WOMEN’S MOVEMENTS & FEMINIST THEORIES: LESSONS & BIG IDEA

Lesson: Women’s Movements in Canada

In Module 1, you learned that in the post-war period, many Western states like Canada institutionalized a new way of thinking about the role of the state in the lives of its citizens. After the Great Depression, many Western states embraced the introduction of social and economic programs, such as unemployment insurance and welfare, aimed at protecting citizens from hardship if the economic system failed.  In the aftermath of World War Two and the Holocaust, the international community also embraced a commitment to human rights. The combined effects of these new ways of thinking about the state, citizens, and rights presented an opportunity for marginalized groups to make claims on the state for equality, equity, and inclusion. The women’s movement emerged in this context. In this lesson, we will consider the unique contours of the Canadian women’s movement, placing it in the global context of new social movements, and consider French, English, Indigenous, Black, and immigrant women’s distinct experiences with feminism and patriarchy. Along the way, we will focus on defining key terms like: patriarchy, sex and gender, and feminism.


“We can no longer ignore that voice within women that says: ‘I want something more than my husband and my children and my house”

Betty Friedan (1963) in The Feminine Mystique

Liberal feminism is both a theory and a social movement which argues that women should be included in institutions traditionally dominated by men, such as government, the workplace, and universities. Liberal feminists tend to understand equality as sameness; that is, a liberal feminist view holds that women are equal to men when they are treated the same as men.

LISTEN:
Liberal Feminism & Black feminist critiques
Listening Time: 4 min 41
seconds
Recorded by Daisy Raphael

In Canada, English-speaking women, who emphasized the liberal feminist pursuit of political representation, employment opportunities, and education, dominated the women’s movement. In the 1960s, a rising sense of Québec nationalism meant that the Québec women’s movement formed separate networks and organizations. Meanwhile, Indigenous peoples and racialized immigrants emerged as powerful social and political forces challenging the Canadian myth of two founding nations. These national differences are important for understanding the Canadian women’s movement from the 1960s until the mid-80s, in which Indigenous, Black, immigrant, refugee, French, and English women articulated distinct experiences with structures of oppression such as patriarchy, racism, and colonialism.

LISTEN:
Canadian Women’s Movements
Listening Time: 9 min 38
seconds
Daisy Raphael

The 2012 National Film Board documentary Status Quo: The Unfinished Business of Feminism in Canada by Karen Cho features footage from the Royal Commission on the Status of Women.

BIG IDEA: Sex and Gender

Feminists, queer, and trans scholars are not unified in their definition of gender. Gender and its relationship to biology is the subject of ongoing theorising and debate.  Since the emergence of the women’s movement in the mid-twentieth century, feminist, queer, and trans scholars have advanced distinct theories of sex and gender. 

Generally, ‘sex’ refers to biology, including chromosomes, hormones, and genitalia.

‘Male’ and ‘female’ are categories that refer to biology, differentiating people based on chromosomes, hormones, and genitalia.  When social scientists say ‘gender’, on the other hand, they typically mean the cultural, social, and political meanings ascribed to bodies.  So-called “gender reveal parties” — wherein soon-to-be parents announce their child’s gender using pink or blue cakes — presume that a child’s gender identity will neatly correspond to the baby’s sex assigned at birth. ‘Gender’ reveal parties do not reveal anything about a child’s gender identity; rather, they reveal fetal sex (specifically, genitals). These parties are one example of ways people ascribe social, cultural, and political meanings to bodies. This lesson presents two different theories of sex and gender and explains that biology is actually more complex than ‘gender reveal’ parties might suggest. 

“Gender Reveal Party” by ron.aguilar@gmail.com is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

French philosopher Simone de Beauvoir articulated the sex/gender distinction in her 1949 book The Second Sex, in which she writes, “One is not born, but rather becomes [a] woman” (1949: 283).  By this, she means that sex does not naturally lead to femininity and an experience of subordination; rather, women learn to be feminine and subordinate to men.  What boys and girls and men and women learn about masculinity and femininity comes to shape their very experiences of themselves — men, Beauvoir argues, learn that they are the ‘norm’; women that they are ‘the Other.’  Beauvoir’s distinction between biology and experience — or the process of becoming a woman — challenges biological determinist views of sex and gender. 

A biological determinist perspective holds that biology is destiny — that behaviour, identities, and even gender power relations are the result of natural and immutable physical differences. 

Judith Butler’s 1990 book Gender Trouble challenges the distinction between sex and gender. Butler’s Gender Trouble troubles the categories of men/women/masculinity/femininity.  She interrupts the notion that sex is a neat and tidy “container” for socially constructed meanings about gender. Butler argues that gender is performative. Performativity means something a little different than just being an act. Instead, Butler (2012) explains that how we walk, talk, dress, act, and engage in relationships, “produces a series of effects that consolidate an impression of being a man or being a woman”.  In other words, the ways we enact gender make it seem as though gender is our innermost core — as opposed to a series of behaviours. Butler argues that gender identity is produced and reproduced — sometimes through affirmations of ‘correct’ gender behaviour, like a girl playing with a doll might be praised for being sweet and caring — and sometimes through more regulatory admonitions of ‘incorrect’ gender. This might include a boy being bullied for being perceived as too ‘weak’ or effeminate. Such ‘normalizing practices’ try to “keep us in our gender place.”  Enforced heterosexuality or heteronormativity — concepts we will come back to later on in the course — require a binary sex/gender system (male/men/masculine versus female/women/feminine). But, we can subvert gender regulations, resist normalization, and disrupt heteronormativity by engaging in gender trouble. Butler’s theory of gender as performative opens up space to consider what it means to be queer or trans, since her theory disrupts the idea that biology and gender identity necessarily correspond with one another. Check out Thinking about Gender on the wgs101.org site for a video featuring Butler and a lecture from Dr. Michelle Meagher on gender dualism.

Importantly, increasingly the fields of biology and medicine support feminist, queer, and trans scholarship and activism. (See, for example, Ainworth 2015.) These fields challenge binary ideas about sex and gender, and that sex and gender are simple, stable, essential, and accurate.  Anne Fausto-Sterling, Professor of Biology and Gender Studies, explains in a 2018 New York Times op-ed that “there is no single biological measure that unassailably places each and every human into one of two categories — male or female.”  Intersex people, who have chromosomal, hormonal, or genital variations from the ‘norm,’ challenge strict binary classifications of ‘male’ and ‘female’.  Currently, the international medical consensus is that doctors and parents should work together to support intersex children by affirming a child’s chosen or ‘felt’ sex/gender identity instead of deciding a child’s sex.  

Bodies are complex – and so are debates about how bodies matter.  Between 1968 and 1998, for example, the International Olympic Committee mandated chromosomal sex verification tests for women athletes in an effort to prevent women deemed too masculine from competing against ‘real’ women.  Yet, scientists report that there is evidence to support the notion that chromosomal testing could verify sex.  Today, the IAAF’s “hyperandrogenism policy” requires women with naturally high levels of testosterone to take medication to bring levels below a certain threshold in order to compete as women. This view equates hormones with sex and sex with gender. Yet, Fausto-Sterling explains that assessing genitalia, hormones, and/or chromosomes cannot ‘prove’ that one is more male than female, more female than male, more man than woman, or woman than man.  Fausto-Sterling argues that science does not have all of the answers when it comes to explaining the relationship between sex and gender, and credits social movements for pushing scientific and medical communities to reject strict classifications of sex and gender.  

As you continue the course, consider how distinct authors understand the relationship between sex and gender to get a sense of the multiple ways feminist, queer, and trans scholars understand bodies and identities. We will come back to these concepts throughout the course. 

INTRODUCTION TO GENDER AND SOCIAL JUSTICE: A SUMMARY

Gender & Social Justice in Times of Crisis

We are learning about gender and social justice in unusual times — a crisis that deepens existing inequalities. Iris Marion Young’s “Five Faces of Oppression” emphasizes that multiple systems of oppression operate, generating inequalities based on race, gender, class, sexuality, disability, and age. Groups marginalized by these systems of oppression are feeling the impacts of COVID-19 more acutely. In the United States, for example, the Centre for Disease Control reports that infection, hospitalization, and death rates are higher for Black Americans than white Americans. In Canada, economists note that women are feeling the economic impacts of the pandemic more severely, arguing that women are in the midst of a “she-cession.” People living without homes cannot, by definition, follow orders to “stay home” to avoid contracting COVID-19. As we collectively look to virologists and epidemiologists for expertise, let’s also remember that social thinkers have a role to play in providing solutions that can avoid deepening inequality.

This course has been designed purposefully for online learning. You will work through course content weekly. Thus, you must set aside time to work through the content for this course. The teaching team for WGS 102 has built an online learning environment that we hope will help you to thrive.

  • Students taking this course for credit may have the opportunity to complete an optional Community Service Learning (CSL) component, gaining experience working towards social justice in their communities. See information about whether CSL is available for this class on eClass.
  • Make sure to contribute to the weekly discussions on eClass. Check eclass for further information.
  • You will have the opportunity to “test yourself” to assess your basic understanding of key concepts. If you are struggling with the “test yourself” questions, this means you need to do a closer reading of lessons and assigned resources and try again. The “test yourself” questions are not for marks.
  • The teaching team is available for individual learning support via office hours. Check eclass to learn more about your teachers and their office hours.

After you have completed the lessons and assigned resources for this module, log on to eClass to complete your first discussion board post.

Test Yourself!

Discussion Questions – see eclass

In our discussion forums for Module One, we will focus on paraphrasing and citing as important academic skills. Paraphrase Young’s reading, explaining each of the five faces of oppression. Also, apply what you’ve learned by identifying your own examples of these forms of oppression. Log into eClass to find instructions for this week’s discussion.

Big Idea Challenge

Remember! Check out the details of the “Big Idea Challenge” assignment on eclass. These challenges encourage you to apply the big ideas and theories you are learning in this course to the world outside of our virtual classroom. You will find a list of challenges and the assignment guidelines here. You will also find the challenges at the end of each module when you see this star logo. See details of this assignment on eclass.

LEARN A CREE WORD

LEARN & SHARE A CREE WORD

Learn and share one of the following Cree words that can help inform a social justice approach to gender studies. For example, you might learn the Cree word for ‘Edmonton’ and tell us why learning this word helps inform a social justice approach to gender studies. Share the pronunciation of these words as best you can. Remember to relate your response to the big idea for Module One, which is “social justice”. Use course materials, including lessons, lectures, and assigned resources to do this. Make sure to reference all materials you draw on using the author-date method (Chicago-Style reference system).

Here is the list of words from which you can choose:

  • amiskwaciy-wâskahikan
  • wahkohtowin
  • miyowicetowin
  • nehiyaw-iskwew

Here are some links with more resources to help you:

LEARN ABOUT YOUR HOME

Check out this map at native-land.ca. Find your home on the map do some research online to learn a bit about the territory’s history. What’s the traditional Indigenous name for the place you call home? Learn how to pronounce it. Go for a walk. Take photographs or a video of things you notice about your surroundings. For example, what do you notice about the street names, the name of your neighbourhood, your neighbours, the landscape, river, or trees? Are there monuments nearby? Schools? Community centres? Do you think about your location differently after learning a bit about the territory you’re from? How might your new understanding inform your approach to studying gender and social justice? Share your reflections with your classmates. You can upload a video, a photo essay, or an audio recording — you can be creative! Remember to review the assignment requirements carefully before you get started.

Remember to relate your response to the big idea for Module One, which is “social justice.” Use course materials, including lessons, lectures, and assigned resources, to do this. Make sure to reference all materials you draw on using the author-date method.

GET INSPIRED! Check out Ayla’s reflection on what it means to think about social justice on Treaty 6 territory through her “treaty walk.”

References

âpihtawikosisân. 2016. “Beyond Territorial Acknowledgements.” Updated September 23, 2016. https://apihtawikosisan.com/2016/09/beyond-territorial-acknowledgments/ 

Brodie, Janine, ed. 2018. Contemporary Inequalities and Social Justice in Canada. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press.

CBC. 2019. “I regret it: Hayden King on Writing Ryerson University’s Territorial Acknowledgement.” CBC Radio, January 18, 2019. https://www.cbc.ca/radio/unreserved/redrawing-the-lines-1.4973363/i-regret-it-hayden-king-on-writing-ryerson-university-s-territorial-acknowledgement-1.4973371 

CBC. 2020. “For Those Experiencing Homelessness, Lives Already Hanging By a Thread ‘Snapped’ By COVID-19, Say Advocates.” CBC News, August 13, 2020. https://www.cbc.ca/news/health/homelessness-covid19-1.5684260 

CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). 2021. “Risk for COVID-19 Infection, Hospitalization, and Death by Race/Ethnicity.” Updated March 10, 2021. https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/105022 

“Clearing the Plains – Presented by James Daschuk – February 21, 2018.” 2018. Produced by McKillop United, March 8, 2018. Youtube video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2IUCd4yX6E

Ferguson, Ann, and Mechthild Nagel, eds. 2009. Dancing With Iris: The Philosophy of Iris Marion Young. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Hobbs, Margaret, and Carla Rice. 2011. “Reading Women’s and Gender Studies in Canada” Canadian Woman Studies 29(1/2): 201-08. 

“Janine Brodie: Social Literacy and Social Justice in Times of Crisis.” 2012. Produced by Federation HSS, October 26, 2012. Youtube video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hap9fWUp4DM

Raphael, Daisy. 2020. “Lecture: Social Justice”. Women and Gender Studies 102: Gender & Social Justice. University of Alberta. https://wgs102.org/2020/03/09/social-justicelesson/

Venne, Sharon. 2002. “Understanding Treaty 6: An Indigenous Perspective.” In Aboriginal and Treaty Rights in Canada, edited by M. Asch, 173-207. Vancouver: UBC Press. 

Yalnizyan, Armine. 2020. “Opinion: The ‘She-cession’ is Real and a Problem for Everyone.” Financial Post, October 23, 2020. https://financialpost.com/opinion/opinion-the-she-cession-is-real-and-a-problem-for-everyone

Young, Iris M. 1988. “Five Faces of Oppression.” Philosophical Forum 19 (4): 270-90.

Young, Iris M. 2000 [1988]. “Five Faces of Oppression.”  in Readings for Diversity and Social Justice, edited by Maurianne Adams et al, 35-49. New York: Routledge.

INTRODUCTION TO GENDER & SOCIAL JUSTICE: ASSIGNED RESOURCES

READ:
“The Five Faces of Oppression”
Iris Marion Young

(check eclass for the link to the reading)

Your first assigned resource is Iris Marion Young’s (1990), “The Five Faces of Oppression”. Introductory Women’s and Gender Studies courses continue to feature this text, which explains that oppression, power, and domination are structural.  This means that power and domination are not the fault of a few individuals, but systems of oppression. Because power and oppression are structural, Young demonstrates that conversations about justice cannot focus simply on individuals — instead, thinking about justice requires thinking about social and relational patterns of injustice and inequality.  

Iris Marion Young (1949-2006) is a world-renowned feminist philosopher, who wrote about social justice, gender inequality, oppression, and democracy. Iris Marion Young is an example of a feminist scholar who connected theory with practice — in addition to writing about social justice, she was active in challenging disciplinary and political norms, and encouraged her students to put their ideas into action.

As we are doing in this course, Young connected the local context with a sense of global citizenship. Young thought about gender equality and social justice at the local, national, and international levels.  Young understood that individuals live in communities, and as such share a responsibility to one another.  Her former colleague writes:

“Iris Marion Young was perhaps one of American feminist philosophers’ most prestigious public intellectuals: always a little ahead of the rest in grasping the implications of the political events and movements of the day”

Ann Ferguson and Mechthild Nagel in Dancing With Iris: The Philosophy of Iris Marion Young

In “The Five Faces of Oppression”, Young begins by defining justice.  This is helpful for our purposes, because in order to talk about “social justice”, we need to think about how we understand this concept.  Young writes that “Justice should refer not only to distribution, but also the institutional conditions necessary for the development and exercise of individual capacities and collective communication and cooperation” (39).  When Young asks us to think about justice beyond “distribution”, she means we need to go beyond thinking about who gets what. Thinking about how systems allocate resources and power unevenly is part of justice, but justice requires more than that: it requires dismantling or reforming the very institutions that allocate power and resources (39).  Because we live in political systems structured by classical liberal thought, which emphasizes individuals bearing rights, it can be difficult to think about power and oppression at a structural level, impacting not just individuals, but communities and groups.  Yet, thinking about structural oppression requires that we move from thinking about the individual to the social (Young 1990, 39). 

Before you start reading Young, here is some more general advice on active reading. As you read each article in this and subsequent lessons, ask yourself these questions:

  • What is the author’s main claim?
  • How does the author develop and support this main claim?
  • What do you take to be the author’s purpose in writing the piece?
  • What kind of relationship does the author establish with their audience or reader?

To practice active reading skills, it’s recommended that you define key terms and also pay attention to how the authors define them. Consult this guide for academic reading before you begin.

CONTENT WARNING (CW): This chapter features discussions of sexual violence.

As you read:

  • Take notes explaining each section’s argument in your own words. Write down 2-3 sentences explaining her argument in each section.
  • In your own words, try to write a few sentences explaining each of the five faces of oppression.
  • Pay attention to how Young explains that a person can be both privileged and oppressed. How is this possible? 
  • Pay attention to how Young explains gender differences.  She does not say that gender inequality is the result of biology, but of an unequal division of labour and socialization (43; 50). 
  • Pay attention to how Young defines ‘race’.  Young explains that ‘race’ is a social concept — people are racialized in relation to other groups.  Race is not about superficial physical differences, but social categorizations, shared histories, and belonging within a group (44).  We will come back to definitions of ‘race’, racism, and racialization in Module 3.

INTRODUCTION TO GENDER & SOCIAL JUSTICE: LESSON & BIG IDEA

This course is hosted at the University of Alberta, located on Treaty 6 territory, a traditional gathering place for diverse Indigenous peoples including the Cree, Blackfoot, Metis, Nakota Sioux, Iroquois, Dene, Ojibway/ Saulteaux/Anishinaabe, Inuit, and many others whose histories, languages, and cultures continue to influence our vibrant community. 

Territorial Acknowledgment, University of Alberta

LESSON: Thinking about Territory

If you are just starting university, you may notice that many university events begin with the territorial acknowledgment above. University of Alberta Faculty of Native Studies scholar Chelsea Vowel writes that territorial acknowledgments can be powerful when they prompt non-Indigenous peoples to reflect on the conditions of their presence on this land.  Territorial acknowledgements can also make Indigenous students feel more welcome in university spaces.  Yet, when territorial acknowledgments are offered routinely and repetitively, without a meaningful discussion of what it is that listeners are being asked to acknowledge, territorial acknowledgements become depoliticized — meaning detached from conversations about power relationships.  Anishinaabe scholar Dr. Hayden King writes that territorial acknowledgments should prompt meaningful conversations about the obligations the Crown made to Indigenous peoples when they signed treaties, as in the case of Treaty 6.  King reminds us that treaties, made in many parts of what is now known as Canada, continue to govern non-Indigenous obligations to Indigenous peoples.  The relationships between land, gender, and social justice are a focus of this course. So, let’s take a moment to explore what kinds of obligations the Crown — represented in Canada by the Governor General, Canada’s head of state — made to Indigenous peoples when they signed Treaty 6 in 1876.

In 1870 — six years before the signing of Treaty 6 — the Hudson’s Bay Company transferred “Rupert’s Land” or the North-West — a massive portion of land representing about one-third of what is today known as Canada —  to the Dominion of Canada without the consent of the Indigenous peoples who lived there. Indigenous peoples had lived in political communities with governing systems and laws before the British and French arrived in North America.  University of Alberta Faculty of Native Studies scholar Dr. Adam Gaudry explains that the 1870 Transfer Agreement rested on a fantasy of sovereignty based on the European idea of terra nullius — the notion that the land did not legally belong to Indigenous peoples and, therefore, could be taken. Indigenous peoples on the plains resisted the notion that the land they had lived on for centuries — land to which they had their own legal relationships — could be sold without their consent. 

In “Understanding Treaty 6: An Indigenous Perspective”, Nehiyaw (Cree) legal scholar Sharon Venne explains the terms of Treaty 6. Canada’s first Prime Minister, John A. Macdonald, viewed treaty-making as a form of nation-building — a way to take control of Indigenous land and expand the Canadian state westward.  On the other hand, Indigenous peoples viewed treaties as necessary to protect their sovereignty, meaning their ability to enact their own laws, self-govern, and live without interference from a foreign power — in this case, Canada.  Distrustful of the Government of Canada and representatives of the British Crown, some Indigenous leaders, including Chief Big Bear, beloved by Nehiyaw people, resisted signing Treaty 6. Big Bear feared that the government would not honour the terms of the agreement, and he was right.

The Treaty Commissioner requested three things on behalf of the Crown, representing Canada, in 1876. First, the Crown wanted to ensure that the settlers could use the land to farm. Thus, the Commissioner requested the “use of the land to the depth of the plough.”  Second, he requested trees to construct houses. Finally, he asked that the settlers could use the grass to feed their animals. Although the written version of Treaty 6 states that the leaders agreed to “cede, surrender, and forever give up title to the lands,” Cree Elders, as Sharon Venne explains, maintain that this is impossible, given that Cree, Saulteau, Assiniboine, and Dene laws do not permit them to sell their land — only to share it. Thus, Cree Elders dispute this wording.  The leaders agreed to share the lands in return for certain benefits, and they agreed to uphold the terms of the treaty “as long as the sun shines and the waters flow” — the “waters” being the waters that flow from a woman before she gives birth.  This means that Canada is obligated to live up to the terms of Treaty 6 as long as Indigenous women are giving birth to children.

In return for sharing the land with the settlers, the Crown agreed to several provisions, including, for example: healthcare, education, aid in times of famine, and police to protect Indigenous peoples from treaty violations. Canada has not kept these promises. First, on healthcare: in 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal ruled that the Government of Canada discriminates against First Nations children on reserves by failing to provide adequate funding for health care.  Second, on education: in 2015, the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission identified the residential school system as a form of cultural genocide. Third, on aid in times of famine: when the settlers depleted bison populations on the plains in the 1870s and 1880s, Indigenous peoples experienced famine. The Government of Canada refused to honour the commitment made in 1876 to provide aid, as James Daschuk documents.  Finally, on police: the Final Report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls describes police violence against Indigenous peoples and a lack of police accountability when it comes to investigating MMIWG2S.

What does Treaty 6 have to do with gender and social justice? Eurocentric representations of the treaty-making process tend to assume that Cree women had no political and legal power in the late nineteenth century, like their British and French counterparts. In Nehiyaw spiritual, legal, and political traditions, however, women have decision-making autonomy when it comes to relationships to land.  In Sharon Venne’s words:

“When the Elders speak about the role of women at the treaty they talk about the spiritual connection of the women to the land and to treaty-making”.

Sharon Venne (2002), “UNDERSTANDING TREATY SIX”

It is women who have the authority to make decisions about land, and women did not sign Treaty 6. Thus, they did not agree to cede or surrender land.  

In this course, we will take this territorial acknowledgment to heart by using it as a starting point for studying the relationship between gender and social justice — starting here, on Treaty 6 territory, where we are all bound by treaty obligations. Throughout the course, we will consider Indigenous and non-Indigenous relationships using a gender lens and learn about Indigenous feminisms. Can there be social justice on stolen land?

BIG IDEA: SOCIAL JUSTICE

Next, listen to this lecture by Daisy Raphael explaining the relationship between social justice and Women’s and Gender Studies.

LISTEN:
Thinking about Gender and Social Justice
Listening Time: 11 min 35 seconds

Before you move on to the assigned resource, take a moment to reflect:

  • Why are you interested in studying gender and social justice?
  • What do you consider to be the most urgent social problem? Why might a gender analysis be important to addressing this problem?