đŸ Archived View for library.inu.red âș file âș helin-asi-witch-slut-murderer.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 10:43:11. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
âĄïž Next capture (2024-07-09)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Witch, Slut, Murderer Author: HĂȘlĂźn AsĂź Date: June 28, 2018 Language: en Topics: anarcha-feminism, feminist Source: http://theregion.org/article/13623-witch-slut-child-murderer-shaming-other-tools-of-patriarchy
Patriarchy does not merely subsist on structures which are out of our
influence and control. In fact, the patriarchal mindset is one that has
been passed on over societies and generations, and one which changes its
character depending on the historical place and time. Today, we are
confronted with other mechanisms of oppression than the ones which
prevailed 50, 100 or 500 years ago. At the same time though, there are
certain parallels and patterns which have survived over the centuries
and which reveal the manner in which the war on women, their thoughts
and bodies has been conducted. The repression and exploitation of women,
through which the establishment of the patriarchal system has been made
possible, can be traced back to thousands of years. The development of
this system can be deduced from the erasure of female key figures and
divinities in the mythologies, and can also be witnessed later from the
devaluation of âfemininityâ, of the natural and corporal in (mostly
Western) philosophy and, not least, from the witch hunts of Europe which
started in the late Middle Age. When looking at the ideological and
psychological means of war, which have been used against women* in the
last 5000 years, we can recognize certain patterns with which we are
also similarly confronted with today.
To name it concretely, we can speak of a demonization of women,
accompanied by the shaming and degradation of women. In the historical
analysis of patriarchy the hegemonic-male historical narrative portrays
women as passive factors, which have in no way and no time put up
resistance. Moreover, the patriarchal system is being understood as
natural and god-given. Yet there is the other side of the coin, which
would have remained hidden if it wasnât for feminists revealing this
history of resistance in the last decades. The history of patriarchy is
at the same time the history of a war against the rebelling body and the
resistant spirit.
Among others, the Kurdish womenâs movement has analysed the remarkable
depiction of female figures in the Sumerian, Babylonian, Indian and
Greek mythologies. They speak of a crash that happened in the
mythologies, a crash which destroyed the image of the worshipped Goddess
and started ascribing predominantly destructive attributes to her. From
this crash the beginning of the patriarchal society can be detected.
Today, when we inform ourselves about the goddesses of the mythologies,
we come upon contradicting traditions. Many powerful, strong goddesses
are at the same time described as devious and almost demonic. A good
example of this lies in the Indian goddesses Durga and Kali, which are
described as independent and strong figures who, unlike other goddesses,
do not have a spouse or a male equivalent. The goddess Durga symbolizes
life and death, kindliness and punishment at the same time. Similarly,
Kali, who is said to be born from the brow and from the anger of Durga,
is a goddess of creation and renewal, but also of death and destruction.
Both of them symbolize sexuality and shakti, which is primordial female
energy, but thereby rather representing the dark and destructive side of
shakti in the first place. In some cases, they are described as loudly
laughing, wreckful and demonically dancing figures. On the opposite,
there are goddesses like Sita, who is rather described as being tame and
standing for fidelity, fertility and fortitude.
The goddesses Kali and Durga are not the only examples showing us that
the portrayal of strong female goddesses go along with demonization in
many cases. The Sumerian goddess Lilith, which is at the same time the
first woman in Jewish mythology, puts up resistance against submission
and stands for independence and sexual freedom. In later depictions, she
is feared as a demon, seductress or child murderess. This pattern of
demonization of female self-determination, strength and free sexuality
managed to live through over centuries, until the Middle Age in Europe,
where one of the bloodiest and cruellest campaigns in the history of
patriarchy took place.
In the beginning of capitalism, the war on the rebellious body was
intensified when they tried to exploit and turn every creative,
constructive energy of the human into labour power. Before and during
this time there were widespread beliefs of vivid energies in nature and
natural forces like magicians and, especially, witches. In her book
âCaliban and the Witchâ, Silvia Federici (*1942) writes that the
practice of magic was not compatible with the evolving capitalist order
and work. Capitalism, a system that calculates, logically prognosticates
and concludes and disciplines, was opposing witchcraft, which was then
considered lawless, unpredictable, chaotic and evil. As a result of the
demonization of rebellious women, there was a sexist campaign and witch
hunt, which is often forgotten in the analysis of the history of
capitalism. Rebellious women who did not conform to the social norms
were labelled as witches by their own relatives and neighbours.
âPromiscuityâ, having âillegitimateâ children, strong bonds between
women, wisdom and knowledge about nature, being connected to nature, the
possession of cats (thousands of cats have been murdered as well!),
prostitution, adultery, living without a man or having a âbad recordâ in
society were all seen as evidence for being a witch. A witch was also a
woman who was not submissive, who disagreed, defended herself or swore.
Witches were in some way a symbol of resistance against the patriarchal
order. Their resistance was answered with degradation and shaming. The
execution of 60.000 witches was a public act, a name and shame event,
where the women who have been excluded from society were burned at the
stake. The punishment and torture of witches aimed at demonizing and
humiliating them. Nature, magic, witches and women, which until then
used to be important parts of life â were destroyed and degraded as part
of the development of capitalism and the emergence of rationalist
science.
Also in Western philosophy, the devaluation of nature, the body and
everything material went along with the devaluation of women, who were
declared unreasonable, irrational, unstable, unpredictable and
compulsive beings. Philosophers, scientists, psychoanalysts and many
more engaged in this. All these methods of defamation and demonization
of women through shaming, accusation, subjugation and objectification
survived over the centuries. Also the present society is not spared from
the idea that a woman who lives a self-determined, free and independent
life, who organizes and allies herself with other women, argues, shouts,
disagrees, discusses, decides over her own body, decides over her love
and sex life or does in other forms resist the sexist norms, should be
âashamedâ. Shaming, humiliation, exposure (keyword: revenge porn) and
accusations have always been tools of the patriarchal system, which
should definitely be analysed more intensively in order to fight them.
The manner and extent changes depending on cultural and social
realities, but to name only a few examples, women* often are seen as a
mirror of the âhonourâ and âprideâ of her family. What a woman* wears,
who she spends time with, whom she loves or if she loves, whom she
marries or not marries and many other grotesque standards determine her
reputation in society. She is judged â and this is something almost
every one of us does â for the way she dresses, for her body, for the
way she walks, laughs or dances and especially for her decisions
concerning her sexual life. This is not only due to the fact that our
society has a distorted relationship on the subject of sexuality in
general, which is increasingly shaped by perversion and demonstrations
of power, but especially when it comes to the sexuality of women*. Her
sexual life determines her so-called purity, and as soon as she moves
away from the social norms she is seen as impure. This is part of an old
pattern which we can recognize as far back as to mythology. The image
the society has of women* is that of an extremely ambivalent and
unpredictable being. On the one hand, she is seen as a symbol of
fertility, purity, groundedness and maternal love, while only being
socially accepted with these attributes. On the other hand, at the
latest when a woman begins to resist, the other side of the coin
reveals, where she is being labelled as an uncontrollable, âhystericalâ,
devious, impure and diabolic being which has to be controlled and
subordinated. Between these âpoles of femininityâ there seem to be no
grey areas, and through the creation of the âslut-saintâ-dichotomy the
psychological and emotional pressure on women* is even more intensified.
Shaming, embarrassment and accusation are the means of war which the
sexist society uses in every part of life. The sense of shame and guilt
are supposed to break her spirit, to subjugate her (collective)
resistance and to weaken her self-confidence.
It is up to us and coming generations of revolutionary feminists and the
youth to reveal these and other means of war by the patriarchy and to
put up a collective resistance against them. Witch, bitch, slut, child
murderess â or whatever name they give us â let us ourselves determine
our names, colours, spirits, lives and revolution and rebel against the
disenchantment of life and the world, against the artificial hierarchies
and powers.