No Woman, No
Revolution, Part 9b
Women’s Power
During this
course we have looked at the “woman’s question” in a practical way. Especially
we have said that it is a revolutionary necessity that the women should be
organised en masse in order that they
should become a collective “Subject of History”. But we have not extensively
examined this thing called “Subject of History” during this particular course.
Simply,
being a “Subject of History” means having the power to act, as in the
revolutionary slogan “Power to the People!” It means being free. It means
having “agency”.
The item
linked below is “Postmodernism and Hindu Nationalism” by Meera Nanda [pictured]. This piece of
writing can help readers to understand how, in a triple context of philosophy,
national liberation and feminism, the crucial or pivotal point of struggle is
usually exactly this question of agency.
Meera Nanda
is a secular rational humanist philosopher in general, and an expert on Hindu
nationalism, bourgeois feminism and anti-humanist postmodernism in particular.
Postmodernist
philosophy, reactionary nationalism and mystical feminism all bear down upon
the concept of freedom, attempting to crush it. All try to return the people in
general, and women in particular, to a condition of relentless bondage and
victimhood of circumstances.
What is
common to all of these aspects, whether in India or in South Africa, is the
evacuation of popular agency and the refusal of the mass Subject of History
following the liberation struggle, which in the case of both India and South
Africa promised precisely this thing - freedom - above all other things.
In India
the promise was “Swaraj” and in South Africa,
“Power to the People”. Independence and national sovereignty were supposed to
be inseparable from mass popular agency, and vice versa.
In
practice, political independence co-existed with bourgeois dictatorship and
neo-colonialism, and these latter factors trumped and negated the mass popular
power, including organised women’s power.
Revolutionary
organs of people’s power were dismantled. Golden Calves were raised up in place
of the slogans of popular power. These substitutes were the slogans of
bourgeois nationalism, national mystique, women’s solidarity versus men, and the
cult that holds inanimate things (the earth, the environment) to be more
valuable than humanity.
In all
cases the best remedy will be that of the SACP: Educate, Organise and Mobilise.
- The above is to introduce the original reading-text: Postmodernism, Hindu nationalism, Vedic science, Nanda, 2004, Part 1 and Part 2.
- To download any of the CU courses in PDF files please click here.
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