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Race to the Bottom: How Clinton's Campaign Divided the Feminist Movement

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tekisui Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 07:08 AM
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Race to the Bottom: How Clinton's Campaign Divided the Feminist Movement
Source: The Nation

In the course of Hillary Clinton's historic run for the White House--in which she became the first woman ever to prevail in a state-level presidential primary contest--she has been likened to Lorena Bobbitt (by Tucker Carlson); a "hellish housewife" (Leon Wieseltier); and described as "witchy," a "she-devil," "anti-male" and "a stripteaser" (Chris Matthews). Her loud and hearty laugh has been labeled "the cackle," her voice compared to "fingernails on a blackboard" and her posture said to look "like everyone's first wife standing outside a probate court." As one Fox News commentator put it, "When Hillary Clinton speaks, men hear, Take out the garbage." Rush Limbaugh, who has no qualms about subjecting audiences to the spectacle of his own bloated physique, asked his listeners, "Will this country want to actually watch a woman get older before their eyes on a daily basis?" Perhaps most damaging of all to her electoral prospects, very early on Clinton was deemed "unlikable." Although other factors also account for that dislike, much of the venom she elicits ("Iron my shirt," "How do we beat the bitch?") is clearly gender-specific.

Watching the brass ring of the presidency slip out of Clinton's grasp as she is buffeted by this torrent of misogyny, women--white women, that is, and mainstream feminists especially--have rallied to her defense. On January 8, after Barack Obama beat Clinton in the Iowa caucuses, Gloria Steinem published a New York Times op-ed titled "Women Are Never Front-Runners." "Gender is probably the most restricting force in American life, whether the question is who must be in the kitchen or who could be in the White House," Steinem wrote. Next came Clinton's famous "misting-over moment" in New Hampshire in response to a question from a woman about the stress of modern campaigning. For that display of emotion, Clinton was derided, on the one hand, as calculating and chameleonlike--"It could be that big girls don't cry...but it could be that if they do they win," said Chris Matthews--and, on the other, as lacking "strength and resolve," as her Democratic rival John Edwards put it, in a jab at the perennial Achilles' heel of women candidates. Riding a wave of female sympathy, Clinton won New Hampshire in what was dubbed an "anti-Chris Matthews vote."

Thus, feminist opposition to the sexist treatment of Hillary Clinton has morphed into support for the candidate herself. In February Robin Morgan published a reprise of her famous 1970 essay "Goodbye to All That," exhorting women to embrace Clinton as a protest against "sociopathic woman-hating." In the Los Angeles Times, Leslie Bennetts, author of The Feminine Mistake, wrote of older female voters fed up with the media's dismissive treatment of Clinton: "There are signs the slumbering beast may be waking up--and she's not in a happy mood." A recent New York magazine article titled "The Feminist Reawakening: Hillary Clinton and the Fourth Wave" described how "it isn't just the 'hot flash cohort'...that broke for Clinton. Women in their thirties and forties--at once discomfited and galvanized by the sexist tenor of the media coverage, by the nastiness of the watercooler talk in the office, by the realization that the once-foregone conclusion of Clinton-as-president might never come to be--did too."

The sexist attacks on Clinton are outrageous and deplorable, but there's reason to be concerned about her becoming the vehicle for a feminist reawakening. For one thing, feminist sympathy for her has begotten an "oppression sweepstakes" in which a number of her prominent supporters, dismayed at her upstaging by Obama, have declared a contest between racial and gender bias and named sexism the greater scourge. This maneuver is not only unhelpful for coalition-building but obstructs understanding of how sexism and racism have played out in this election in different (and interrelated) ways.

Yet what is most troubling--and what has the most serious implications for the feminist movement--is that the Clinton campaign has used her rival's race against him. In the name of demonstrating her superior "electability," she and her surrogates have invoked the racist and sexist playbook of the right--in which swaggering macho cowboys are entrusted to defend the country--seeking to define Obama as too black, too foreign, too different to be President at a moment of high anxiety about national security. This subtly but distinctly racialized political strategy did not create the media feeding frenzy around the Rev. Jeremiah Wright that is now weighing Obama down, but it has positioned Clinton to take advantage of the opportunities the controversy has presented. And the Clinton campaign's use of this strategy has many nonwhite and nonmainstream feminists crying foul.

(snip)

Clinton has, to be sure, faced a raw misogyny that has been more out in the open than the racial attacks on Obama have been. But while sexism may be more casually accepted, racism, which is often coded, is more insidious and trickier to confront. Clinton's response to "Iron my shirt" was immediate and straightforward: "Oh, the remnants of sexism, alive and well." Says Kimberlé Crenshaw, law professor at Columbia and UCLA and executive director of the African American Policy Forum, "While sexism can be denounced more directly, that doesn't mean it's worse. Things that are racist have yet to be labeled and understood as such."

While on occasion Obama's campaign has complained of racial slights, Obama himself has avoided raising the charge directly. Even so, Clinton supporters make the twisted claim that it is Obama who has racialized the campaign. "While promoting Obama as a 'post-racial' figure, his campaign has purposefully polluted the contest with a new strain of what historically has been the most toxic poison in American politics," wrote Sean Wilentz in The New Republic in an article titled "Race Man." Bill Clinton recently groused that the Obama camp, in the controversy over his Jackson remark, "played the race card on me."

(snip)

Among the black feminists interviewed for this article, reactions to the declarations of sexism's greater toll by Clinton supporters--and their demand that all women back their candidate out of gender solidarity, regardless of the broader politics of the campaign--ran the gamut from astonishment to dismay to fury. Patricia Hill Collins, a sociology professor at the University of Maryland and author of Black Feminist Thought, recalls how, before they were reduced to their race or gender, the candidates were not seen solely through the prism of identity, and many Democrats were thrilled with the choices before them. But of the present, she says, "It is such a distressing, ugly period. Clinton has manipulated ideas about race, but Obama has not manipulated similar ideas about gender." This has exacerbated longstanding racial tensions within the women's movement, Collins notes, and is likely to alienate young black women who might otherwise have been receptive to feminism. "We had made progress in getting younger black women to see that gender does matter in their lives. Now they are going to ask, What kind of white woman is Hillary Clinton?"



much more at link: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080519/betsyreed

This is an excellent read. It explains how Hillary has exploited the sexist media and culture to promote herself, at the same time dividing feminist along race lines.
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Window Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 07:41 AM
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1. Very good piece.
:kick:
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roguevalley Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 09:59 PM
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2. excellent
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TragedyandHope Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:20 PM
Response to Original message
3. Thank you
These are a couple other perspectives to add to the picture.

Lest We Forget: An open letter to my sisters who are brave by Alice Walker

Georgian recalls rooming with Michelle Obama



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merh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:28 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Here is another good read.
Women of My Generation Have Clearly Lost Their Minds
Lynda Obst

Women of my generation have clearly lost their minds. Not that I can blame them, apparently being invisible and all. Now with Geraldine Ferraro making outrageous nut-jobber remarks she doesn't even seem to understand, and realizing our tragic generation was once proud of her as a "pioneer," you can see how deluded we are as well. Worse, only this week, a heroine of mine, Tina Brown, got it utterly wrong in Newsweek, saying all boomer women had to be for Hillary. Tina drank the victim Kool Aid.

So I want my peers to meet an original (begged for him to run) pro-Barack boomer 50-something careerist woman, who chose Barack above and beyond -- hear me, Geraldine, you utter moron -- from the best field of Democratic candidates we've had for years, many of whom I've been big fans of forever, for their various courageous stands on Central America (Dodd,) Iraq (Biden, Richardson and Kucinich.)

But Hillary? Never liked her. Many of my best friends and favorite women have always felt the same. Something unsettling about her. A feminist? Maybe. But a compromised one, having risen to fame as the victim of Monica and having been famously on bimbo eruptions in her White House patrol. She was the destroyer of Paula Jones and Gennifer Flowers, the very blue collar ladies she is now being saved by. Kind of yucky, really. And hanging in there, through all the humiliation, and that making her a star. Left a bad taste in my mouth. Moving on.

What about my generation's desperation that there will never be another female candidate? Why? Is our gender about to die out? Do you all know something I don't? I can understand the 80-year-olds, I guess. But to me, Hillary Clinton is merely the first credible candidate, and the most flawed. And the only one not to rise on her own coattails, which is the real reason she doesn't appeal to both me and many young, yes, in their own way, feminists. And what about Claire McCaskill? She's great! And she just emerged this year! Why do we act like Hillary is our last great chance? How damaged and pathetic. I see fantastic women in their 30s all the time. To wit, Chelsea's undamaged generation. Not polarizing, like us ceiling crashers. I can sympathize, I am, too.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lynda-obst/women-of-my-generation-ha_b_91468.html


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ccharles000 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:33 PM
Response to Original message
5. Hillary is an inspirational woman.
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DerekJ Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:35 PM
Response to Reply #5
7. At least you're positive.
:hi:
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DerekJ Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:34 PM
Response to Original message
6. I'll keep this kicked for a while.
:kick:
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DerekJ Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:36 PM
Response to Original message
8. kick
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barack the house Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:37 PM
Response to Original message
9. If women make the majority of America it isn't sexism why she is losing...
Edited on Fri May-09-08 11:41 PM by barack the house
Clearly enough women find fault with Hillary plain and simply as a candidate. Not all feel this way but enough to make the difference.
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Gore1FL Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-10-08 12:19 AM
Response to Reply #9
14. No doubt
Being a woman is like #10 on the list of what is wrong with Hillary...

Sorry--I couldn't resist!!

So how many people will respond to me before realizing I was kidding?
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VotesForWomen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-10-08 05:23 AM
Response to Reply #9
18. heh. please see my post #17, and/or open a history book. nt
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DerekJ Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:40 PM
Response to Original message
10. kick
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nomorewhopper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:41 PM
Response to Original message
11. a great article but my one big comment....
while sexism and racism both exist and have strong undercurrents in this campaign.

obama is not being accused of sexism

hilly IS being accused of racism.

HUGE difference.
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DerekJ Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:48 PM
Response to Original message
12. kick
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livingmadness Donating Member (347 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-09-08 11:57 PM
Response to Original message
13. An excellent article which articulates so beautifully
my own rage at the 'sweepstake' that has been invoked by Steinham and others to imply that for all women, their first priority should be their gender. If only I could divide myself in pieces so easily!! Thanks for the great read :)
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quantass Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-10-08 01:27 AM
Response to Original message
15. Brilliant. *The FULL article* is a must read for all
Edited on Sat May-10-08 01:28 AM by quantass
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HuffleClaw Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-10-08 02:23 AM
Response to Original message
16. "While on occasion Obama's campaign has complained of racial slights"
which SHOULD read, 'at every opportunity...'


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VotesForWomen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-10-08 05:20 AM
Response to Original message
17. you know of course that a good portion of *women* have resisted every advance in women's rights sinc
since day one, don't you? this is hardly a new or surprising phenomenon. many women actively resisted giving women the right to vote, allowing them into all professions/occupations/military, resisted the ERA, equal pay, wearing pants, you name it. it's unfortunate, but many women decide for whatever reasons, which side their bread is buttered on, and choose to try to advance them selves through men, rather than alongside of them. in other words, they'd rather marry a rich husband than have a career and earn their own money. the same thing just doesn't happen among racial groups, so i'm not really persuaded by black feminists talking about how the (alleged) racism of the clinton campaign is so much worse than the sexism of obama and his supporters.
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eridani Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-10-08 07:34 AM
Response to Reply #17
20. And many women resist warmongering "obliterators" too n/t
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-10-08 05:27 AM
Response to Original message
19. The only good thing about Hillary Clinton is that she is a woman.....
Everything else about her, not so good.
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