From Biscuit's blog:
blue author wrote:Doesn’t seem funny? Well, I had to think about it before realizing what struck me as weird about it.
I’ve talked before about how hazy the actual end game of radical feminism’s gender abolition is, but this post made me realize something else:they don’t have much of a start game, either.
Radical feminism isn’t even an Underpants Gnome plan, where there’s a clearly defined start and end but the middle is a mystery. There’s no beginning.
Think about it: radical feminists attack queer politics and liberal feminism for pursuing incremental changes within the system, for trying to evolve the paradigm or create more flexibility and mobility within it. They also claim not to believe in violence.
Well, there are two ways to change a paradigm. There’s the evolutionary approach, where incremental changes add up over time until you wind up with something completely unrecognizable, and there’s the revolutionary approach.
The impression I've gotten from my admittedly very limited exposure to them is radfems have a very Protestant-ish vision of how their revolution would work, where the real strength of the patriarchy is as a system of symbols and the only way to truly fight it is to get women to reject its symbol system inside their own heads, and a successful revolution is what will happen when some critical mass of women do that. They're contemptuous of institutional fixes because they think it's all about symbol manipulation and the ideas in people's heads, and changing institutions without
first changing that will never get you a culture that does more than pay lip service to anything but the pre-existing symbol complex.
It strikes me as strongly showing the mark of having come out of a social science/humanities academic space. "I live by studying symbols and ideas, therefore I assume that symbols and ideas are the most powerful and important thing, and the ability to study, understand, and manipulate symbols and ideas is the greatest power."
Would you say there's any truth to this analysis?