and feminism | laid out. We have to differ- entiate ourselves, as feminists from other kinds of feminists, and as Marxists from other kinds of Marxists. We have to stake out a socialist femi- nist kind of feminism and a socialist feminist kind of socialism. Only then is there a possibili- ty that things will “add up” to something more than an uneasy juxtaposition. . First, what is our outlook as feminists and how is it different from that of other feminists? | think most radical feminists and socialist femi- nists would agree with my capsule characteriza- tion of feminism as far as it goes. The trouble with radical feminism. from a socialist feminist point of view, is that it doesn’t go any farther: it remains transfixed by the universality of male supremacy: things have never really changed; all social systems are “patriarchies”; imperial- ism, militarism and capitalism are all simply expressions of innate male aggressiveness. And soon. The problem with this is not only that it leaves out men (and the possibility of reconciliation with them on a truly human and egalitarian basis) but that it leaves out an awful lot about women. For example, to discount a socialist country such as China as a “patriarchy” —as | have heard some radical feminists do—is to ignore the real struggles and achievements of millions of women. Socialist feminists, while agreeing that there is something timeless and universal about women’s oppression, have in- sisted that it takes different forms in different settings, and that the differences are of vital importance. There is a difference between a society in which sexism is expressed by female infanticide and a society in which sexism takes the form of unequal representation on the Central Committee. And the difference is worth dying for. One of the historical variations on the theme of sexism which ought to concern all feminists is the set of changes that came with the transi- tion from an agrarian society to industrial capi- talism. This is no academic issue. The social system which industrial capitalism replaced was in fact a patriarchal one, and | am using that term now in its original sense to mean a system in which production is centered in the house- hold and is presided over by the oldest male. The fact is that industrial capitalism came along and tore the rug out from under that system: production went into the factories; individuals broke off from the family to become “free” wage earners. To say that capitalism disrupted the patriarchal organization of production and family life is not, of course, to say that capital- ism abolished male supremacy! But the particu-