Feminism,
Futures Studies And The Futures Of Feminist Research
by
Ivana
Milojevic[1]
In 1995, we are part of thirty years of intensive feminist
research. In these thirty years, research conducted from a feminist
perspective has gone into many, sometimes even surprising,
directions. Women's studies now deal with women's issues from many
different viewpoints, feminist writers and researchers are coming
from many different fields, traditions, and schools of thoughts. In
these article, I examine the relationship between feminist and
future research and also to contemplate how feminist research might
possibly look in the future.
FEMINIST
RESEARCH IS FUTURE ORIENTED
In one respect, almost every feminist research is inevitably
futuristic. As feminism is a program for social change, feminists
are concerned with offering alternative visions of the future.
Change is also incorporated into the feminist understanding
of social reality. Seeing, for example, norms of the objectivity,
customs, law, religion, science, and other areas as historically and
socially constructed, gives greater opportunity for redefinition,
for reconstruction, for questioning givens, for more radical
transformation, for change. What
is seen as man made could be woman remade. Therefore, feminist
research does not only include extrapolation, forecasting, and
analysis of current trends but alternative visions, as well, even if
these are seen by many as unfeasible utopias.
However, feminists tend to concentrate more on preferred
visions and scenarios because extrapolation does not give us much
hope for the future. If the future is just "a bit more of the
same", then feminist goals would be achieved in hundreds if not
thousands (and hundred thousands) of years.
Of course, as there are many types of futures activities, the
feminist movement does not correspond to all of them. In terms of
specializing for different topics, or using different approaches
there is a 'division of labor' within futures field. Some believe
that futures field should be filled with analysis of trends,
particularly analysis of technological developments or predictions,
and even one of the most potential futuristic areas, science
fiction, is predominantly derived from technological forecasting.
Some futurists still believe in the 'neutral' role of a scientist
who merely stands aside and marks, describes and predicts our nearby
or distant future. On the other hand, there are more and more
futurists who believe in futurism which is critical, value driven,
and empancipatory, creating preferable futures.[2]
It is as much an "academic field as it is a social
movement",[3]
more concerned with creating instead of predicting the
future. One of the central techniques used in this type of a futures
work is empowerment. This technique is also used by many feminists.
Empowering is seen as something which "involves giving people
the ability, the power, to participate in the creation of their own
futures".[4]
Within this distinction feminism clearly stands on the side
of those who "study likely alternatives (the probable)"
and are more concerned about making 'choices to bring about a
particular future (the preferable)'.[5]
The main focus is in the area of social futures, with constant
critical and epistemological questioning about assumptions,
paradigms, goals, values and purposes. Feminists often reject
different schemes, tables and other 'impersonal' tools, coming
closer to ancient and even 'new age' futurism which prefers
intuition or imagination as specific subjective and qualitative
research methods.[6]
There is also a clear distinction among futurists (in both
approaches) who are more in favor of pessimistic visioning, so
called dystopias (or counter utopias) concerned with catastrophes
and decline and those who are incurably optimistic. It is quite easy
to locate feminism within these two traditions. As with most other
social movements (especially so called 'modern' ones) feminism
promises us a bright future if only we follow some of its main
ideological principles. Feminism not only chooses utopias
consciously, it also needs them for many futures are mostly
redefined ideological
values and patterns, in accordance with short and long term
political, personal (with and linking relationship between the two)
and social goals. Without utopias, feminist ideology and activity
would lose some of its strength; while without ideology and praxis,
feminist utopias would remain pure ideals, inaccessible, out of
history and social reality, more or less irrelevant.[7]
In relationship to ideology, utopias, and movements, there is
an important question in front of feminists. How much is feminist
research and feminist output connected to the real world? And are
feminist some sort of women's elite, who actually don't represent
anyone else but themselves? We
know that there is sometimes a huge discrepancy between most
'ordinary' women's and feminist's opinions and attitudes. Here a few
important points have to be made.
First, since gender roles are one of the most strongly
defined among all of our roles, viewed as natural and not
susceptible for a change, it is not surprising that a perspective
which challenges deeply rooted believes confronts so much
resistance, both by men and women (who have internalized basic
patriarchal values); Second, feminism defines itself in terms
of having an open approach, and feminist researchers do try and
listen to the women they are researching, such that in many cases
the starting hypothesis is changed and redefined (as with
participatory action research); Third, most women do agree
with feminist goals and ideas, but resist defining themselves as
feminist since from the beginning of the feminist movement, there
has been so much condemnation and sneering at feminists.
However, feminist research has proven to be 'successful' in
uncovering hidden structural phenomena, in inquiry that goes a step
further from superficial reality. After the first shock, feminism
has proven to be capable of real futuristic research, since with
times more and more women have accepted feminist views partly
because of the positive feedback that has come through realized
futures, through societal changes. Issues like sexual harrassement
have become common place finding their space even in such
traditional (patriarchal) areas like women's magazines and talk
shows. Apart from its roles in changing consciousness some concrete
measures have also occurred as a result of feminist inquiry. After
discussing ways of achieving desirable visions, feminist offer
propositions that can make a difference, that can be a stimulus for
social change. Some of those propositions have became property of
many social movements, parties, agendas, and even UN conventions.
The results of research to a certain extent has changed previous
attitudes and the ways reality was seen. It has therefore influenced
policy makers as well, both on local and global level. By showing
the subordinated position women are in, "positive
discrimination", changes in representation quotas has resulted,
thus improving conditions in many areas. That is the reason that the
knowledge and research are,
within feminism, repeatedly seen as means for altering facts, for
altering data, for altering conditions in human societies. Both
production of theory and production of knowledge are seen as
political activities, moreover they are also seen as power itself.
Feminist research is supposed to be politically 'correct',
and it is supposed to help us achieve better society. Feminists want
to understand and explain but moreover they want to emancipate and
transform. That is the reason that it is often stressed that
research must be designed in such a way to provide insights and
visions and to establish a dialogue with the future.
DIALOGUE
BETWEEN FEMINISM AND FUTURES STUDIES
This dialogue between feminism and futures is something which
is still missing
although feminism has a futuristic note and although future studies
has became more gender conscious with years. Feminists would be able
to benefit largely from using some specific futures methodological
tools, mainly backcasting, where utopias, and current goals are be
connected more tightly, where strategy results not from means-end
planning but from envisioning a desired future, believing it has
occurred and then working backward to "anticipate" how it
occurred. Of course, not just backcasting but any futurist's ways of
exploring future possibilities, alternatives and choices, purposes,
goals and intentions, their experience in planning and
decision-making, use of metaphors, emerging issues and layered
causal analysis, as well as constant critical and epistemological
future studies questioning of assumptions, paradigms and purposes,
can only be beneficial for the feminist research. What-if questions
and scenarios could help us move from the present even more
dramatically and thus create the real possibilities for new futures.
Futurists involved in participatory and emancipatory futures
activities are concerned with the preparation of people for changing
the future, and even if the changes are through technological
development they are largely considered in the context of cultural
goals, generated from different spheres including grassroots
activities. Many futurist as well as many feminists believe that the
real change begins at the grassroots and that is the preferred
change in contrast to directed one from the government and power
positions. This focus
on grassroots activities is a crucial point of convergence between
futurists
and feminists.
Feminist should consider seriously getting involved in
futures reasons for some pragmatic reasons as well. Our time is
characterized by increased interest for future studies, whether
because of the approaching "mellinium" or because of the
unprecedented nature of technological change, the future has
arrived. The number of publication and members in futuristic
societies are largely increasing every year, and furthermore, within
almost every separate scientific discipline, the futures approach is
developing either as separate area or continuumum of what has been
researched.[8]
Through the future studies field feminism can spread its influence
to many different areas which could be otherwise closed. Through a
dialogue both fields can enrich themselves.
In the next part of the article I discuss the feminist
critique of the futures field and argue that futures studies should
include feminist perspective in its dominant knowledge paradigm.
FUTURE
FUTURE RESEARCH SHOULD BE GENDER CONSCIOUS
Future studies should have the most flexible, the most
diverse, and sometimes even surprising approach since their field of
study exists in the unlimited human mind rather then in already
given events and data. But futrues studies also generates and
follows epistemological and methodological practices from already
existing social sciences. The work we are doing is inevitably
limited not only because of traditional opinions in science, notions
and theories which rules scientific thinking in certain periods, but
also because of our own interests, values, dreams and visions.
Critics of the research in the field of future studies argues
that this field is also burdened with a male-centred bias. We could
start with showing what is the proportion of women and man in the
field, for example, we could show their participation in World
Future Society, World Future Studies Federation, as well as in
government planning agencies, among policy makers and others who
control important political decision.[9]
We could also analyse the sexism in titles, constant use of pronoun
'he' and noun 'man' when discussing 'universal' issues (though
lately, language has become more sensitive), lack of topics of
concern to women, etc.
A deeper approach would include a critique of current
methodologies and epistemologies in the field. Patricia Huckle, for
example, stresses that much of future research methodologies is
controlled by man and male viewpoints.[10]
She points out at the use of "experts" and the way
problems are chosen in methods like Delphi technique or in
developing future scenarios. Women would not chose experts but would
prefer small groups, working together in an egalitarian environment
to solve agreed upon problems. She further claims that not only
methods closer to "science fiction" (science-fiction
writing is, as she points out, also quite different when writting
from feminist perspective) represents the man point of view, but
that trend extrapolation, cross impact matrices, quantifiable data
for identifying alternative future, simulation modeling, simulation
gaming and technological forecasting also "suffer from the
limits of available data and ideological assumptions". The
questions asked, the statistics collected, the larger framework of
knowledge remain technocratic--and thus male in the sense that they
avoid issues central to women.
However, most assumptions futurists hold about the future,
feminists share as well. Those would be: that the future is not
predetermined and thus not predictable; that the range of
alternative futures exists, and; that the future will be (from minor
to major changes) different in many respects from the present world.
However, among basic assumptions about the future belong
another one which would be very problematic seen from a feminist
perspective. And that is that the notion that future outcomes can be
influenced by individual choices and that individuals are solely
responsible for the future.[11]
While this is certainly true on one level, this assumption
has to be put into social context, reinforced with the concept of
power and the availability of the choices. Otherwise it would
represent typical Western and male way of looking at those
enpoverished women bounded by tradition, family, society, economy or
politics. In its bare form it further assumes position of power,
stability, democratic and moderately rich environment.
Unfortunately, for the vast majority of people the future does just
happen to them. Black and white, aggressor/victim theory would not
contribute much to the discussion. But, for example, let us consider
the future (or past which was future once) of those who were
colonized. Some people attempt to avoid or resist colonization, but
for most whatever they attempted to do, colonization was a given,
almost like a physical force in a form of tornado. The
unavailability of choices also implies to people in war zones,
ordinary citizens, children abused by adults, young women sold as
sex slaves, and unfortunately, many, many others. When looking at
the metaphor for choices, that one of using road map to get to
particular destination, it is forgotten that most people in our
global world, and women especially, do not possess neither map nor a
car. Furthermore, put in the mentioned situation they would not know
how to read the map as it is a product limited to a particular
culture and particular class. To conclude, there are many things we,
as humans, or as a particular group of people, can do about the
changing conditions of our lives, about influencing our future. But,
there are maybe even more things, we as a particular group of
people, individual or family unit, can do nothing about, since we
exist within given historical social and world structures (gender,
of course, being one of these historical structures).
There is also one very specific area in which many feminists
see the most danger in having male-dominated future's research and
that is the area of controlled reproduction.[12]
Man has been trying to control and dominate women's participation in
procreation at least since the beginning of the patriarchy, and
current development of medical science might enable them to gain
almost complete control over human reproduction. This would totally
marginalize women, as they would be enterily removed from the
reproductive biological cycle. Feminists argue that in this crucial
area of future of the humanity and human evolution women's approach
must be of extreme importance. This is so not only because these are
our bodies and genes involved, but as welll because women were
largely responsible for human reproduction from the beginning of our
species existence, our identities have become to a large extent
based on this biological history. Of course, cutting this
responsibility could be by some seen as liberating for women's
destinies (they would escaped childbirth and possibly childrearing),
but what is worrisome is that it could further decrease woman's say
in what would be our common future. Developments in genetics are
occuring without women's voices, Bonnie Spanier argues in her Im/Partial
Science: Gender Ideology in Moecular Biology[13]
nongendered bacteria are described in gendered terms, often
reinscribing dominant/subordinate relationships. Even the building
blocks of life (and they are being transformed by new technlogies)
are not immune from sexual ideology.
Unfortunately, it is not only medicine and biology where
women do not have control over the research agenda. Women's
participation in science in general is still very limited, and so it
is in the futures field. However,
there are many reasons why women should be included in this field.
(1)
Women's role in many societies is changing rapidly, women are
becoming more visible in many public areas. Statistically, we
represent at least half of the humanity, and in the future women
could significantly outnumber men (given the improvement in health
and the fact of longer life expectation). The importance of physical
force is decreasing with new technological changes so another
argument for women's subordinated position is disappearing.
(2)
Eleonora Masini argues that women can create alternatives for
future better then men because of certain individual (flexibility,
rapid response to emergency situations, superimposition of tasks,
definite priorities and adaptability) and social capacities
(solidarity, exchange, overcoming of barriers). She also shows the
impressive range of women's activities in many social movements such
as peace, human rights and ecological movement. These activities
will influence the future, less in terms of obvious revolution and
more in terms of "an important, slow historical process of
change",[14]
in creating a global civil society.
(3)
Many futurist perfer not to predict how the future would look
like, seeing prediction as a mere extension of present data. They
would rather see futures (and use such methods) which would bring
better lives for the majority in the world community. As for women,
wherever we look, no matter how bad conditions men are in, women's
conditions are always worse. According to data extrapolation, women
will continue to suffer from poverty, violence, malnutrition,
physical and mental abuse. We will also continue to be disadvantaged
in employment, education, politics, health, law, and planning, i.e.
in "controlling" the future. Clearly, women have an
important say in how and what methods are used in understanding and
creating the future, particularly in exploring partnership visions
of the futures.
(4)
Most social scientist agree that we are entering a new era.
The names range from 'postindustrial' to 'information' or 'tourist,
traveling' societies but what is characteristic for the time we live
in is that, like in all other major transitions in the past, we
witness huge changes in almost every aspect of our lives. One of the
main area where those changes are taking place is in our systems of
belief and ways of knowing. Many intellectual see this era as the
end of the domination of the Western civilization, which has reached
its peak and which could collapse or it could be qualitatively
transformed. In many respects, not only women's but the future of
the humanity does not promise much if we don't
radically change our ways of exploiting the nature,
organizing society, treating the "other", dealing with
differences. Feminist visionaries could give important contribution
in making alternative ways of living and thinking, in describing the
transition into this new era.
(5)
Even while there is a visionary dimension to futures studies,
at the same time, the Future field is in some ways responsible for
maintenance of the status quo. As Slaughter argues: "Many of
the major institutional centers of futures activity have tended to
maintain close links with the centers of social and economic power.
Future research, forecasting, and education appear to be dependent
upon government or corporate support and hence constrained to
varying degrees by given definitions, imperatives, and economic
structures".[15]
Slaughter also points out that the field remains strongly associated
with North America and that many of the future studies
institutionalized forums has became associated with the needs of
relatively powerful groups. This would represent an artificial
narrowing of vision, a closure rather than an expansion.[16]
Extending futures field by critical approaches, feminist and others,
could help remove these limitations.
PRINCIPLES
FOR NON-SEXIST FUTURE RESEARCH[17]
Feminist researchers developed several epistemological
principles for gender conscious research. Cook and Fonow summarize
them in five basic ones:[18]
(1)
acknowledging the pervasive influence of gender;
(2)
focus on consciousness-raising;
(3)
rejection of the subject/object separation and
assumption
that personal experience is unscientific;
(4)
concern for the ethical implications of research;
(5)
emphasis on the empowerment of women and transformation of
patriarchal social institutions through research.
In similar way Margrit Eichler gives four epistemological
principles or rather propositions which she derives from the basic
postulate of the sociology of knowledge. Those principles are:
(1)
all knowledge is socially constructed;
(2)
the dominant ideology is that of the ruling group;
(3)
there is no such thing as value-free science and the social
science so far have served and reflected men's interests;
(4)
and because people's perspective varies systematically
with
their position in society, the perspectives of men and
women
differ.[19]
Besides this epistemological principles feminist have made
few changes within social science methodology. Methods used in
feminist research are actually ones which already exist and are
recognizable tools in social sciences.
What is new is the way they are applied, more precisely the
thematic content they are used within. Thematic content is changed
in two main ways:
(1)
already existing data and "facts" are re-examined and
reinterpreted from a new perspective, and
(2)
previously non-existing phenomena or those considered of no
importance are analyzed (childbirth, housework, wife abuse, rape,
incest, divorce, widowhood, infertility, sexual harassment,
pornography, prostitution, women's thoughts from private letters,
memoirs, diaries, journals) and stress is given to some crisis
situations which demystify the assumed naturalness of patriarchy.
If futures research wants to be non-sexist or rather
feminist-gender-conscious it does not have to follow all of the
principles but at least a few. It is also important to pay attention
and avoid sexism in titles, in language, in concepts, in research
designs, in methods, in data interpretation and in policy
evaluation.[20]
Future feminist research (done by those who share the values
of feminism and futures studies) must take into account rapid
changes and rethink some of the methods used. For example, within
futures field topics such as future childbirth have been discussed
but some of the very important question have not been stressed
enough. We know quite a bit about possibilities for having children
produced in artificial wombs, about genetic engineering and choices
enabled by technological developments; however, questions such as:
what would that mean for the babies and women, how would their
experience look like, what would artificial upbringing mean to the
relationship between mother and her children, are women still going
to have the right to breastfeed, who is going to decide about how
many babies is particular women going to have, and many others, have
rarely been raised. Here, futures research still stays in the secure
domain of technological forecasting, unable to reveal the
circulation of power in particular futures.
Past and current
feminist research rediscovered women's history and their existence
as people and persons rather then just in terms of their
relationship to men, mostly through women's private letters and
diaries. Some questions about the future would include, for example,
how would feminist research draw conclusion on women's thoughts in
the time of depersonalized personal computers, who has control over
communication process and is women's work going to disappear from
hard drives and diskettes as it had disappeared through other forms
of written history? Or questions about the future of the housework:
If housework is going to be done with the help of robots, who is
going to make the software, whose priorities within the household
are going to be respected, those of men, women or children? Many
other have to be raised and that is where futures feminist research
should channel its energy.
THE
FUTURE OF THE FEMINIST RESEARCH
In order to discuss what would be the future of feminist
research I would like to quickly skim through the history and main
changes in research done by feminist. When we talk about its
relationship with science, feminist research has gone through three
main phases. In the first phase, feminist authors discovered women's
absence from the mainstream, or, how it is sometimes called,
malestream science, accusing it for being sexist, partial, biased,
with strong patriarchal values incorporated into
"objective" theories and data.
In the second phase, the inclusion (re)discovery of female
voices, histories, thoughts, beliefs, lives and visions resulted,
mostly through qualitative approaches. So after the initial
deconstructionalist phase, we gained research about women done by
women and for women. The
Third phase would result in some kind of synthesis, in the
incorporation of feminist research into a transformed mainstream
science and realization by feminists that only if they research men
as well as women can they develop a feminist science. [21]
In this phase deconstruction also becomes more radical by
challenging the category of women (and men) itself.
Following the current efforts and inclinations we would
expect that feminist research would go even more towards
interdisciplinary approach, and become more and more diverse, and
more future focused. In addition, to a more future focus, the last
decade has seen feminism become more civilizationally and cultural
sensitive. The feminist movement has become increasingly aware of
overgeneralizations, especially implementations of Western feminist
positions to the other parts of world. We, as women, do share
similar destinies, but it has become obvious that not the same
solutions can apply everywhere. Aminata Traore, for example,
stresses that:
They
(Western feminist) have appropriated to themselves the right to
interfere in our affairs, to dissect and pass judgement on them and
to draw conclusions that have sometimes become action programs
against which we can do nothing.... Together they want to liberate
us from our cultural realities which they regard as archaic, and
from our governments which they consider to be corrupt... In Africa
the greatest impediments to women's advancement are economic and
political. But international thinking merely condemns our societies
and our cultures."[22]
She
also points out that many African women are determined to
distinguish themselves from Western feminism, so many women's
associations insist on being regarded as "feminine" rather
than "feminist". The same implies to many other women,
including Muslim women, women from former socialist countries or
Chinese women who also coined a new term and would like to be seen
as involved in "feminology" instead in
"feminism". Although the Western approach has been
predominant so far within the feminist movement, voices of women
from other traditions are increasingly heard, and are shaping the
future of the feminist movement, itself. It is interesting to notice
the different perception of Muslim and other women in the example of
veiling. While, for most Western feminists, veiling and other forms
of women's covering could mean nothing but the horror, the ultimate
in women's oppression, for most Muslim women, the experience is
quite the opposite. For them, head scarves and long sleeves may be
experienced as a sensible way to dress in the hot climate, it can
mean a statement of support for their religious beliefs, or an
economic way to dress, the choice to live peacefully among
neighbors, or the protection against sexual harassment. Embrace of
fundamentalism, so scary for Westerners if it is not the
fundamentalism of their own, could actually be the path to
liberation for many Muslim women. They could use religion as their
protection and a way of confronting men, seeing Western women as
disadvantaged as they could turn only to less confining abstract
morality and concrete law. [23]
Inclusion of "the Other" has helped feminism see certain
contradictions, like, for example, "The contradiction between
liberalism (as patriarchal and individualist in structure and
ideology) and feminism (as sexual egalitarian and
collectivist)". [24]
So while most Western feminists start "with a recognition of
freedom of choice, individuality, and 'rights'", these concepts
are "specified in terms of the way that Patriarchy organizes
racial and economic inequality". [25]
Feminism has learned a great deal from the inclusion of other
perspectives. This has
been further encouraged by the influence of postmodernism. While
feminists have criticized many of the malestream theories which
would claim to speak universal truths, "particularly in the
early days of feminist theory, many accounts that aimed for
explanations of male/female relations across large sweeps of history
were proposed. Moreover, and this is a tendency that continues, many
feminist writings have included statements containing terms such as
man, women, sex, sexism, rape, body, nature, mothering, without any
historical or societal qualifiers attached." [26]
"The production of grand social theories, which by
definition attempt to speak for all women, was disrupted by the
political pressures put upon such theorizing by those left out of it
- poor and working-class women, women of color, lesbians,
differently-abled women, fat women, older women".[27]
For Linda Nicholson postmodernism then "appeared as an
important movement for helping feminists uncover that which was
theoretically problematic in much modern political and social
theory. Postmodernism was also useful in helping feminism eradicate
those elements within itself that prevented an adequate theorization
of differences among women". [28]
She further concludes, that what "postmodernism adds to
feminism is an expansion of the widely held feminist dictum
"The personal is political" to include the dictum
"the epistemic is political", as well. [29]
It is interesting to point out that feminism through this embrace of
postmodernism stay critical, if not sometimes sarcastic, towards
some of its conceptions: "Surely it is no coincidence that the
Western white male elite proclaimed the death of the subject at
precisely the moment at which it might have had to share that status
with the women and peoples of other races and classes who were
beginning to challenge its supremacy". [30]
While feminism might "use" postmodernism for its own
purposes, it tries to remain that critical note, which has been
present from the very beginning in feminist research.
Futures studies, of course, have been involved in a similar
broadening. While Mary Daly argues that "patriarchy appears to
be 'everywhere'", and that "even outer space and the
future have been colonized" [31],
it seems that "the future" as a category in itself is
being decolonized. Or at least, colonizers have been exposed.
Instead of only being concerned about technological forecasting,
images of the future based on discrete civilizational categories are
increasingly being explored. [32]
Moreover, the field in itself has been challenged as being
overly male, Western, not just in terms of its participants but in
terms of the knowledge categories used.
Thus more voices are entering "the future" as they
are entering "the feminism", at one level contesting these
fields and another level creatively re-making them based on
different cultural histories.
The need for expanding the feminist field so it can include
non-Western perspectives, Ann Curhoys has called 'the three body
problem' of feminism (class, race and gender analysis). Since there
is an infinite complexity at any level of analysis, many choose only
one concept or at the most two. Trying to incorporates all three
concept into research makes analysis too complex to handle. However,
despite all the difficulties, incorporation of cultural and ethnic
diversity as central, rather than a marginal or "added on"
issue, becomes the basic task for future feminist research if it
wants to form the basis for an adequate social theory. [33]
Besides the need to incorporate culture, religion, race, age
and class analysis, future feminist research has to consider
technological and societal changes as well. Already research by such
writers as Donna Harraway in her excellent Simians, Cyborgs, and
Women [34]
has begun the process of locating feminism in the emerging new
technologies.
More research is needed on the feminist response to current
world problems such are energy crises, increase in unemployment and
poverty, increase in social differentiation, in pollution, in
violence, to mention just the few areas of research. How would
feminism see the way out of these problem and what would be its
solutions for the future? In trying to give certain visions and
preferable scenarios for the future, futures feminist research would
be increasingly beginning with the experience of women as central,
and the traditional malestream approach as "the Other". Up
till now feminist research mostly began the other way around. For
example, Kathy Ferguson titles her book, The
Man Question instead of phrasing it in the traditional way
("The Women question" as socialists did). The time has
come for a change, since feminism have gained so much in its
strength. Even if the actual movement is not so present in the
streets and mass gathering, women's movement in West has became
incorporated within most public spheres, within the categories men
and women use to see. Some believe that this success means that
feminism is dead, therefore we cannot speak about any future
feminist research. "I realized finally that feminism, as such,
was finished forever: a victim of its own success. Better that women
get on with it--with working, writing, teaching, driving taxis,
whatever--and stop thinking about themselves a s a special
sub-species of the human race, in need of special attention." [35]
My opinion is that this is too good to be true and that while
feminism has achieved some things in some countries, as long as
women continue to do two thirds of the work on this planet, earning
and owning less then 10% of world's resources, and as long as women
stay discriminated in almost every single area of human life, we
need a feminist research. Feminism gave us new vision on gender
issues, it has became one of the central tools in gender analysis
and there is no reason to abandon it at this point in history.
On the contrary, feminism is becoming a world phenomenon with
a growing feminist consciousness in developing and poor countries.
It does face a backlash all over the world as well, but what is more
important is that feminism is increasingly becoming part of the
dominant scientific paradigm, particularly in Western societies
(sexism is much easier to criticise and institutions are forced to
make gender changes to accomodate women). Because of its strength it
can now afford to be criticized, especially from the position of
non-white, non-western, non-middle/upper class women. Malestream
universalism is then challenged not with another universalism but
with the approach which is inherently open, more inclusive with true
calls for diversity and difference. Feminism then has only few
'givens' and everything else is to be open for discussion and
redefinition. Through all the differences, all feminist and vast
majority of women concerned with improving women's position within
their societies agree that it is necessary to understand women's
subordination and to emancipate us. Analysis of causes of
subordination as well as how emancipation is to be achieved vary, so
we could expect to see different solution depending on a position
taken. Feminist research will be different if taken from liberal,
marxist, socialist, radical, reformist, black, lesbian, or anarchist
feminism, and it will go in quite different directions if taken by
Muslim, feminologist or within feminine approach. This diversity can
only enrich current feminism and help think about how to achieve
more just societies.
When we talk about changes in feminist theory and
epistemology we should remember that feminist methods did not appear
completely independently, out of nowhere. They represent historical
development within both science and society. The stimulus from
society came mostly through democratization (industrialization) of
Western societies in this century and feminist movements. Within
social sciences, feminist methods and principle of feminist research
follow several traditions such as: hermeneutics (inclusion of the
subjective into the research), critical theory (orientation towards
action, social change and emancipation), empiricism (partialities
and biases are correctable through methodological improvements),
postmodern approach (skepticism about universal "truths"
and universalizing statements based on inevitably partial
knowledge), standpoint epistemology (in their view that those who
are less powerful have access to more complete knowledge through so
called double vision). In that sense, the future of feminist
research will also be connected with the changes both in science and
in wider societies. Riane Eisler sees questioning of sex roles and
relations as a part of a broader movement towards greater democracy
and egalitarianism. This global movement for change happens in both
private and public spheres with attempts to create a world in which
the principles of partnership rather than domination and submission
are primary, "the world of greater partnership and peace, not
only between men and women but between the diverse nations, races,
religions and ethnic groups on our planet".[36]
Most futurists, at least those within critical and
emancipatory tradition, are part of this global movement. So are
most feminists. In that sense it is extremely important to establish
dialogue between all of those who claim to be trying to achieve more
just societies. This concern, how to think and make an
"ideal" society, has been present for thousands of years.
Throughout our recorded history different forms of domination had
been challenged. Priests and wizards, kings and chiefs, rich and
white, male and old, they all had seen at least some of their powers
diminished. At the same time, we are almost as far from society
which would be free from injustices, victims, oppressed and
discriminated, as we have ever been. There is enough data to support
the view that, in terms of justice, nothing had been and cannot be
done.
At least four different (philosophical) viewpoints
crystallized on transformations of human societies experienced since
the beginning of our history, in terms of discriminations and
improvement of our societal organization:
(1)
History is linear in the sense that every new society
represents different but at the same time more developed
and
"better" way of organizing our lives.
(2)
History is linear in the sense that every new society
represents further withdrawal of who we really are.
Eventually, this direction will lead us to total
distraction,
humans as a species will stop to exist.
(3)
History is cyclical: every new society is in some ways better
and in some ways worst then the lost one. But there is no
real
improvement in our lives, nothing is forever, i.e. everything
is susceptible to change and can go either way.
(4)
History is static: there had not been any improvement in
human
lives, there were and will always be oppressors and
oppressed,
just names are changing, and different groups are getting
into
first or second category.
So, what could be the future of the dispowered half of the
humanity that are women? Our future is seen differently from
feminist and non-feminist (all others) perspective, and at the same
time it will effect any research done in the future, as part of the
wider societal influence. Here I will look at the four possible
scenarios and what would each mean for futures feminist research.
history
valued
|
basic
categories
|
women
|
future
|
linear
positive
|
improvement
|
changes
in franchise, laws, educa-tion, employ-ment, etc.
|
women
and men as equal partners
|
linear
negative
|
decrease
|
fall
from matriarchy
|
women
fight back for lost empire
|
cyclical
|
no
change or
minor
changes
|
always
oppressed, but within different
patterns
|
possibility
for positive change, less oppressed in the future
|
static
|
no
change
|
destined
by sex and biology
|
women
will continue to be "second sex"
|
(1)
The first scenario would be the most preferable one. It views
history as the path in which basic human rights are increasingly
met, and those of women in particular. Women are entering and
changing most public areas, even those who were for thousands of
years reserved exclusively for man. This improvement, although it
could come under minor backlashes, will continue throughout our
future. Future will see women and man as equal partners, it will be
realizing of the utopia in which people would be seen primarily as
individuals and not in the terms of their belonging to certain
gender, race, class, nation or religion.
(2)
The second scenario is one of decline in which history is seen as
the continuous lose from our real selves, from nature and Goddesses.
The last 5, 000 years represent the continuous decline for women,
their fall from matriarchy after they became the first slaves.
Female deities, reflecting women's culture and women's power,
universally accepted by humankind until the modern era of immediate
pre-industrial societies are forever lost. But women should not
accept this fall, they should appropriate the Amazon myth and
exclude themselves from men, which would be the only way to liberate
ourselves.
(3)
In the third scenario, the cycle is the most powerful
metaphor. Women had been always oppressed, even in matriarchal
societies, when the matriarchy purely ment that genealogy was
feminine. Women's oppression follows different patterns, it varies
in different societies and different period of times, so that could
give us some hope for the future. Even women will always be
dominated by man, their oppression could be lessen by appropriate
government or religious measures. It will also be influence by major
societal changes in which the quality of life for all will be
improved. The cycle promises temporary liberation, for the strong
shall fall and the weak rise, but they too fill fall.
(4)
The fourth scenario is one in which changes are perceived to
be minor. Women are destined by their sex and biology, and even if
liberated from reproduction through technology, their physics would
never allow them to gain equal status. Women's minds are still, and
will always be, in the hands of their bodies, and in that sense
remaining 'second citizens' would be the just and only possible
future.
Depending on a person's position different scenario would be
chosen as a solution for the future. Within the feminist field,
different solutions would be chosen from liberal or radical
position. In the example of the scientific inquiry, while liberal
feminists would see futures feminist research see as incorporating a
better sample and a greater number of women researchers, radical
feminist would not be satisfied if every aspect of our lives is not
challenged and questioned. Certainly, the future will be different
for different women, and that is something futures feminist research
will have to deal with. Feminism is constantly testing, constantly
destabilizing social relations, challenging social conditions. Just
as in emancipatory futures, the goal is to constant recreate the
future, recreate new visions, create new possibilities, never end up
with a utopia, since as Ashis Nandy writes, "today's utopia is
tomorrow's nightmare."[37].
However, for feminists, there are concrete goals that
must be realized, the day to day life of girls and women (as well
boys and men depend on it). Thus, to conclude, we (feminist, women,
people) should hope that the future will see the realization of the
first scenario. That would be of crucial importance for our common
future, women's future and the future of feminist research. As
Sandra Harding points out "we will have a feminist science
fully coherent with its epistemological strategies only when we have
a feminist society".[38]
Futures feminist research will be shaped by its tradition and
developments within feminism, science and society. Of course, since
since the future is an open space, the real character of the futures
feminist research is yet to be seen.
Notes
[1].
Ivana Milojevic is an assistant at the University of Novi
Sad, Serbia, currently on leave and living in Brisbane, Australia.
I would like to thank June Lennie and Sohail Inayatullah
for providing me with research materials and editorial assistance.
[2].
For an analysis of the futurists field see, for example,
Roy
Amara, "Searching for Definitions and Boundaries", The
Futurist, February 1981, pages 25-29; Roy Amara, "How to
Tell Good Work from Bad", The Futurist, April 1981,
pages 63-71; Roy Amara, "Which Direction Now", The
Futurist, June 1981, pages 42-46; Richard A. Slaughter,
"Towards a Critical Futurism", three articles in the World
Future Society Bulletin, in following issues July/August 1984
(pages 19-25), September/October 1984 (pages 11-16 and 17-21);
Somporn Sangchai, Some Aspects of Futurism, (Honolulu,
Hawaii Research Center for Futures Study, 1974); and Richard A.
Slaughter, editor, "The Knowledge Base of Futures
Studies", special issue, Futures, April 1993, 25(3).
[3].
Sohail Inayatullah, "Epistemologies and Methods in
Futures Studies" page 3 in Richard Slaughter, ed., The
Knowledge Base of Futures Studies (Melbourne, Futures Study
Centre, 1995).
[4].
Martha J. Garrett, "A Way Through the Maze: What
futurists do and how they do it", Futures, April 1993,
25(3), page 271
[5].
Roy Amara, "Searching for Definitions and
Boundaries", The Futurist, February 1981, page 26.
[6].
However, some authors claim that since the feminism is a
perspective and not a research method, feminist scan use a
multiplicity of research methods and they, in fact, do so. See,
for example, Shulamit Reinharz, Feminist Methods in Social
Research, (New York, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1992),
page 240. Her analysis on feminist use of different methods is as
follows: "Some feminists argue that there is no special
affinity between feminism and a particular research method. Other
support interpretive, qualitative research methods; advocate
positivist, 'objective' methods; or value combining the two. Some
imply 'use what works', others 'use what you know', and others
'use what will convince'." (page 14)
[7].
For the relationship between utopias and ideology see
Herbert Marcuse, "The End of Utopia", and Karl Manhajm,
"Ideology and Utopia", in Miodrag Rankovic, Sociologija
i futurologija (Sociology and Futurology), (Belgrade, Institut
za socioloska istrazivanja Filozofskog fakulteta u Beogradu,
1995).
[8].
See, for example, Richard Slaughter, ed., The Knowledge
Base of Futures Studies (Melbourne, Futures Study Centre,
1995).
[9].
A glance at membership directors and the gender
distribution of articles published in futures journals and
magazines quickly makes this point.
[10].
Patricia Huckle, "Feminism: A Catalyst for the
Future", in Jan Zimmerman, editor, The Technological Woman
(Praeger, New York, 1983).
[11].
See, for example, Geofreey H. Fletcher, "Key Concepts
in the Futures Perspective", World Future Society Bulletin,
January- February 1979, pages 25-31; Roy Amara, "Searching
for Definitions and Boundaries", The Futurist,
February 1981, page 25; Richard A. Slaughter, Futures: Tools
and Techniques, (Melbourne, Futures Study Centre, 1995).
[12].
See, Susan Downie, Baby Making: The Technology and
Ethics (London, The Bodley Head, 1988).
[13].
Bonnie Spanier, IM/Partial Science: Gender Ideology in
Molecular Biology (Bloomington, Indiana University Press,
1995).
[14].
Eleonora Masini, Women as Builders of Alternative
Futures. Report Number 11, Centre for European Studies,
Universitat Trier, 1993.
[15].
Richard Slaughter, "Towards a Critical Futurism", World
Future Society Bulletin, September/October 1984, pg 13.
[16].
Ibid, July/August 1984, page 19.
[17].
Feminist literature used for the article (besides books and
articles already mentioned in other footnotes): Helen Roberts,
ed., Doing Feminist Research, (London and New York,
Routledge, 1990); Joyce McCarl Nielsen, ed., Feminist Research
Methods: Exemplary Readings in the Social Sciences, (Boulder,
San Francisco, & London, 1990); Ruth Bleir, ed., Feminist
Approaches to Science, (Pergamon Press, 1988); Pamela Abbott
and Claire Wallace, An Introduction to Sociology: Feminist
Perspectives, (London and New York, Routledge, 1992),
particularly chapter 1 (Introduction: the feminist critique of
malestream sociology and the way forward) and 9 (The production of
feminist knowledge); Zarana Papic, Sociologija i feminizam,(Sociology
and Feminism) (IIC SSOS, Belgrade 1989), Jane Butler Kahle, ed., Women
in Science, (Philadelphia
and London, The Falmer Press, 1985); Margaret Alic, Hypatia's
Heritage: A History of Women in Science from Antiquity to the Late
Nineteenth Century, (London, The Women's Press, 1990); Cheris
Kramarae and Paula A. Treichler, A Feminist Dictionary, (London,
Pandora, 1989); Maggie Humm, The Dictionary of Feminist Theory,
(London, Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1989).
[18].
Judith A. Cook and Mary Margaret Fonow, "Knowledge and
Women's Interests: Issues of Epistemology and Methodology in
Feminist Sociological Research:, in Joyce McCarl Nielsen, editor, Feminist
Research Methods, (London, Westview Press, 1990).
[19].
Margrit Eichler, "And the Work Never Ends: Feminist
Contributions", Canadian
Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 22, 1985, pages 619-644,
from Liz Stanley, editor, Feminist Praxis: Research, Theory and
Epistemology in Feminist Sociology, (London, Routledge, 1990).
[20].
Magrit Eichler, Non-Sexist Research Methods, (London,
Allen and Unwin, 1988), from Pamela Abbott and Claire Wallace, An
introduction to sociology: feminist perspectives, (London,
Routledge, 1992) pages 208-209.
[21].
Kathy E. Ferguson, The Man Question: Visions of Subjectivity in
Feminist Theory, (Berkeley, University of California Press,
1993).
[22].
Aminata Traore, "The South: A Joint Struggle", in
The Unesco Courier, September 1995, pages 9 and 11.
[23].
Christopher Dickey, "The Islamic World: Bride, Slave
or Warrior", in Newsweek, September 12, 1994, pages
13-17.
[24].
Zillah R. Eisenstein, The Radical Future of Liberal
Feminism (Boston, USA, Northeastern University Press, 1993),
page 3.
[26].
Linda Nicholson, 'Feminism and the Politics of
Postmodernism', in Margaret Ferguson and Jennifer Wicke, Feminism
and Postmodernism, (Durhan and London, Duke University Press,
1994), pages 69-86.
[27].
Patti Lather, Getting Smart, Feminist Research and
Pedagogy with/in the Postmodern, (New York, London, Routledge,
1991), page 27.
[28].
Linda Nicholson, ibid., page 76
[30].
Fox-Genovese, quoted in Patti Lather, Ibid. page 28.
[31].
Mary Daly, Gyn\Ecology, The Metaethics of Radical
Feminism, (Boston, Beacon, 1978, page 1), quote from Zillah R.
Eisenstein, The Radical Future of Liberal Feminism (Boston,
Northeastern University Press, 1993), page 18.
[32].
Eleonora Masini and Yogesh Atal, eds., The Futures of
Asian Cultures, Bangkok, UNESCO, 1993, and Eleonora Masini and
Albert Sasson, eds., The Futures of Cultures, Paris, UNESCO
1994.
[33].
Ann Curthoys, "The Three Body Problem: Feminism and
Chaos Theory", Hecate, 17(1), 1991, pages 14-21.
[34].
Donna Haraway, Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The
Reinvention of Nature (New York, Routledge, 1991).
[35].
Anne Applebaum, "The Perils (yawn) of poor
Naomi", The Courier-Mail, Brisbane, Australia, October
18, 1995, page 15
[36].
Riane Eisler, "A Time for Partnership", in The
UNESCO Courier, September 1995, pages 5-7.
[37].
Ashis Nandy, Tyranny, Utopias and Traditions (Delhi,
Oxford, 1987) page 13.
[38].
Sandra Harding, The Science Question in Feminism,
(Milton Keynes, England, Open University Press, 1986), page 141.