UmsebenziOnlineBig.jpg

 


Umsebenzi Online, Volume 12, No. 36, 17 October 2013

 

 In this Issue:

*       Gender as a terrain of the class struggles
<http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=4117#redpen> 

 

 


Gender as a terrain of the class struggles

 

 

By Walter Mothapo

SACP PEC member in Limpopo Province and a member of the Ike Maphoto Branch
of the ANC in Polokwane

 

 

The history of all hitherto existing societies is the history of class
struggles

 

Communist Manifesto, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, 1848

 

 

The context of our liberation struggle

 

In order for us to dissect the concept of gender we must first understand
the nature of the South African liberation struggle. Indeed, ours is,
fundamentally, first and foremost a class struggle. It is a struggle of one
part of the people against another. It is a struggle between those who own
the means of production and those who are forced to toil - expropriated of
all means of production and left only with their capacity to labour for a
living as wage labourers, the proletariat.

 

Those who own the means of production adopted and developed national
oppression and gender domination, not for their own sake, but for carrying
out and intensifying a policy of divide and rule. This involved diving the
working class along lines of race and sex. While the working class as a
whole, black and white, was exploited, the black working class was, in
addition, super-exploited as part of national oppression and gender
domination.

 

'The Path to Power', programme of the SACP adopted at the Seventh Party
Congress in 1989, clearly articulates the vision of our struggle and how the
struggle for gender transformation forms an integral part for the attainment
of that vision. 'The Path to Power' asserts that the struggle for national
liberation must be intertwined with the struggle to overcome the system of
capitalism. The document is among the first to point out that "in the case
of the majority of South African women, they suffer from triple oppression -
as women, as blacks and as workers".

 

Therefore the elimination of patriarchy and thus gender domination is both
an inherent and integral part of our struggle against the systems and
structures of oppression, and is itself a key feature of our national
liberation and class struggles.

 

'The Path to Power' further calls upon women to "fight shoulder to shoulder
with their brothers against colonialism and exploitation for a united,
non-racial, non-sexist and democratic South Africa". This represents a quest
to demystify the notion that gender struggles belong to women only, with an
emphasis that it is a struggle for both sexes. The document is succinct in
its call for society to stand against the distortion of African traditional
and cultural values to legitimise gender domination as characterised by the
oppression of women.

 

Gender perspectives by Engels

 

In 'The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State' written by
Frederick Engels in 1884, a point is made that during the early age of
societal formation, women were oppressed in a crude and barbaric manner as
there was no state, no laws and no instruments to regulate human behaviour.
Engels's analysis shows that even during the era of civilisation as
expressed by the existence of the state, the structural oppression of women
never changed since the state is an instrument of the ruling class meant for
holding down the oppressed - the exploited class. He points out to a
paradoxical, structural societal phenomenon that contrasts barbaric and
civilised periods in the oppression of women.

 

What Engels said some centuries ago resonates with the evolution of the
truth until now. King Mswati will, for instance, in the name of culture,
custom and tradition, abduct an 18 year old girl and forcefully marry her as
his wife. You will imagine that a King who benefitted from the First World
British education system would think twice before evoking such traditional
patriarchal tendencies. But, alas, as a member of the monarchical ruling
class in the context of Swaziland, he actually practices, to borrow from
Engels, 'barbaric tendencies'.

 

Pre- and Post-apartheid gender constructs

 

Gender scholars often refer to a concept of 'masculinity'. This happens when
men see themselves as having insatiable rights over women. The South African
Constitution guarantees rights to dignity for both men and women, but
because of the economic muscle and social standing that men have attained
over time there are some among them who believe the rights enshrined in the
constitution speak to men more than to women. These men believe such rights
are for them to exercise, and regard it as the duty of women to comply with
them.

 

Thus, women generally are still regarded by such men as reproductive more
than as productive beings. Even at the workplace women are seen to be adding
value only if part of their "informal job-description" is to sleep with
their male bosses. Some men and their ilk will go to an extent of blaming
women for enticing them to commit acts of sexual misconduct or adultery.

 

In this context, the masculine gender has all the permission and rights to
behave as recklessly as they wish while a feminine gender's duty is to
comply. Nothing in societal masculine idiosyncrasy ever points to men as
initiators or triggers in cases of sexual misconduct or happenings. Women
are always to blame as instruments and social weapons used by sinister
forces to overthrow men in their hard-earned positions of power. Actually it
is more like "Eve causing Adam a sin", not vice-versa, to evoke Biblical
interpretation.

 

The colonial and apartheid social fabric affirmed the white male as the
"baas" and the black male as the "garden boy"; the white boy was the "klein
baas" and had authority over black men. Similarly, the white female was
affirmed as the "madam" and the black female as the "kitchen girl". The
whole notion was that the real men and women were whites in contrast to
blacks who were demeaned and denigrated as less masculine and less feminine
respectively.

 

It is interesting that in the post-apartheid set-up the concept of
'masculinity' has evolved from historically privileged white males to
encompass economically well-off black males, some of who now see women as
objects who must aggrandise their newly attained socio-economic status. This
is exactly what Engels saw as the oppression of women both in the barbaric
and civilised epochs.

 

Our immediate tasks

 

It is the duty of all those who regard themselves as progressive people or
revolutionaries, to advance struggles for the transformation of gender
relations, and to ensure that they are multiplied by democratically winning
the majority to their side. This must be done with consciousness that these
struggles are an essential and integral part of the struggle for complete
liberation and socio-economic emancipation, and are simultaneously part of
the nucleus of class struggle. This calls upon us to practically undo such
constructs as 'masculinity' that reinforce the "objectification" of women
and lead to a deliberate attempt to confine women in the reproductive rather
than release them in the productive spheres of human activity.

 

Trade unions in particular are inherently central in the dialectical pursuit
of gender struggles as part and parcel of the class struggle because the
mere insertion of women in the workplace where all sorts of exploitation
take place does not do away with their oppression even though it represents
a step forward.

 

 

 

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