Tuesday, 11 April 2017

What is Intersectional Feminism?

You’ve probably heard the latest internet buzzword (is buzzphrase a thing?), ‘intersectional feminism’. It must be popping up on your timelines and news alerts and what not. Day by day, more people are starting to identify as intersectional feminists because there is an increase in awareness about this movement. The term was coined by Kimberle Crenshaw. In her insightful 1989 essay, Crenshaw uses a simple analogy to concretize the concept:
Consider an analogy to traffic in an intersection, coming and going in all four directions. Discrimination, like traffic through an intersection, may flow in one direction, and it may flow in another. If an accident happens in an intersection, it can be caused by cars traveling from any number of directions and, sometimes, from all of them. Similarly, if a Black woman is harmed because she is in an intersection, her injury could result from sex discrimination or race discrimination. . . . But it is not always easy to reconstruct an accident: Sometimes the skid marks and the injuries simply indicate that they occurred simultaneously, frustrating efforts to determine which driver caused the harm.
Although it has been 28 years since the term was first used, it has crept into the mainstream debate surrounding feminism only a few years ago. Understandably, this is why many are still unaware or confused about it.

To elaborate on intersectional feminism, it is important to understand the most fundamental idea about intersectionality: there is no one-size-fits-all type of feminism. Intersectionality tries to bring about the idea that the identity comprises of several component identities, which include but are not limited to, gender, race, nationality, ethnicity, class, sexuality, age, religion, mental and physical disabilities etc… Intersectionality proposes that all of these identities are not independent but rather interdependent and linked to one another. Certain groups of women have multi-layered facets in life that they deal with on a daily-basis. For example, an able-bodied heterosexual white woman has a completely different point of view about feminism than does a bisexual, paraplegic African-American black skinned woman. It is very essential that mainstream feminism evolves to include ideas from women from all spheres of life. If it remains stagnant, the movement will become fragmented and be less effective.

With multiple identities come multiple privileges and even multiple oppressions. There are many studies and instances which show that women who come from minorities are more likely to be subjected to these oppressions. Non-heterosexual women are more susceptible to hatred and verbal abuse. Economically disadvantaged women, women of colour and uneducated women are more vulnerable to poverty, domestic abuse and other forms of violence. Transwomen are often ignored or subjected to hate-based violence. Being a part of the minority leads to many challenges. If the mainstream conversation of feminism doesn’t account for the women who are at a greater comparative risk of facing discrimination, we aren’t accounting for all women and so the idea of feminism is by definition, not proper.

Although ‘white feminism’ is a more colloquial and slightly derogative term to use, it is the kind of feminism that most teens are exposed to on the media. The Urban Dictionary defines white feminism as “A brand of feminism centered around the ideals and struggles of primarily white women. While not outright exclusive, its failure to consider other women and its preoccupation with Western standards and the problems faced by the “average woman” is often alienating to women of color, non-straight women, trans women, and women belonging to religious or cultural minorities.” While this type of feminism raises questions about certain issues regarding gender equality, like equal pay, it fails to pay attention to other issues which are not separate from the conversation, such as trans-women’s rights, cultural appropriation and disability rights. It erases the experiences of minority women who are not white, heterosexual and cis-gendered.  It also imposes tight boundaries around what it means to be a woman and a feminist.

Intersectional feminism is extremely necessary in this day age where there is rampant globalization and an increase in diversity around the world. This movement is not just about breaking glass ceilings but also making the world a better place for women in all spheres of their life.
--V
*I am not rude. I am outspoken.

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