4 Wednesday, November 11, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Hoge Five We~s~, oebr 1 90 H IHIA ALYPg v Dia Shulamith Firestone, THE DIALECTIC OF SEX: T H E CASE FOR THE FEMINIST REVOLUTION, William Mor- row, $6.59. By CAROLYN C. LOUGEE The Dialectic of Sex is the latest of the feminist writings that aspire to join Sexual Poli- tics on the bestseller list. Un- fortunately, The Dialectic of Sex is simplistic, often preten- tious, and far below the quality of Kate Millett's work. I t s informative sections are deriva- tive, its original ones uninform- ative. Its primary value lies not in its thesis or scholarship but in its insights into the problems women face 'and the issues which concern both moderate and radical feminism. When Millett's work m i g h t be called the "Manifesto" of the new feminism, Shulamith Fire- store offers its German Ideology: an effort to free the movement from the value judgments of utopian-reformist feminists by penetrating to the REAL sci- entific-objective bases of human history - the dialectic of sex. According to this new dialec- tic, the most fundamental divi- sion in human history is the di- vision of labor between the sexes for the purposes of ,childbreed- ing: husband as owner, wife as means of production, and child- ren as labor. This sexual division precedes the division into eco- nomic classes and determines all of cultural history. "Beneath economics, reality is psychosex- ual"; a true materialist v i e w y of history can only be based on the "sexual substratum of t h e historical dialectic." Correct- ing Marx and Engels, Firestone declares: Historical materialist is that view of the course of history which seeks the ultimate _ cause and the great moving Fi ectic o power of all historic events in' the dialectic of sex: the divi- sion of society into two dis- tinct biological classes for pro- creative reproduction, and the struggles of these classes with one another; in the changes in the modes of marriage, re- production and childcare; in the related development of other physically-differentiated classes [castes]; and in the sex: nomic modes of production and exchange of goods and services. The sexual-reproduc- tive organization of society always furnishes the real basis, starting from which we can alone work out the ulti- mate explanation of the whole superstructure 'of economic, juridical and political institu- tions as well as of the relig- ious, philosophical and other Making ideas of Marxism and of the his- torical process will be convinced I that sexism is "the ultimate cause and the great moving power of all historic events."' It is a shame that this gim- 1 mick obscures so much of the sense of the book. Beneath the paraphernalia of c the dialectic, Firestone's basic c argument is that of other radi- 1 cal feminists: the argument that c it on A book first division of labor based on sex which developed into the [economic] class system. All past history was the his- tory of class struggle. These warring classes of society are always the product of t h e modes of organization of the biological family unit for re- production of the species, as well as of the strictly eco- for the (Oh say can you see the ele- ments of Greek tragedy?) At first life in the commune ran sweetly to the beat of crude dances and easily-manufactured drugs. New converts spread the word all along the East Coast, as similar groups sprouted. Then somehow, Corey's carefully built structure came crashing around their heads, as inner corruption and the 'police eliminated the tribe. Marge Piercy, DANCE THE EAGLE TO SLEEP, Doubleday, $5.95. By HANNAH MORRISON Dance The Eagle To Sleep is the literary version of skim milk: it attempts to 'mention all the current issues, but mere- ly becomes less rich in the pro- cess. This "now" novel focuses on everything from communal ideas of a given historical period. It is difficult to paraphrase this dialectic of sex because it so easily lapses into parody. It is not a true dialectic, despite the elaborate charts. The mis- use of Marxist apparatus adds nothing to Firestone's analysis except to attach her to Marx's coattails. And few with c le a r " movies look, fur rugs for that Tribal Pow Wow, genuine (more or less) buffalo greatcoats for Shaggy Male Splendor ... This analysis of advertising ties in with a later explanation of the generation gap: "For years the culture had been tell- ing everbody through every boob tube that only youth was sexual and beautiful, and that all an over-twenty-five shmuck like like you could do was buy Brand X to look a little more youthful . . . Thus is a people conditioned to hate its young and focus its frustrations down upon them in a vast dream of those half-dependent. half-in dependent children, demanding and rebelling and threatening.. . It was Them Versus Us: the first step in the psychological conditioning for war." In their turn, the youth re- belled because of social pressures that transform people into sub- humans. As Corey said, "It's bet- ter to live your own death than somebody else's life." The novel also makes some relevant points about the tend- ency of groups to suffer picay- une ideological splits, at the time when unity is most needed: "The more threatening the si- tuation grew and the graver the danger of imprisonment and death, the more the kidsdseemed to want to stay huddled in familiar rooms arguing theory with each other, each reaf- firming his own militancy and dogmatism in the face of his 'enemies,' the other . faction across the room." All the statements were scary, but the worst was the violence. It stalked through the pages, reeking. The same can be said for the sex scenes. Whatever this book lacksas a novel, it could make a great movie, if handled in the right way. Can't you see it now, in technicalor and Panavision? sexual inequality and the de- velopment of two personality- power systems (dominant and submissive) do not spring di- rectly from two different psychosexual essences. Q u i t e realistically, she argues t h a t oppression of women results from the natural functioning of the female reproductive p r o - cesses: women who produce children and, through the ethos and organization of the biologi- cal family are required to care for them, cannot escape in- equality and oppression. Therefore, oppression can be solved only by the complete eli- mination of the sex distinction itself ("a synthesis of human sex") and of the family. Once reproductive processes are total- ly eliminated, the sole differ- ences (genital) between men and women will be entirely without importance. In Firestone's view, the eli- mination of sexual reproduction is a real possibility. For birth control and artificial reproduc- tion will enable women to aban- don the bodily functions which have so long kept them enslaved. Now (or soon) for the f i r s t time in history the "precondi- tions" exist for "freeing women from the tyranny of their sex- ual-reproductive roles." Moderate feminists will ques- tion whether it is necessary to go so far. As the family has re- cently become the culprit for all of women's troubles, it has become unfashionable for a woman to admit that sex-repro- ductive roles have any satisfac- tions at all. But a great deal of the extreme anti-reproductive argument is nonsense. Consider this from Firestone : Pregnancy is barbaric . . . Childbirth hurts. And it is not good for you . . . Child- birth is at best necessary and tolerable. It is not fun. Granted that the cult of child- birth, the mystique surrounding it, have been powerful tools for keeping woman in her place - still, is it necessary, in order to overcome the tyranny of these roles, to abolish the roles entirely? Of course, here we Today's Writers ... Carolyn Lougee, a doctoral candidate in history, is writing her dissertation on 17th Cen- tury French feminism. Hannah Morrison, a soph- omore, is a reporter for the Daily. are at the heart of the disagree- ment between radical and mo- derate feminists. But even revolutionary fem- inists should question whether Firestone's utopia is desirable, even if the test-tube can make the womb obsolete. Her advo- cacy of a technocratic utopia is disturbing. She has faith that this utopia will succeed where others have failed because it alone eliminates the family and sexism (we are treated to a two- page summary of why the Rus- sian Revolution failed). And it will avoid the horrors associat- ed with 1984 because technol- ogy will be in the hands of revo- lutionaries themselves: the ap- parently magic antidote to all the dangers of technocracy. The utopia is most disturbing because Firestone is very anti- nature, both human and exter- nal nature. As she says, men need not be slaves to nature: men can and should control na- ture in the interest of human values. "Natural" is not neces- sarily "human". But she g o e s further than this is negate na- ture through technology, to overcome a nature she sees only as a hostile force. Ecology means to her the creation of a n e wv artificial environment through the destruction of nature: fem- inism means the replacement of human nature. Perhaps we see here the ul- timate extension of the mental- ity that would "engineer" everything, even "the funda- mental biological condition of humans." Apart from the dialectic and the utopia, The Dialectic of Sex does raise crucial issues. T h e discussion of modern concep- tions of childhood, while mostly a paraphrase of Philippe Aries. is particularly valuable. One of the weakest points of K a t e Millett's book is its poor histori- cal sense: not only the ve-r y pedestrian way in which she re- counts the history of Anglo- American feminism, but also her failure to see that both the modern feminist problem and the radical objections to it crystallize before - long be- fore - her 1830 starting point. Firestone at least points to the formative period for the nuclear family: the seventeenth cen- tury. But if feminists are going to understand where theyare and how they got there, they need in addition to study the surprising seventeenth-century feminist debate: the extreme feminism of the ladies of the For the student body: FLARES by ' Levi ' Farah Wright STads Sebring CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty one s ( French salons, who resisted family duties and the depend- ence of children on them, and of the Cartesians, who defended women's public role against Fenelon and Madame de Main- tenon, who sought to bar women from culture and from all public influence. In the chapter on the history, of American feminism Firestone again uses historical insights to clarify current problems. Ap- plying the lessons learned by the last generation of femin- ists, she implicitly rebukes wo- men who shun the movement. Women who prefer other re- form movements, Firestone says, are "in a sense viewing them- selves as defective men: women's issues seemed to them 'special', 'sectarian', while is- sues that concerned men were 'human', universal'." To those own eager to get women to join them. And'to the woman who chooses to "go it alone", Firestone re- joins that the problem is not a personal one but a social one, and therefore is not amenable to the "private solution". To which is should be added that perhaps the greatest danger the feminist movement faces today is its increasing isolation from important scientific re- search. Firestone argues that sex-reproductive roles must be abolished because they unjust- ly oppress one of the two human sexes which, aside from the re- productive proccesses, are iden- tncal. This is the most crucial 7 point in Sexual Politics as well as in The Dialectic of Sex: both brands of revolutionary femin- ism stand or fall on the prem- ise that psychosexual differenc- es do not exist apart from cul- tural conditioning. But sub- stantial amounts of current research in genetics and endo- chinology simply do not support the identity thesis. Therefore it may be risky for the feminist movement to build on its foun- dation. Feminists need to build a vigorous case for female equal- ity and liberation on a basis which neither totally denies sexual differences nor, at the other extreme, lapses into counter-productive functional- ism. who prefer partisan political activities she answers with a quote from Charlotte Perkins Gilman: The power women will be able to exercise lies with their not joining a party system of men. The party system of politics is a trick of men to conceal the real issues. Women should work for the measures they want outside of party politics. It is because the old political parties realize that woman's influence will be negligible on the inside that they are so ARTISTS WANTED to contribute illustrative material to the MICH- IGANENSIAN, U. of M.'s Yearbook. No limit on subject matter. (Black and white preferable. Nothing larger than 15"x16"). All work will be returned by publisher. For further information, call Katrina at 761-3314 or 'Ensian office, 764- :...r:} ............"r...« n ...PIY:.::r..r.a"..r.."h""::.:};4""}"n"r::{.."""... . :". :4. . . ..ti" d~:{". { JryY i . Jfti JJti M1Y fJ J OJ ++ tir b 0 0 k s Phoenix Eye View 1" of Sociology INTRODUCTION TO THE SCIENCE OF SOCIOLOGY Including an Index to Basic Sociological Concepts Student Edition Robert E. Park and Ernest W. Burgess Abridged and with a New Preface by Morris Janowitz "Any student of today who reads in it will be a better sociologist and a more civilized human being."-New Society $4.75 fth, CHICAGO SOCIOLOGY: 1920-1932 Robert E. L. Faris With a Foreword by Morris Janowitz____ _______ The department of sociology at The University J of Chicago was the first in the United States. : Faris outlines its history, the main lines of research and teaching, and the major publications of its members from the turn of the century to World War II, high- lighting its most productive years. $2.75 URBAN SOCIOLOGY A Selection from "Contributions to Urban Sociology" Edited by Ernest W. Burgess and Donald J. Bogue Readings in sociology touching on such aspects of urban} research as ethnic, racial, and religious tensions, street corner society, prejudice, and crime. Contributors include Philip M. Hauser, Nathan Keyfitz, William Foote Whyte, and E. Franklin Frazier. $2.95 The University of Chicago Press Phoenix Paperbacks living and drugs to women's lib- eration, but never r e a 11l y scratches the surface. 4 The author, a former Hop- wood Award winner, devotes a few chapters to sketching the four principle characters and filllingrin theirdiverse back- grounds. The remainder iex- plores the consequences. Like a traditionalist, all the loose threads are neatly tucked away by the end. It is sufficient to satisfy the practical reader but bores the sophisticated. The two foils, Bill and Corey, are linked throughout the book, first during the revolution in , their high school and later in the resulting subculture. Corey, a rebellious half-breed Indian, has a vision and the charisma to communicate it: "With the strength of the buffalo, he was to destroy the eagle of empire and lead the tribes to water." Taking over the school was on- ly the beginning, a means of mobilizing support. Later it would be all (of) society. In the meantime, Corey tried to sepa- rate his followers from the pres- sures of the surrounding cul- ture by forming communes on farms as well as in New York. Bill, on the other hand, had been a model student before the "teentsy" revolution. Until Corey adopted him, he had been soli- tary in his brilliance. "'hen the ex-freak and would-be physicist became Corey's henchman, head " of the warriors. In this position he plotted Corey's destruction. Bill, who had assumed control in New York,rcommanded his warriors in a riot on the lower East Side, causing untold dam- age. The communes were forced to disband as members fled West or were killed. The glorious dream ended, b 1 e e d i n g and whimpering. Despite the triteness of the plot and shallow characters, Dance The Eagle To Sleep makes some frighteningly ac- curate statements. One concerns the role of the mass media: The brunt of the media attack on them, the 'line' of explana- tion, was set by a group of ex-radicals and left-liberals comfortably housed in various universities. It was a real ul- cerated hatred that seethed in the works they produced that analyzed the phenomena of the Indians. At the same time, teen magazines pushed the buck and the squaw look, with fringed shirts and beads ind expensive deerskin moccasins and boots, with beaded head- bands and feather hats that looked like run-over chickens dipped in paint pots, wampun belts, clay peace pipes, Deers- layer tunics for that huntress 0 I 16 CHICAGO: A school system with a goal: Teaching $8,400 starting salary (10 months) 10 days paid vacation * 10 days sick leave Paid hospitalization The Chicago Public Schools will have a representative on campus o Nov. 18, 1970 . Please arrange for an interview with the Placement Office. " ., :.... .:.:.: . .. . ... . . .. . . .. . . . .. ,. . . .. .. . . .. . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . : : . ... t:. . f. : : :._ : . .... .... :.... . ... ..............:.. ........... ...... ......::::::._-:::".:..:.:,.::..:<;: :::. . . ::. SPECIAL---THIS WEEK ONLY---Wednesday-Saturday, Noy. 11-14 Uair Shapin Reg. $ 5.00 **. IN i