Maria Fernandez on 1 Sep 2001 06:00:36 -0000 |
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Re: [oldboys] Re: maria fernandez/suhail malik on cyberfeminism |
Thank you to Pauline for sending my piece to the list and for your comments. They were right on target. I regret to have missed the beginning of this exchange. The exigencies of relocating transatlantically and moving two households have kept me off line for the last two weeks. I'm currently living among boxes so my communication may remain intermittent for some time... Connie: I was intrigued by your reactions as my brief comments do not deviate significantly from previous, more extensive critiques of cyberfeminism, including the paper by Faith Wilding "Where is the Feminism in Cyberfeminism", a version which is posted in the OBN web site. Wilding also questioned cyberfeminism's lack of definition and goals yet to my knowledge you have not responded (publically) with similar zeal. As Pauline observes, I do not think cyberfeminism is over. Quite the opposite, it has hardly begun! I believe that critique is constructive. Rather than deeming it a futile exercise (as you suggest), it can help one to reflect on and refine/define one's position. Connie, you wrote: "there is a tradition within obn discussing the understanding of politics. (see also mute #13) and the main question is if something (like cf) can have a political concern if there is not clearly formulated goals; if there can by a different understanding of politics than an intentional, which clearly was the feminism of the 70s." I'm not clear of what you are arguing here. Are you saying that in the deliberate formulation of politics it is not necessary to have an intention? Just how can one hold a committed political position or sustain political activities without any goals? "for me it makes much more sense to rethink strategies and tools than just replacing one goal by another and using the same strategies to try to reach them." Here I agree with you. This is precisely where critique, reflection and discussion can help. "that feminists accuse each other for only being feminist of career reasons is an old tradition, as old as the fact that proclaiming to be a feminist /cyberfeminist does harm to your career. it doesn't lead anyone anywhere and mostly shows personal envy. to make a serious topic out of it you have to be honest about female competition which is a complete taboo ..." To my mind, that women excel in their chosen careers is entirely consistent with feminism. I'm in favor of healthy competition and/or careerism (as long as it is not exploitative or denigrative of others). In the case of political movements, I believe that political considerations and vision are central and professional and career motives should be guided by and complementary to a political vision. "but there will also be a section at the conference talking about what the hell is it that ties obn together?" Perhaps such a discussion will clarify obn's positions. Best of luck! Maria ** distributed via <oldboys list>: no commercial use without permission ** <oldboys list> is an unmoderated mailing list for global cyberfeminism ** to remove your address from the list, send a message to: <oldboys-unsubscribe-xy=domain.topleveldomain@lists.ccc.de> ** more info: send mail to: oldboys-info@lists.ccc.de and/or <oldboys-faq@lists.ccc.de> ** archive: http://www.nettime.org/oldboys ** contact: oldboys-owner@lists.ccc.de ** www.obn.org