Claire Goldberg Moses, Made in America PDF
Claire Goldberg Moses, Made in America PDF
Claire Goldberg Moses, Made in America PDF
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Feminist Studies
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MADE IN AMERICA:
"FRENCH FEMINISNM' IN ACADEMIA
Feminist Studies 24, no. 2 (summer 1998). ? 1998 by Feminist Studies, Inc.
241
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242 Claire Goldberg Moses
'"FENCH FEMINISM' I:
FRENCH WOMEN WRITE THEIR HISTORY
During the past two decades, French scholars and move
activists have produced several histories and personal r
spectives that focus on the 1970s and early 1980s, the
during which "French feminism" as a category first ap
in U.S. publications. The earliest of these French wo
Anne Tristan and Annie de Pisan's 1977 Histoires du M.L.F~
More recent studies include two histories of the women's liber-
ation movement in Paris: Franqoise Picq's Liberation des
femmes: Les Annies-mouvement (1993) and Monique Remy's
De L'Utopie a l'int6gration: Histoire des mouvements de
femmes (1990); a 1981 volume introduced by Simone de Beau-
voir, Chroniques d'une imposture: Du Mouvement de liberation
des femmes & une marque commerciale, which focuses on one
important split in the French movement and includes articles
by Christine Delphy, Genevieve Fraisse, and Marie-Jo Dhaver-
nas; and a history of the movement in Lyon (Chronique d'une
passion: Le Mouvement de libdration des femmes ' Lyon) pub-
lished in 1989. Articles by engaged intellectuals have appeared
in feminist periodicals and in a 1991 collection, Crises de la so-
cidtd: Fdminisme et changement, edited by the Groupe d'Etudes
Feministes de 1'UniversitW Paris VII.2
In all these histories, the central protagonist is the Mouve-
ment de libdration des femmes (MLF)-the women's liberation
movement-which, like the U.S. movement at the same mo-
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Claire Goldberg Moses 243
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244 Claire Goldberg Moses
confirming a conversation
the importance of French tr
nine Mystique and Kate Mill
French demonstrations des
the media-the laying of a w
soldier in honor of the unknown soldier's unknown wife-was
planned in solidarity with the first nationwide feminist demon-
stration in the United States, the August 26, 1970, "strike" on
the fiftieth anniversary of woman suffrage. Picq identifies the
importance of early texts by the Redstockings and other U.S.
radical feminists published in Notes from the Second Year; and
works by Carol Hanisch, Anne Koedt, Naomi Weisstein, and
Margaret Bentsen were translated and republished in a sum-
mer 1970 special issue of Partisans. The British women's liber-
ation conference at Ruskin College, Oxford, is also frequently
mentioned and was clearly important to French MLF
activists.8
At first, French feminist theoretical work was published in
already existing Left periodicals like Les Temps modernes, Par-
tisans, or L'Arc. In 1971, the MLF's own Torchon briile was
first published. In 1973, the group Psych et po founded a pub-
lishing house, des femmes, which brought out Quotidien des
femmes, and next, Des femmes en mouvements-journals that
reached an audience numbering in the tens of thousands.9 In
1977, came Histoires d'Elles, followed in 1978 by Cahiers du
fdminisme. Liliane Kandel counts thirty-five feminist periodi-
cals circulating nationally in 1979, among which were several
important scholarly publications: the women's history journal
Pindlope; La Revue d'en face; and Questions frministes, now
published as Nouvelles questions fdministes under the editor-
ship of Christine Delphy.10
The theory that one reads in these publications focuses pri-
marily on patriarchy and its institutions of social control. Al-
though the struggle for abortion was the central organizing
crucible throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, abortion poli-
tics were embedded in a broader theoretical discourse chal-
lenging patriarchal constructions of the family, housework,
heterosexuality, and especially motherhood. Rape, woman bat-
tering, and pornography were frequent topics in the late 1970s
and into the 1980s. Much of the theory was published anony-
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246 Claire Goldberg Moses
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252 Claire Goldberg Moses
English-language translati
Cixous in 1975 and 1976 an
ses of the French movement
ference, edited by Hester E
lished papers from a Barnar
discussions by Jane Gallop
ton, among others, of theor
Irigaray. In the same year E
vron's New French Feminism
1981, a cluster of articles "
feminism was published in
Section on French Feminis
Moi's Sexual /Textual Politic
opposed "French" to "Anglo
featured Cixous, Irigaray, an
land in 1985. Together these
for the American-and also B
"French feminism."
This construction was a process rather than a single event.
Its first stage was the introduction to American audiences of
Kristeva, Cixous, and Irigaray as French writers, although not
yet as "French feminists." Consider the inaugural issue of
Signs, which included a translated excerpt from Kristeva's Des
Chinoises (On the women of China). The accompanying editori-
al described Kristeva as "among the most provocative and re-
spected contemporary French intellectuals"; nothing was said
to connect her to feminism, and Signs did not then provide the
biographical information about its authors that might have
identified Kristeva's political affiliations. Nor did the editorial
speak of the significance of Des Chinoises to French feminism.
Readers unfamiliar with French writers-surely the vast ma-
jority of Signs' readers in 1975-probably read the article for
the light it might shed on Chinese women, not on France.
Readers introduced to Cixous in the pages of Signs would
not have learned much that would place her in relation to a so-
cial and political movement. The editorial for the summer 1976
issue, which included Cixous's "Laugh of the Medusa"-a mani-
festo for what came to be called "6criture f6minine"--described
Cixous only as a "French writer, scholar, and initiator of a doc-
torate in women's studies at the University of Paris." A brief
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254 Claire Goldberg Moses
French-language literature
the important role of obtaini
lations and analyses for Sig
feminist publications, pub
most U.S. readers would hav
nize the omission of other fo
tice. In hindsight, it is the co
the women's movement tha
not certain I noticed it at th
from Paris" even claimed to
academic, discipline-specif
take for a feminist movemen
identified Cixous, Kristeva, a
"intellectuals," never as femi
in reading into these articles
I assumed that Cixous was a
me, identified with a "wom
in her review essay, inform
had problematized the word
then again, in The Second S
the position of early-twentie
sociated herself from "fem
ased and narrow in its interest.27
I think it not surprising, therefore, that in the United States
the trio of already celebrated theorists-Cixous, Kristeva, and
Irigaray-became identified with French feminism despite the
protestations of at least Cixous and Kristeva that they were not
feminists. By the end of the 1970s, the section of the Barnard
College conference on "Difference" that was devoted to these
particular women could be entitled "Contemporary Feminist
Thought in France." This formulation in the Barnard confer-
ence papers, published as The Future of Difference in 1980, was
reinforced by the publication in that same year of Elaine
Marks and Isabelle de Courtivron's New French Feminisms: An
Anthology, the volume I believe most significant of all for con-
structing "our" French feminism.28
It is illuminating to return to The Future of Difference and
New French Feminisms with my present purpose in mind.
Domna Stanton's article in The Future of Difference, "Lan-
guage and Revolution: The Franco-American Dis-Connection,"
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262 Claire Goldberg Moses
"history," as if historians m
without pondering their m
understanding the human c
entists are uncomfortable with and defensive about a lot of in-
terdisciplinary women's studies scholarship, oftentimes with-
out understanding why. I suggest that this is because there is
inadequate acknowledgment that our so-called interdiscipli-
nary field is not so very interdisciplinary after all. Those who
feel excluded from that which is supposedly interdisciplinary
worry that their particular contribution to the larger feminist
intellectual project is diminishing.
We have set ourselves a worthy goal in aspiring to interdis-
ciplinarity in feminist scholarship: anything less narrows and
limits our understanding of women's situation in all its aspects
and focuses us instead on academic agendas not shaped with
women's interests in mind. Nonetheless, if we are to manage
interdisciplinarity, I suggest we must begin by being more, not
less, explicit in presenting our disciplinary origins, speaking
carefully across our scholarly differences with care that others
understand the value of our work and that we understand the
value of others' work to a common project.
It was in looking at the disciplinary origins of made-in-
America French feminism that I came to examine debates not
only within interdisciplinary women's studies but also within
the field of literature itself. Here one discovers a "French theo-
ry" that pre-existed "French feminism" in the U.S. academy,
and one comes to recognize that for many American feminists
in literature studies, "French feminism" was a feminist politi-
cal practice, a strategy for placing both women theorists and
the topic of gender centrally into their field of scholarship
alongside a group of French male theorists who had already
captured their colleagues' attention.58
Sociologist of knowledge Michble Lamont has written about
the diffusion of "French theory" in the United States, linking
its increased popularity to the vacuum left in literature studies
following successful critiques of New Criticism.59 She credits a
key conference, held at Johns Hopkins University in 1966, for
introducing structuralist and poststructuralist theories to
American scholars and also mentions a special issue of Yale
French Studies published that same year. She explains that
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264 Claire Goldberg Moses
Communications (1977), Cr
(1983), Cultural Anthropolo
Diacritiques (1971), Feminis
tober (1976), Raritan (1981
text(e) (1974), Social Text (1
and Society (1974).61 It is in
ticles by Cixous and Kriste
1976 and, a few years later
first published.
Of course, the particular t
theory" no more constitute
criticism than the American-selected "French feminists" con-
stitute the French feminist movement. But in both cases, the
special interest of academic literary critics in the 1970s is ob-
vious: the engagement with discourses, the disinterest in
events. In the case of "made-in-America French feminism,"
what we have is "theory" without "history"-a disconnection of
feminist theory from its political and social context. When U.S.
scholars and students throughout the United States routinely
cite Kristeva, Irigaray, and Cixous, there is little discussion of
what has been happening to French women or even to French
feminists.
Think of the power relationships involved here: as Jane Jen-
son has pointed out, there are some American scholars who
have referred recently to a French "colonization" of the U.S.
mind.62 The metaphor places France in the position of power
and conveys some discontent on the part of "colonized" Ameri-
cans. But I'm suggesting that the reverse is at play: that it is
U.S. feminists who are in the dominant position and that have
expropriated one aspect of French culture for purposes here,
with little regard for the French or the French context. Refer-
ences to the discourse of postcolonialism should lead us to this
kind of understanding: as feminists, multiculturalists, or left-
ists, we have become aware that we abuse our power over peo-
ples when we exoticize them, expropriate an aspect of their cul-
ture by decontextualizing it and using it for our purposes, with
little interest in the people themselves. The relationship be-
tween feminists in the United States and in France is similar:
the aspect that has interested U.S. feminists is the least char-
acteristic of French feminism and the most different from ours;
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NOTES
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