Portolani for Our Times
        Patricia Lança's Web Site
             GENDER                                                                                                        WHAT KIND OF WOMEN?
                                       
                   
                           
                                     WHAT KIND OF WOMEN?
                               WHAT KIND OF MEN?
                                 Gender as Identity*
                                   
                                  By Patricia Lança
        


    INTRODUCTION

    IN NO OTHER AREA have traditional ideas been so challenged in recent years as in that of the
    relationship between the sexes and the way men and women see themselves and each other. In
    western universities and the forums of some international organizations a paradigm as old as the
    human species is being questioned and strange new patterns adumbrated. Never before have these
    subjects been so much discussed, studied, written up, campaigned about and legislated on as in the
    last three decades. Until very recently sexual identity and a broad typology of character for men on
    the one hand and women on the other have been thought to be fixed and unalterable.  How sexual
    identity defined a person was seen as of a quite different order from other defining characteristics
    of human beings such as class, religion, nationality and ethnicity.  And so it still is—except by
    proponents of what are known as 'gender theory' and its close relative, 'queer theory'.

    The apparent immutability of sexual identity is still the rule for the vast majority of human-kind and
    it is doubtful whether even in modern societies most people are likely  to have had their fundamental
    perceptions changed by such theories.  The fact that women have risen in recent years to high
    positions in the State has very little to do with the matter. History is, after all, peppered with
    female figures who have exercised real power and this has never been a factor in changing
    perceptions about  the respective vocations and nature of ordinary men and women.  What has indeed
    been changing is the attitude of members of both sexes to the participation of women in economic and
    public life.

    Despite women’s emancipation in the industrialized countries, the majority of people still seem to have
    little doubt  that most men will become fathers and most women mothers and that children are best
    raised in families. Or the corollary that mothers are women and fathers are men.  There is,
    however, growing public concern over some recent social trends, most evident in the English-speaking
    world and Scandinavian countries, which seem to indicate increasing family breakdown. Working wives
    and mothers, full citizenship rights for women, easy divorce and abortion and a growing number of
    women in leading positions in public and private administration have certainly had familial and wider
    social repercussions.  It is therefore appropriate to examine the position of 'gender theorists' in
    relation to  these questions.

    It might be useful first to look at sexual identity and character in three phases: before women’s
    emancipation; secondly, during that process; and thirdly the situation as it exists today. This  
    examination requires to be undertaken in a spirit of realism rather than with a mind-set bent on
    seeking evidence of class oppression and the alleged  predisposition of men to dominate and exploit
    women. What follows is necessarily schematic and concerned rather with the lives of ordinary people
    than with the particularities in habit and outlook of tiny élites.

    I.  The sexes before modernization
    It was impossible for women to be other than dependent upon men before the onset of
    modernization.  This fact requires brief elaboration because its implications are overlooked, denied or
    misinterpreted by 'gender theory' whose tenets are notable for lack of empathy with the main
    features of human history and of compassion for its essentially tragic content.

    In traditional agrarian societies average life-expectancy was around forty years, about half what it
    is today. High mortality meant that a high birth rate was essential for a community’s survival, hence
    large families were very desirable.  Most females were expected to marry as soon as they reached
    puberty and, if they were reasonably healthy and their husbands were not absent from home, the
    natural course was for women to conceive and give birth almost every year.  Access to and knowledge
    of birth-control was unsought and therefore almost unknown.  All but rich women, who could afford
    wet nurses, had to breast-feed their babies. Human beings of both sexes toiled from dawn to dusk
    in order to keep alive. Nearly everybody, including  members of ruling castes, was illiterate.  Only a
    few  belonged to the class of clerics and literati who could cultivate things of the mind.  There was
    scant leisure for the masses. Public order and security in face of marauders and the elements were
    fragile.  In such circumstances the very survival of humanity meant that women and children required
    protection. This requirement has been sacralized by religion and enshrined in law. It is here that we
    must seek the origin of the family and not in what Engels called 'the overthrow of mother-right' and
    '…the first class oppression… of the female sex by the male.'1

    Of course women suffered from the necessarily subordinate position that dependence implies.  But
    men suffered too.  They frequently had to sacrifice life and limb in defence of their homes and
    families. Their incentive and reward were the honour and glory associated with the valour demanded
    of the 'stronger sex'.  Women brought up their sons in the cult of courage and duty to the family.  
    It can well be argued that as the first educators and socializers of children during their long infancy
    women were in fact the ones who imposed the rules.  These  were  frequently broken. Invading and
    conquering armies often put entire communities to the sword. But even in such  atrocious cases,
    history tells us that the men were  the first victims and women’s lives were often spared even if
    their destiny was to be carried off into slavery.

    Beliefs about some golden age in palaeolithic times when people lived peacefully together in harmonious
    matriarchy have dubious foundation. It has, indeed, been claimed, with better evidence, that hardly
    any human remains have been found in prehistoric burial grounds that did not show signs of their
    original possessors having met with violent deaths. Hence it is not surprising that in pre-modern times
    attitudes to sexuality were quite different from those current in our affluent, medicated and
    pleasure-loving societies. Whatever cults of eroticism may have existed among tiny ruling élites, or  
    dionysiac orgies and fertility festivals rituallyindulged in by the masses of lowly folk, peasant women
    could do no other than look on sexual activity as something to be strictly regulated. Pregnancy and
    childbirth were risk-laden enterprises. Perhaps some sturdy peasant girls might give birth painlessly
    in the fields and then happily carry on with their work.  But for very many this was not the case.
    Under-nourishment and disease were widespread and death in childbirth was common. So, too, after
    the fifteenth century was syphilis.  No wonder then that families reared  daughters in the cult of
    pre-marital virginity and fidelity in marriage.  Men did not have to impose the idea of sexual sin on
    women. Nature usually provided sanctions enough.  To say this is not to imply that society generally
    did not reinforce these sanctions by custom and by law. Young people’s strong instinctual urges had to
    be contained by the older and wiser who knew the dangers involved.

    Women taken in adultery have been stoned to death in some societies.  Clitorectomy still persists in
    certain parts of the world.  Chastity belts are said to have been forced on mediaeval ladies.  
    Chinese upper-class women had their feet bound and whether this was for aesthetic reasons or
    originally to prevent them straying is open to question.  Barbarous customs indeed! As were those of
    the castration of men to produce guards and choristers.  Until the advent of Enlightenment humanism
    everybody, male and female, even in Christian lands, took barbaric practices for granted.  People
    were hanged, drawn and quartered and burned at the stake—men in far greater numbers than women—
    and multitudes of both sexes and all ages flocked avidly to view these horrible spectacles as lately
    as the eighteenth century, often taking picnic baskets along with them to enjoy the show. To
    maintain a sense of proportion, and of shame,  we should also not forget that our own enlightened
    twentieth century has been a time of periodic mass slaughter of both sexes even in the most
    advanced countries. It is quite simply not true that cruelty, labour or the regulation of sexual
    activity were inventions of the post-Enlightenment bourgeoisie composed of 'white European males.'

    Male children have been generally regarded as more desirable than female children but not merely
    out of some perverse masculine preference. At certain times in history physically defective and girl
    babies were ruthlessly eliminated. It has been said that this is yet one more example of patriarchal
    oppression of the female sex. However, it has more to do with the fact that, until very recently,
    both foetal and infant mortality in males has been significantly higher than in females as any study
    of sex ratios in this area  demonstrates. So boy babies were, and in most parts of the world still
    are, especially  precious. Medical science, hygiene and better nourishment have caused infant
    mortality to drop to almost negligible levels in the industrially advanced world. Because nature
    provides for more males to be conceived, more boys than girls are now being born and reaching
    adulthood—a historically unique phenomenon.

    People generally did not question their sexual identity or the rules  concerning marriage and the
    family that prevailed in their respective cultures. Within Christian and certain other societies,
    clerical celibacy and the monastic life have been practised by a minority and in some places honoured
    more than marriage. Chastity, it was said, was a higher state but monasticism may well have been
    as much a matter of ecclesiastical economics as of virtue. It certainly had nothing to do with sexual
    identity. The choice of celibacy, involving discipline and self-sacrifice, was rather a matter of
    character.  Joan of Arc may have been a warrior but she never claimed to be other than a woman.

    It should also be added that, however immutable seemed the sexual identity of men and women,
    character and behaviour in terms of sexual morals was not uniform either in time or place. There
    were periods of dissoluteness and moral breakdown as well as periods of reform, of which the
    Protestant Reformation and the Catholic Counter-Reformation are the most memorable examples.
    Similarly with Islam whose history is punctuated by revolts against what purist Moslems have
    regarded as relapses from the ideals  of its original teaching.

    II. Sexual identity and the onset of modernity
    One of the first recorded manifestos in favour of female equality was that of Olympe de Gouges, a
    Frenchwoman who proclaimed her indignation at the time of the French Revolution over the treatment
    of women by the authors of the Rights of Man.    She wanted the same rights for women and set
    them out in Les Droits de  la Femme.  This document is notable for its insistence that the same
    duties should be expected of women as of men including the payment of taxes and 'the right to mount
    the scaffold' because women should be 'dealt with in the full rigour of the law'.2   

    The French Revolution inspired other women to demand citizenship rights.  Anne-Josèphe Thérouingue
    de Méricourt went so far as to organize a female militia.  The Englishwoman Mary Wollstonecraft
    went to Paris and produced the Vindications of the Rights of Women.  Male  revolutionaries remained
    unmoved but Olympe de Gouges was granted one of her demands: she was guillotined during the
    Terror.3

    At the end of the eighteenth century women such as these were voices crying in the wilderness but
    the ideals of freedom and equality proclaimed by the American and then the French Revolutions had
    seized popular imagination. In the course of the following century-and-a-half more voices were
    raised, not least  those of men, to affirm that women too should enjoy these rights.  As economic
    conditions changed with industrialization and increasing numbers of women joined the growing ranks of
    factory-workers so too  more and more women began to take part in literary and intellectual life.  
    It was becoming clear to the fair-minded that if women were emerging from their traditional home-
    bound interests justice  was no longer being served by denying them full citizenship rights. The role
    of women like Florence Nightingale in the Crimean War  and later the pressing need for women in the
    factories and as military auxiliaries during the First World War began to sound the knell for the
    ancient institution of women’s civic subordination. Women’s organizations  demanded the vote and went
    on to widen their claims. Opinion in society began to change until one by one additional rights were
    conceded.
             
    III. The role of technological change
    None of this could have taken place without accelerated technological change, and expansion of
    medical knowledge. Mechanization made it possible for women to perform many tasks hitherto
    regarded as the preserve of men.  The teachings of Malthus and declining mortality rates made large
    families no longer as desirable as hitherto. Family planning began the process of relieving women from
    the burden of annual child-birth.  At the same time growing market economies demanded expansion of
    the work-force.  Multiplier effects caused the  process to speed up in incipient forms in the thirties
    of the twentieth century, then at a vertiginous rate after the Second World War. The age of
    consumerism dawned.  The home too became mechanized and household appliances began to relieve
    women of domestic drudgery.  Because purchasing power was needed to acquire these new machines  
    women  now had an even greater incentive to  contribute to family incomes. Business interests and
    governments were quick to see the point  of double-income households. The last bastions of women’s
    minority status finally crumbled in the decades following the Second World War, during which women
    had taken part in all the Allied Armed Forces.

    With generalized knowledge of and access to more efficient contraception  together with market
    need for women workers and consumers at all levels, profound changes have taken place throughout
    Western society.  Women’s’ access to higher education in equal if not greater numbers than men and
    the growing  presence of women  in  high status positions in both public office and private enterprise
    have  given many women an unprecedented degree of economic independence.  This, together with
    juridical consecration of equal rights for women as well as the generalized hedonistic ethos induced by
    consumer society,  have eroded many traditional constraints on social behaviour generally.

    The question arises:  what happened to sexual identity and character during the century-and-a-half-
    long process just summarized? Anyone who, like me, grew up in the thirties and forties of this
    century remembers that what was foremost in the minds of many young people tempted to anticipate
    marriage in those far-off days was fear of pregnancy.  We also remember that what kept many an
    unhappily married couple together was the economic dependence of most wives.  Generally speaking, it
    was the rich who got divorces in those days.  This is not to say that moral principles did not inspire
    very many people to practice sexual restraint, forego divorce or behave responsibly towards their
    families. Of course people had ethical convictions about these matters and tried to live up to them.  
    But we should have no illusions that it was moral conviction alone that guided sexual behaviour at a
    time when there was already a great deal of social freedom between the sexes at least in northern
    Europe and North America.

    Most people of my generation can well remember that when these questions were discussed, there
    was always somebody around to warn us of the moral collapse that would follow if everybody knew
    about and could procure safe contraception.  Very often the same people would also caution us about
    how wholesale economic independence of women would threaten the existence of the family. My
    generation of young women at university or in the Armed Forces during the Second World War all
    heard these warnings. Our answer to the Cassandras, that is the answer of those of us who, like
    myself,  regarded ourselves as high-minded feminists (of the old school), was that there was no
    moral value in behaving decently through fear.  Better-educated women and women in the professions
    and satisfying jobs were likely, we thought, to have a greater sense of responsibility and better-
    grounded moral convictions than our poor subjected sisters whose morality we saw rather
    simplistically as being based largely on convention backed up by duress. We also argued that the
    emancipation of women would affect men in a positive direction: they would be more likely to see
    women as equal companions in marriage rather than as mere objects of sexual satisfaction, mothers
    of their children, housekeepers and nurses.  Marriage itself, we thought, had begun to assume a new
    content.  Instead of being regarded as a 'meal-ticket' and  status symbol for women or a source of
    sensual comforts for men, many people of both sexes began to view marriage essentially as a
    partnership of companions and equals.  Even the ideal of romantic love, incipient for centuries, but
    which had overwhelmed the West from the nineteenth century onwards, became permeated with  a
    new ideal of comradeship between men and women.

    Whatever arcane discussions may have been conducted in the salons of such as the Bloomsbury
    Group4 most people, including socialists, did not dream of questioning the traditional concept of sexual
    identity: that there are two sexes, male and female.  Although we knew homosexuality existed the
    very word seemed to identify males as males and females as females: the word simply meant 'same-
    sex sex'.  The days of 'polymorphous perversity' were still far in the future.

    IV. The modern world becomes 'post-modernist'.
    As the twentieth century draws to a close the Cassandras of my youth would  seem to have been
    vindicated. This is not the place to cite statistics showing the direct relationship between family
    breakdown and juvenile delinquency. These are readily available and show that there is cause for
    grave concern about social stability in all the democratic countries.5  The question at issue is
    whether these problems, which evidence profound moral and identity crises, are a consequence of the
    emancipation of women or whether the roots of that crisis are to be found in the same circumstances
    which brought about female emancipation.

    If they are indeed interconnected and the inevitable accompaniment of modernization in any culture,
    then it is not  the West alone that faces such problems but also the rest of the world.  On the
    other hand it may be that Western traditions before and during the process of modernization embody
    specific features conducive to the present crisis.  How the  various nations of the world with their
    very different histories and cultures are able to cope with these problems is perhaps one of the key
    questions to be posed as we enter the twenty-first century. If problems of identity and social
    cohesion deepen in some countries and are overcome in others it is not difficult to imagine which will
    grow stronger and which weaker.  Perhaps Spengler6 and Toynbee7 may be proved correct in their
    deep pessimism about the future of the West.

    a. Relativism and deconstruction
    The most characteristic feature of the intellectual climate (in the Humanities as opposed to Science)
    in Western countries throughout most of this century has been the insistent rise of self-questioning
    and relativism in epistemology and ethics. At no other time or place in the history of civilizations has
    there been such voluminous criticism of its own traditions and  institutions  as among  intellectuals in
    Western society over the last three hundred years. It would seem that this phenomenon arises
    directly out of the scientific revolution of the seventeenth century, the growth of democratic
    institutions and the habit of increasingly free discussion.  

    From the Renaissance onwards interrogation has grown in momentum, and in every area of human
    interest, to the point that we might call the twentieth century as much the century of total
    iconoclasm as of totalitarianism. Indeed it may well be that the former has more than a little to do
    with the latter. The situation contains its ironies, not least of which being that a procedure (rational
    criticism) which arose out of protest against dogma together with  the search for truth and greater
    knowledge has now culminated in what amounts to the denial of rationality and of objective
    knowledge.  For this is indeed the characteristic of what is called post-modernism, a catch-all
    expression applied to a number of areas including art, literature, philosophy and the social sciences.

    Deconstructionism, an influential trend in post-modernist philosophy, has as its basic tenet  that
    what we think of as knowledge is always suspect because it can only be reached through language and
    culture and these are not what they seem.  They contain hidden meaning and require to be
    deconstructed, unbuilt, in order to reveal the  power relations that lie behind all discourse.  In brief,
    there is no real world but only subjective interpretations of it. In all areas of life the holders of
    power impose their interpretations on the powerless in order the better to keep them in thrall.

    These ideas, which have their source in  marxist doctrines, descend from the 'sociologists of
    knowledge' and find their apogee in the writings of people like Jean Baudrillard, Jacques Derrida,  
    Michel Foucault  and Jean Lyotard.  Foucault’s is the  name of most significance here because his
    ideas have had considerable if not primordial  influence on the development of 'gender theory'.8

    Foucault’s favourite rejoinder to his critics was the question D’où parles-tu?  Any objection was thus
    undermined, the implication being that the critic had a hidden interest in attempting to refute
    Foucault’s views. This kind of pseudo-refutation is common in unscientific theories such as Marxism
    and Freudianism which are couched in such terms as to render them unfalsifiable. The stance of
    relativists such as Foucault and others that there is no such thing as truth is, of course, very much
    like the classic paradox of the Cretan liar. If they are right, then they are wrong, for they present
    their denial of truth as itself an absolute truth and they may thus be attacked from their own
    premises.   D’parles-tu? also may logically be turned on Foucault and his followers with the
    question D’où parlent-ils?  However, to point this out, did not impress Foucault because despite his
    enormous (though often faulty) erudition he was contemptuous of rationality and regarded the
    Enlightenment as the initiator of those two perverse enemies of human well-being: logocentrism or,
    worse, phallogocentrism.

    Logocentrism is the deconstructionists’ word for the belief that there exists a real world and that it
    can be  described in words.  Phallogocentrism is the word used  to describe what Foucault regarded
    as compulsory heterosexuality, yet another stratagem  of the bourgeoisie  to preserve its power.  It
    is clear in  these  writers that the enemy to be struck down is western culture and all its traditions,
    including science and logic, seen as a kind of monstrous conspiracy to preserve capitalism. When
    pressed, deconstructionists will admit, even proclaim, that their position does in fact entail that
    'anything goes'.  Your views are as good as mine; your behaviour as admissible as mine:  there exist
    no standards and no moral values.  All these things had been said by others long before Foucault.  
    The source of his fascination for the radical generations that arose during and after May 1968 was
    the length to which he took his radicalism.  From a critique of the concept of insanity to that of the
    prison system and  criminality he went on to a sure-fire winner with his Histoire de la Sexualité.9  
    Here the concept of sexual identity itself was challenged and declared to be a social construct.  
    Heterosexuality, it was claimed, was not an essential component of human identity but had been
    imposed on society in the interests of those in power in order to force people (including members of
    the bourgeoisie  themselves)  to devote their energies to work.  Precisely how people would feed,
    clothe and house themselves if they gave up work for a life dedicated to multi-sexual pleasure we
    are not told.

    The conclusion seems inescapable that the adoption on an individual level  of  relativism as an
    intellectual and moral life style provides an excuse for mental laziness in the first case and self-
    indulgence in the second.  As far as society as a whole is concerned the prevalence and propagation of
    cultural relativism tends to deprive many people, especially the young and vulnerable, of anchorage for
    their sense of identity and furthers anomie, rootlessness and irresponsibility.

    This brief digression into the realm of philosophy is of  relevance to the subject of  'gender theory'
    because many of its main proponents claim the status of philosophers and regard Foucault as their
    inspiration. Deconstructionism has rapidly gained adepts in Humanities departments in universities all
    over the English-speaking world.  This phenomenal success for bizarre theories which, at one time,
    could easily have been 'deconstructed' by a first-year Philosophy undergraduate, can surprise nobody
    familiar with the declining standards in education.  There are no doubt other causes too, which reside
    in the narcissistic ethos prevalent in consumer societies and the irresistible appeal of what looks like
    an intellectual justification for unbridled pleasure-seeking.  And so Foucault, the white, European
    male, became the guru and inspirer of 'gender feminists'. In truth his ideas were tailor-made for
    them, providing a scholarly-sounding mantle for the proclamation of war against the concept of sexual
    identity. In the universities, at least, the war has had considerable success and the battle-fields
    have been in the social sciences and  especially Women’s Studies.

    b.  The scientistic influence
    There is another, less scholarly  and more scientistic strand in the tangled web of influences that
    have given rise to 'gender theory': the new discipline of sexology pioneered by Kraffte-Ebbing,
    Havelock Ellis, and Wilhelm Reich. Some of these were long-banned and available only to the medical
    profession. Alfred Charles Kinsey and his associates, however, in a time of relaxed censorship, burst
    upon the world in 1948 and 1953 with reports of supposedly scientific studies which were seized upon
    avidly by the media and became best-sellers.10  Still widely cited today, both Kinsey’s methods and
    his results have been subjected to serious criticism especially in connexion with the atypical subjects
    he interviewed: mainly students and members of prison populations.11 He has also been accused of
    sexual experimentation with infants and young children.  Nevertheless, some of Kinsey’s conclusions
    became widely accepted, especially his highly dubious figures regarding the incidence in the population
    of homosexuality—placed at more than ten percent when more recent and more serious studies
    conclude for one to two percent.12   Even more influential was Kinsey’s hypothesis of the fluidity of
    sexual identity and the existence of a continuum  rather than a dichotomy.  Kinsey may be regarded
    as the founding-father of a flourishing and lucrative industry, well-suited to the developing media
    ethos of sensationalism and the satisfaction of prurient curiosity.  Much later and more serious
    studies in the field,  which undermine what have become received perceptions, have aroused less
    publicity and are largely forgotten in the field of 'gender studies'.13 Also influential in promoting the
    'anything goes' sexual ethos were certain psycho-analytic practitioners such as Carl Rogers and his
    'Human Potential Movement'.

    By 1993 Women’s Studies was 'by far the fastest-growing area within the humanities and social
    sciences, both institutionally and in terms of publications.  It is estimated that there are now five
    hundred women’s studies programs, thirty thousand courses, and fifty feminist institutes…' in the
    United States.  Visitors to any academic book-shop may confirm for themselves the industrial
    quantities of titles that have been published in the field. What has come to be known in more recent
    years as 'queer studies' has also expanded, though to a lesser degree.  Because its preoccupation
    appears mainly to be  with male homosexuality, by definition less concerned with the emancipation of
    women, this branch of  'gender  theory' has not made the same inroads into public forums as 'gender
    feminism' which claims to speak for all women.  The fraternal branch of 'gender studies' will
    therefore not be discussed here although the two share many basic ideas.14

    c. A word about words
    The word 'gender' is now in common use in the English-speaking countries to refer to something other
    than the technical grammatical classification of nouns and adjectives.  The new usage has become so
    widespread in the English-speaking world that to challenge it now sounds old-fashioned and
    idiosyncratic.  However, the new sense represents a key concept in the Pandora’s box of 'political
    correctness'  and has almost everything to do with challenging the traditional (binary) concept of
    sexual identity.

    One preliminary objection to the new usage, now employed throughout the social sciences and in the
    media,  is that it is virtually untranslatable and there is something very odd about a concept that
    cannot be expressed in  languages other than English.  Even for those who know only English a moment’
    s reflexion will demonstrate how peculiar is the recent innovation. Its inappropriateness is clear when
    we try to employ it with reference to reproduction. All reproduction in the animal world (with the
    occasional exception of lowly creatures like gastropods and certain reptiles) from insect-life upwards
    is sexual reproduction, i.e. through the union of male and female. This is a biological given, not a
    social construct.   Biologists, botanists, zoologists, ethnologists and so on habitually talk about
    'sexual reproduction' and regard it as the means whereby diversity of inheritance and the survival
    capacities of a species are ensured.  They are not referring to erotic activity.

    The insistence of some English-speakers on the use of the word 'gender' has indeed given rise
    to considerable difficulties in international forums and an illuminating example of this will be
    discussed below. This is because languages that do possess grammatical gender—and these are
    most of  the European languages except English and Dutch—also use the word 'gender' in a
    variety of different ways none of which refer to the sex of human beings:  First: genus,
    family, race kind. Second: kind, manner, sort, way. Third: artistic style, manner. Fourth:
    manners, fashion, taste.15  

    'Gender theory', let it be clear,  refers to  the cluster of ideas which attack in no uncertain terms
    the traditional concept of sexual identity. 'Gender theorists' are thought of as radical feminists and
    sometimes style themselves as such although there are various factions in the movement whose
    quibbles need not concern us.  However, 'gender feminism', as will be seen, is not in fact the
    culmination of the movement for women’s emancipation: it is rather  a programme for the abolition of
    women and of men, an aim explicitly stated by some of its proponents.

    d. 'Gender theory' in words
    For the sake of clarification 'gender theorists' must be allowed to speak for themselves. The
    authors quoted below are not marginal but exemplify 'gender theory'.  Most of the publications  from
    which they are taken are to be found in course material in Women’s Studies departments and some of
    the authors are leading figures in the radical feminist movement.

    Although many people think that men and women are the natural expression of genetic blueprint,
    gender is a product of human thought and culture, a social construction that creates the 'true
    nature' of all individuals.16

    Heterosexuality has been both forcibly and subliminally imposed on women…'Compulsory
    heterosexuality' was named as one of the 'crimes against women' by the Brussels International
    Tribunal on Crimes against Women in 1976.17
                   
             ...an appropriate workable abortion rights strategy is to inform all women that
    heterosexual penetration is rape, whatever their subjective experience to the contrary.18

    …heterosexuality, like motherhood, needs to be recognized and studied as a political institution.
    19

    Gender fluidity is the ability to freely and knowingly become one or many of a limitless number
    of genders, for any length of time, at any rate of change. Gender fluidity recognizes no
    borders or rules of  gender.20

    Women couldn’t be oppressed if there was no such thing as “women”. Doing away with gender is
    key to the doing away with patriarchy.21

    Imagine that the sexes have multiplied beyond currently imaginable limits. It would have to be
    a world of shared powers.  Patient and physician, parent and child, male and female,
    heterosexual and homosexual—all those oppositions and others would have to be dissolved as
    sources of division. A new ethic of medical treatment would arise, one that would permit
    ambiguity in a culture that had overcome sexual division.22

    Imagine sex among friends as the norm. Imagine valuing genital interaction in terms of whether
    and how it fosters friendship and pleasure… Pleasure is our birthright of which we have been
    robbed in religious patriarchy… I picture friends, not families, basking in the pleasure we
    deserve because our bodies are holy. 23

    Gay/lesbian culture can also be looked on as a subversive force that can challenge the
    hegemonic nature of the idea of the family.  It can, however, be done in a way that people do
    not feel is in opposition to the family per se,   a simple “smash the family” slogan is seen as a
    threat not so much to the ruling class as to people in the working class who often rely on family
    ties to maintain security and stability in their lives. In order for the subversive nature of gay
    culture to be used effectively, we have to be able to present alternative ways of looking at
    human relationships.24

    One of the most influential of the 'gender theorists'  is Judith Butler.  She is Professor of
    Humanities at the Johns Hopkins University and is listed as a director of the International Gay and
    Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC).  The commission is a UN accredited NGO and sponsor of
    the international petition campaign 'Put Sexuality on the Agenda of the World Conference on Women'
    The petition called on member states to recognize 'the right to determine one’s sexual identity; the
    right to control one’s own body, particularly in establishing intimate relations, and the right to choose
    if, when and with whom to bear or raise children as fundamental components of the human rights of
    all women regardless of sexual orientation'25

    Butler’s book, Gender Trouble, Feminism and the Subversion of Identity  is widely cited in 'Women’s
    Studies' course material.
     
    Assuming for the moment the stability of binary sex, it does not follow that the construction of
    'men' will accrue exclusively to the bodies of males or that 'women' will interpret only female
    bodies. Further, even if the sexes appear to be unproblematically binary in their morphology
    and constitution (which will become a question) there is no reason to assume that genders ought
    also to remain as two. The presumption of a binary gender system implicitly retains the belief
    in a mimetic relations of gender to sex whereby gender  mirrors sex or is otherwise restricted
    by it. When the constructed status of gender is theorized as radically independent of sex,
    gender itself becomes a free-floating artifice, with the consequence that man and masculine
    might just as easily signify a female body as a male one, and woman and feminine  a male body
    as a female one. 26

    If the immutable character of sex is contested, perhaps this construct called 'sex' is as
    culturally constructed as gender; indeed, perhaps it was always already gender, with the
    consequences that the distinction between sex and gender turns out to be no distinction at all.27

    Shulamith Firestone, another prestigious 'gender theoretician', is also one of the most explicitly
    Marxist and  comprehensive.  The Vintage Book of Feminism  declares Firestone’s book The Dialectic
    of Sex (dedicated to Simone de Beauvoir) 'to have been a powerful force in shaping the ideas of
    radicals in the women’s movement—Robin Morgan considered it "a basic building block"’ of feminism
    that had been crucial to the development of her thinking.'28

    For a foretaste of the 'gender' utopia it is worth giving her writing some attention.

    Natural reproductive differences between the sexes led directly to the first division of labor
    based on sex, which is at the origins of all further division into economic and cultural classes.29

    So that just as to assure  elimination of economic classes requires the revolt of the underclass
    (the proletariat) and, in a temporary dictatorship, their seizure of the means of production, so
    to assure the elimination of sexual classes requires the revolt of the underclass (women) and
    the seizure of control of reproduction: the restoration to women of ownership of their own
    bodies, as well as feminine control of human fertility, including both the new technology and all
    the social institutions of childbearing and childrearing. And just as the end goal of socialist
    revolution was not only the elimination of the economic class privilege but of the economic class
    distinction itself, so the end goal of feminist revolution must be, unlike that of the first
    feminist movement, not just the elimination of male privilege but of the sex distinction itself;
    genital differences between human beings would no longer matter culturally.30

    Thus, the 'natural' is not necessarily a 'human' value. Humanity has begun to outgrow nature,
    we can no longer justify the maintenance of a discriminatory sex class system on the grounds of
    its origins in Nature. Indeed, for pragmatic reasons alone it is beginning to look as if we must
    get rid of it.31

    The reproduction of the species by one sex for the benefit of both would be replaced by (at
    least the option of) artificial reproduction; children would be born to both sexes equally, or
    independently of either, however, one chooses to look at it.32

    The incest taboo is now necessary only in order to preserve the family; then if we did away
    with the family we would in effect be doing away with the repressions that mold sexuality into
    specific formations. All other things being equal, people might still prefer those of the opposite
    sex simply because it is physically more convenient.33

    If early sexual repression is the basic mechanism by which character structures supporting
    political, ideological, and economic serfdom are produced, an end to the incest taboo, through
    the abolition of the family, could have profound effects.  Sexuality would be released from its
    straitjacket to eroticise our whole culture, changing its very definitions.34

    We must include the   oppression of children in any program of feminist revolution… Our final
    step must be the elimination of the very conditions of femininity and childhood.35

    Adult/child and homosexual sex taboos would disappear, as well as nonsexual friendship…. All
    close relationships would include the physical.36

    Among Firestone’s  first demands for  any alternative system are :
    1.  The freeing of women from the tyranny of their reproductive biology by every means
    available, and the diffusion of the childbearing and childrearing role to the society as a whole,
    men as well as women…. The freedom of all women and children to do whatever they wish to do
    sexually…Child sexuality had to be repressed because it was a threat to the precarious internal
    balance  of the family. These sexual repressions increased proportionately to the degree of
    cultural exaggeration of the biological family.… In our new society, humanity could finally revert
    to its natural ‘polymorphously perverse’ sexuality—all forms of sexuality would be   allowed and
    indulged….marriage in its very definition will never be able to fulfil the needs of its
    participants, for it was organized around, and reinforces, a fundamentally oppressive biological
    condition that we only now have the skill to  correct. As long as we have the institution we
    shall have the oppressive conditions at its base. We need to start talking about new
    alternatives that will satisfy the emotional and psychological needs that marriage, archaic as it
    is, still satisfies, but that will satisfy them better.'37

    The foregoing quotations clearly show that 'gender theory' holds that it is the hegemony of
    men which compels  women to be heterosexual. Indeed some gender-feminists go so far as to
    declare that without this compulsion lesbianism would  be preferred. Others, like Firestone,
    also favour pedophilia and incest. Some want 'lesbianization of the world' (Monique Wittig as
    cited by Butler).  Others want sex with anybody at all, singly or in groups.  What is truly
    preposterous about these scabrous pronouncements is that their saturnalian (or better, satanic)
    fantasies have found a firm niche in formerly respectable quarters.  Humanities
    undergraduates, instead of learning something of the great cultural heritage of civilization are
    instead being taught to despise what they do not know and indoctrinated with something more
    akin to pornographic science-fiction.

    e.'Gender-theory' in action
    'Gender theory' should not be dismissed as being  all talk.  Not only does  it occupy an
    important place in Women’s Studies and Humanities departments, it has also become an issue in
    international organizations. An example of the way 'gender theorists' operate was provided by
    the discussions  during the preparations for and in the course of the United Nations Fourth
    World Conference on Women held in the Chinese capital in  September 1995.38

    Among the Beijing participants discussion of the word 'gender' in the documents  aroused
    considerable controversy between, on the one hand, some English-speaking delegates and, on
    the other, representatives of that benighted majority of the world’s women for whom English is
    not the mother-tongue. These had at first innocently  assumed that the word 'gender' was
    indeed being used as a euphemism for the word  'sex' and that 'gender' referred to male and
    female human beings. However,  there was no option  in the translations but  to use the
    respective languages’ word for 'sex'.

    The controversy that ensued revealed the pitfalls that beset meetings where well-meaning
    innocence confronts malevolent ignorance.  However, in the course of proceedings it became
    explicit that the use of this unfamiliar concept was a ploy intended to smuggle into documents
    the UN-blessed recognition by women’s organizations world-wide of a number of 'rights' usually
    rejected as immoral by pro-family women’s organizations. These rights included those of  
    homosexuality to be regarded as equal to heterosexuality; total freedom and assistance for
    abortion; sex for adolescents; prostitution as a service industry as well as the adoption by
    governments of quotas for women in all areas of public

    Unfortunately for 'gender feminists' there were English-speakers present from pro-family
    organizations who were familiar with the take-over of Women’s Studies programs in US
    universities. In consequence, fierce polemics ensued in the course of which  the 'gender
    perspective' was exposed. Comparison between the different texts was elucidative: although
    'gender' appeared over 60 times in the Feb 27, 1975, English draft, the equivalent words
    genero and  genre were never used in the Spanish or French versions. Instead 'gender' was
    translated as sexo (sex) or hombres y mujeres (men and women) or with some other phrase. In
    some cases the English, French and Spanish each had a different meaning.  

    So it seems that there is something peculiarly anglo-centric about “gender”.  Its critics were
    ferociously attacked by the 'gender' feminists who saw this as a reactionary onslaught on
    'political correctness'.  Former US congresswoman Bella Abzug spoke for the 'gender feminists'
    and her claims were revealing:

    The concept of  gender is embedded in contemporary social, political and legal discourse. ….The
    meaning of the word gender has evolved as differentiated from the word sex to express the
    reality that women’s and men’s roles and status are socially constructed and subject to change…

    The current attempt by several Member States to expunge the word gender from the Platform
    for Action and to replace it with the word sex is an insulting and demeaning attempt to reverse
    the gains made by women, to intimidate us, and to block further progress. We urge the small
    number of male and female delegates seeking to side-track and sabotage the empowerment of
    women to cease this diversionary tactic.  They will not succeed. They will only waste precious
    time. We will not go back to subordinate inferior roles.39

    Because the 'gender feminists' were better prepared and better funded,  their
    unrepresentative ideas, although they were forced to be toned down, did in fact find their way
    into the final Beijing documents.  This was no new phenomenon.  The 'gender perspective' is to
    be encountered in a multitude of other UN materials as well as that of western government
    departments,  those of the European Union and of the European Parliament.

    f. Social conditioning and sexual identity
    Rejection of relativism does not entail underestimation of the importance of social conditioning in
    the formation of identity.  Simone de Beauvoir is famous for her oft-quoted remark that one is
    not born a woman but rather becomes one. This rather trivial observation has been granted far
    more weight than it deserved.  In one sense it contains a banal truth. In another it contains a
    falsehood. Everybody is born male or female.  The kind of men or women they become will, of
    course, be influenced by the way they are socialized. The experience and education of a child
    within its culture and the expectations it encounters are of great importance in forming its
    identity and character. Interaction between the innate and the culturally-shaped have long
    been discussed in the 'nature versus nurture' controversy in connexion with intelligence and
    other qualities.  In the matter of sexual identity there is an added aspect and biological
    function may in a very primary sense influence the way an individual is socialized.  If the
    survival conditions of a given society require females to be protected and dependent upon men,
    the culture will see to it that members of each sex  are socialized accordingly. Experience will
    provide the growing human with many of the elements that enable it to construct its identity.
    The process is essentially an interactive one.

    It seems to me of considerable importance that we are not born as selves, but that we have to
    learn that we are selves; in fact we have to learn to be selves 40 …being a self is partly the
    result of inborn dispositions and partly the result of experience, especially social experience.
    The new-born child has many inborn ways of acting and of responding, and many inborn
    tendencies to develop new responses and new activities. Among these tendencies is a tendency
    to develop into a person conscious of himself. But in order to achieve this, much must happen. A
    human child growing up in social isolation will fail to attain a full consciousness of self 41 …  All
    learned adaptation has a genetic basis in the sense that the heredity of the organism (its
    'genome') must provide for the aptitude of acquiring new adaptations.42

    In traditional societies, in modernizing ones and in our own day the cultural elements that
    contribute to the child’s consciousness of selfhood, have varied.  It can be argued that only
    with women’s emancipation and the material possibilities of  full participation  in social  and
    public life is the girl-child able to achieve full realization of self.  The boy-child’s consciousness
    of identity is also subject to change.  Sometimes nowadays for the worse.  Instead of the
    male ideal evolving from the role of protector-dominator of women towards that of equal
    partner and companion, too many features of our culture are helping to produce boy-children
    who will turn into irresponsible aggressors.  If 'gender-theory' gains in influence, as it aims to,
    it will also have a negative effect on the sense of identity of young women.  The socialization
    ('consciousness-raising') engaged in by women’s studies aims at producing females who see
    themselves as victims of men, as “gender-fluid” creatures hostile to the family and with their
    inborn vocation for motherhood suppressed. The damaging effects on the personalities of
    impressionable young girls caused by this kind of brain-washing are easy to predict. However,
    there are considerable difficulties for the success of such projects. The genetic predisposition
    of females—the essential basis of their identity—for motherhood and child-rearing are much
    stronger than the genetic predispositions of males for fatherhood.   The latter need more
    positive socialization in order to become mature citizens.  'Gender-feminists' find it very
    difficult to convert ordinary women into changing their natural propensities.  This is why they
    resort, as in the end do all revolutionaries, to administrative means to gain their ends, as we
    have seen with the Beijing case.

    'Gender feminists' are also notable for  their demagogy. To win support among vulnerable young
    women, as well as grossly distorting history they campaign against “sexual harassment” and
    have extended the meaning of this expression beyond all reasonable bounds.  The main effect of
    these campaigns is to cause women to feel more insecure (the victim cult) and to provoke in
    many young men more irresponsible behaviour than ever.  To bolster these campaigns and other
    accusations of 'patriarchal oppression', many leading 'gender theorists' have had recourse to
    the 'cooking' of statistics over a wide field.  Christina Hoff Summers has produced an
    impressive array of examples of this practice.43 Another demagogic ploy has been the demand
    for quotas or affirmative action which, if put into effect, can only damage the credibility of
    competent women and further irritate relations between men and women.  A 'hidden agenda'
    that may well lie behind this demand will be suggested below.

    g.Ethnicity and 'gender'
    'Gay and Lesbian' activist groups including 'gender feminists' make frequent declarations about  
    'minority rights' and tend to seek allies  with activists among those ethnic groups which see
    themselves as disadvantaged. To maintain that anything significant other than physical features
    is  biologically innate about race is generally regarded as redolent of racism. The desire of  
    'gender theorists'to make common cause with certain kinds of nationalism clearly owes itself to
    the subjacent intention of  drawing parallels between 'gender' and ethnicity.  Because there is
    a vast plurality of ethnic groups, why not a vast plurality of  'genders'?  Because ethnicity is
    often fluid,  why not 'gender'?  Because nationalist protest and revolt are frequently against
    real oppression or discrimination, if 'gender' activists associate with them they too can be seen
    as victims. To insist on the essential nature of sexual identity is to be 'sexist' and that is
    bad, as it is bad to be a 'racist'. This is an old story in the history of protest movements,
    especially the spurious ones.  They amalgamate issues in order to confuse them.

    h. Deconstructing the deconstructors
    The final question to be answered is why I have chosen 'gender theory' and 'gender feminists'
    as my main concern in these pages and have said very little about contemporary challenges to
    male identity. The reason has to do with that  essence of female identity, which  clearly
    'gender feminists' are very well aware of.  When they propose not just affirmative action and
    parity for women in all areas of social life, but even amendments to the US Constitution to
    provide for two senators from each sex for each State of the Union, 'gender feminists' know
    what they are doing. Their aim is to obtain a captive  constituency. They know only too well—
    they have discussed it often enough in their proposals for the virtual abolition of motherhood—
    that the majority of women, whether they work outside the home or not, have neither time nor
    inclination for positions of  public power and are unlikely to want to give up motherhood and
    family life for the often shabby rewards of politics.  Some lesbians may be mothers; most are
    not.  This gives homosexual women a considerable edge over the generality of heterosexual
    women both in the labour and political market-place, an advantage that homosexual men do not
    enjoy with regard to heterosexual men.  Nor can homosexual men aspire to lead grassroots men’
    s emancipation movements, did such exist.

    Lesbian women, however, claim to speak for all women and  to represent them in positions of
    power.  Their quota, parity and similar proposals, if put into effect, would inevitably help them
    realize this ambition.  It can be argued that 'gender feminists' have a strategy of achieving
    power on the backs of ordinary women, in the same way as Bolshevik middle-class intellectuals
    rose to power in Russia on the backs of the proletariat.  And all in the name of the struggle
    against the powerful.  Perhaps Foucault’s question needs to be reformulated:  D’où parlent-
    elles? What are these unrepresentative women’s hidden interests?  Many already proclaim their
    aim of overthrowing existing society.  Who then will be Big Sister?

    Although 'queer theorists' share with their female counterparts, general deconstructionist
    approaches there are  crucial contradictions between them. The latter, as we have seen, insist
    on the primacy of social construction of sexual identity and would undermine or even go so far
    as trying to destroy its biological foundation.  Many male homosexual spokesmen, however, are
    now beginning, as part of their demand for recognition of minority status, to insist on the
    importance of innate factors. 'Gender feminism' is unremitting in its hostility to marriage and
    the family.  Many male homosexuals are asking for these institutions to be available to them.  
    Discussion of such questions is beyond the scope of this paper.  Except for one comment: the so-
    called 'Gay and Lesbian' alliance seems to be as basically incoherent and unstable as any
    alliance of these two with ethnic minority activism.

    Conclusion
    The replacement of the word 'sex' by the word 'gender' seems to be yet one more example of
    an old technique: what Orwell called Newspeak or Françoise Thom  langue de bois. Give
    something another name and you obscure its true nature. Get people to use it and you have
    brain-washed them.  As with 'people’s democracy' or  'dictatorship of the proletariat', if you
    repeat an expression often enough and persuade people to use it, many of them end up accepting
    that it describes a real state of affairs.  Here, in truth, reside power interests behind the
    use of words.

    To use the word 'gender' instead of 'sex', no matter how innocently, is to give implicit credit
    to the new word’s  hidden meanings:  the suggestion that sexual identity is fluid; that there
    may be more than two 'genders';  that people make 'gender' options. What 'gender theory'
    denies is that in the real world there exist only two sexes, male and female and  the norm is
    for humans, like animals, to seek and prefer erotic relations with individuals of the opposite
    sex. In other words, mothers are women and fathers are men and parenting is most successful
    within a family structure. The very small minority which prefers necessarily sterile carnal union
    with members of their own sex still remain either biologically male or female with the potential
    of being fathers or mothers. The existence of a negligible number of unfortunates born with
    genital malformations who are physiologically pseudo-hermaphrodites 'doesn’t prove that
    heterosexuality is not natural, any more than the fact that some babies are born blind proves
    that it isn’t natural for human beings to see' 44

    In concluding this appraisal of 'Gender as Identity' I would like to quote from the last page of
    Dale O’Leary’s analysis of the Beijing meeting.  It is a succinct and timely statement which
    should be pondered by everybody concerned with the human sciences and the clarification of
    identity questions in the area of sex:

    The feminists have relied on the politeness of men. They have demanded that dangerous
    nonsense and utter stupidity be treated with respect. The Gender Agenda cannot be defeated
    until people are willing to stand up and say, “No more inclusive language, no more politically
    correct speech. 'We must refuse to say "gender" when we mean "sex". Those who are offended
    by reality and human nature will just have to live with it'. 45

    Notes
    1.Frederick Engels, The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (New York,  
    1986).
    2. Norman Davies, Europe A History, (Oxford, 1996), p. 716.
    3. Ibid., p.717.
    4. The London literary circle known as the Bloomsbury Group, several of whose members were
    homosexual, frequently questioned sexual identity.  See especially Virginia Woolf’s Orlando, a
    novel about a trans-sexual figure reincarnated over four centuries.
    5. Mitchell B. Pearlstein, “Fatherlessness in the United States”, The Family in Global
    Transition, Ed. Gordon L Anderson, (PWPA, St. Paul, Minnesota,1997), pp 401-405.
    6. Oswald Spengler, The Decline of the West (New York 1926-28).
    7. Arnold Joseph Toynbee, A Study of History (abbreviated version, London 1946).
    8. For  overviews see J.G. Merquior, Foucault (London, 1985) and Roger Scruton Thinkers of
    the New Left (London, 1985), pp.31-44.  Scruton’s Modern Philosophy  (London  1994) deals in
    several places with Post-modernism, Deconstructionism and Michel Foucault.
    9. Michel Foucault, Histoire de la sexualité (Paris 1976).
    10. Alfred Kinsey et al., Sexual Behaviour in the Human Male  (Philadelphia 1948) and Sexual
    Behaviour in the Human Female (Philadelphia 1953).
    11. Wardell Pomeroy, Dr Kinsey and the Institute for Sex Research (New York 1972).
    12. Reisman and Eichel (co-authors), Kinsey, Sex and Fraud (l990).
    13. Robert F. Michael, John H. Gagnon, Edward O. Laumann and Gina Kolata, Sex in America
    (Boston, 1994).
    14. Jerry Z. Muller, “Coming Out Ahead: The Homosexual Moment in the Academy,” First
    Things 35, August/September, 1993.
    15. Harrap’s Standard French and English Dictionary (London, 1961).
    16. Lucy Gilbert and Paula Webster, “The Dangers of Femininity,” Gender Differences:
    Sociology or Biology?, p.41, cited in O’Leary, Gender: The Deconstruction of Women, (hearth
    Magazine 1995).
    17. Adrienne Rich, “Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence,” Blood, Bread and Poetry: Selected
    Prose, (1979-85, New York,) p.57, cited in O’Leary 1995, p.6.
    18. Ibid. p.70, cited in O’Leary 1995, p.6.
    19. Ibid. p.35, cited in O’Leary 1995 p. 6
    20. Kate Bornestein, Gender Outlaw: On Men, Women and the Rest of Us (New York,) p.52,
    (cited in Dale O’Leary, The Gender Agenda: Redefining Equality (Lafayette, La. 1997). The
    author cited by O'Leary is a man who underwent a sex-change operation.
    21. Ibid., p.115
    22. Anne Falsto-Sterling, “The Five Sexes: Why Male and Female are Not Enough” in The
    Sciences (March-April 1993) p.24
    23, Mary Hunt of 'Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics and Ritual' at Re-Imaging
    Conference, Minneapolis, 1993, cited in O’Leary, 1997, p. 79
    24. Christine Riddiough, 'Socialism, Feminism and Gay/Lesbian Liberation,' Women and
    Revolution, ed. Lydia Sargent (Boston 1981) p.87.
    25. O’Leary, 1997. p.112
    26. Judith Butler, Gender Trouble, Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (New York,
    1990),    p.6
    27. Ibid., p.7
    28. Miriam Schneir, ed. The Vintage Book of Feminism (London, 1995) p. 245.
    29. Shulamith Firestone, The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution (New York,
    1970 and 1993), (excerpts published in Schneir, op.cit. pp.246-256.)
    30. Firestone, op.cit. p.9.
    31. Ibid., pp. 10-11.
    32. Ibid., p.10.
    33. Ibid., p.12.
    34. Ibid., p.59.
    35. Ibid., p.60.
    36. Ibid., p.240.
    37. Ibid., (cited in Schneir l995, 249).
    38. For a full account of the way the 'gender' issue was treated in Beijing, see
    O’Leary, 1997.
    39. Ibid., p. 86, 87.
    40. Karl R. Popper and John C. Eccles, The Self and  Its Brain, (London, 1977), p. 109
    41. Ibid., p. 111.
    42. Ibid., p. 121.
    43. Christina Hoff Summers, Who Stole Feminism? (New York, 1994)
    44. O’Leary, 1997, p.70.
    45. O’Leary, 1997, p.213.

                                              
    *       This is the text of a paper submitted under the  rubric 'Gender as
    Identity' to Panel 3  'The Crisis of Identity in the Contemporary World', Seventh  International Congress
    of Professors World Peace Academy on Identity and Character, The Influence of Family and Society on
    Personality Development.   Washington, D.C. 1997.

                                      ~~~~«»~~~~               

Few people outside of academia are fully
aFew
Few outside the Academyware aware of the content of what is
taught in
so-called 'Gender' or 'Women's Studies'  
The accompanying text is over ten years old,
but what it has to say still remains news
outside of the fevered atmosphere with
which it deals.
Because most people would regard  the
author's affirmations as an exaggeration,
the paper reproduces a large number of
quotations from writings of the 'gender'
muses themselves.