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l'Enfermé
25th April 2013, 22:25
Ben Lewis reviews: Anne Lopes and Gary Roth, 'Mens feminism: August Bebel and the German socialist movement', Amherst, 2000, pp261, 28




http://www.cpgb.org.uk/assets/images/wwimages/ww959/sm%20augustBebel2.jpg
Forgotten legacy


What role did men - particularly those involved in the early days of the workers movement - play in the development of the politics of womens liberation? How does Marxism, as the independent outlook of the working class, fit into those perspectives?

These are some of the questions that arise when reading this book, which presents the basic yet provocative argument that the key figure between and within Marxism and feminism (p47) was the Marxist workers leader and Social Democratic Reichstag deputy, August Bebel, who acted as a useful mediator for the commonalities and contrasts between these approaches. The account follows Bebels political life and activity in and around both the Leipzig Workers Education League and several womens campaigning groups before he rose to international prominence as a Social Democratic leader in the late 1860s. All the while it notes the intellectual and emotional influence of little-known womens rights activists such as Moritz Mller, Hope Adams, Gertrud Guillame Schack, Julius Motteler and Bebels wife, Julie.

The books argument can be broadly summarised as follows: the development of Marxisms feminism is unintelligible without the role played by Bebel and the experience he gained by coming into contact with, and even helping to set up, the German middle class womens movement, as well as his later work in the then groundbreaking dual-gender union, the International Association of Textile, Factory and Handicraft Workers (1869-71).

Over time, his mens feminism gradually became more radical and far-sighted than that of some of his peers, many of whom argued for womens political education, but not for women to be allowed to hold political office, as this would jeopardise their domestic functions. The authors then go on to conclude that Bebels approach to womens liberation was also in many ways more radical than the later efforts of Clara Zetkin, whose advocacy of protective legislation for women reflected a kind of return to mens feminism, with its stress on protecting and entrenching womens domestic role.

Rehabilitation

This is no biography of Bebel, but it does manage to illuminate the life of a quite remarkable man who suffered enormous hardship and poverty as a child, but who taught himself politics and proceeded to embody the kind of purposeful worker leader that the Marxist movement sought to create.

Nonetheless, the authors core thesis is that historiography has tended to marginalise Bebels contribution to womens liberation - this despite the fact that his Woman and socialism (1879) was one of the socialist movements best-selling books. It defied the censorship of the anti-socialist laws (1878-90) and was reprinted 22 times (Bebel revising and updating the various editions throughout). It was translated into a number of languages, thus laying the basis for womens liberation movements in all countries where social democracy existed, or was in the process of coming into existence.

Indeed, so the authors argue, Bebel helped to create the exceptional situation where the German Social Democratic Workers Party, of which he was a founding member in 1869, took such pride in fighting for gender equality, despite the vast majority of its members being men. Interestingly, the authors argue that, in Germany feminism was as much a mens as it was a womens movement and that in general, socialist men proved to be more consistent feminists than bourgeois women (p31).

However, so the authors argue, ask anybody about Marxisms attitude to womens liberation, and most will mention Friedrich Engels or Clara Zetkin, not August Bebel. For Lopes and Roth, a caricatured Bebel emerges in both pro- and anti-Marxist accounts. Both stress Bebels limited theoretical abilities, the fact that his text was more of an event (Zetkin) than serious analysis, that Bebel was simply a man of his time, that the text contained many pre-Marxist ideas or that the classic text was Engels Origin of the family, private property and the state, despite the latters readership paling in comparison to Woman and socialism. The authors do a solid job of refuting a lot of these accusations. They also cogently rebut the idea - held, for example, by Lise Vogel - that Origin was written as a kind of silent polemic against Bebel: a correction to his anthropological shortcomings. They show just how much Engels adored Bebel and his work (which is not to say that Engels text is not a far better piece of scientific anthropological investigation).

Leipzig influences

Bebels early activism revolved around the young German workers movements self-help associations and cooperatives, where he came into contact with three main groups: the League of German Worker Associations, the General Association of German Women and the (Lassallean) General German Workers Association. Their similar names reflected the commonalities between some of the different political outlooks.

It was in this period that he came across figures such as Louise Otto-Peters, who did for middle class women what Bebel did for working class women (p89) and Moritz Mller, a very wealthy member of the League, who financed cooperatives and published several pamphlets on both workers issues and the question of womens liberation (p95). The authors make a compelling case that Bebels Marxism was hugely influenced by these two thinkers, particularly by Mllers particular brand of mens feminism that advocated female domesticity not as the antithesis of equality, but its result (p95).

Yet, while the authors caution against making a schematic division of Bebels life into liberal and Marxist phases (p47), I do think they tend to minimise the actual break that resulted between him and those like Mller and Otto-Peters. By the late 1860s, these two had left the workers movement altogether, Mller because the League had decided to adopt a programme based on the statutes of the International Workingmens Association, drafted by Marx (p99). The fact remains that Bebel went a different way to Otto-Peters and Mller - towards partyist class organisation in the IWMA and beyond. He was followed on this path by another of his Leipzig contemporaries, Julius Motteler, who was also instrumental to the dual-gender union and who was doubtless an influence on the dual-gender trade union statutes drafted by Bebel in the late 1860s, a time when women were still largely viewed as strike-breakers and potential enemies who could drive down wages and working conditions.

Motteler is also reported as having fought for gender equality in the IWMA: Our union embraces both sexes, and the representatives of the central office, in its recommendations to the party organisation, must represent this point of view (p115).

As the authors discussions of his draft of the German partys first programme make clear, Bebels gender politics developed in fits and starts. They note his omission of female suffrage in 1869, but also how he was absolutely insisting on it by the 1875 Gotha conference of unification between the Eisenachers (Bebels group) and the Lassalleans.

The books argument comes to a conclusion in the final chapter on the role of Clara Zetkin and what the authors allege signifies some sort of weakening in the Marxist approach to womens liberation. Their point of reference is the rather controversial matter of protective legislation for women (Zetkin was in favour). For the authors this revealed a kind of regression in Marxist thinking, a return to a pre-Bebel approach as a way of enforcing female domesticity. A quote from a single Zetkin speech that talks of protecting womens role as mothers is offered as proof of this.

I must say that I do not find this argument particularly convincing. The portrayal of Bebels unfolding gender politics through the concepts of mens feminism, equality and domesticity may make for a good read and allow the argument to be developed clearly, but railroading Zetkin into this schema does not work.

Moreover, doing so also fails to address some of the later divisions and discussions within the workers movement on domesticity and the household (Kollontai), and fails to take seriously Zetkins gender politics as a whole. Instead, on the basis of not very much at all it grasps at the simplistic conclusion that the Marxian legacy, as it has come to be known in the subsequent historiography, is largely a fiction created by Zetkin herself (p222). The implication here is that there is some kind of break between Bebel and Zetkin on womens liberation, also evidenced in the formers alleged more conciliatory attitude towards the mainstream womens movement and the latters more hostile, more simplistic outlook.

Method

The authors portrayal of Bebel as the key man when it comes to Marxism and gender also appears to downplay the role of Marx and Engels in their writing on the relationship between men and women. Yet there can be no denying that the uncovering of Bebels forgotten legacy is a real service, and our movement would benefit greatly from looking at this aspect of his work - positive and negative - in greater detail.

The two major issues I have with the argument offered in this book both relate to methodology. The first is the authors conscious eschewal of a socio-historical narrative in favour of a Foucauldian sense of genealogy (p46) in history. Although space and time do not permit a proper discussion of this approachs limits, the second problem I have is closely related to it.

The books investigation into the historical relationship between Marxism and feminism is rendered far less effective by its insufficient contextualisation of feminism as a concept. Introducing the book, the authors recognise the problem involved here: ie, the evolution and changing meaning of feminism over the last 150 years, but they do not really address it. As they put it, Feminism and feminist had not yet taken on their current meanings, but we use them because of their suitability to the issues at hand (p23).

It is fairly well known, for example, that under the leadership of Zetkin from the 1890s onwards, at least, Social Democracy had an extremely hostile attitude towards the actually existing feminism of its time. For Zetkin, it was not bourgeois feminism that was the problem. The problem was that feminism was bourgeois. As the historian Gisela Notz explains, She was neither a feminist nor a left feminist - the latter were unknown in her time. For her, feminists were the bourgeois. She criticised groups like the Association of Proletarian Women and Girls, founded in Berlin in 1873, because it only accepted women as members. She hated such a segregation of women and men and saw it as ineffective. She regretted the feminist tendencies of many outstanding supporters of the Berlin movement, who were quite obviously influenced by feminist [frauenrechtlerisch] trains of thought.1

Despite explaining that the term feminism is used in the modern-day sense, Lopes and Roth side-step a genuine problem for any historical enquiry into its meaning: ie, what it is both in history and in the language of today.2 After all, in the early 1900s, the Marxist activist, Alexandra Kollontai, dismissed feminism and the feminist movement as poison, while around 80 years later, that recently deceased figurehead of British conservatism, Margaret Thatcher, could do the same using more or less exactly the same language.3

This also presents a methodical problem when we wind the clock back to the 1860s, seeing how the gulf between feminism on the one hand and the workers womens movement on the other came about by 1890. This is especially complicated by Bebels role: although he was initially part of helping to set it up, following the split with those like Otto-Peters, the German womens movement then appears to have largely fallen under the hegemony of those very feminists that would later come into conflict with the Social Democratic womens movement.

Feminist insult?

Slightly oddly, Lopes and Roth even begin their presentation by noting that in 1860s Germany the word feminist was actually some kind of insult directed at men who were not manly enough or too compromising in their politics (p19). Indeed, such terminology was also formalised and codified. The authors draw on German dictionary definitions that describe feminism as originally meaning feminine characteristics in a man and feminist as originally a feminine man (p24). This leads them to concede that the very title of their book, the concept of a mens feminism, would have been redundant (p19) in the period they are discussing.

As such, I think it is far more analytically useful to have talked about men on womens liberation, the workers movement on womens liberation or Marxism and womens liberation, etc. Lopess and Roths failure to do so leads to a rather jarring disjuncture between their explanation of the origins of feminism as an insult and their ensuing portrayal of various constructive and pioneering mens feminisms that grappled, in various forms, with the question of female equality. And this is the point: where the text should be interrogating whether Bebels commitment to womens liberation was non-Marxist/pre-Marxist in origin and how this did or did not change, it actually subsumes a lot of conflicted and conflicting concepts, both within and between Marxism and the womens movement, into one ideologically loaded concept. The context is lost as a result.

Nevertheless, however Bebels politics were formed, and however their origins may have manifested itself in the movement to which he was so instrumental, one thing is worth noting. In contrast to what many anti-Marxist feminists would claim, the authors note that gender equality was first a working class phenomenon, raising many questions about the often-assumed modernising influence of the middle classes (p31). As with all democratic questions, our class took the lead on womens liberation too.

Looking through the enormous amount of references in this book, it is nigh on criminal just how much of the rich, diverse Marxist material on the so-called womens question remains to be translated and made available to wider audiences - a situation that can only provide further sustenance to the erroneous view that Marxism has little or nothing to say on the question of womens oppression.

Marxism constantly needs to be expanded upon and developed. This is doubly true with regards the womens question. It is not that all the answers can be found in the Bebel of 1867 or 1891 - or in the collected speeches and writings of Clara Zetkin, for that matter.

Yet understanding our own history and the fate of womens liberation in a historical context allow us to recast thinking about womens empowerment and liberation in new terms: beyond the academy and beyond the fragments, as it were, of the bewildering number of broad fronts and single-issue campaigns, into a united class party of men and women. As August Bebel shows, womens liberation is a matter for the organised working class: the two phenomena are inseparable.

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Notes

1. G Notz, Clara Zetkin und die international sozialistische Frauenbewegung, in U Plener (ed) Clara Zetkin in ihrer Zeit p12. This essay is one of many excellent contributions that precisely try to draw out Clara Zetkin in her time, not as the socialist feminist she is deemed to be ex post facto.

2. Moreover, as Mike Macnair has recently argued in these pages, the various feminist discourses themselves have been through their own particularly complex 20th century history - originating, for example, in the politics of Maoism and in many respects being absorbed into mainstream thought since then. See M Macnair, A useless product of 1970s radicalism Weekly Worker April 11.

3. As Thatcher reportedly told her adviser, Paul Johnson. See www.newstatesman.com/archive/2013/04/margaret-thatcher-feminist-icon (http://www.newstatesman.com/archive/2013/04/margaret-thatcher-feminist-icon).


The original: Women and Socialism: Bebel's forgotten legacy, WW 959 (http://www.cpgb.org.uk/home/weekly-worker/959/mens-feminism-bebels-forgotten-legacy)

The book being reviewed: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Mens-Feminism-August-Socialist-Movement/dp/1573928682

Q told me comrade Rakunin is currently reading this book, I wonder if he could share his thoughts on it here?

Tower of Bebel
26th April 2013, 11:54
Waw, what a coincidence. So far, though, I've only reached chapter two.

Looking through the enormous amount of references in this book, it is nigh on criminal just how much of the rich, diverse Marxist material on the so-called ‘women’s question’ remains to be translated and made available to wider audiences (..).It's almost criminal we don't know anything about him as well.

Five few years ago I posted a review (not my own) of the book in the feminism discussion group (http://www.revleft.com/vb/group.php?do=discuss&group=&discussionid=796).

Flying Purple People Eater
26th April 2013, 13:43
Bebel is like a socialist superman.

Slightly unrelated, and I'm sorry if this goes slightly off-topic, but was Bebel homosexual?

He was incredibly brave for standing up for gay people in one of the first (the first ever recorded?) speeches for the rights of homosexuals and the repeal of the 'Sodomy law' in republican Germany, to a crowd of predominantly religious and utterly homophobic people who had most likely never heard such a perspective their entire life. He was quite adamant in the speech and, from the written form, he had a few shouting matches with some angry members of the audience as well. I can't understand from whom he would get this motivation in that period unless he knew someone who was gay or was gay himself.

Tower of Bebel
26th April 2013, 15:51
Slightly unrelated, and I'm sorry if this goes slightly off-topic, but was Bebel homosexual?
He was married to Julie Otto and raised a daughter, Frieda, who was then (in 1898) 29 years old.


He was incredibly brave for standing up for gay people in one of the first (the first ever recorded?) speeches for the rights of homosexuals and the repeal of the 'Sodomy law' in republican Germany, to a crowd of predominantly religious and utterly homophobic people who had most likely never heard such a perspective their entire life. He was quite adamant in the speech and, from the written form, he had a few shouting matches with some angry members of the audience as well. I can't understand from whom he would get this motivation in that period unless he knew someone who was gay or was gay himself.
Bebel made the speech when "a petition [was] being circulated by the Scientific Humanitarian Committee calling for the repeal of Germany's sodomy statute, Paragraph 175. The Scientific Humanitarian Committee (wissenschaftlich-humanitre Komite), the world's first activist homosexual rights organization, was itself only nine months old at the time, having been founded on 15 May 1897 by Magnus Hirschfeld, Max Spohr, and Erich Oberg. The petition was the main tactic used by the Committee in its efforts to repeal Paragraph 175."

But if he was honest in what he said during that speech, he must have known at least one person (whether gay or lesbian).

"The number of these persons [gays and lesbians] is so great and reaches so far into all levels of society, that if the police here scrupulously carried out their duty, the Prussian State would immediately be compelled to build two new penitentiaries just to take care of those offenses against Paragraph 175 that are committed in Berlin alone."

(Commotion. Hear! Hear!)

"That is not an exaggeration, Herr von Levetzow; it has to do with thousands of persons from all walks of life. (...) But gentlemen, I'll tell you this: if in this area the Berlin police did their duty all the way — I want to say a word about this — then there would be a scandal such as the world have never known, a scandal compared with which the Panama scandal, the Dreyfus scandal, the Ltzow-Ledert and the Tausch-Normann scandals are pure child's play."