| Essentialism . . . refers to a grab bag of different,
sometimes overlapping, problems. Once is the problem of
false universalisms, in which over-generalizations or
unstated reference points implicitly attribute to all
members of a group the characteristics of a dominant subset
of that group. Critiques of law . . . often have included
the claim that legal standards purporting to be neutral and
objective often presuppose a single standard -- the
"make need of the law's "special
accommodations." "Feminist Theory has a problem of
over-generalization". A common subject for
critique is the unstated, sometimes unconscious assumption
that for purposes of feminism, "women" are white,
middle class, heterosexual, able-bodied, and otherwise
privileged. To what extent can we think about
"women" as a class and "women's
interests" generally without indulging this assumption?
A second, and related, problem of universalism often
described as "essentialism" has to do with the
applicability of Western feminism to other cultures. How
should Western feminists respond to practices like
clitoridectomy, veiling, or gender-based access to rights
when they occur in a non-Western context? When feminists
challenge such practices, are they inappropriately importing
Western conceptions of gender oppression? When feminists
defer to such practices, are they holding non-Western
cultures to a lower standard? Which should take precedence
when feminism and anti-colonialism seem to be at odds? Is
sisterhood truly global?
A third meaning of the term "essentialism" is a
form of reductionism by which the world is viewed through a
single lens that reduces social relations to those aspects
that support one "grand" theory. People who take
this view believe that gender oppression is the most
"fundamental" or "primary" oppression;
all other forms of oppression are less central, or less
universal, or dependent upon gender oppression. A frequent
criticism of this view is that it wrongly minimizes the
significance of oppression based on other factors such as
race, sexuality, class, ethnicity, and religion.
A fourth meaning of the term "essentialism" is
selecting out only one possible source of a woman's identity
-- such as her gender, race, class, or sexual preference --
and treating it as severable from the rest of her being.
Women are never just women; they are lesbians, black women,
Asian women, able-bodied straight women, poor, or
middle-class women. To what extent do our conceptions of
gender and of feminism require us to separately analyze our
gender-based oppression from other possible forms of
oppression, preventing a recognition of multiple identities
and multiple interactive oppressions?
A fifth meaning of the term "essentialism" that
appears not only in law itself but in some feminist
critiques of law might be called the "naturalist"
error. Within critical legal perspectives, to commit the
naturalist error is to assume the existence of certain
inherent or "natural" facts, rather than socially
construed ones, on which law is or should be based. This
error is replicated by feminists, some say, when they treat
"women" as a self-explanatory category, often
defined by biology. The example of the transsexual throws
into relief some of the difficulties of viewing sexual
characteristics as inherent, biological ones. Is a
male-to-female transsexual a woman? If so, is she a woman
only upon completion of reassignment surgery, or is her
inner sense of feminine identity sufficient with or without
the proper genitalia? Is a woman born or made? Another
naturalist mistake is made when feminists assume that the
removal of unnatural, man-made social constructions will
make women's basic commonality, or oppression, more apparent
and, once removed, allow women's "true-identity"
to emerge. In the absence of sex-based oppression, would
there still be "women?" Or only individuals who
happen to be of different sexes?
A sixth meaning of the term "essentialism"
points at a deeper problem, located in the process of
categorization itself. Humans constantly put one another
into mental categories; it seems to be an inescapable part
of cognition itself. But every category is inevitably
under-inclusive and over-inclusive. Every category is useful
for some purposes and not for others. When categories are
both assumed to be fixed and treated as extremely important
to social life, as "gender" is, what are the
consequences for people who don't neatly fit one category or
another? Is it possible to escape categories altogether?
Would trying to do so make collective action impossible? Is
it possible to learn to think of our categories as
provisional instead of unalterable, socially created rather
than inherent nature?
Finally, a seventh connotation of the term
"essentialism" points toward the philosophical
movement known as "postmodernism." Postmodern
theory challenges the notion that there is any objective
reality "out there" in the world that can be
perceived apart from our expectations and our past
experience. It insists, instead, that one's experience of
the world is always shaped by one's position in it. Many
anti-essentialist commentators argue that feminists should
be receptive to postmodernist theory, because both feminists
and postmodernists are skeptical of claims about universal
truth, which have often been used to justify women's
oppression. Other feminists, however, argue that postmodern
philosophy is dangerous because it tends to suggest that
people can simply "think" themselves free of
oppression, and because it implies that any world view or
opinion is as good as any other because non can be proven to
be universally "true."
Although the term "essentialism" can refer to
many different things, within recent feminist theory the
term consistently tends to be a derogatory label. As you
work through this section of the [unit], ask yourself
whether it is always bad to be an essentialist. Are some
forms of essentialism worse than others? Are some kinds of
essentialism necessary or appropriate in certain contexts? |