London SlutWalk demo: women united against rape

On Saturday the 11th of June, more than three thousand women and men, old and young, began to gather for the Slutwalk demonstration which would march from the top of Piccadilly to Trafalgar Sq.

The atmosphere was really lively as the sun shone down and people were asking for copies of REVOLUTION’S Slutwalk bulletin, which put forward a socialist perspective on the Slutwalk mobilisations and the struggle for women’s liberation.

Although it was predominately young women there was a fair proportion of men, and LGBT groups. As we marched towards Trafalgar Sq builders watched not daring to wolf whistle at women passing in stockings, bras and Basques, clutching banners with statements like “cleavage is not consent” and tourists on sightseeing buses took photos. Some other placards simply said ‘a dress is not a yes’ and some males stood near us had written on their chest, ‘love sex, hate rape.’

The reaction from on-lookers was positive and many showed interest as we leafleted along the edge of the crowd. There was a buzz of excitement among the protesters as we chanted ‘whatever we wear, wherever we go, yes means yes and no means no,’ however more political chants such as ‘women of the world unite and fight’ didn’t have much resonance with the crowd. Similarly, the usual sea of Socialist Workers Party placards was present but many people had ripped the party name off them.

This is both a strength and weakness of the march. It is fantastic to see huge numbers of young women demonstrating against rape, but we need to make clear that we don’t see the issue of women’s oppression and liberation as ‘above’ or ‘before’ politics.

Once we arrived at Trafalgar Sq it became obvious just how many people had come out to support the movement, there were people in bikinis, dressed as sex workers, office workers or just in jeans and a t-shirt, all with the same united message – blame the attacker not the victim.

The rally which followed put across many powerful messages from a range of speakers. 17 year old Anastasia Richardson, Slutwalk co-organiser spoke about how we need to organise ourselves and fight back against rape whether it’s by your partner, when you’re drunk or wearing a short skirt. She spoke to us afterwards and said she believed women and men together needed to fight back against it and women couldn’t be liberated alone.

Cristel Amiss, Black Women’s Rape Action Project said women should feel they can report rape and be protected, whether they’re sex workers, asylum seekers or mothers, without being afraid of being arrested, deported or  having their children taken into care.

The variety of speakers was refreshing as ethnic minorities and sex workers were represented alongside students, and the liberal women’s  rights groups. The rally gave off a really positive feel and addressed all areas of the movement from what Tory politicians have recently said to the involvement of men in women’s liberation.

REVOLUTION members distributed our bulletin at the protests in London and Manchester – Read it online below:

Slutwalk: Women fighting back against misogyny and rape

Socialism and women’s liberation

Can ‘Slut’ be reclaimed?

Women hit hard by cuts – we won’t go back!

SlutWalk: Women fight back against misogyny and rape

The SlutWalk movement has struck a chord with young women across the world and has put the issue of rape and sexual assault back on the agenda with demonstrations taking place in many countries.

The phenomenon started in Toronto when a policeman instructed female students “to avoid looking like sluts” to protect their personal safety. This attitude puts the blame on the victims of rape, not the attacker. Since then, women have taken to the streets under the banner: “whatever we wear, wherever we go, yes means yes and no means no!” SlutWalk protests are now being organised across the country as women rise up to fight back.

The comments of the Torronto policeman, along with the low conviction rate for rape serve as a shocking reminder of how far we still have to go to change attitudes towards rape.

SlutWalk is therefore a much-needed initiative to promote “the radical notion that nobody deserves to be raped”.

With nearly 10,000 showing their support on Facebook, SlutWalk has captured the imagination of a generation of young women who have been brought up trapped between supposed equality and liberation and the stigmatisation of our sexuality.

When women choose what to wear, we are not only choosing what feels comfortable or looks good, but negotiating our way through the maze of social and cultural values which our clothing embodies.

And let’s not forget the irony of a situation in which women are called sluts for wearing too little while on the other side of the Channel, women have been banned from wearing the niqab and covering up too much. These are all fronts in the struggle under capitalism for control over our bodies.

While the name SlutWalk has caused controversy (see inside), it is this in-your-face affront to conservative values that has appealed to many young women.  However, the next step for the SlutWalk movement must be to broaden out.  With so many cases of rape taking place within the family, any movement against sexual abuse needs to open itself up to women who have been victims of domestic abuse, who may not feel represented under the banner of SlutWalk.

These protests have the potential to be the first step towards a new women’s movement which can fight against violence, for control of our bodies and also against cuts to women’s jobs, benefits and services.

Last year saw young women take to the streets in our thousands to protest against rising tuition fees. Through the walk-outs, demonstrations and occupations of the student movement, a whole generation of young women have been politicised. Being radical and militant is not something “masculine”. Women have a proud history of struggle.

We have shown that we can be radical and fight back, and with spending cuts disproportionately affecting women, now is the time for a new women’s movement.

We need a women’s movement that can stand up for the interests of working class women whose jobs are threatened by cuts; a movement that can fight for the rights of young women to have free and easy access to abortion and contraception; a movement that fights against racism and islamophobia – we should be able to wear what we want, whether that’s the hijab or the mini-skirt!

Can ‘Slut’ be reclaimed?

SlutWalk’s controversial name has sparked a debate amongst feminists and women’s rights campaigners about whether it is possible to re-appropriate the word ‘slut’ and whether or not it is a word that women want to reclaim.

‘Slut’ is a word that is used to demonise and humiliate women. As a response to a woman’s sexual behaviour, it exercises control over female sexuality through the verbal power to shame. It is a word that does not apply to men, who are praised for such behaviour as ‘seducers,’ ‘libertines,’ ‘babe-magnets’.

Nobody should have moral judgements imposed on them for their enjoyment of sex. But it is solely women who bear the brunt of our society’s habit of doing so. This is reflected by the UK’s shockingly low conviction rate for sexual assault. So much rape and sexual abuse goes unreported, precisely because of words like ‘slut’ and the implication that what a woman wears, how much she has drunk, what her sexual history is like, has an impact on the crime committed and how seriously it is taken when reported.

It is the impact imposing moral values on a woman’s sexual behaviour, in terms of either purity or promiscuity that is precisely why words like ‘slut’ cannot be reclaimed. Doing so trivialises the power that the word has to bully and undermine.

Attempts to reclaim language are generally unsuccessful. There have been various attempts to reclaim and decontaminate other words of hatred, such as ‘queer’ and ‘nigger’. Yet no community has successfully and coherently reclaimed a word. And this language remains steeped in oppression and discrimination.

If SlutWalk was to develop into a movement focussed on reclaiming oppressive words, this would be a step backwards.

Not only is this re-appropriation not possible, but the struggle for women’s liberation will not take place on the terrain of language. We will win equality by challenging sexist ideas and attitudes and by changing the material conditions which give rise to them.

To try to reclaim the word ‘slut’ is to recognise the power of patriarchy and continue it, rather than to challenge it.

Socialism and Women’s Liberation

Women shoulder a double burden under capitalism – working to earn money in the day and then doing unpaid housework and childcare in the evenings.

Cuts to jobs, tax credits and benefits, funding for education, health and social care budgets, legal advice and women’s organisations will have a terrible effect on women who depend on these services.

The 500, 000 cuts to public sector jobs – where women make up 65% of the employment – are forcing huge numbers of women to join the dole queue.

As a secure employer, the public sector employs a high percentage of women, allowing them to balance work with childcare responsibilities.

The proposed cuts will push more women and families into poverty. On top of cuts to benefits and tax credits for families, women are more likely to be hit by cuts to local services.

The fact that women shoulder most of the responsibility for caring for children and elderly relatives means that we will suffer the most from cuts to services for children, the disabled and the elderly. If these services are cut, it is women who will have to provide care at home, for free.

In 2006, 62% of all applications for legal aid were by women. As a result, legal aid cuts will hit women the hardest. Family law, including divorce and child residence cases, would no longer be eligible for legal aid other than where domestic violence or forced marriage is proven. Women suffering psychological abuse are also disqualified under the legal aid reforms. Without the crucial support offered by legal aid, more women will end up trapped in abusive relationships.

Rape crisis centres which support survivors of sexual violence are under threat too. The promised funding for new centres has been withdrawn and existing centres face large budget cuts. These cuts will severely reduce the number of rape victims who benefit from their services, leaving thousands of women vulnerable to repeated abuse.

Such an attack on women’s services disempowers women. We are being forced back into the home in order to cope with an increased burden of caring for children and for sick and elderly relatives. The effect of these spending cuts will be to leave women at an economic and social disadvantage. The welfare state has played a vital role in easing the burden of housework on women, allowing us to enter into the workplace.

These measures risk overturning all the gains we’ve made over the generations. Our message has to be very simple – we won’t go back and will unite and fight for our rights.

Women hit hard by cuts – we won’t go back!

Women shoulder a double burden under capitalism – working to earn money in the day and then doing unpaid housework and childcare in the evenings.

Cuts to jobs, tax credits and benefits, funding for education, health and social care budgets, legal advice and women’s organisations will have a terrible effect on women who depend on these services.

The 500, 000 cuts to public sector jobs – where women make up 65% of the employment – are forcing huge numbers of women to join the dole queue.

As a secure employer, the public sector employs a high percentage of women, allowing them to balance work with childcare responsibilities.

The proposed cuts will push more women and families into poverty. On top of cuts to benefits and tax credits for families, women are more likely to be hit by cuts to local services.

The fact that women shoulder most of the responsibility for caring for children and elderly relatives means that we will suffer the most from cuts to services for children, the disabled and the elderly. If these services are cut, it is women who will have to provide care at home, for free.

In 2006, 62% of all applications for legal aid were by women. As a result, legal aid cuts will hit women the hardest. Family law, including divorce and child residence cases, would no longer be eligible for legal aid other than where domestic violence or forced marriage is proven. Women suffering psychological abuse are also disqualified under the legal aid reforms. Without the crucial support offered by legal aid, more women will end up trapped in abusive relationships.

Rape crisis centres which support survivors of sexual violence are under threat too. The promised funding for new centres has been withdrawn and existing centres face large budget cuts. These cuts will severely reduce the number of rape victims who benefit from their services, leaving thousands of women vulnerable to repeated abuse.

Such an attack on women’s services disempowers women. We are being forced back into the home in order to cope with an increased burden of caring for children and for sick and elderly relatives. The effect of these spending cuts will be to leave women at an economic and social disadvantage. The welfare state has played a vital role in easing the burden of housework on women, allowing us to enter into the workplace.
These measures risk overturning all the gains we’ve made over the generations. Our message has to be very simple – we won’t go back and will unite and fight for our rights.

Discussion | SlutWalk: Supporting with hesitation

The first SlutWalk took place in Toronto Canda on April 1st, after a police officer suggested women avoid dressing like ‘sluts’ in order to avoid sexual assault and rape. Since then SlutWalks have taken place on 3 continents and thousands are expected to join the SlutWalk protests in London and Manchester on June 11.

Here, Eleanor B, a member of Revolution and Leeds University Union Feminist Society presents a discussion piece.

 

SlutWalks have been named specifically in reference to a particular instance, but that doesn’t mean it’s progressive to try and reclaim the word.

Women’s sexuality has terrified society throughout history, and this is particularly noticeable in the legislative discrimination and cultural attitudes which prosper within the UK and beyond. When it comes to morality, the way a woman expresses her sexuality is full of societal blame and contradictions. Women are either contested for their vulgar overt sexuality, or dismissed as void of sexual desire.

The blaming culture which accompanies many female survivors’ experiences of sexual assault and rape illustrates how women are oppressed directly by the person who has harmed them, but also indirectly by society which tells them that their experience is in some way a consequence of their actions.

Sometimes society tells women that they must have deserved it, and that is what the police officer in Ontario was implying. The recent SlutWalk demonstrations that have swept across Canada, the USA, Australia and the UK are direct responses to the officer’s remark that if women students did not want to be sexually assaulted, then they should not dress like ‘sluts’.

The widespread attitude that a woman’s conduct is a factor in whether she will experience or deserve rape or unwanted sexual contact is dangerous. This belief is held by men and women of all ages in contemporary society. It is also shared by the Coalition government, who have recently declared their interest in replacing science-based sex education with promoting abstinence instead.

Abstinence is a doctrine based on telling young women that they are responsible for not arousing the animalistic sexual tendencies of boys, and that they must preserve their purity (because obviously that is their only measurement of worth) by abstaining from sex. Who’d want to have sex anyway right? Girls don’t, that’s icky and unrefined. Besides, girls and women don’t have real sexual urges like men! Abstinence disempowers women by denying them control over their own sexuality.

The idea that women essentially do not or cannot enjoy sex is unfortunately still popular; remember Stephen Fry’s valuable insights into female sexuality as a homosexual man?

Under a capitalist system, a woman’s value becomes contingent upon her sex appeal before she has even reached puberty. Young girls are of course encouraged to be many things in their childhoods, as long as they all adhere to the gender role which is assigned to their physical female form. Girls may be princesses, little mothers to dollies and objects to be adorned with beauty so that they can be admired.

Women are supposed to want to be admired by men, and that is why they wear ‘attractive’ clothing, for men, not themselves. This ridiculous and demeaning stereotype simply reinforces a set of cultural values which insist that women exist for men, and that they must conduct themselves in a way which increases their value as a consumer and sex object without doing anything too risqué or offensive to the social order.

It is not uncommon for some people to think that women should indeed be flattered by harassment in the street, because it is a compliment to their sex appeal. Similarly, women are expected to look sexy but not too sexy. Sexual but virginal (think Britney Spears’ early career).

The contradictions continue as we see the expectations on young women to respond positively to stripping and pornography consumption whilst at the same time not practising casual sex. The pressure on young women is at breaking point. The contradictions of conservatism versus consumerism under capitalism are too much to bear. Presumably this is where SlutWalk steps in.

But it doesn’t seem that simple. Feminists in the blogosphere have been going crazy, with opinion divided over whether the language is progressive enough to embrace the issues of female oppression today. I am tempted to suggest it is not. I understand that the specific use of ‘slut’ by the police officer in Ontario which launched the wave of demonstrations, but that does not make it ‘reclaiming’ this word an empowering struggle for women’s sexual liberation.

I do not want to reclaim the word slut; I want to make it redundant. I don’t want to repackage a variant, unified expression of female sexuality which just focuses on the single-issue aesthetic of all women being ‘sluts’. I don’t even understand what ‘sluttiness’ is supposed to encompass as a lifestyle.

The recent youth mobilisations around the SlutWalks are fantastic, and a progression from some of the essentialist understandings of heterosexuality which emerged from the second wave feminist movement. However, I am unhappy with the word slut being so readily welcomed as empowering for all women just because the original organisers in Ontario decided so. Celebrating ‘sluttiness’ seems regressive. It’s still promoting one sexual lifestyle as more valid than another.

What about asexual people? What about women who do not want casual sexual relationships? What about women who don’t want to describe themselves with words that have been spat at them with the poison of centuries of women’s oppression behind them?

The women’s liberation movement must not dictate how all women should conduct their sexuality in order to free themselves from oppression – an error which brought on the downfall of radical lesbianism and fractured the second wave feminist movement in the 1970s.

Reclaiming ‘sluttiness’ is essentially as regressive as dictating abstinence is, and will not improve gender relations or ameliorate oppression under capitalism.

The word slut is so deeply rooted in the Madonna/Whore dichotomy of female sexuality that it becomes lost in translation. Is the right message really being conveyed here? Even as a feminist activist with the time to explore the issues at hand, I am struggling to identify the message that is meant to be empowering me. Am I supposed to be more sexually suggestive now to counteract largely male attitudes towards sexual assault? It doesn’t feel like a particularly authentic sexual expression.

Women’s bodies have been subjected to the control of legislators, scientists, medical professionals, government agencies, religion and men throughout history, and this is not liberation. Men and women have both been alienated from the possibility of authentic sexual expression because of religious and capitalist sanctions. Consumerist markets package up the sexual expressions of humans and sell them back to us in distorted forms.

The message that women’s bodies must be under their own control, free from consumerist and conservative violation under capitalism must be at the heart of these demonstrations.

Yes, women should wear whatever they want when they go about their lives. They should be free from fear of reprisal. Women should not have to take the responsibility of counteracting sexual attacks through the modification of their own behaviour.

Self-defence classes are not the answer. Assuming men are animalistic sexual predators is not the answer. Talking about women as if they are all the same is not the answer.

I do not think reclaiming the word ‘slut’ is the answer either, but I don’t want to punch the enthusiasm out of this new youth mobilisation. Further discussions are needed of course, but let’s support the SlutWalk demonstrations as an act of recognition to the repression of female sexuality, with the acknowledgement that embracing this word is not our ideal first port of call to win the fight.

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Women & the Egyptian revolution

First Tunisia, then Egypt. In the past week we have seen the people of Egypt rise up in their millions and take over the streets across the country. Peaceful demonstrations of hundreds of thousands march alongside popular militias that have seized control of police stations and arrested corrupt officials.

In this struggle women of all ages have taken up many of the leading roles, they are at the forefront of the uprising. Thanks to live broadcasting, people in the West, and more importantly, across the Middle East can see the huge numbers of women taking their rightful place on the streets in the Egyptian people’s democratic revolution.  

Some are dressed in all black, some in veils, some in brightly coloured hijabs, others in denim; and all can be seen at the front of every demonstration. The bravery of the women of Egypt and the rest of the Middle East is demolishing the stereotype that they are submissive and isolated from political events. The active role played by women is one of the most inspiring developments to emerge from the revolt across the region.

However, physical bravery on demonstrations is not enough. Women make up the majority of the international working class, so if women are not able to take up many of the leading roles, we cannot have a successful revolution.

Egyptian women should demand that they are allowed to join the popular militias to defend their communities and demonstrations from President Mubarak’s fascist gangs. Women must fight for political representation in the workers’ committees that are springing up in the most militant towns and cities.

Women must have their own independent representation at every level of the struggle against dictatorship and oppression. By playing their part in the defence and workplace committees, women can organize to unite the struggle for women’s liberation from religious, sexual and cultural oppression with the mass movement to overthrow Mubarak.

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