done. In the U.S., too, anti-feminist backlash, somewhat reminiscent of the Stalinist attack on women’s freedom, splits American feminism down its uncertain center. Though reformists suggest that there is room in a liberal America to heal the wounds of women, liberalism is par- ticularly dangerous since it cleverly masks its own conservatism, its own investment in the status quo. Liberal ideology neatly instantiates the two-part form of the contradiction. “Its progressive side provides a rationale for defend- ing the rights of individuals against the state. Its reactionary side emphasized that capitalism is not a system where one class exploits another but is rather a collection of individuals, any one of whom can succeed if he or she so decides.”6 | hope it is becoming clear how ideologically messy liberalism really is from a post-humanist perspective in which the individual can no longer be seen as the subject of history. Liberal- ism is seen by leftists as a joke because it bears so tenuously the wan hopes of a bankrupt hu- manism and is, ultimately, untenable. Even hard-core conservatism is more internally co- herent. Conservatives and Marxists alike might describe capitalism as a system in which the “stronger” individuals make out. The difference, of course, is that conservatives say so approv- ingly, grounding their argument in the old dog- eat-dog theory of what they call human nature. Marxists have favored the idea that the industri- al capitalist system tends to pervert or alienate what is potentially, or at a given historical mo- ment “good” in human beings. Stated so simply, both are inadequate readings but at least they rehearse the consistency of these positions. The liberal wants to enjoy the fruits of his class privilege while salving his guilty con- science with a quasi-philosophic posture pro- posing that every individual (being protected by ‘equality’ before the law, by ‘equal’ opportunity measures, etc.) could theoretically be enjoying this same privilege if he or she were as hard- working and dauntless as him/herself. Thus the liberal buys off with a little charity or minimal social welfare all those who, by some extreme individual misfortune, can’t quite cut it. Here we return to the underbelly of co-opta- tion. While a bill assuring equal rights before unequal laws is flung in our faces, and even defeated (adding insult to injury), the dominant media simultaneously declare the women’s movement to be “over” or somehow “won” be- cause of the presence of one and a half news anchor-women on TV or the financial viability of Ms. Magazine. Capitalist propaganda demon- strates before our eyes that by inference, if one woman can do work that one man can do, wom- en are the achieved “equals” of men. The re- sponsibility for change is thus cleverly switched back onto the shoulders of individual women; to change the world, all you really must do is change yourself. And the mapping of contra- dictions comes full circle. The liberal feminist, like the liberal social democrat, learns to sate herself on the token goodies she is tendered. Or the radical feminist (who, lacking a viable mass strategy, is a liberal in disguise) tries to build a separatist island on which she and her sisters can be “free.” It's a dilemma. | was, and in some ways still am, such a radical feminist. After all, | am a member of the women’s group which publishes this maga- zine. We try to experiment with anti-oligarchic forms, collective practice. But what is an egali- tarian island in a sea of capitalist contradictions but something doomed, as it were, to sinking? Witness a little linguistic contradiction and the issues it raises for us in Heresies. We are constituted as a collective. Adopting one of the stronger aspects of feminist practice, we at- tempt to chip away at the hierarchical authority structures of The System on a micro level by attempting to produce a theoretical magazine on a collective basis. The assumption here is that theory and practice must develop together in a dialectical relationship. But in order to function as a legal entity, we are transformed to Heresies Collective, Inc.: an incorporated col- lective. This is either redundant or ironic. The fact is, we don’t even aspire to making profits but are completely dependent on the legal and business structures around us. This dependence relation, the impossibility of autonomy within a given economic structure, has meant about a two-year life-span for most American collec- tives before us, according to popular lore. This dependence also means that artists, par- ticularly those artists being forced by height- ened economic contradictions to face political realities, must re-examine their place in our culture. The feminist filmmaker, for example, has had to confront this issue head on. Film, more than any other artform, requires the mas- tery of machine technology. For women, that technology and the authority it connotes has been historically taboo. There are exceptions in the history of film7 but the percentage of wom- en filmmakers is dramatically low for a 20th- century art. Feminists with the energy and sup- port of their sisters in the movement have begun to break that taboo. But in doing so, they have been thrown against a major contradiction facing all “independent” filmmakers: the prob- lem of capital. For to make films requires large amounts of capital, capital which is controlled by the ruling classes, middle-class liberals included. Advocates of independent filmmaking from Maya Deren in the 1940s (implicitly) to Annette Michelson in the 1960s (explicitly in her article “Film and the Radical Aspiration”8) have pro- posed that a stance outside of the commercial market is itself a “political” gesture. It is—to the 91