Politics Is More Than About Governing...
This essay does not define the political as that relatively
narrow and exclusive world of meetings, chairmen, and parties.
The term "politics" shall refer to power-structured
relationships, arrangements whereby one group of persons is
controlled by another. By way of parenthesis one might add
that although an ideal politics might simply be conceived
of as the arrangement of human life on agreeable and rational
principles from whence the entire notion of power over others
should be banished, one must confess that this is not what
constitutes the political as we know it, and it is to this
that we must address ourselves.
The word "politics" is enlisted here when speaking
of the sexes primarily because such a word is eminently useful
in outlining the real nature of their relative status, historically
and at the present. It is opportune, perhaps today even mandatory,
that we develop a more relevant psychology and philosophy
of power relationships beyond the simple conceptual framework
provided by our traditional formal politics. Indeed, it may
be imperative that we give some attention to defining a theory
of politics which treats of power relationships on grounds
less conventional than those to which we are accustomed. I
have therefore found it pertinent to define them on grounds
of personal contact and interaction between members of well-defined
and coherent groups: races, castes, classes, and sexes. For
it is precisely because certain groups have no representation
in a number of recognised political structures that their
position tends to be so stable, their oppression so continuous.
In America, recent events have forced us to acknowledge at
last that the relationship between the races is indeed a political
one which involves the general control of one collectivity,
defined by birth, over another collectivity, also defined
by birth. Groups who rule by birthright are fast disappearing,
yet there remains one ancient and universal scheme for the
domination of one birth group by another - the scheme that
prevails in the area of sex. The study of racism has convinced
us that a truly political state of affairs operates between
the races to perpetuate a series of oppressive circumstances.
The subordinated group has inadequate redress through existing
political institutions, and is deterred thereby from organising
into conventional political struggle and opposition.
Quite in the same manner, a disinterested examination of our
system of sexual relationship must point out that the situation
between the sexes now, and throughout history, is a case of
that phenomenon Max Weber defined as herrschaft, a relationship
of dominance and subordinance. What goes largely unexamined,
often even unacknowledged (yet is institutionalised nonetheless)
in our social order, is the birthright priority whereby males
rule females. Through this system a most ingenious form of
"interior colonisation" has been achieved. It is
one which tends moreover to be sturdier than any form of segregation,
and more rigorous than class stratification, more uniform,
certainly more enduring. However muted its present appearance
may be, sexual dominion obtains nevertheless as perhaps the
most pervasive ideology of our culture and provides its most
fundamental concept of power.
This is so because our society, like all other historical
civilisations, is a patriarchy. The fact is evident at once
if one recalls that the military, industry, technology, universities,
science, political office, and finance - in short, every avenue
of power within the society, including the coercive force
of the police, is entirely in male hands. As the essence of
politics is power, such realisation cannot fail to carry impact.
What lingers of supernatural authority, the Deity, "His"
ministry, together with the ethics and values, the philosophy
and art of our culture - its very civilisation - as T. S.
Eliot once observed, is of male manufacture.
If one takes patriarchal government to be the institution
whereby that half of the populace which is female is controlled
by that half which is male, the principles of patriarchy appear
to be two fold: male shall dominate female, elder male shall
dominate younger. However, just as with any human institution,
there is frequently a distance between the real and the ideal;
contradictions and exceptions do exist within the system.
While patriarchy as an institution is a social constant so
deeply entrenched as to run through all other political, social,
or economic forms, whether of caste or class, feudality or
bureaucracy, just as it pervades all major religions, it also
exhibits great variety in history and locale.
Kate Millett
Theory of Sexual Politics (1970)