Despite one’s best intentions age does catch up to us.
Finishing graduate school, having children, getting that first job, and then
finally tenure. It’s a nice
academic narrative. But more often
then not we continue into this middle-aged zone, much as I have, thinking that
we are still pretty much the same person we were 20 or 30 years ago. However, even if we still see ourselves
as that radical young activist campaigning against pornography and engaged in
direct actions against x-rated vendors our younger colleagues are more likely
see us as a middle-aged male professional wielding power and authority over
them.
What a let down.
Today’s academic workplace is overwhelmingly female but the
positions of authority remain the bastion (perhaps the last bastion?) of male
control. In my own academic
department most of the untenured faculty are women in their 30s while most of
the full professors are men in their 60s (which leaves me still somewhere in
the middle). Despite the long-term
demographic transition that is feminizing the academe, many of the positions
seen as powerful remain in the hands of men. Arguments and explanations that it’s a matter of lifecycle
and history are rarely accepted nor do those who see this as a hierarchical
system based upon power and gender appreciate them (rightly so). That gender plays a role in academic politics should not be
surprising for those of us who cut our teeth on the works of women like Eleanor Leacock, Katherine Gough, and Margaret Benston.
I’ve never been one to deny that each of us is a product of
our world and our times. Thus I
quite bluntly assert that no one among us is free from the prejudice of
sexism, ageism, racism, or homophobia, irrespective of our age, gender, sexual
orientation, race, etc. We carry
with us the values and experiences of our childhoods and our adult lives. Sometimes these underlying values drive
us to explicit acts, other times they are merely an unconscious background to our
patterns of speech and behaviour – I still stand to the side at doors holding
it for older colleagues or women – that’s not a virtue, it’s a habit drilled
into me by my mother and grandmother.
Confronting racism and sexism does rely upon each of us to
accept our own inherent racisms and sexisms. It doesn’t mean we tiptoe around issues – I value (but
perhaps this is gendered?) clear direct honest statements more than the lily-livered middle-class liberal platitudes spoken softly and with what often seems
to me to be a rather passive-aggressive undertone. Though, who doesn’t bristle (except the saints among us)
when we find ourselves positioned as an abstract and ahistorical dominating
source of power. Are we
post-modernists in our writing – eschewing grand narratives in a holistic play
of polyvocality- but structuralists in our work place where roles take
precedence of actors and agency? Sometimes
it does seem that way.
I subscribe to a variant of socialist feminism – one that sees
the oppression of women (as reflected in misogynist pornography, for example)
as being integral to the maintenance of contemporary capitalist society. Thus, confronting sexism means to
necessarily also confront capitalism.
However, the particular history(ies) of sexism in our world and the way
in which specific benefits have fallen to men, even working class men, means
that simply rejecting capitalism is not a sufficient act to confront the issue
of women’s oppression. Capitalism
may give a specific form to sexism, but sexism predates (and sadly) could
easily continue after the demise of capitalism. This necessitates a combined program
that links strategic struggles against class exploitation with struggles
against the oppression of women. Thus, if we really want to address sexism we have to also attack class privilege in general, not just fragments of it.
When I was younger I had a far more grandiose idea of what could
be done. As I have grown older I have come to see this more as a struggle reduce to those
things that I might in fact control in some small way. The big questions of world hunger and peace and the impending
environmental collapse remain important issues. However, I see my zone of local control as
more and more in those things that affect the person. It is, I realize, quite true that the personal is political., Except, I see this in a somewhat different manner than it was implied in
the midst of the 1970s women’s liberation movement.
So, what have I done?
Beginning with the socialist feminist idea that women’s oppression is
in a critical way located within the realm of the reproduction of labour power I
endeavoured to act, not as a father (which, of course I am) but as a
co-parent. That means attempting
to share the responsibilities and obligations for parenting as an equal and
attempt to engage in an equitable division of responsibilities, obligation, and
pleasure (for parenting is more than work, it can be emotionally rewarding as
much as it can be taxing).
In my work place this meant arguing for flexible teaching
schedules that would allow those with parental responsibilities, but no day
care or afterschool care, the opportunity to be both scholar and parent. As my children grew it also brought me
into the domain of parent politics and school politics where I spent over a
decade being involved in school-based parent committees. These engagements led me to become a
public advocate in support of public education and the teachers who did the
work educating our children.
Though, by the end of my involvement with public education advocacy I
came to the perspective that our expectations of the school system are
misplaced, since we ultimately are unwilling at this moment in time to redistribute social wealth in a
way that would address all of the expectations placed upon our schools.
Being a parent changes how one views the world – it leads,
at least for me- to a greater sense of humility and a sobering
reconceptualization of what we can in fact control – precious little. In my
work environment I have translated this into a do what is asked locally (as
best I can) and work at a higher level to try to make changes.
One area that faces serious equity issues in our University
is the conditions under which Indigenous faculty work. There are only a handful of us here and the issues are fairly stark. In
the university of 'excellence' one either goes along or one gets pushed out (though arguments can be made for a third path). I have seen a number of examples since
starting to work in my university – tenure denial, shifts out of the tenure
stream, non-renewal of contacts, resignations and on it goes – there are good
things too – very important to say.
But I would like to focus some of whatever power that others think I
have into changing the situation for Indigenous faculty so that we don’t
constantly have to make excuses or provide explanations when we do things
differently. I’d like to think that my progressive colleagues who
are concerned about gender will join with their Indigenous faculty colleagues
in trying to make our work environment all that much better, that they will be
honest and acknowledge their own racisms and misconceptions about us, and that
together real progress can be made.
However, as long as we let those with REAL POWER divide us and pit us
one against the other no one will really win, except those who always have won –
those in positions of administration and authority who have the power and
control over real resources and real decision making.