Preface

AS A WRITER, I feel rewarded by the fact that this collection has remained in print over the dozen years since it was first published. Now, with a new preface and a few postscripts, it enters its second edition. Considering the average shelf life of a book in this country is somewhere between that of milk and eggs—and the essays in this one ranged over a twenty-year period when they were first assembled—that is more than I could even have imagined.

Reissued in a slightly changed world, I hope these essays have added uses. For younger readers and others whose idea of the recent feminist past is secondhand, they may contribute to an account of events and ideas as they were experienced at the time. I think of the need for such a contemporaneous record whenever I read books and articles that are based more on media or academic accounts than on the diverse experiences of people who were there; for instance, when I hear “women-imitating-men,” “anti-male,” “women-as-victims,” “white middle class,” and other mutually contradictory descriptions of a monolithic movement I don’t recognize. Even feminist scholars sometimes fall victim to the ease of computer searches, and let their views be shaped by newspaper clippings they wouldn’t trust in the present. Perhaps there should be a guideline for all scholars of the recent past: People before paper.

I also hope the durability of this and other collections and anthologies puts a dent in the popular convention that multisubject books are somehow less worthwhile and lasting than single subject ones. When I was writing “Life Between the Lines,” I, too, felt apologetic for not producing what I still thought of as “a real book.” Since then, I’ve learned that diversity has its uses, especially when trying to convey even a little of what happens when we transform ideas once based on sex and race. It turns out that, for every purpose other than reproduction on one hand or resistance to certain diseases on the other, the differences between people of the same sex or race are much greater than those between females and males, or between races as groups; yet lifelong caste systems based on these two visible differences remain the only political systems so pervasive that they are confused with nature. One subject just isn’t enough to excite our imaginations of what life could be like without all the assumptions that flow from these caste systems, from an intimate to a global level. Even histories of movements against such caste systems are more about the thing than the thing itself. Only personal stories, plus parallels with systems already recognized as political—say, those based on class or ethnicity, which also were once thought to be inborn—can help us begin to see the world as if everyone mattered. After all, human beings do what we see, not what we’re told. We need diverse examples.

In retrospect, I realize that I also responded to the “what-one-book-should-I-read-about-feminism” question by recommending books that offered diversity, from anthologies like Sisterhood Is Powerful, Radical Feminism, and All the Women Are White, All the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave, to collections by one author, like Andrea Dworkin’s Woman Hating or Alice Walker’s In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens. Of those, Robin Morgan’s Sisterhood Is Powerful holds the record for longevity in this wave of feminism with twenty-five years in print, and the rest are still in bookstores, dog-eared in libraries, assigned in classrooms, or cherished at bedside—along with other treasure troves that have appeared in the meantime. (Note: There are more references for that “what-one-book-should-I-read-about-feminism” listed at the end of this preface. Each book will lead you to many more.) If this collection joins them in any of those places, I’ll be a happy writer.

On the other hand, the activist in me doesn’t feel at all happy to find that this or any of its sister books is still relevant. I would feel far more rewarded if this collection were so out of date with most readers that it ranked with Why Roosevelt Can’t Win A Second Term, or the cottage industry of books about South African apartheid and Soviet Communism as systems only wars could end. When I see the essays in this book being handed down to another generation of readers, I don’t know whether to celebrate or mourn.

Here are some examples of their currency that worry me:

Recently, I was interviewed for a television documentary on the women’s movement that focused on why, in the words of its women producers, “there are no young feminists.” Though they could have looked at opinion polls and found there are actually more young feminists than ever before in history—not to mention more young women who lead feminist lives, whatever they call themselves—I knew what they meant. Their question really was: Why aren’t young women more feminist than older women—as we expect them to be?

I found myself explaining all over again the trends I reported seventeen years ago in “Why Young Women Are More Conservative.” It’s men who are rebellious in youth and grow more conservative with age. Women tend to be conservative in youth and grow more rebellious with age; a pattern that has been evident since abolitionist and suffragist times. This makes sense in a male-dominant society where young men rebel against their powerful fathers, and then grow more conservative as they replace them, while young women outgrow the limited power allotted to them as sex objects and child bearers, and finally replace their less powerful mothers. Furthermore, young women haven’t yet experienced the injustices of inequality in the paid labor force, the unequal burden of childrearing and work in the home, and the double standard of aging. To put it another way, if young women have a problem, it’s only that they think there’s no problem.

This pattern shouldn’t have been news when the essay was first published. Unfortunately, it was—and still is. If I were writing the same essay today, I would make more clear that the female pattern is no better or worse than the male one; just different. Nor is either pattern true for all members of one gender; it’s culture at work here, not biology. If we look at history, the average age of a woman’s self-respecting rebellion gets younger by a decade or so with each wave of feminism. Eventually, gender patterns will disappear along with the roles that created them. But behaving as if a culturally male paradigm is the expected, normal, or only one renders invisible the many women (and some men) whose lives follow a different logic, and diminishes the courage of those young women who do buck the gender-role conservatism of their peers. Most of all, it causes society—and even women ourselves—to underestimate the power of older women as gender rebels—women in their forties, fifties, sixties, and beyond. Now that the U.S. birthrate has plummeted and life expectancy is at least thirty years longer than in the suffragist era, older women are even more likely to make up the critical mass of feminist energy.

Lately, we’ve also begun to understand more reasons why women are the one group that grows more radical with age. I’ve added a note on some of them. But even young feminists themselves—like those young television producers—are still made to feel lonely. They wonder: “Where is everybody?”

How long before both women and men are allowed to see self-respecting rebellion as a lifelong possibility?

Sixteen years ago, “If Hitler Were Alive, Whose Side Would He Be On?” was written to expose the fact that anti-abortion groups were trying to equate Jews with fetuses and supporters of freely chosen, legal abortion with Nazis. This inflammatory rhetoric had just replaced a largely unsuccessful rightwing attempt to portray legal abortion as a genocidal plot against the black community; an allegation that had little to back it up (white women were and are more likely to have abortions than women of color), but might have been more successful if it hadn’t come mainly from white racists who were also complaining that, as you’ll see, “the white Western world is committing suicide through abortion and contraception.” I thought the mainstream media would pick up on the cynicism of this new and outrageous campaign, as well as on the historical fact that Hitler and the Nazis had actually been anti-abortion. Declaring abortion a crime against the state for which women and doctors could be imprisoned, closing down the family planning clinics, and banning information on contraception—all these were part of the Nazi effort to increase the Aryan population while eliminating Jews and other undesirables in more immediate ways.

Now, it’s a decade and a half later, and anti-abortion groups are still comparing pro-choice activists to Nazis—unchecked by the media. This inflammatory rhetoric has invited or justified firebombings and other terrorist acts against reproductive health care clinics that now take place on an average of once a month. There have also been murders and attempted murders of clinic doctors and staff.

Have these violent results served to temper anti-abortion rhetoric? I’m afraid not. On the contrary, it has entered the mainstream. Rush Limbaugh, an ultra-rightwing talk show host who gained popularity during the current backlash against equality, has compressed this false equation of feminists with Nazis into a single word: “feminazi.” Asked to define it in 1992, he explained: “A feminazi is a woman—a feminist—to whom the most important thing in the world is that as many abortions as possible take place.”1 I’ve never met anyone who fits that description, though he lavishes it on me among many others. In fact, the right to have children in safety, as well as the right to decide when and whether to have children, has always been our goal; for instance, one of the first feminist legal battles was waged against coerced sterilization. The current emphasis on abortion is a response to attempts to re-criminalize or terrorize it out of existence.

Nonetheless, the term “feminazi” goes right on being reported in the media as if it were legitimate or even amusing. Would an equally cruel and ahistorical term like “nazijew” be treated in the same way? I doubt it. How long will it be before equating freely-chosen abortion with genocide—and feminists with Nazis—has been so exposed in the media that it can no longer justify terrorism?

In the nineteen years since I wrote “Erotica vs. Pornography,” an understanding that pornography is about misogyny and violence, not sex—just as rape is about violence and not sex—has found its resonance among an increasingly terrorized public, and has triggered a national debate. That’s the good news. The bad news is that anti-pornography activists have been so misunderstood—and so distorted by a disinformation campaign from the pornography industry—that they are increasingly lumped together with rightwing censors, even though those censors themselves are superclear about being anti-feminist, anti-gay, anti-lesbian, anti-abortion, anti-sex education, anti-nudity, and anti-anything sexual unless it ends in conception within marriage. In fact, it’s usually pretty easy to tell a censor from a feminist. The former is trying to get books out of the library, while the latter is trying to get more books in.

I can’t tell you how surrealistic it is to find myself and others called “puritanical,” “the new Victorians,” or “anti-sex” for the same views that got us condemned as “sexual liberationists” and “immoral women” until a few years ago. (Indeed, among rightwingers themselves, we still are.) Women and men who oppose pornography for its normalizing of violence will have to fight hard if we’re going to avoid the suffragists’ fate of being recorded in history as boring, asexual bluestockings. After all, many of them believed in sexual liberation as much as we do, from Emma Goldman and Victoria Woodhull to Margaret Sanger. Making women seem anti-sex and joyless if we want the right to be sexual without being humiliated or hurt, and making men seem wimpy and undersexed if they prefer cooperation to domination, is clearly the tactic of choice for isolating anybody who tries to separate sexuality from violence and domination—which is a challenge to male dominance at its heart.

Why has separating pornography from erotica turned out to be even more difficult than separating rape from sex, sexual harassment from mutual attraction, and other efforts to separate violence and dominance from sex? I think most of the answer lies in the billions of dollars being made by a multinational pornography industry on everything from movies, videos, comic books, porn magazines, CD ROMS, and video games to the live sex shows, child prostitution, sex tourism, and the sexual slave trade of “throwaway” children and imported women who also are used in pornography. This is the industry in which organized crime has been most successful in going “legitimate,” even in being defended by civil liberties groups to which pornographers contribute. Just by prosecuting crimes already committed in the making of pornography—from beatings and imprisonments like those described in the essay on Linda Lovelace, to the abduction and rape of children—we could make profiteering in this business far more risky. If distribution were limited—or, worst of all, if pornography were to become less tolerated and popular—this biggest of all growth-industries would shrink. That’s why anti-pornography protests are so much more likely to be condemned as threats to the First Amendment—even if they are actually strengthening it by using free speech—than are similar protests against Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazi, and other less profitable forms of hate literature. It’s almost come to the point where the best way to protect a crime is to photograph it and sell it as pornography. The surest way to be condemned as a censor is to suggest that a crime sold as pornography should be prosecuted like any other.

Of course, there are less economic but deeper reasons why we may still believe that pornography is “normal.” Depictions of mutual pleasure and the sexualization of equality are so rare that pornographers seem to have the franchise on sex. They can get away with claiming that to oppose pornography is to oppose sex. Every time we talk about “sex-drugs-and-violence” as if it were one entity, we strengthen their claim that sex is intrinsically violent.

Since this essay was written, however, we’ve learned more about the clear linkage between a society’s degree of child abuse and its degree of adult sado-masochism. Many people grow up with the conviction that pain and humiliation are an inevitable part of love and intimacy. The answer to pornography lies not only in exposing it as an institution, but making sure that individuals who are drawn to it, but who are not hurting others, don’t feel condemned. It’s partly this feeling of being personally accused that has caused some women, including some feminists, to defend pornography. Just as there are people so rooted in race or class systems that it feels like “home,” there are some sex workers and others for whom prostitution and pornography have an unchosen power.

For most people, however, the greatest barrier to opposing pornography is the ignorance of what is in it. Diana Russell, a feminist pioneer who sometimes wears a T-shirt with the simple slogan, “Women against pornography and censorship,” has included in her recent book, Against Pornography: The Evidence of Harm,2 some of the most common pornographic images, so that those who have averted their eyes out of self-protection might know what is in their movie theaters, video stores, newsstands, and increasingly likely to invade their homes via cable and cyberspace. These are typical images: Women with breasts so dangerously enlarged by implants that they can no longer lie down or walk normally; female bodies turned into meat market parts by gags, bonds, and masks; young girls with tear tracks in their make-up as they experience “pleasure” in their humiliation; women chained with their legs apart while bottles and rods are forced up their vaginas; girls who smile, apparently on drugs, as their nipples and labia are pierced by needles; children being penetrated orally and anally in “how-to” manuals of child abuse; women screaming in pain as they are strung up in harnesses and penetrated by animals or dildos; adult males with little boys playing the “female” role as their bodies are painfully invaded; even very realistic scenes of evisceration and murder. In much of the above, the difference in power between victim and victimizer is made greater by an added difference of race, class, age, or degree of vulnerable nudity.

How long before women and men of all races can oppose pornography, and be taken as seriously as Jews who oppose Nazi imagery, blacks who oppose racist imagery, or anyone who opposes depictions of hate and degradation that are not sexualized?

As you can see, I feel angry when I re-read some of these pages and consider the lack of change or reminders of the backlash against change. But anger is an energy cell for action. I hope you cherish and use whatever you may feel. Only anger unexpressed and turned inward becomes bitterness or depression, and there is plenty of proof here that action is an antidote to those feelings, and the only path to progress. Indeed, backlash itself is a tribute to success; the dangerous but inevitable result of turning the majority consciousness toward equality, thus turning the former anti-equality majority into an irate minority that still thinks it can dictate what is legal, and even what is normal.

For women especially who are so trained to find our identity in the approval of others, facing opposition is difficult. But, as historian Gerda Lerner has pointed out, it is a shared characteristic of women’s history—or the real history of any marginalized group—to be lost and discovered, lost again and re-discovered, re-lost and re-re-discovered, until the margins have transformed the center. As in a tree or a seed, the margins are where the growth is. Who would want to be anywhere else?

There are many signs of growth to celebrate in these pages. They run the full spectrum from personal to political. The political is shared by groups, and eventually by the whole of society, but the personal will be different for every reader. My celebrations include:

Realizing that my expose of working in a Playboy Club has outlived all the Playboy Clubs, both here and abroad.

Re-visiting my alma mater of “College Reunion” to give the 1995 commencement address, and finding it had become a hive of student activism, and also the first of the Seven Sisters to appoint an African-American woman president—who is about to take office.

Re-reading the account of Bella Abzug’s congressional defeat in “Far from the Opposite Shore,” and realizing that this sad defeat also paved the way for her new position as an organizer of international women’s groups within the United Nations system, and thus the discovery of her talents by a worldwide constituency. (As one woman announced with pride as she arrived at the UN, “I am the Bella Abzug of Mongolia.”)

Finding that subjects here have been enlarged upon elsewhere, from the politics of “Men and Women Talking” (now explored most popularly by Deborah Tannen in You Just Don’t Understand) to “The International Crime of Genital Mutilation” (which finally is being reported by mainstream media, and is acquiring the most important engine of change: a movement of women who have suffered this mutilation, and are brave enough to organize against their own cultural traditions in order to save their daughters).

Looking again at “In Praise of Women’s Bodies,” and finding it made all the more poignant by a new understanding of the frequency and seriousness of eating disorders, and of the gender politics that cause young women to starve themselves out of menstruation, hips, breasts, and their female fate.

Seeing the lesbian and gay movements enlarge the space in which gender rebels like those described in “Transsexualism” can live and be themselves—with or without surgery.

Wishing I had written more on traveling as an interracial team of feminist organizers in “Life Between the Lines”—and on the shared origins of racism and sexism in “Houston and History”—because there is still too much characterizing of the entire women’s movement as “white middle class” (more than, say, the Republican Party, where one could go snow blind); yet also noticing an increase in multiracial organizing, especially among younger feminists, even if they don’t know the history of other such work.

And then there are individual lives as markers of change: Seeing the acting talent of Marilyn Monroe being taken more seriously, something she longed for, during her lifetime; celebrating Alice Walker’s journey to becoming a writer whose work is now known worldwide, a source of great joy; and remembering that Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis said after this article was published that it helped her become accepted as a serious editor, work she continued to do for sixteen years. She died, as her son described, surrounded by her family and the books she loved.

In my own life, the essay “Ruth’s Song” has been the greatest marker of change. For years, I could not bear to re-read it. Some mysterious part of myself must have had more courage to face the sadness of my mother’s life than I did. Only much later did I realize that I had been writing about my own life as well—about the early years that I had walled off and allowed to remain a magnet for sadness, about seeing my mother in other women who were having a hard time, and about how much I had missed having a strong and protective mother. Now, I’m able to think about the meaning of this sentence I wrote then, but without conscious understanding: “I know I will spend the next years figuring out what her life has left in me.”

And it’s true. I continue to uncover parts of myself that I had denied because they were like her, and so might invite her fate. But now that the fear is gone, these discoveries are themselves a kind of rebirth.

Whether the life is yours or mine, our parents’ or that of children yet to come, it’s far better to be one’s whole self than to be immortal. In a contest between pleasure that a work has lasted and an activist wish for a world in which everyone matters, the choice is simple. I hope you will find something within this book that will help you to make it obsolete.

—1995

1. Paul D. Colford, The Rush Limbaugh Story (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1993), p. 184.

2. Diana E. H. Russell, Against Pornography: The Evidence of Harm (Berkeley, California: Russell Publications, 1994). See also: Russell, Making Violence Sexy: Feminist Views on Pornography (New York: Teachers College Press, 1993).

ADDITIONAL READING: DIFFERENT PATHS TO FEMINISM

Allen, Paula Gunn. Grandmothers of the Light: A Medicine Woman’s Sourcebook. Boston: Beacon Press, 1991.

Anzaldúa, Gloria, ed. Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza. San Francisco: Spinsters/Aunt Lute Press, 1987.

Asian Women. Berkeley, California: Berkeley Asian American Studies, 1973.

Conway, Jill Ker, ed. Written By Herself. New York: Vintage Books/Random House, 1992.

Dworkin, Andrea. Woman Hating. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1974.

Findlen, Barbara, ed. Listen Up: Voices from the Next Feminist Generation. Seattle, Washington: Seal Press, 1995.

Freeman, Jo, ed. Women: A Feminist Perspective. Mountain View, California: Mayfield Publishing Company, 1995.

Geok-Lin Lim, Shirley, and Mayumi Tsutakawa, eds. The Forbidden Stitch: An Asian American Women’s Anthology. Corvallis, Oregon: Calyx Books, 1989.

Hull, Gloria T., Patricia Bell Scott, and Barbara Smith, eds, All the Woman Are White, All the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave, New York: The Feminist Press, 1982.

Koedt, Anne, Ellen Levine, and Anita Rapone, eds, Radical Feminism. New York: Quadrangle Books, 1973.

Kimmel, Michael S., and Thomas E. Mosmiller, eds. Against the Tide: Pro-feminist Men in the United States, 1776–1990, A Documentary History. Boston: Beacon Press, 1992.

Moraga, Cherrie, and Gloria Anzaldúa, eds. This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color. New York: Kitchen Table/Women, of Color Press, 1983.

Morgan, Robin, ed. Sisterhood Is Powerful, New York: Vintage Books/Random House, 1970.

Saxton, Marsha, and Florence Howe, eds. With Wings: An Anthology of Literature By and About Women with Disabilities. New York: The Feminist Press, 1987.

Schneir, Miriam. Feminism in Our Time: The Essential Writings, World War II to the Present, New York: Vintage Books/Random House, 1994.

Smith, Barbara, ed. Home Girls: A Black Feminist Anthology. New York: Kitchen Table/Women of Color Press, 1983.

Walker, Alice. In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens, New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1983.