Showing posts with label feminism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feminism. Show all posts

30 years of gender studies

 

30 years of gender studies: anniversary special issue from "La Ventana", the journal of the Centre for Gender Studies at the University of Guadalajara, Mexico. Has thoughtful pieces by a range of scholars, from Mexico and beyond. I have an article in it, about the global picture. All open access!

 

https://revistalaventana.cucsh.udg.mx/index.php/LV/issue/view/699

Gender, truth, populist politics


A new book about feminism, education, and the challenges to truth from new right-wing politics has been published, with general analyses, case studies, and discussions of how to respond.

I have a chapter in it. Here's the reference: Connell, Raewyn. 2022. Truth, power, pedagogy: Feminist knowledge and education in a 'post-truth' time. Pp. 65-77 in Penny Jane Burke, Julia Coffey, Rosalind Gill and Akane Kanai, ed., Gender in an Era of Post-truth Populism: Pedagogies, Challenges and Strategies. London: Bloomsbury Academic.

Gender: In World Perspective, 4th Edition

 


How can we understand gender in the contemporary world? What psychological differences now exist between women and men? How are masculinities and femininities made? And how is gender entwined in global politics and debates over trans issues?

 

Raewyn Connell – one of the world's leading scholars in the field – answers these questions and more. Her book provides a sophisticated yet accessible introduction to modern gender studies, covering empirical research from all parts of the world, in addition to theory and politics. As well as introducing the field, Gender provides a powerful contemporary framework for gender analysis with a strong and distinctive global awareness. Highlighting the multidimensional character of gender relations, Connell shows how to link personal life with large-scale organizational structures, and how gender politics changes its form in changing situations.

 

The fourth edition of this influential book brings the statistical picture of gender inequalities up to date, and offers new close-focus case studies of gender research. Like previous editions, it examines gender politics and global power relations, but with added discussion around contemporary issues of intersectionality, populism, gender-based violence, trans struggles and environmental change. It also speaks at the intimate level, about embodied gender and personal relationships.

 

Gender moves from personal experience to global problems, offering a unique perspective on gender issues today. 
 
 
 
 
YES, FRIENDS, THAT'S THE OFFICIAL BLURB!  YOU CAN FIND THE NEW EDITION HERE: https://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509538997

Intellectuals & world society; and Gender in world perspective


I'm pleased to announce the publication of my booklet Intellectuals and World Society. This is No. 15 in the Dissenting Knowledges Pamphlet Series, published in Penang by Multiversity and Citizens International, and edited by Vinay Lal.

Intellectuals and World Society is an attempt to decolonize the discussion about the knowledge economy, intellectual work, and intellectuals as a 'new class'. I highlight the way intelligentsias were formed in the context of global imperialism, and have taken different positions in struggles over knowledge. I also point to new possibilities now appearing, a theme I have also taken up in my book The Good University.

This pamphlet series is an initiative in popular education, hoping to take sustained argument about key issues to a wider audience than academic work usually reaches. So it's done in a low-cost print format, in booklets that are nicely designed and easy to read. They could be used by NGOs, in adult education classes, in self-help reading groups, or in secondary schools or colleges.

There are now fifteen of these pamphlets. They cover issues ranging from the Zapatista movement to economics, organ trafficking, terrorism, indigenous knowledge, the Palestinian struggle, Afrocentricity, and more. Authors include Ashis Nandy, Nancy Scheper-Hughes and Claude Alvares.

The publishers of the pamphlet series can be contacted at cizs@streamyx.com, or Citizens International, 10 Jalan Masjid Negeri, 11600 Penang, Malaysia.

And in further news:

I'm also pleased to report the publication of the Spanish translation of Raewyn Connell and Rebecca Pearse, Gender: In World Perspective, 3rd edition.

Género desde una perspectiva global, published by Publicacions de la Universitat de València, 2018, is a careful translation by Arantxa Grau i Muñoz and Almudena A. Navas Saurin, to whom much thanks!

The book offers readers a contemporary picture of gender as a social reality. We explore the gender dimensions in the economy, government, and human relationships with the environment, as well as in personal life and intimate relationships. When they tell you "gender doesn't matter any more", this is the book for you!

Sex, Fear and Faction: Australia's Bizarre Marriage Survey




Australia is currently in the midst of an official survey of opinion about who can get married.  It’s run by the national census office (the Australian Bureau of Statistics) - but it’s not a census.  It’s about a proposal for legal change - but it’s not a vote or referendum.  It’s about allowing lesbian and gay couples to get legally married - but lesbian and gay advocates opposed holding it.  It’s going to cost 122 million dollars - but the people who launched it will probably disregard its result.
A situation so bizarre must involve the Murdoch press and the new Right. And this one certainly does.  It comes out of a complicated series of manoevres in the national parliament, by which the hard-right faction in the ruling Liberal Party has tried to deny or delay marriage equality.
With support from the rural-conservative National Party and the Murdoch-owned media, this faction in recent years has been running a number of culture-war campaigns.  They are against climate science, against multiculturalism, and against sex education. Marriage equality joins the list.
A free vote in the national parliament would suffice to change the law. Public opinion now seems to support this. Therefore the hard-right faction has tried to prevent a vote in parliament.  One tactic was to propose a national referendum on the issue.  Other parties blocked this.
At which point the government came up with the ripe idea of holding an official postal survey, more exactly, a one-question postal opinion poll.  It could do this without new legislation, using funds supposed to be held for an unforeseen emergency (a move recently declared legal by the High Court).
No social scientist would think this is a sound way to find out what the nation thinks.  Postal surveys usually have a low response rate and many biases.  Individual opinion items have low reliability. Response patterns are strongly affected by the specific wording of poll items.
Nor would a lawyer be impressed.  The survey outcome will have no legal effect at all.  It doesn’t compel parliament to act, let alone follow the survey majority.  It’s clear that some parliamentarians will not be swayed whatever the result.
What the survey does achieve is to create a magnificent occasion for the far right to mobilize hatred and fear.  This is now happening.  The formal ‘No’ campaign has mostly tried to scare people with imaginary disasters for ‘the family’, for schools, for children, and for religious freedom, which are supposed to follow from marriage equality.  The logic is a trifle obscure, but the intent to raise fears is clear.  The informal campaign, the dog-whistling and hate speech, is where the underlying masculinity politics and homophobia surface.
This pattern is not original to Australia.  Though this is not discussed in the Australian media, for the past few years there has been a new kind of international backlash campaign against feminism, women’s sexual rights, gay rights, queer culture and transsexuality.  It is promoted by both Catholic militants and Protestant fundamentalists, who link these targets under the interesting name “gender theory”.
This movement has been particularly active in Latin America and Eastern Europe, though it has also been seen in France, the USA (remember the weird “bathroom bans” against trans people?), and elsewhere.  It surfaced in Australia in a highly abusive campaign in 2016 against the Safe Schools programme (an anti-bullying programme to reduce homophobia in schools).  It is now in full bore with the No campaign on marriage equality.
Because the No campaign can’t make a direct attack on human rights, to mobilize participants in the survey it relies mainly on creating fear among religious communities.  Some religious leaders are willing to help.  I heard one bishop on the radio making an awkward plea for a No vote on the grounds that the survey question didn’t specify protections for religious freedom.
I have known a number of bishops in my time, and most of them are competent professionals.  I sympathised with this gentleman, because if he is competent at being a bishop, he must know that marriage equality in other countries – including New Zealand next door – has not had the slightest effect on religious freedom.
This is a small example of a common problem.  Here’s another example.  In the No campaign we hear frequent claims that having gay parents is damaging for children.  There is adequate research on this question, and the claim is known to be false.
But denying the findings of systematic research is a feature of culture-wars campaigns.  What is claimed to be true is what the campaigners wish to be true.  I don’t think the campaigners are necessarily lying, in the sense of deliberate denial of the facts.  It’s more that the facts have ceased to hold much interest for them.  They construct a world via emotions of resentment, fear and hostility.
This is not so much post-truth politics as truth-free politics.  But curiously it always comes around to favouring the interests of rich, white, heterosexual men with shares in fossil fuel companies.  I wonder why that could be?

Jessie Bernard Award


The American Sociological Association has kindly made me the recipient of the Jessie Bernard Award for 2017.  This award, established about forty years ago, recognizes "work that has enlarged the horizons of the discipline of sociology to encompass fully the role of women in society."

The award is named after Jessie Bernard (1903-1996).  Jessie was one of the founders of the Society for the Study of Social Problems in the 1950s.  In the 1960s and 1970s she became an amazingly productive contributor to feminist sociology, continuing her activism, research and mentoring long after retirement.  A model for us all! 
For an evocative account of her life and work, written by Patricia Yancey Martin, see: http://www.asanet.org/sites/default/files/savvy/footnotes/julyaugust09/bernard_0709.html
I will be travelling to the annual meeting of the ASA in Montréal in August 2017, and hope to meet many colleagues, students and fellow-conspirators there.

A little trip


Academic work is not always a million miles from show business. One point where they come close is the visiting lecture. That’s been a part of my work for the last fifteen years, usually adding lectures at different institutions to meet the heavy costs of inter-continental travel from Australia. A week ago I came home from a tour with seven public lectures and five workshops in three countries. I’ve reported about particular conferences on this blog, but not really about a tour, so here goes:
The trip began with a successful 3-day research group meeting in April at the Fundação Getulio Vargas in Rio de Janeiro. I travelled with Australian colleagues via Chile, flying over the far south Pacific and then over the magnificent Andes. The meeting was held in a room with an eat-your-heart-out view of the harbour and the most famous sugarloaf in the world; we also did some work.
Lecture at UERJ: photo courtesy Carmen de Mattos
The following week I gave a lecture at the State University of Rio de Janeiro’s impressive centre for research on sexuality and human rights, CLAM, which I have mentioned on Twitter. This centre’s programme extends across Latin America and ranges from HIV/AIDS to gender diversity.  My talk was called “Transsexual women’s embodiment: gender, medicine and politics“ and there’s a note about it here: bit.ly/1yM3LOt.
I then visited the Federal University of Bahia in Salvador, the first time I have been to Brasil’s legendary north-east.  UFBA has one of the pioneering gender research and teaching programmes in the country, the Centre for Interdisciplinary Women’s Studies, NEIM.  We did a seminar on research, with about forty people.  The next day I gave a public lecture “Gender in world perspective: thinking from the global South”, with sequential translation into Portuguese – difficult, but very effective.  There’s a note about it here.
In May I reached Europe.  First visit was to the University of Bristol’s Graduate School of Education, which has an innovative Centre for Globalization, Education and Social Futures.  I was kindly invited to launch the School’s new annual lecture series.  I spoke on “Education and the global politics of knowledge”; outside were rain, wind and cold - neoliberal weather!  The next morning held a workshop on methods in gender research, based on the studies currently being done by graduate students and staff at Bristol.  It was highly participatory and I enjoyed it a lot.
The following week in London I gave the Annual Lecture for the journal Feminist Theory, hosted by the Gender Institute at LSE.  Feminist Theory has recently published my paper “Meeting at the Edge of Fear: Theory on a World Scale” (2015, vol. 16 no. 1, pp. 49-66).  I took up the same theme for the lecture, under the title “Decolonizing Gender, in Theory and Practice”.  The LSE social media folk excelled themselves with a campaign publicizing the event. I saw the Twitter version of it with the hashtag #LSEConnell – curious to be the subject of a hashtag!  About two hundred people came, I was in good form, I think, and there were tough questions in the Q & A session – so all went as we hoped.  There’s a video of it online, also an audio recording, and something that was new to me, a “storify” of the tweets in and after the lecture.
I then leapt aboard the Flying Scotsman steaming north from King’s Cross station... no, unfortunately that famous train steams no more, it’s a boring Virgin Corporation intercity express... and headed for Newcastle.
The University of Newcastle was holding a Spring School in the humanities, on the theme of “Interiors”.  I gave the keynote address, “Border Protection: Inside and Outside Defended Spaces of the Neoliberal World Order”, trying to get bearings on the growth of gated communities and border-defence politics.  The next day I conducted a seminar with graduate students on transsexual embodiment. The Border Protection lecture too has been tweeted and storified (if that's a word).
Then, after meeting friends in London and doing just a little retail therapy, I headed for the Goethe-Universität in Frankfurt am Main.  The Cornelia Goethe Institute for Women’s Studies and Research on Gender Relations has been running – indeed is still running – a public lecture series on the theme “Masculinities”.  Mine was called “Masculinities in the World: Perspectives from the Global South”, and this too was very well attended, as the picture shows.  Before the lecture, I had a workshop with a masters-level class. They were very well prepared; and instead of being told what to think, they grilled me on the subject of masculinity research for nearly two hours.  Good stuff!
Conference in spring sunshine, courtesy of GSSC
Then on the admirable DeutscheBahn to Köln, where the University has recently founded a Global South StudiesCentre.  I gave the opening keynote at the Centre’s inaugural conference, on “Transformations in the Global South”.  You will find the programme here.  It was all in English; those questions about the politics of language buzzed around in my head.  My talk was called “The Global South and Transformations of Knowledge”, and discussed decolonial, Southern and postcolonial perspectives on organized knowledge - see the abstract.
And then: the long flight home, via Hong Kong, and a long recovery from exhaustion... Was it all worthwhile?  I find it hard to judge this kind of academic travel, against the wear-and-tear, cost (including carbon cost) and time involved. What I hope to do is focus attention on emerging issues and approaches, perhaps dramatising them for new audiences – that’s show business again. The ultimate purpose is to create a terrain on which other intellectual workers can build, in the future.  It’s a fragile project, and the real effects will be a long time emerging.  But in the short run, I got great satisfaction from this trip, I hope others got something too, and I’m grateful to all the people who made it happen.

Gender and masculinities in Southern perspective


The global dimension in questions about gender, including questions about masculinities, is now recognized.  There’s a longstanding debate about gender in development, and a newer debate about the impacts of global neoliberalism on the employment of men and women, not to mention gender identities.  The international links of feminism have been contentious, and increasingly a subject of research.

There has been less recognition that gender theories also have a global dimension.  Most of the concepts that circulate internationally - in academic research, public policy, and the NGO world - come from the global North, i.e. western Europe and North America.  This includes concepts like gender identity, gender socialization, patriarchy, performativity, even masculinity and femininity.  It is not surprising that these concepts carry with them the social and cultural experience of the global North.

But this is now becoming an issue.  The social sciences and humanities are acknowledging the global economy of knowledge and its politics.  Discussions have arisen about the coloniality of gender, the multiplicity of feminist perspectives, and the gender dynamics of imperialism, colonialism and corporate globalization.  Increasingly it is recognized that theory does come from the colonized world and continues to come from the postcolonial “periphery” of the world economy.

I have been concerned with these issues for some time, in work that led to the book Southern Theory. Gender issues were present in that book, but were not central.  Since it was published I have been trying to bring southern-theory, de-colonial perspectives to the debates in gender studies.

Two papers from this work have recently been published.  One is about masculinities, called “Margin becoming centre: for a world-centred rethinking of masculinities”, in the Nordic journal NORMA: International Journal for Masculinity Studies, which has recently re-designed itself as a global journal. This discusses the global archive on masculinities and the way Southern perspectives could re-shape this domain of knowledge.


The second paper is about theories of gender, called “Rethinking gender from the South”, published in the pioneering US journal Feminist Studies (see the picture to the left). This discusses the work of a range of gender theorists in the postcolonial world, and the social conditions of their work.  The editors of this journal had the really good idea of accompanying the paper with some translations of theoretical classics from the global South.  There are three to start with, extracts from texts by He-Yin Zhen, Heleieth Saffioti, and Teresita de Barbieri.  If you don’t know these amazing feminist thinkers, you can find samples of their work here (scroll to bottom of page).

And while we are thinking about texts from the South, here is a remarkable online collection of South American work on sexuality, from the Brasilian sexuality research centre CLAM.

Fighting Sexism with Laughter


A couple of nights ago I went with feminist friends to the Ernies.  This is an annual ceremony in Sydney, held at Parliament House, at which spoof awards are given for the most disgusting sexist statements or actions in Australia in the past year. The Ernies are named after an infamously sexist union official.  This year was the event’s 21st birthday.
About 400 women come, and over dinner, we pick the most disgraceful public statements by men in six categories: politics, sport, media, celebrity, judicial, and industrial.  The decisions are made by a unique voting system.  The statements, collected by alert researchers during the year, are read out by the Mistress of Ceremonies, Meredith Burgmann (former president of the Legislative Council of NSW, she knows how to manage a crowd).  The quote that attracts the longest and loudest boo-ing – assessed by highly-trained Boo Monitors – is the winner.
Meredith Burgmann officiating at 2013 Ernies ceremony
To preserve gender equality, there is also an award for unhelpful statements made by women.  At the end of the night, the “Gold Ernie” is awarded by competition between the winners of the individual sections.  It usually identifies a ripe example of public misogyny.
A special award is reserved for Repeat Offenders.  This year the new Prime Minister – who had a long record of hostility to women’s interests when Health Minister in a previous government, and who has appointed a Cabinet that includes only one woman – was an easy winner.
There is also, I’m glad to say, the “Good Ernie”, a real award for men who make public statements positively helpful to gender equality.  There is particular kudos for men doing this from unpromising circumstances.  This year the Good Ernie was awarded to a Lieutenant-General in the Army, who defended equal opportunity measures.
The Ernies event is good humoured, in fact some of it extremely funny.  There’s a dress code; this year we were supposed to wear what we wore (more often, should have worn) to our own 21st birthday party.  I did my best for 1965, but the younger folk were much more glamorous.
But the Ernies is also rather dire; you have to listen for a couple of hours to horrible, bullying, and sometimes really vile, quotes.  That so much sexism is still spilling forth on the air waves and into print, forty years after the Women’s Liberation Movement, is discouraging.  A few years ago, Meredith Burgmann and Yvette Andrews compiled the nominations and awards 1993-2007 into an Ernies book, 1000 Terrible Things Australian Men have Said about Women.  It makes compulsive, and aversive, reading.
The Ernies is a unique piece of social research – a kind of crowd-sourced data bank on gender ideology.  This year seemed to show a real surge of nastiness, one component being the vicious attacks on Australia’s first woman Prime Minister, Julia Gillard.  (In the face of which, she was dumped by her own party during the year.)
But mainly the Ernies is a form of politics and education, a creative counter-blast to sexist assumptions about women. The “awards” do get media exposure, and so hold up misogyny to public ridicule.  The Ernies slogan is “keep them nervous!”  Over the years, they seem to have had some impact – there are now many fewer nominations of judges, and union officials.  But the Murdoch media, the radio shock jocks, and the neo-conservative politicians, are unrepentant bullies.

Feminism's challenge to biological essentialism

The debate over sex differences has a considerable history in the Western world. Here is a short article I wrote reflecting on the women's movement's challenges to biological essentialism first published to the Occupy Times of London website hereAnd in Australia, my two cents were included in a piece on cognition and sex differences in the SMH last February also. You can read it here.

Gender: Biology, Roles and Activism

Thirty to forty years ago, there was a “great debate” pitting biology versus society in relation to the role of gender. Just as there had been in relation to IQ and school success, and in earlier generations about class and race. Which was more important: nature or nurture?

The reason this debate flared up in the 1970s was the advent of the Women’s Liberation Movement, which confronted gender inequalities and the oppression of women. Women’s Liberation challenged stereotypes about women, inequalities of income and domestic labour, men’s predominance in positions of power and, in due course, men’s violence towards women in the form of rape, domestic abuse, and femicide. All these were seen as social patterns that could and should be revolutionised.

This soon brought the movement up against the cultural justifications of gender inequality. Some justifications were religious, some were folkloric, but some were expressed in more modern language. The most powerful, in the English-speaking world, were the arguments that came to be called “biological essentialism”.

Image source: http://www.scilogs.eu/
According to this ideology, the social arrangements that feminism challenged expressed differences in character (emotion, intellect, attitude, etc.) between women and men, which were rooted in biological sex differences. These in turn were explained by survival imperatives that had shaped the early stages of human, or hominid, evolution. Thus it followed that men, who did the hunting and fighting, had to be aggressive, dominant, promiscuous, rational, etc. While women, who had the babies and tended the home fires, had to be nurturant, passive, monogamous, emotional, etc.

Biological essentialism itself has evolved. It started by emphasising sex differences in size and muscular strength as the explanation for male dominance. In the era of “sociobiology” such matters as endocrine differences were emphasised, and men were supposed to have a hormonal “aggression advantage”. As the field of “evolutionary psychology” developed, differences of reproductive strategy were emphasised; some of the more toxic literature of this type provided pseudo-biological justifications of rape. In the 1990s, seemingly all attention became fixed on the brain and we began hearing a lot about dichotomous “brain sex”. This notion infested schools for a while, with bizarre ideas about boys’ fixed brain-based “learning styles”. (I have always thought this idea was an insult to boys, who actually have many ways of learning.)

Curiously, whatever biological mechanism was appealed to, the argument always ended up in the same place: Conventional sex roles, gender divisions of labour, and inequalities of power, were biologically determined and therefore could not be challenged. Feminist activism was coming up against nature and so, ultimately, it was futile.

The idea that gender relations are biologically fixed, is shown up as nonsense in the light of the ethnographic and historical evidence of cultural diversity and change. But we can’t substitute a simple “sex role” model instead, assuming that attitudes and emotions are determined by dichotomous roles. One of the most important empirical findings of gender research is that in contemporary affluent societies (at least), there are very few substantial differences in psychological characteristics (attitudes, emotions, intellect, etc.) between men and women. This conclusion flies in the face of popular stereotypes, but is supported by a large body of quantitative evidence.

Biological essentialism gets its influence from the enormous cultural prestige of biological science since Darwin; from its match with the familiar stereotypes of masculinity and femininity in European-derived popular culture, and from its value in shoring up existing structures of power and privilege. It does not get its influence from being good science. Most of it is not science at all. It is, rather, a conservative social rhetoric that cherry-picks those fragments of biological and social research that fit into a pre-determined set of conclusions. It is ideology that uses the rhetoric of science, much as ideology a few hundred years ago used the rhetoric of religion to justify the marginalisation of women. (I can think of a few archbishops, popes and muftis who still do.)

Building a genuine scientific understanding of gender and gender relations is an immense task, involving both biological and social science as well as a rethinking of human history and human evolution. The Women’s Liberation Movement is rightly seen as the modern starting point of gender studies, opening up this whole terrain to serious analysis. Some of its formulations, we can now see, were too simple, but the movement was right in its perception that gender arrangements can and do change historically.

This doesn’t mean that bodies are irrelevant, far from it! Feminism around the world is deeply concerned with perinatal mortality, infant survival, motherhood, HIV/AIDS, unequal nutrition, domestic violence, rape, occupational health, sexual desire, contraception, abortion, and the increasing impact of biotechnology. All of these are issues about embodiment, for which sophisticated biological knowledge is necessary. What we can see now, more clearly than a few decades ago, is that on all these fronts, human bodies are caught up in a historical process, and to understand that, sophisticated social science is also necessary. The knowledge base for activism thus continues to change and develop, but the social justice imperative for activism remains unchanged.


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