From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Mon Jul 22 2002 - 11:24:08 MDT
On 22 Jul 2002 at 13:18, Walpurgis wrote:
> Another interesting essay Joe, you are quite a writer! Some coments follow:
> 
I didn't write it; go to:
http://www.secularislam.org/women/postmodern.htm
> >      In the Middle Eastern countries,
> >     opposition to 'imperialist culture' has been considered as an
> >     element of the fight against imperialism. Women have been the
> >     victims of the struggle against 'imperialist culture' and
> >     "Westernism". This is because women's liberation and women's
> >     rights were seen as imperialist and western concepts.
> >     Traditionalist, religious and reactionary forces opposed women's
> >     liberation in the name of fighting Imperialism and the West. 
> 
> I recall reading Mary Daly's Gyn/Ecology from 1979. She wrote that cultural 
> relativism would not stop women defending other women from the misogynistic 
> values of cultures that burn, mutiliate, rape and kill women. She supported an 
> universal rights based on her ideas of female essence.
> 
> >     Under the guise of avoiding orientalism, racism and
> >     Euro-centerism, these theories have justified and continue to
> >     justify the attacks on women's rights,
> 
> Guise? Is this a conspiracy? Or just a mistake?
> 
> >     Post-modern
> >     theories emerged in the 1980s; at the time of the rise of
> >     conservatism, the attacks of capitalist market economy, the
> >     international ideological shifts and imbalances, the
> >     anti-secularist backlash and the rise of political Islam. These
> >     theories were the by-products of a time of uncertainty, darkness,
> >     setbacks and backlash.
> 
> I'm dubious about the simply cause and effect you posit here. Post-modernity is 
> likely the result of other factors, part of a complicated picture, not necessarily the 
> bastard child of this desperate struggle.
> 
> >     Post-modern theories have increasingly
> >     questioned the project of Enlightenment.
> 
> Good. Universalism and essentialism is just as dangerous and irresponsible as 
> relativism.
> 
> >     These theories criticize
> >     the ideals of truth, rationality, system, foundation, certainty
> >     and coherence. They refute a universal view on history, the world,
> >     and society as a whole and believe in fragmentation and
> >     differences, since according to these views, the history of
> >     humanity does not evolve in a universal direction toward modern
> >     and secularist norms and values. These theories doubt system and a
> >     universal truth, and base their essence on differences and
> >     fragmentation. 
> 
> Good. These ideas need critiquing. Science also provides counter-point to these 
> lofty ideals.
> 
> >     From this standpoint the history has reached to its
> >     end, modernism failed to achieve its commitments, and secularism
> >     and universalism, all became empty words and terms. According to
> >     post-modern views, the dichotomy of oppressed and oppressor,
> >     oppressive regimes and people under their rule, backward cultural
> >     and religious values and women's liberation, are invalid and do
> >     not exist anymore. 
> 
> At this point I sense a profound problem with the essay - how do you make such 
> generalisations about post-modern theory, with defintion of it, or even references to 
> any of its proponents? Who made these claims of invalidty? When? Where? Who 
> supported it? Which po-mos didn't?
> 
> >     These theories tell us that the universality of
> >     women's rights, modernity and secularism are all products of the
> >     evolution of western societies and therefore inapplicable and
> >     incompatible to non-western societies where indigenous cultural
> >     and religious values and norms are different than the West.
> 
> They seem to be. rights are useful, but certianly not absolute. To conceive of them, 
> and implement them as universal measures is just and laudable, to make any 
> ontological claims about their objective reality is false.
> 
> >     Therefore, dominant secularist ideologies must be questioned and
> >     resisted where the viable traditions of social organization such
> >     as Islam can lay the framework for a more humane and egalitarian
> >     society. 
> 
> What po-mos suported Islam? Who would swop secularism for another patriarchal 
> religion?
> 
> >     "Secularism is not a separation between religion and the state, as
> >     propagated in both western and Arab writing. Rather, it is the
> >     removal of absolute values- epistemological and ethical- from the
> >     world such that the entire world-humanity and nature alike-
> >     becomes merely a utilitarian object to be utilised and subjugated.
> 
> Removal of absolute values does not necessarily result in oppression.
> 
> >     According to identity politics and cultural relativism,
> >     women's quest for legal, political and economic equality is
> >     considered as culturally specific. It permits the justification of
> >     practices that oppress and dehumanise women in non- western
> >     cultures, when similar practices would be condemned as outrageous,
> >     unacceptable and barbaric in western culture. 
> 
> Who's identity politics? 
> Cultral specification does not necessarily rsult in oppression.
> 
> >     The pressure
> >     on women living in the Middle Eastern countries to denounce
> >     concepts of women's rights as western, as ethnic specific and
> >     irrelevant to non- western contexts is one of the destructive and
> >     damaging consequences of these views. 
> 
> Perhaps the pressure is so great because WE have sold-out on women's rights. We 
> still do not live in an equal society, we are still dogged and poisoned by sexism. 
> What must our feminisms mean to the rest of the world when there are still these 
> problems? This is a mistaken perspective, but one which women elsewhere might 
> have of us.
> 
> >     Juliette Minces has argued that they are not ready "to
> >     undergo an emancipation which throws into question a non - secular
> >     equilibrium which has the full backing of religion" 
> 
> It seems to me that emancipation is a necessary condition for the full modernisation 
> Islamic countries so desire. One cannot have a technological revolution without a 
> cultural one.
> 
> >     One dramatic
> >     example is the silence of feminists in the West in face of
> >     systematic suppression of women's basic human rights in Iran and
> >     countries under the rule of Islamic regimes and under the pressure
> >     of Islamic movements. 
> 
> Perhaps being called "islamophobic" makes them scared? But it shouldn't.
> 
> >Another example is the denial of asylum
> >     rights to people especially women fleeing oppression and
> >     gender-based persecution such as honour killing, forced marriage,
> >     stoning to death, veil and other Islamic practices and oppressive
> >     customs, under the name of respecting indigenous culture and
> >     religion. 
> 
> I believe it is the MEN who rule our governments that deny these rights.
> 
> >The third example is the way Western governments and
> >     their judicial systems treat the basic human rights of women and
> >     girls in the Islamic families and Islamic communities in the West,
> >     in face of forced marriage, honour killing, imposing the veil on
> >     girls under 16 which deprives them from social activities and
> >     enjoying their basic rights. Presumably what is happening to women
> >     in those countries and communities is what they deserve and is
> >     more than enough for them. 
> 
> Here you seem to conflate postmodernity with racism.
> 
> >The conceptual frameworks laid by
> >     identity politics and cultural relativism prevent many western
> >     intellectuals including women's rights activists from seeing and
> >     appreciating the diversified women's movements in the Middle East.
> 
> No. ID politics allowed feminists to underastand that women of different 
> classes/races/ethnicities/ages/etc had different needs than the white middle -class 
> women who were the main feminist writers. This does not condone abuse, slavery, 
> harm etc etc etc. The differences that were recognised we're in what women wanted 
> from freedom and how they were to get it - but the main concern for all was the 
> same.
> Freedom.
> 
> Despite these observations, I salute you for being concerned with gender equality.
> Thanks for the read,
> Walpurgis
> 
> 
> 
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> http://www.noumenal.net/exiles
> 
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> http://www.guardian.co.uk/humanrights/story/0,7369,731074,00.html
> 
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> 
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