Feminism, Anti-Racism and the Feminism Demands of the Gay Movement
14 October 1980 Marxism Today aims — the defence of living standards, existing services, jobs, wage levels and the political rights of different oppressed groups — but also around the more long term aim of building a movement which can Tricia Davis effectively challenge this right-wing coherence and produce its own concrete, alternative and total vision of society. We must, in short, and Catherine Hall examine our potential for developing a unified grouping of diverse social forces and movements, whose homogeneity will rest not on the experience of oppression, whether as workers, women, blacks or gays, but on a common, and painfully achieved, political strategy. We must The Forward Face of ask ourselves whether we can help to build feminist, anti-racist and gay movements which are also anti-capitalist, whether we can create a trade union and labour movement which is not only anti-capitalist but also takes on with equal seriousness, feminism, anti-racism and the Feminism demands of the gay movement. CONFRONTING THE DIFFERENCES Here we want to concentrate on two questions. The first is the need for feminism to make a satisfactory alliance with socialism and die problems of building such an alliance both in general and in the Hilary Wainwright, in her introduction to the new edition of Beyond specific situation of the 80s. This involves looking critically at ways in the Fragments, begins by pointing to the Left's failure to extend which the challenge -of the Women's Liberation Movement is being socialist consciousness and the overlapping nature of inequality and received on the Left and at some alternative positions within the sources of exploitation and oppression.
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