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NEWS & LETTERS, March-April 2005

Woman as Reason

Rosa Luxemburg's feminist dimension

by Terry Moon

March is Women's History Month, March 8 is International Women's Day (IWD), and March 5 is the birthday of the revolutionary Polish theorist and leader of the 1919 German Revolution, Rosa Luxemburg. It was Rosa Luxemburg's close friend and comrade, Clara Zetkin, who proposed an International Women's Day (IWD) to the Second International, first celebrated in 1911.

Now there is a new work that illuminates what Raya Dunayevskaya, the founder of Marxist-Humanism, called Rosa Luxemburg's "feminist dimension" in her book, ROSA LUXEMBURG, WOMEN'S LIBERATION AND MARX'S PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION. This new work, TE ROSA LUXEMBURG READER, edited by Peter Hudis and Kevin B. Anderson, is a collection of Luxemburg's major theoretical writings, including some that have never been published in English and some never before published at all. It brings together substantial extracts from her economic, polemical, and theoretic writings with speeches and letters revealing an expansive view of one of the most complex and important woman thinkers and activists of the early 20th century. The excellent Introduction puts Luxemburg's life in context and presents her as a thinker relevant to our age of globalized capitalism and worldwide revolt.

While there are many points of departure for viewing Luxemburg's life and work, one of the most contested claims of Dunayevskaya's work is that Luxemburg embodied a feminist dimension in her life and work. Chapter 9 of the READER, "Writings on Women, 1902-1914," reveals Luxemburg's conviction of the necessity of women's emancipation, especially for the proletarian woman, and, at one and the same time, shows the limitations of her time, especially for a revolutionary feminism.

LUXEMBURG'S WRITINGS ON WOMEN

"A Tactical Question," Luxemburg's attack on the Belgian Social Democrats who abandoned the demand for women's suffrage to assuage the Liberals, leads off the chapter. What Luxemburg is concerned about is not tactics, but principles. And the principle is not only women's right to vote, but "revolutionary methods." She is opposed to any "compromise…that cost us our basic principles" (p. 235).

To her disgust, the Party takes the same ground as the bourgeoisie--claiming women are "not mature enough to exercise the right to vote" (p. 235). How that must have rankled her is expressed when she writes that the "inclusion of proletarian women in political life" of the German Social Democracy as well as in its social life would mean "a strong, fresh wind would blow in with the political emancipation of women, which would clear out the suffocating air of the current, philistine family life that rubs itself off so unmistakably, even on our Party members, workers and leaders alike" (p. 236). She spoke from experience. As Dunayevskaya documents, Luxemburg resigned as editor of a Social Democratic paper because the men refused to grant her the same powers as her male predecessor. 

In her 1907 "Address to the International Socialist Women's Conference," a straightforward talk to her women comrades, she strongly advised the women's association to keep its headquarters in Stuttgart, where it could maintain its independent existence. Luxemburg states that it is "You, however, [who] will resurrect this moral center of the International." (p. 237). Dunayevskaya shows us how prescient Luxemburg was in securing the independence of the women's movement. The principle of having an independent socialist women's movement became central when Luxemburg so angered the leadership that they refused to print her articles. Then GLEICHHEIT (Equality), the newspaper of the socialist women's movement edited by Clara Zetkin, "was an outlet for Luxemburg's revolutionary views. Indeed it later became the anti-war organ when World War I broke out and the International betrayed" by voting for war. 

In the last two essays in Chapter 9 on "Women's Suffrage and the Class Struggle" and on "The Proletarian Woman," one notices a contradiction in Luxemburg's feminist dimension. She is well aware of the tremendous power of the women's movement and of the demand for suffrage which is important politically, and is a demand to be seen as full human beings. Furthermore, in speeches and private letters, her muted critique of the party's sexism and her regard for the work of her women comrades, especially Zetkin, shines forth. Yet her hostility to the bourgeois women's movement is jarring and some of her generalizations untrue, for example: "The bourgeois woman has no real interest in political rights, because she does not exercise any economic function in society." (p. 243). The bourgeois women's movement did not only agitate for the vote but also for education and equality, and if it was like the movement in the U.S., it believed the women's vote would mean that women's "values" could be asserted into the political realm.

Luxemburg refused to recognize publicly what she had herself experienced. Her public position was that for the proletarian woman, "Her political demands are rooted deep in the social abyss that separates the class of the exploited from the class of the exploiters, not in the antagonism between man and woman but in the antagonism between capital and labor" (p. 244). Clara Zetkin did not make this dichotomy, as seen in her talk at the founding of the Second International in 1889: "Just as the male worker is subjugated to the capitalist, so is the woman by the man, and she will always remain in subjugation until she is economically independent." 

FIGHTING CAPITALISM AND SEXISM

Lesbian feminist poet and theorist Adrienne Rich comments on this contradiction in her Foreword to Dunayevskaya's book: "Yet, in her [Luxemburg's] short and brutally ended life, feminism and proletarian revolution never became integrated."  Dunayevskaya writes something similar: "Because, however, Luxemburg refused to make any reference to what we would now call male chauvinism, during the hectic debates with [Karl] Kautsky and [August] Bebel, the two sets of activities [the general revolutionary struggle and women's liberation] remained in separate compartments."  It is our age that has seen that for women to experience full freedom, both battles must be fought, and furthermore, that, as Marx noted, capitalism exacerbates and exploits all existing antagonisms for its own interests.

Dunayevskaya's book on Luxemburg allows us to understand the complexity of her feminist dimension. While on the one hand Luxemburg worried that agitating for an end to male chauvinism in the movement could break up the revolutionary organization, on the other, she had been talking of and fighting for women since 1902. By 1910-1911 and the founding of IWD, the socialist working women's movement had developed tremendously. When World War I broke out and the German Social Democracy supported German chauvinism, the women's movement became the stalwart center of the anti-war movement. Dunayevskaya concludes that "Once again, everything merged into proletarian revolution, but always thereafter, woman as revolutionary force revealed its presence."  This was so because there was a "new stage of feminism" and it was moving "from total concentration on working women's rights to opposing the capitalist system in its entirety." 

The inclusion of the letters from Luxemburg are a wonderful contribution to the READER as they reveal how her passion for human liberation and her outrage at the murder of innocents in the service of capitalism's expansion is intrinsic to who she is. They help us see her as the whole person she was. Her letters to her lover Leo Jogiches show her as confident, competent and deeply in love. Her letters to her women friends, many from prison, show an uncompromising revolutionary discipline, a belief in the power of the mass movement, and a passion for life and for justice that encompasses the world.

The READER confirms that Raya Dunayevskaya was right in insisting that Rosa Luxemburg not only had a feminist dimension, but that it is key in understanding who she was and what revolution meant to her. What the discerning women's liberationist will discover in exploring this, however, is that it compels one to try to understand all of Luxemburg's dimensions. Luxemburg's feminist dimension cannot be separated from her theoretic development, her arguments with comrades and enemies, her confidence and pride in her economic and theoretic abilities, her passion for revolution and her determination to transform our world.

* * *

The Rosa Luxemburg Reader

Edited by Peter Hudis & Kevin Andersen, Monthly Review Press

"[This collection] offers invaluable perspectives on radical thought and practice in the early 20th century. The editors deserve praise for general scholarly excellence--this work is graced throughout by lucid introductions and helpful endnotes.... Highly recommended."

--CHOICE, January 2005

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