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    Woman Hating: A Radical Look at Sexuality


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      Woman Hating: A Radical Look at Sexuality

      Andrea Dworkin

      PLUME

      Published by the Penguin Group

      Penguin Books USA Inc., 375 Hudson Street,

      New York, New York 10014, U. S. A.

      Penguin Books Ltd, 27 Wrights Lane, London W8 5TZ, England

      Penguin Books Australia Ltd, Ringwood, Victoria, Australia

      Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcorn Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada,

      M4V 3B2

      Penguin Books (N. Z. ) Ltd, 182-190 Wairau Road, Auckland 10, New Zealand

      Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England

      Published by Plume, an imprint of New American Library, a division of

      Penguin Books USA Inc.

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3

      Copyright © 1974 by Andrea Dworkin

      All rights reserved

      Printed in the United States of America

      Drawing on page 98 by Jean Holabird

      Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this

      publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or

      transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

      BOOKS ARE AVAILABLE AT QUANTITY DISCOUNTS WHEN USED TO PROMOTE PRODUCTS

      OR SERVICES. FOR INFORMATION PLEASE WRITE TO PREMIUM MARKETING DIVISION,

      PENGUIN BOOKS USA INC., 3 7 5 HUDSON STREET, NEW YORK, NEW YORK IOOI4.

      Permissions are on page 218

      For Grace Paley

      and in Memory o f Emma Goldman

      . . . Shakespeare had a sister; but do not

      look for her in Sir Sidney Lee’s life of the

      poet. She died young —alas, she never

      wrote a word.. . . Now my belief is that

      this poet who never wrote a word and was

      buried at the crossroads still lives. She lives

      in you and in me, and in many other women who are not here tonight, for they are

      washing up the dishes and putting the

      children to bed. But she lives; for great

      poets do not die; they are continuing presences; they need only the opportunity to

      walk among us in the flesh. This opportunity, as I think, it is now coming within

      your power to give her. For my belief is

      that if we live another century or so—I

      am talking of the common life which is the

      real life and not of the little separate lives

      which we live as individuals —and have

      five hundred a year each of us and rooms

      of our own; if we have the habit of freedom and the courage to write exactly what

      we think; if we escape a little from the

      common sitting-room and see human beings not always in their relation to each

      other but in relation to reality. . . if we

      face the fact, for it is a fact, that there is

      no arm to cling to, but that we go alone and

      that our relation is to the world of reality

      . . . then the opportunity will come and the

      dead poet who was Shakespeare’s sister

      will put on the body which she has so often

      laid down. Drawing her life from the lives

      of the unknown who were her forerunners, as her brother did before her, she

      will be born. As for her coming without

      that preparation, without that effort on

      our part, without that determination that

      when she is born again she shall find it possible to live and write her poetry, that we

      cannot expect, for that would be impossible. But I maintain that she would come

      if we worked for her, and that so to work,

      even in poverty and obscurity, is worthwhile.

      Virginia Woolf,

      A Room of One's Own (1929)

      A C K N O W L E D G M E N T

      Ricki Abrams and I began writing this book together in

      Amsterdam, Holland, in December 1971. We worked

      long and hard and through a lot o f living and then, for

      many reasons, our paths separated. Ricki went to Australia, then to India. I returned to Amerika. So the book, in its early pieces and fragments, became mine as

      the responsibility for finishing it became mine. I thank

      Ricki here for the work we did together, and the time

      we had together, and this book which came from that

      time and grew beyond it.

      Andrea Dworkin

      C O N T E N T S

      Introduction

      17

      Part One: THE FAIRY TALES

      29

      Chapter 1 Onceuponatime: The Roles

      34

      Chapter 2 Onceuponatime: The Moral of the

      Story

      47

      Part Two: THE PORNOGRAPHY

      5 1

      Chapter 3 Woman as Victim: Story of O

      55

      Chapter 4 Woman as Victim: The Image

      64

      Chapter 5 Woman as Victim: Suck

      75

      Part Three: THE HERSTORY

      91

      Chapter 6 Gynocide: Chinese Footbinding

      95

      Chapter 7 Gynocide: The Witches

      118

      Part Four: ANDROGYNY

      151

      Chapter 8 Androgyny: The Mythological Model

      155

      Chapter 9 Androgyny: Androgyny, Fucking, and

      Community

      174

      Afterword

      197

      Notes

      205

      Bibliography

      211

      There is a misery of the body and a misery

      of the mind, and if the stars, whenever we

      looked at them, poured nectar into our

      mouths, and the grass became bread, we

      would still be sad. We live in a system that

      manufactures sorrow, spilling it out of its

      mill, the waters of sorrow, ocean, storm,

      and we drown down, dead, too soon.

      . . . uprising is the reversal of the system, and revolution is the turning of tides.

      Julian Beck, The Life of the Theatre

      The Revolution is not an event that takes

      two or three days, in which there is shooting and hanging. It is a long drawn out

      process in which new people are created,

      capable of renovating society so that the

      revolution does not replace one elite with

      another, but so that the revolution creates

      a new anti-authoritarian structure with

      anti-authoritarian people who in their

      turn re-organize the society so that it

      becomes a non-alienated human society,

      free from war, hunger, and exploitation.

      Rudi Dutschke

      March 7, 1968

      You do not teach someone to count only

      up to eight. You do not say nine and ten

      and beyond do not exist. You give people

      everything or they are not able to count at

      all. There is a real revolution or none at

      all.

      Pericles Korovessis, in an interview

      in Liberation, June 1973

      I N T R O D U C T I O N

      This book is an action, a political action where revolution is the goal. It has no other purpose. It is not cerebral wisdom, or academic horsesh
    it, or ideas carved

      in granite or destined for immortality. It is part o f a

      process and its context is change. It is part o f a planetary movement to restructure community forms and human consciousness so that people have power over

      their own lives, participate fully in community, live in

      dignity and freedom.

      T h e commitment to ending male dominance as the

      fundamental psychological, political, and cultural reality o f earth-lived life is the fundamental revolutionary commitment. It is a commitment to transformation o f

      the self and transformation o f the social reality on every

      level. T h e core o f this book is an analysis o f sexism (that

      system o f male dominance), what it is, how it operates

      on us and in us. However, I do want to discuss briefly

      two problems, tangential to that analysis, but still crucial

      to the development o f revolutionary program and consciousness. T h e first is the nature o f the women’s movement as such, and the second has to do with the work o f the writer.

      17

      10

      Woman Hating

      Until the appearance of the brilliant anthology

      Sisterhood Is Powerful and Kate Millett’s extraordinary

      book Sexual Politics, women did not think o f themselves

      as oppressed people. Most women, it must be admitted,

      still do not. But the women’s movement as a radical

      liberation movement in Amerika can be dated from the

      appearance of those two books. We learn as we reclaim

      our herstory that there was a feminist movement which

      organized around the attainment of the vote for

      women. We learn that those feminists were also ardent

      abolitionists. Women “came out” as abolitionists —out

      of the closets, kitchens, and bedrooms; into public

      meetings, newspapers, and the streets. Two activist

      heroes o f the abolitionist movement were Black women,

      Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman, and they stand

      as prototypal revolutionary models.

      Those early Amerikan feminists thought that suffrage was the key to participation in Amerikan democracy and that, free and enfranchised, the former slaves would in fact be free and enfranchised. Those women

      did not imagine that the vote would be effectively denied Blacks through literacy tests, property qualifications, and vigilante police action by white racists. Nor did they imagine the “separate but equal” doctrine and

      the uses to which it would be put.

      Feminism and the struggle for Black liberation were

      parts of a compelling whole. That whole was called,

      ingenuously perhaps, the struggle for human rights.

      The fact is that consciousness, once experienced, cannot

      be denied. Once women experienced themselves as activists and began to understand the reality and meaning of oppression, they began to articulate a politically

      Introduction

      19

      conscious feminism. T h eir focus, their concrete objective, was to attain suffrage for women.

      T h e women’s movement formalized itself in 1848 at

      Seneca Falls when Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia

      Mott, both activist abolitionists, called a convention.

      T hat convention drafted The Seneca Falls Declaration of

      Rights and Sentiments which is to this day an outstanding

      feminist declaration.

      In struggling for the vote, women developed many

      o f the tactics which were used, almost a century later,

      in the Civil Rights Movement. In order to change laws,

      women had to violate them. In order to change convention, women had to violate it. T h e feminists (suffragettes) were militant political activists who used the tactics o f civil disobedience to achieve their goals.

      T h e struggle for the vote began officially with the

      Seneca Falls Convention in 1848. It was not until

      August 26, 1920, that women were given the vote by the

      kindly male electorate. Women did not imagine that the

      vote would scarcely touch on, let alone transform, their

      own oppressive situations. Nor did they imagine that

      the “separate but equal” doctrine would develop as

      a tool o f male dominance. Nor did they imagine the

      uses to which it would be put.

      T here have also been, always, individual feminists —

      women who violated the strictures o f the female role,

      who challenged male supremacy, who fought for the

      right to work, or sexual freedom, or release from the

      bondage o f the marriage contract. Those individuals

      were often eloquent when they spoke o f the oppression

      they suffered as women in their own lives, but other

      women, properly trained to their roles, did not listen.

      20

      Woman Haling

      Feminists, most often as individuals but sometimes in

      small militant groups, fought the system which oppressed them, analyzed it, were jailed, were ostracized, but there was no general recognition among women

      that they were oppressed.

      In the last 5 or 6 years, that recognition has become

      more widespread among women. We have begun to understand the extraordinary violence that has been done to us, that is being done to us: how our minds are

      aborted in their development by sexist education; how

      our bodies are violated by oppressive grooming imperatives; how the police function against us in cases of rape and assault; how the media, schools, and

      churches conspire to deny us dignity and freedom; how

      the nuclear family and ritualized sexual behavior imprison us in roles and forms which are degrading to us.

      We developed consciousness-raising sessions to try to

      fathom the extraordinary extent of our despair, to try

      to search out the depth and boundaries of our internalized anger, to try to find strategies for freeing ourselves from oppressive relationships, from masochism and passivity, from our own lack of self-respect. There

      was both pain and ecstasy in this process. Women

      discovered each other, for truly no oppressed group

      had ever been so divided and conquered. Women began to deal with concrete oppressions: to become part of the economic process, to erase discriminatory laws,

      to gain control over our own lives and over our own

      bodies, to develop the concrete ability to survive on our

      own terms. Women also began to articulate structural

      analyses o f sexist society — Millett did that with Sexual

      Politics; in Vaginal Politics Ellen Frankfort demonstrated

      Introduction

      21

      the complex and deadly antiwoman biases o f the medical establishment; in Women and Madness Dr. Phyllis Chesler showed that mental institutions are prisons for

      women who rebel against society’s well-defined female

      role.

      We began to see ourselves clearly, and what we saw

      was dreadful. We saw that we were, as Yoko O no wrote,

      the niggers o f the world, slaves to the slave. We saw

      that we were the ultimate house niggers, ass-licking,

      bowing, scraping, shuffling fools. We recognized all o f

      our social behavior as learned behavior that functioned

      for survival in a sexist world: we painted ourselves,

      smiled, exposed legs and ass, had children, kept

      house, as our accommodations to the reality o f power

      politics.

      Most o f the women involved in articulating the oppression o f women were white and middle class. We spent, even if we did not earn or control, enormous


      sums o f money. Because o f our participation in the mid-

      dle-class lifestyle we were the oppressors o f other

      people, our poor white sisters, our Black sisters, our

      Chicana sisters —and the men who in turn oppressed

      them. This closely interwoven fabric o f oppression,

      which is the racist class structure o f Amerika today,

      assured that wherever one stood, it was with at least one

      foot heavy on the belly o f another human being.

      As white, middle-class women, we lived in the house

      o f the oppressor-of-us-all who supported us as he

      abused us, dressed us as he exploited us, “treasured”

      us in payment for the many functions we performed.

      We were the best-fed, best-kept, best-dressed, most

      willing concubines the world has ever known. We had

      22

      Woman Hating

      no dignity and no real freedom, but we did have good

      health and long lives.

      The women’s movement has not dealt with this

      bread-and-butter issue, and that is its most awful

      failure. There has been little recognition that the destruction of the middle-class lifestyle is crucial to the development of decent community forms in which all

      people can be free and have dignity. T here is certainly

      no program to deal with the realities of the class system

      in Amerika. On the contrary, most of the women’s

      movement has, with appalling blindness, refused to take

      that kind o f responsibility. Only the day-care movement

      has in any way reflected, or acted pragmatically on, the

      concrete needs of all classes of women. The anger at

      the Nixon administration for cutting day-care funds is

      naive at best. Given the structure o f power politics and

      capital in Amerika, it is ridiculous to expect the federal

      government to act in the interests o f the people. The

      money available to middle-class women who identify

      as feminists must be channeled into the programs we

      want to develop, and we must develop them. In general,

      middle-class women have absolutely refused to take any

      action, make any commitment which would interfere

     


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