The Second Sex
Author’s Introduction
by Simone de Beauvoir
For a long time I have hesitated to write a book on woman.
The subject is irritating, especially to women; and it is not new. Enough ink
has been spilled in the quarrelling over feminism, now practically over, and
perhaps we should say no more about it. It is still talked about, however, for
the voluminous nonsense uttered during the last century seems to have done
little to illuminate the problem. After all, is there a problem? And if so,
what is it? Are there women, really? Most assuredly the theory of the eternal
feminine still has its adherents who will whisper in your ear: ‘Even in Russia women still are women’; and other erudite persons –
sometimes the very same – say with a sigh: ‘Woman is losing her way, woman is
lost.’ One wonders if women still exist, if they will always exist, whether or
not it is desirable that they should, what place they occupy in the world, what
their place should be. ‘What has become of women?’ was asked recently in an
ephemeral magazine.1
But first we must ask: what is a woman? ‘Tota mulier in utero,’ says one, ‘woman
is a womb.’ But in speaking of certain women, connoisseurs declare that they
are not women, although they are equipped with a uterus like the rest. All
agree in recognizing the fact that females exist in the human species; today as
always they make up about one half of humanity. And yet we are told that
femininity is in danger; we are exhorted to be women, remain women, become women.
It would appear, then, that every female human being is not necessarily a
woman; to be so considered she must share in that mysterious and threatened
reality known as femininity. Is this attribute something secreted by the
ovaries? Or is it a Platonic essence, a product of the philosophic imagination?
Is a rustling petticoat enough to bring it down to earth? Although some women
try zealously to incarnate this essence, it is hardly patentable. It is
frequently described in vague and dazzling terms that seem to have been
borrowed from the vocabulary of the seers, and indeed in the times of St. Thomas it was considered an essence as
certainly defined as the somniferous virtue of the poppy.
But conceptualism has lost ground. The biological and social
sciences no longer admit the existence of unchangeably fixed entities that
determine given characteristics, such as those ascribed to woman, the Jew, or
the Negro. Science regards any characteristic as a reaction dependent in part
upon a situation. If today femininity
no longer exists, then it never existed. But does the word woman, then, have no specific content? This is stoutly affirmed by
those who hold to the philosophy of the enlightenment, of rationalism, of
nominalism; women, to them, are merely the human beings arbitrarily designated
by the word woman. Many American
women particularly are prepared to think that there is no longer any place for
woman as such; if a backward individual still takes herself for a woman, her
friends advise her to be psychoanalyzed and thus get rid of this obsession. In
regard to a work, Modern Woman: The Lost
Sex, which in other respects has its irritating features, Dorothy Parker
has written: ‘I cannot be just to books which treat of woman as woman . . . My
idea is that all of us, men as well as women, should be regarded as human
beings.’ But nominalism is a rather inadequate doctrine, and the
antifemininists have had no trouble in showing that women simply are not men. Surely woman is, like man,
a human being; but such a declaration is abstract. The fact is that every
concrete human being is always a singular, separate individual. To decline to
accept such notions as the eternal feminine, the black soul, the Jewish
character, is not to deny that Jews, Negroes, women exist today – this denial
does not represent a liberation for those concerned, but rather a flight from
reality. Some years ago a well-known woman writer refused to permit her
portrait to appear in a series of photographs especially devoted to women
writers; she wished to be counted among the men. But in order to gain this
privilege she made use of her husband’s influence! Women who assert that they
are men lay claim none the less to masculine consideration and respect. I
recall also a young Trotskyite standing on a platform at a boisterous meeting
and getting ready to use her fists, in spite of her evident fragility. She was
denying her feminine weakness; but it was for love of a militant male whose
equal she wished to be. The attitude of defiance of many American women proves
that they are haunted by a sense of their femininity. In truth, to go for a
walk with one’s eyes open is enough to demonstrate that humanity is divided
into two classes of individuals whose clothes, faces, bodies, smiles, gaits,
interests, and occupations are manifestly different. Perhaps these differences
are superficial, perhaps they are destined to disappear. What is certain is
that right now they do most obviously exist.
If her functioning as a female is not enough to define
woman, if we decline also to explain her through ‘the eternal feminine’, and if
nevertheless we admit, provisionally, that women do exist, then we must face
the question: what is a woman?
To state the question is, to me, to suggest, at once, a
preliminary answer. The fact that I ask it is in itself significant. A man
would never get the notion of writing a book on the peculiar situation of the
human male.2 But if I wish to define myself, I must first of all
say: ‘I am a woman’; on this truth must be based all further discussion. A man
never begins by presenting himself as an individual of a certain sex; it goes
without saying that he is a man. The terms masculine
and feminine are used symmetrically
only as a matter of form, as on legal papers. In actuality the relation of the
two sexes is not quite like that of two electrical poles, for man represents
both the positive and the neutral, as is indicated by the common use of man to designate human beings in
general; whereas woman represents only the negative, defined by limiting
criteria, without reciprocity. In the midst of an abstract discussion it is
vexing to hear a man say: ‘You think thus and so because you are a woman’; but
I know that my only defense is to reply: ‘I think thus and so because it is
true,’ thereby removing my subjective self from the argument. It would be out
of the question to reply: ‘And you think the contrary because you are a man’,
for it is understood that the fact of being a man is no peculiarity. A man is
in the right in being a man; it is the woman who is in the wrong. It amounts to
this: just as for the ancients there was an absolute vertical with reference to
which the oblique was defined, so there is an absolute human type, the
masculine. Woman has ovaries, a uterus; these peculiarities imprison her in her
subjectivity, circumscribe her within the limits of her own nature. It is often
said that she thinks with her glands. Man superbly ignores the fact that his
anatomy also includes glands, such as the testicles, and that they secrete
hormones. He thinks of his body as a direct and normal connection with the
world, which he believes he apprehends objectively, whereas he regards the body
of woman as a hindrance, a prison, weighed down by everything peculiar to it.
‘The female is a female by virtue of a certain lack of qualities,’ said Aristotle; ‘we should regard the female
nature as afflicted with a natural defectiveness.’ And St. Thomas for his part pronounced woman to be
an ‘imperfect man’, an ‘incidental’ being. This is symbolized in Genesis where
Eve is depicted as made from what Bossuet called ‘a supernumerary bone’ of
Adam.
Thus humanity is male and man defines woman not in herself
but as relative to him; she is not regarded as an autonomous being. Michelet
writes: ‘Woman, the relative being . . .’ And Benda is most positive in his Rapport d’Uriel: ‘The body of man makes
sense in itself quite apart from that of woman, whereas the latter seems
wanting in significance by itself . . . Man can think of himself without woman.
She cannot think of herself without man.’ And she is simply what man decrees;
thus she is called ‘the sex’, by which is meant that she appears essentially to
the male as a sexual being. For him she is sex – absolute sex, no less. She is
defined and differentiated with reference to man and not he with reference to
her; she is the incidental, the inessential as opposed to the essential. He is
the Subject, he is the Absolute – she is the Other.3
The category of the Other
is as primordial as consciousness itself. In the most primitive societies, in
the most ancient mythologies, one finds the expression of a duality – that of
the Self and the Other. This duality was not originally attached to the
division of the sexes; it was not dependent on any empirical facts. It is
revealed in such works as that of Granet on Chinese thought and those of
Dumézil on the East Indies and Rome. The feminine element was at first no more involved
in such pairs as Varuna-Mitra, Uranus-Zeus, Sun-Moon, and Day-Night than it was
in the contrasts between Good and Evil, lucky and unlucky auspices, right and
left, God and Lucifer. Otherness is a fundamental category of human thought.
Thus it is that no group ever sets itself up as the One
without at once setting the Other over against itself. If three travelers
chance to occupy the same compartment, that is enough to make vaguely hostile
‘others’ out of all the rest of the passengers on the train. In small-town eyes
all persons not belonging to the village are ‘strangers’ and suspect; to the
native of a country all who inhabit other countries are ‘foreigners’; Jews are
‘different’ for the anti-Semite, Negroes are ‘inferior’ for American racists,
aborigines are ‘natives’ for colonists, proletarians are the ‘lower class’ for
the privileged.
Lévi-Strauss, at the end of a profound work on the various
forms of primitive societies, reaches the following conclusion: ‘Passage from
the state of Nature to the state of Culture is marked by man’s ability to view
biological relations as a series of contrasts; duality, alternation,
opposition, and symmetry, whether under definite or vague forms, constitute not
so much phenomena to be explained as fundamental and immediately given data of
social reality.’4 These phenomena would be incomprehensible if in
fact human society were simply a Mitsein
or fellowship based on solidarity and friendliness. Things become clear, on the
contrary, if, following Hegel, we find in consciousness itself a fundamental
hostility toward every other consciousness; the subject can be posed only in being
opposed – he sets himself up as the essential, as opposed to the other, the
inessential, the object.
But the other consciousness, the other ego, sets up a
reciprocal claim. The native traveling abroad is shocked to find himself in
turn regarded as a ‘stranger’ by the natives of neighboring countries. As a
matter of fact, wars, festivals, trading, treaties, and contests among tribes,
nations, and classes tend to deprive the concept Other of its absolute sense and to make manifest its relativity;
willy-nilly, individuals and groups are forced to realize the reciprocity of
their relations. How is it, then, that this reciprocity has not been recognized
between the sexes, that one of the contrasting terms is set up as the sole
essential, denying any relativity in regard to its correlative and defining the
latter as pure otherness? Why is it that women do not dispute male sovereignty?
No subject will readily volunteer to become the object, the inessential; it is
not the Other who, in defining himself as the Other, establishes the One. The
Other is posed as such by the One in defining himself as the One. But if the
Other is not to regain the status of being the One, he must be submissive
enough to accept this alien point of view. Whence comes this submission in the
case of woman?
There are, to be sure, other cases in which a certain
category has been able to dominate another completely for a time. Very often
this privilege depends upon inequality of numbers – the majority imposes its
rule upon the minority or persecutes it. But women are not a minority, like the
American Negroes or the Jews; there are as many women as men on earth. Again,
the two groups concerned have often been originally independent; they may have
been formerly unaware of each other’s existence, or perhaps they recognized
each other’s autonomy. But a historical event has resulted in the subjugation
of the weaker by the stronger. The scattering of the Jews, the introduction of
slavery into America, the conquests of imperialism are
examples in point. In these cases the oppressed retained at least the memory of
former days; they possessed in common a past, a tradition, sometimes a religion
or a culture.
The parallel drawn by Bebel between women and the
proletariat is valid in that neither ever formed a minority or a separate
collective unit of mankind. And instead of a single historical event it is in
both cases a historical development that explains their status as a class and
accounts for the membership of particular
individuals in that class. But proletarians have not always existed,
whereas there have always been women. They are women in virtue of their anatomy
and physiology. Throughout history they have always been subordinated to men,5
and hence their dependency is not the result of a historical event or a social
change – it was not something that occurred.
The reason why otherness in this case seems to be an absolute is in part that
it lacks the contingent or incidental nature of historical facts. A condition
brought about at a certain time can be abolished at some other time, as the
Negroes of Haiti and others have proved; but it might seem that a natural
condition is beyond the possibility of change. In truth, however, the nature of
things is no more immutably given, once for all, than is historical reality. If
woman seems to be the inessential which never becomes the essential, it is
because she herself fails to bring about this change. Proletarians say ‘We’;
Negroes also. Regarding themselves as subjects, they transform the bourgeois, the
whites, into ‘others’. But women do not say ‘We’, except at some congress of
feminists or similar formal demonstration; men say ‘women’, and women use the
same word in referring to themselves. They do not authentically assume a
subjective attitude. The proletarians have accomplished the revolution in Russia, the Negroes in Haiti, the Indo-Chinese are battling for
it in Indo-China; but the women’s effort has never been anything more than a
symbolic agitation. They have gained only what men have been willing to grant;
they have taken nothing, they have only received.6
The reason for this is that women lack concrete means for
organizing themselves into a unit which can stand face to face with the
correlative unit. They have no past, no history, no religion of their own; and
they have no such solidarity of work and interest as that of the proletariat.
They are not even promiscuously herded together in the way that creates
community feeling among the American Negroes, the ghetto Jews, the workers of Saint-Denis, or the factory hands of Renault.
They live dispersed among the males, attached through residence, housework,
economic condition, and social standing to certain men – fathers or husbands –
more firmly than they are to other women. If they belong to the bourgeoisie,
they feel solidarity with men of that class, not to proletarian women; if they
are white, their allegiance is to white men, not to Negro women. The
proletariat can propose to massacre the ruling class, and a sufficiently
fanatical Jew or Negro might dream of getting sole possession of the atomic
bomb and making humanity wholly Jewish or black; but woman cannot even dream of
exterminating the males. The bond that unites her to her oppressors is not
comparable to any other. The division of the sexes is a biological fact, not an
event in human history. Male and female stand opposed within a primordial Mitsein, and woman has not broken it.
The couple is a fundamental unity with its two halves riveted together, and the
cleavage of society along the line of sex is impossible. Here is to be found
the basic trait of woman: she is the Other in the totality of which the two
components are necessary to one another.
One could suppose that this reciprocity might have
facilitated the liberation of woman. When Hercules sat at the feet of Omphale
and helped with her spinning, his desire for her held him captive; but why did
she fail to gain a lasting power? To revenge herself on Jason, Medea killed
their children; and this grim legend would seem to suggest that she might have
obtained a formidable influence over him through his love for his offspring. In
Lysistrata Aristophanes gaily depicts
a band of women who joined forces to gain social ends through the sexual needs
of their men; but this is only a play. In the legend of the Sabine women, the
latter soon abandoned their plan of remaining sterile to punish their
ravishers. In truth woman has not been socially emancipated through man’s need
– sexual desire and the desire for offspring – which makes the male dependent
for satisfaction upon the female.
Master and slave, also, are united by a reciprocal need, in
this case economic, which does not liberate the slave. In the relation of
master to slave the master does not make a point of the need that he has for
the other; he has in his grasp the power of satisfying this need through his
own action; whereas the slave, in his dependent condition, his hope and fear,
is quite conscious of the need he has for his master. Even if the need is at
bottom equally urgent for both, it always works in favor of the oppressor and
against the oppressed. That is why the liberation of the working class, for
example, has been slow.
Now, woman has always been man’s dependent, if not his
slave; the two sexes have never shared the world in equality. And even today
woman is heavily handicapped, though her situation is beginning to change.
Almost nowhere is her legal status the same as man’s, and frequently it is much
to her disadvantage. Even when her rights are legally recognized in the abstract,
long-standing custom prevents their full expression in the mores. In the
economic sphere men and women can almost be said to make up two castes; other
things being equal, the former hold the better jobs, get higher wages, and have
more opportunity for success than their new competitors. In industry and
politics men have a great many more positions and they monopolize the most
important posts. In addition to all this, they enjoy a traditional prestige
that the education of children tends in every way to support, for the present
enshrines the past – and in the past all history has been made by men. At the
present time, when women are beginning to take part in the affairs of the
world, it is still a world that belongs to men – they have no doubt of it at
all and women have scarcely any. To decline to be the Other, to refuse to be a
party to the deal – this would be for women to renounce all the advantages
conferred upon them by their alliance with the superior caste.
Man-the-sovereign will provide women-the-liege with material protection and
will undertake the moral justification of her existence; thus she can evade at
once both economic risk and the metaphysical risk of a liberty in which ends
and aims must be contrived without assistance. Indeed, along with the ethical
urge of each individual to affirm his subjective existence, there is also the
temptation to forego liberty and become a thing. This is an inauspicious road,
for he who takes it – passive, lost, ruined – becomes henceforth the creature
of another’s will, frustrated in his transcendence and deprived of every value.
But it is an easy road; on it one avoids the strain involved in undertaking an
authentic existence. When man makes of woman the Other, he may, then, expect her to manifest deep-seated tendencies
toward complicity. Thus, woman may fail to lay claim to the status of subject
because she lacks definite resources, because she feels the necessary bond that
ties her to man regardless of reciprocity, and because she is often very well
pleased with her role as the Other.
But it will be asked at once: how did all this begin? It is
easy to see that the duality of the sexes, like any duality, gives rise to
conflict. And doubtless the winner will assume the status of absolute. But why
should man have won from the start? It seems possible that women could have won
the victory; or that the outcome of the conflict might never have been decided.
How is it that the world has always belonged to the men and that things have
begun to change only recently? Is this change a good thing? Will it bring about
an equal sharing of the world between men and women?
These questions are not new, and they have often been
answered. But the very fact that woman is
the Other tends to cast suspicion upon all the justifications that men have
ever been able to provide for it. These have all too evidently been dictated by
men’s interest. A little-known feminist of the seventeenth century, Poulain de
la Barre, put it this way: ‘All that has been written about women by men should
be suspect, for the men are at once judge and party to the lawsuit.’
Everywhere, at all times, the males have displayed their satisfaction in
feeling that they are the lords of creation. ‘Blessed be God . . . that He did
not make me a woman,’ say the Jews in their morning prayers, while their wives
pray on a note of resignation: ‘Blessed be the Lord, who created me according
to His will.’ The first among the blessings for which Plato thanked the gods
was that he had been created free, not enslaved; the second, a man, not a
woman. But the males could not enjoy this privilege fully unless they believed
it to be founded on the absolute and eternal; they sought to make the fact of
their supremacy into a right. ‘Being men, those who have made and compiled the
laws have favored their own sex, and jurists have elevated these laws into
principles’, to quote Poulain de la Barre once more.
Legislators, priests, philosophers, writers, and scientists
have striven to show that the subordinate position of woman is willed in heaven
and advantageous on earth. The religions invented by men reflect this wish for
domination. In the legends of Eve and Pandora men have taken up arms against
women. They have made use of philosophy and theology, as the quotations from
Aristotle and St. Thomas have shown. Since ancient times satirists and
moralists have delighted in showing up the weaknesses of women. We are familiar
with the savage indictments hurled against women throughout French literature.
Montherlant, for example, follows the tradition of Jean de Meung, though with
less gusto. This hostility may at times be well founded, often it is
gratuitous; but in truth it more or less successfully conceals a desire for
self-justification. As Montaigne says, ‘It is easier to accuse one sex that to
excuse the other.’ Sometimes what is going on is clear enough. For instance,
the Roman law limiting the rights of woman cited ‘the imbecility, the
instability of the sex’ just when the weakening of family ties seemed to
threaten the interests of male heirs. And in the effort to keep the married
woman under guardianship, appeal was made in the sixteenth century to the
authority of St. Augustine, who declared that ‘woman is a creature neither
decisive nor constant’, at a time when the single woman was thought capable of
managing her property. Montaigne understood clearly how arbitrary and unjust
was woman’s appointed lot: ‘Women are not in the wrong when they decline to
accept the rules laid down for them, since the men make these rules without consulting
them. No wonder intrigue and strife abound.’ But he did not go so far as to
champion their cause.
It was only later, in the eighteenth century, that genuinely
democratic men began to view the matter objectively. Diderot, among others,
strove to show that woman is, like man, a human being. Later John Stuart Mill
came fervently to her defense. But these philosophers displayed unusual
impartiality. In the nineteenth century the feminist quarrel became again a
quarrel of partisans. One of the consequences of the industrial revolution was
the entrance of women into productive labor, and it was just here that the
claims of the feminists emerged from the realm of theory and acquired an
economic basis, while their opponents became the more aggressive. Although
landed property lost power to some extent, the bourgeoisie clung to the old
morality that found the guarantee of private property in the solidity of the
family. Woman was ordered back into the home the more harshly as her
emancipation became a real menace. Even within the working class the men
endeavored to restrain woman’s liberation, because they began to see women as
dangerous competitors – the more so because they were accustomed to work for
lower wages.7
In proving woman’s inferiority, the antifeminists then began
to draw not only upon religion, philosophy, and theology, as before, but also
upon science – biology, experimental psychology, etc. At most they were willing
to grant ‘equality in difference’ to the other
sex. That profitable formula is most significant; it is precisely like the
‘equal but separate’ formula of the Jim Crow laws aimed at the North American
Negroes. As is well known, this so-called equalitarian segregation has resulted
only in the most extreme discrimination. The similarity just noted is in no way
due to chance, for whether it is a race, a caste, a class, or a sex that is
reduced to a position of inferiority, the methods of justification are the
same. ‘The eternal feminine’ corresponds to ‘the black soul’ and to ‘the Jewish
character’. True, the Jewish problem is on the whole very different from the
other two – to the anti-Semite the Jew is not so much an inferior as he is an
enemy for whom there is to be granted no place on earth, for whom annihilation
is the fate desired. But there are deep similarities between the situation of
woman and that of the Negro. Both are being emancipated today from a like
paternalism, and the former master class wishes to ‘keep them in their place’ –
that is, the place chosen for them. In both places the former masters lavish
more or less sincere eulogies, either on the virtues of ‘the good Negro’ with
his dormant, childish, merry soul – the submissive Negro – or on the merits of
the woman who is ‘truly feminine’ – that is, frivolous, infantile,
irresponsible – the submissive woman. In both cases the dominant class bases
its argument on a state of affairs that it has itself created. As George
Bernard Shaw puts it, in substance, ‘The American white relegates the black to
the rank of shoeshine boy; and he concludes from this that the black is good
for nothing but shining shoes.’ This vicious circle is met with in all
analogous circumstances; when an individual (or a group of individuals) is kept
in a situation of inferiority, the fact is that he is inferior. But the significance of the verb to be must be rightly understood here; it
is in bad faith to give it a static value when it really has the dynamic
Hegelian sense of ‘to have become’. Yes, women on the whole are today inferior to men; that is, their
situation affords them fewer possibilities. The question is: should that state
of affairs continue?
Many men hope that it will continue; not all have given up
the battle. The conservative bourgeoisie still see in the emancipation of women
a menace to their morality and their interests. Some men dread feminine
competition. Recently a male student wrote in the Hebdo-Latin: ‘Every woman student who goes into medicine or law
robs us of a job.’ He never questioned his rights in this world. And economic
interests are not the only ones concerned. One of the benefits that oppression
confers upon the oppressors is that the most humble among them is made to feel superior; thus, a ‘poor white’ in
the South can console himself with the thought that he is not a ‘dirty nigger’
– and the more prosperous whites cleverly exploit this pride.
Similarly, the most mediocre of males feels himself a
demigod as compared with women. It was much easier for M. de Montherlant to
think himself a hero when he faced women (and women chosen for his purpose)
than when he was obliged to act the man among men – something many women have
done better than he, for that matter. And in September 1948, in one of his
articles in the Figaro littéraire,
Claude Mauriac – whose great originality is admired by all – could8
write regarding woman: ‘We listen on
a tone [sic!] of polite indifference
. . . to the most brilliant among them, well knowing that her wit reflects more
or less luminously ideas that come from us.’
Evidently the speaker referred to is not reflecting the ideas of Mauriac
himself, for no one knows of his having any. It may be that she reflects ideas
originating with men, but then, even among men there are those who have been
known to appropriate ideas not their own; and one can well ask whether Claude
Mauriac might not find more interesting a conversation reflecting Descartes,
Marx, or Gide rather than himself. What is really remarkable is that by using
the questionable we he identifies
himself with St. Paul, Hegel, Lenin, and Nietzsche, and from the lofty eminence
of their grandeur looks down disdainfully upon the bevy of women who make bold
to converse with him on a footing of equality. In truth, I know of more than
one woman who would refuse to suffer with patience Mauriac’s ‘tone of polite
indifference’.
I have lingered on this example because the masculine
attitude is here displayed with disarming ingenuousness. But men profit in many
more subtle ways from the otherness, the alterity of woman. Here is miraculous
balm for those afflicted with an inferiority complex, and indeed no one is more
arrogant toward women, more aggressive or scornful, than the man who is anxious
about his virility. Those who are not fear-ridden in the presence of their
fellow men are much more disposed to recognize a fellow creature in woman; but
even to these the myth of Woman, the Other, is precious for many reasons.9
They cannot be blamed for not cheerfully relinquishing all the benefits they
derive from the myth, for they realize what they would lose in relinquishing
woman as they fancy her to be, while they fail to realize what they have to
gain from the woman of tomorrow. Refusal to pose oneself as the Subject, unique
and absolute, requires great self-denial. Furthermore, the vast majority of men
make no such claim explicitly. They do not postulate
woman as inferior, for today they are too thoroughly imbued with the ideal of
democracy not to recognize all human beings as equals.
In the bosom of the family, woman seems in the eyes of
childhood and youth to be clothed in the same social dignity as the adult
males. Later on, the young man, desiring and loving, experiences the
resistance, the independence of the woman desired and loved; in marriage, he
respects woman as wife and mother, and in the concrete events of conjugal life
she stands there before him as a free being. He can therefore feel that social
subordination as between the sexes no longer exists and that on the whole, in
spite of differences, woman is an equal. As, however, he observes some points
of inferiority – the most important being unfitness for the professions – he
attributes these to natural causes. When he is in a co-operative and benevolent
relation with woman, his theme is the principle of abstract equality, and he
does not base his attitude upon such inequality as may exist. But when he is in
conflict with her, the situation is reversed: his theme will be the existing
inequality, and he will even take it as justification for denying abstract
equality.10
So it is that many men will affirm as if in good faith that
women are the equals of man and that
they have nothing to clamor for, while at
the same time they will say that women can never be the equals of man and
that their demands are in vain. It is, in point of fact, a difficult matter for
man to realize the extreme importance of social discriminations which seem
outwardly insignificant but which produce in woman moral and intellectual
effects so profound that they appear to spring from her original nature.11
The most sympathetic of men never fully comprehend woman’s concrete situation.
And there is no reason to put much trust in the men when they rush to the
defense of privileges whose full extent they can hardly measure. We shall not,
then, permit ourselves to be intimidated by the number and violence of the
attacks launched against women, nor to be entrapped by the self-seeking
eulogies bestowed on the ‘true woman’, nor to profit by the enthusiasm for
women’s destiny manifested by men who would not for the world have any part of
it.
We should consider the arguments of the feminists with no
less suspicion, however, for very often their controversial aim deprives them
of all real value. If the ‘woman question’ seems trivial, it is because
masculine arrogance has made of it a ‘quarrel’; and when quarreling one no
longer reasons well. People have tirelessly sought to prove that woman is
superior, inferior, or equal to man. Some say that, having been created after
Adam, she is a secondary being; others say on the contrary that Adam was only a
rough draft and that God succeeded in producing the human being in perfection
when He created Eve. Woman’s brain is smaller; yes, but it is relatively
larger. Christ was made a man; yes, but perhaps for his greater humility. Each
argument at once suggests its opposite, and both are often fallacious. If we
are to gain understanding, we must get out of these ruts; we must discard the
vague notions of superiority, inferiority, equality which have hitherto
corrupted every discussion of the subject and start afresh.
Very well, but just how shall we pose the question? And, to
begin with, who are we to propound it at all? Man is at once judge and party to
the case; but so is woman. What we need is an angel – neither man nor woman –
but where shall we find one? Still, the angel would be poorly qualified to
speak, for an angel is ignorant of all the basic facts involved in the problem.
With a hermaphrodite we should be no better off, for here the situation is most
peculiar; the hermaphrodite is not really the combination of a whole man and a
whole woman, but consists of parts of each and thus is neither. It looks to me
as if there are, after all, certain women who are best qualified to elucidate
the situation of woman. Let us not be misled by the sophism that because
Epimenides was a Cretan he was necessarily a liarl it is not a mysterious
essence that compels men and women to act in good or in bad faith, it is their
situation that inclines them more or less toward the search for truth. Many of
today’s women, fortunate in the restoration of all the privileges pertaining to
the estate of the human being, can afford the luxury of impartiality – we even
recognize its necessity. We are no longer like our partisan elders; by and
large we have won the game. In recent debates on the status of women the United
Nations has persistently maintained that the equality of the sexes is now
becoming a reality, and already some of us have never had to sense in our
femininity an inconvenience or an obstacle. Many problems appear to us to be
more pressing than those which concern us in particular, and this detachment
even allows us to hope that our attitude will be objective. Still, we know the
feminine world more intimately than do men because we have our roots in it, we
grasp more immediately than do men what it means to a human being to be
feminine; and we are more concerned with such knowledge. I have said that there
are more pressing problems, but this does not prevent us from seeing some
importance in asking how the fact of being women will affect our lives. What
opportunities precisely have been given us and what withheld? What fate awaits
our younger sisters, and what directions should they take? It is significant
that books by women on women are in general animated in our day less by a wish
to demand our rights than by an effort toward clarity and understanding. As we
emerge from an era of excessive controversy, this book is offered as one
attempt among others to confirm this statement.
But it is doubtless impossible to approach any human problem
with a mind free from bias. The way in which questions are put, the points of
view assumed, presuppose a relativity of interest; all characteristics imply
values, and every objective description, so called, implies an ethical background.
Rather than attempt to conceal principles more or less definitely implied, it
is better to state them openly at the beginning. This will make it unnecessary
to specify on every page in just what sense one uses such words as superior, inferior, better, worse, progress, reaction, and
the like. If we survey some of the works on woman, we note that one of the
points of view most frequently adopted is that of the public good, the general
interest; and one always means by this the benefit of society as one wishes it
to be maintained or established. For our part, we hold that the only public
good is that which assures the private good of the citizens; we shall pass
judgement on institutions according to their effectiveness in giving concrete
institutions to individuals. But we do not confuse the idea of private interest
with that of happiness, although that is another common point of view. Are not
woman of the harem more happy than women voters? Is not the housekeeper happier
than the working-woman? It is not too clear just what the word happy really means and still less what
true values it may mask. There is no possibility of measuring the happiness of
others, and it is always easy to describe as happy the situation in which one
wishes to place them.
In particular those who are condemned to stagnation are
often pronounced happy on the pretext that happiness consists in being at rest.
This notion we reject, for our perspective is that of existentialist ethics.
Every subject plays his part as such specifically through exploits of projects
that serve as a mode of transcendence; he achieves liberty only through a
continual reaching out toward other liberties. There is no justification for
present existence other than its expansion into an indefinitely open future.
Every time transcendence falls back into immanence, stagnation, there is a
degradation of existence into the ‘en-soi’
– the brutish life of subjection to given conditions – and of liberty into
constraint and contingence. This downfall represents a moral fault if the
subject consents to it; if it is inflicted upon him, it spells frustration and
oppression. In both cases it is an absolute evil. Every individual concerned to
justify his existence feels that his existence involves an undefined need to
transcend himself, to engage in freely chosen projects.
Now, what peculiarly signalizes the situation of woman is
that she – a free and autonomous being like all human creatures – nevertheless
finds herself living in a world where men compel her to assume the status of
the Other. They propose to stabilize her as an object and to doom her to
immanence since her transcendence is to be overshadowed and forever transcended
by another ego (conscience) which is
essential and sovereign. The drama of woman lies in this conflict between the
fundamental aspirations of every subject (ego) – who always regards the self as
the essential – and the compulsions of a situation in which she is the
inessential. How can a human being in woman’s situation attain fulfillment?
What roads are open to her? Which are blocked? How can independence be
recovered in a state of dependency? What circumstances limit woman’s liberty
and how can they be overcome? These are the fundamental questions on which
would fain throw some light. This means that I am interested in the fortunes of
the individual as defines not in terms of happiness but in terms of liberty.
Quite evidently this problem would be without significance
if we were to believe that woman’s destiny is inevitably determined by
physiological, psychological, or economic forces. Hence I shall discuss first
of all the light in which woman is viewed by biology, psychoanalysis, and
historical materialism. Next I shall try to show exactly how the concept of the
‘truly feminine’ has been fashioned – why woman has been defined as the Other –
and what have been the consequences from man’s point of view. Then from woman’s
point of view I shall describe the world in which women must live; and thus we
shall be able to envisage the difficulties in their way as, endeavoring to make
their escape from the sphere hitherto assigned them, they aspire to full
membership in the human race.
Introduction
to Book II
The women of today are in a fair way to dethrone the myth of
femininity; they are beginning to affirm their independence in concrete ways;
but they do not easily succeed in living completely the life of a human being.
Reared by women within a feminine world, their normal destiny is marriage,
which still means practically subordination to man; for masculine prestige is
far from extinction, resting still upon solid economic and social foundations.
We must therefore study the traditional destiny of woman with some care. In
Book II I shall seek to describe how woman undergoes her apprenticeship, how she
experiences her situation, in what kind of universe she is confined, what modes
of escape are vouchsafed her. Then only – with so much understood – shall we be
able to comprehend the problems of women, the heirs of a burdensome past, who
are striving to build a new future. When I use the words woman or feminine I
evidently refer to no archetype, no changeless essence whatever; the reader
must understand the phrase ‘in the present state of education and custom’ after
most of my statements. It is not our concern here to proclaim eternal verities,
but rather to describe the common basis that underlies every individual
feminine existence.
netage.org
_____________________
1 Franchise, dead
today.
2 The Kinsey Report [Alfred C. Kinsey and others: Sexual Behavior in the Human Male (W. B.
Saunders Co., 1948)] is no exception, for it is limited to describing the
sexual characteristics of American men, which is quite a different matter.
3 E. Lévinas expresses this idea most explicitly in his essay
Temps et l’Autre. ‘Is there not a
case in which otherness, alterity [altérité],
unquestionably marks the nature of a being, as its essence, an instance of
otherness not consisting purely and simply in the opposition of two species of
the same genus? I think that the feminine represents the contrary in its
absolute sense, this contrariness being in no wise affected by any relation
between it and its correlative and thus remaining absolutely other. Sex is not
a certain specific difference . . . no more is the sexual difference a mere contradiction.
. . . Nor does this difference lie in the duality of two complementary terms,
for two complementary terms imply a pre-existing whole. . . . Otherness reaches
its full flowering in the feminine, a term of the same rank as consciousness
but of opposite meaning.’
I suppose
that Lévinas does not forget that woman, too, is aware of her own
consciousness, or ego. But it is striking that he deliberately takes a man’s
point of view, disregarding the reciprocity of subject and object. When he
writes that woman is mystery, he implies that she is mystery for man. Thus his
description, which is intended to be objective, is in fact an assertion of
masculine privilege.
4 See C.
Lévi-Strauss; Les Structures élémentaires
de la parenté. My
thanks are due to C. Lévi-Strauss for his kindness in furnishing me with the
proofs of his work, which, among others, I have used liberally in Part II.
5 With rare exceptions, perhaps, like certain matriarchal
rulers, queens, and the like. -TR
6 See Part II, ch. viii.
7 See Part II, pp. 121-3.
8 Or at least he thought he could.
9 A significant article on this theme by Michel Carrouges
appeared in No. 292 of the Cahiers du Sud.
He writes indignantly: ‘Would that there were no woman-myth at all but only a
cohort of cooks, matrons, prostitutes, and bluestockings serving functions of
pleasure or usefulness!’ That is to say, in his view woman has no existence in
and for herself; he thinks only of her function
in the male world. Her reason for existence lies in man. But then, in fact, her
poetic ‘function’ as a myth might be more valued than any other. The real
problem is precisely to find out why woman should be defined with relation to
man.
10 For example, a man will say that he considers his wife in
no wise degraded because she has no gainful occupation. The profession of
housewife is just as lofty, and so on. But when the first quarrel comes, he
will exclaim: ‘Why, you couldn’t make your living without me!’
11 The specific purpose of Book II of this study is to
describe this process.