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MILITARISM VERSUS cepting our share of responsibility as that of an essentially servile and subordi-

FEMINISM: WRITINGS ON those who might have helped, had we nate section of the community." Drawing
WOMEN AND WAR cared enough." She cautions people to on anthropological and sociological
examine war honestly and to refuse "to be work, they go on to show that across time
blinded by [the] glamour" of battle. Her and culture, those societieswhere women
Catherine Marshall, C. K. Ogden and major point is that we are all responsible fared worst were militaristic in nature.
Mary Sargant Florence. Edited by for war and peace and that it is imperative They discuss the ways in which the con-
Margaret Kamester and Jo Vellacott. for women to work actively for peace. cept of militarism has corrupted or per-
London: Virago Press, 1987. In "The Future of Women in Politics," verted every social institution: govern-
Marshall takes her argument further, ment ("the state is still constituted primar-
examining militarism and the role of ily as if for war"); industry ("men trained
Sharon Froese Nielsen women in changing the political climate. in the ethics of imperialism will apply that
She defines the militarist as "one who ethic to the advancement of their indi-
The women's movement today is grap- believes in the supremacy of force, who vidual interests in the business world");
pling with a variety of peace-related is- justifies the use of power to compel sub- religion ("in spite of all that Christianity
sues, recognizingthat peace is necessarily mission to the desires of its possessor, has done to soften the heart of the world it
an important concern. One of the feminist without any further sanction than his own is doubtful whether any body of ethical
dilemmas has to do with the issue of conviction that his desires be reasonable." teaching has so often been adapted to
whether women are natural peacemakers, Militarism, then, involves "the desire to meet the requirements of militarists" and
given their ability to give birth and create dominate rather than to co-operate, to "militarism is quite capable of using the
life, their role as nurturers. The peace vanquish and humiliate the enemy rather purest religious motives deliberately for
movement, too, is having to recognize than to convert him into a friend." She its own purposes"); education ("the
women's concerns, in the face of evi- argues that women have a vital role to play whole organization of our educational
dence that women's vision of peace dif- in setting up new attitudes and politics system is influenced by the obsessions of
fers from men's. Moreover, the peace based on cooperation instead of conflict. military administration" and, as a conse-
movement has been given impetus by the Women's lack of experience in the polit- quence, the averageperson "still thinks of
work of such feminist pacifists as Helen ical arena is even seen as a possible advan- the past in terms of warriors and battles");
Caldicott and Ursula Franklin. tage as our experience in the home is more sports (which encourage children to think
This book examines the interconnect- likely to foster the values necessary for in terms of killing, victory, competition);
edness of feminism and militarism and peace: men's attitudes and values are women's status (militarism encourages
makes the argunent that the two are in- based on their experiences of providing woman to "exhaust all her faculties in the
extricably interwoven. The major thrust for the family, while women's are based ceaseless production of children that na-
of the arguments presented is that "the on giving and nurturing. Women recog- tions might have the warriors needed for
more militaristic the society, the lower the nize that "life means inevitably growth aggression or defence"); and the press
status of women." and change" and women would thus seem (which is more likely to be financially
Catherine Marshall's "Women and to be the more flexible in the political successful writing of war than of peace).
War" argues that it is imperative to work arena. Women's particular experience Ogden andFlorencealso note that "war
actively for peace rather than merely would make us well-suited to political life is only one of the evils which can be
trying to avoid war. She points out that that involves working actively to set up grouped under [the] conceptionof milita-
people have not insisted that their rulers the conditions necessary for peace. rism. War is but the outward sign of the
"should, positively and constructively, Ogden and Florence's article, "Milita- military spirit.... Militarism is first and
make peace -make the conditions that rism versus Feminism,"makes aconvinc- foremost a system." They call for women
promote mutual trust and co-operation ing and broad-ranging argument that to recognize that militarism is the enemy
instead of acquiescing in conditions that "Militarism has been the curse of women" that keeps women in subjection;therefore
promote mutual suspicion and enmity." and that militarism "must alwaysproduce any hope of attaining equality must be
She suggests that women must "face an androcentric society, a society where linked to the eradication of militarism.
and visualize the full horrors of war, ac- the moral and social position of women is The arguments made throughout this

VOLUME 9, NUMBER l 93
book are, on the whole, interesting, con- have the preservation of life become an should not, however, deter us from exam-
vincing, elegant. The most startling thing, important consideration in interna- ining the radical ideas presented.
however, is that these arguments were tional relations. Finally, the warning given in 1914 is
first published during World War I! The frighteningly prophetic and important to
concepts discussed are extremely rele- As an historical document, this book is remember now as we work for peace:
vant today in feminists' search for under- invaluable: we do tend to think that the
standing of peace, militarism, and suffragists' movement was focussed Shells and machine guns were said to
women's role in peacemaking. The edi- almost exclusively on attaining the right be an insurance for peace before war
tors point out that: to vote. Although the views espoused in broke out, but today they are the mu-
this book were not prevalent at the turn of nitions of war. The infants of today are
...the argument was really about the century,they do point out thatrangeof destined to be thefirst and chief muni-
whether women would prove them- concerns evident in the feminist move- tions of the [next] war.. ..No war in the
selves responsible citizens by accepting ment of the time. The introduction is past has ever produced such casualty
the male-definedsupport rolesin peace especiallyuseful for setting the remainder lists as the present war ... but all this
and war, agreeing to bear and nurture of the book into its historical context. falls into insignificance with the possi-
the warriors; or whether they would Because the book was written in the bilities presented by the next war.... If
insist on taking their supposed predis- early 1900s, the rhetoric of the time, with this thing is to go on, the human race as
position to nurturing and conciliation its "heavy emphasis on an almost mysti- we know it today will be wiped off the
into the decision-making sphere, and cal quality of mothering," is evident. This surface of the planet.

WOMEN AND PEACE I was not "aware" enough to be a paci- reduce the panoply of weapons which are
fist during World War I1 (I was in college lethal in any number." This is what she
Edited by Ruth Roach Pierson. London, at the time), but I think I was always a calls "tranquilly playing Russian Rou-
New York, Sydney: Croom Helm, 1987. feminist, and I began to see the connec- lette," with or without nuclear missiles.
tions to pacifism as I worked for the Sandi E. Cooper's contribution on
Milnor Alexander University Division of the YWCA and for women's participation in European peace
the American Friends Service Committee movements, and the struggle to prevent
The task of reviewing Women and in the 1950s. But it is true that many World War I, shows how important the
Peace is a very pleasant one for me. feminists still do not see the necessary role of women has been. It also shows
Having worked in the peace and women's correlation with the pacifist position. how women peace activists varied among
movement for over 35 years, and having Berenice Carroll makes the case on the themselves as greatly as did men.
attended three international women's basis of the inextricable connection be- Nadine Lubelski-Bemard presents the
conferences, I feel myself to be in a par- tween patriarchy, dominance, and war, case for the participation of women in the
ticularly advantageousposition to review and also on the premise of inalienable Belgian peace movement (1830-1914).
the book. I was very glad to read a book rights. Ursula Herrmann writes about the Social
with such a range of theoretical, histori- Dorothy Thompson, in the second ar- Democratic women in Germany and the
cal, and practical perspectives on the ticle, presents an overview of women, struggle for peace before and during
subject. Ruth Roach Pierson of the On- peace and history. Her survey is different World War I. Judith Wishnia shows the
tario Institute for Studies in Education is than Sandi Cooper's in the fourth article, French connectionbetween feminism and
to be commended for bringing it together. inasmuch as Thompson stresses that the pacifism. I cannot comment at length on
The first contribution, by Berenice A. support for war and opposition to it have all these articles, but suffice it to say that
Carroll, raises the very interesting con- been the province of both sexes. Th- we in the English-speakingworld need to
nections, both historical and theoretical, ompson mentions the women warriors know more of this history of women in
between feminism and pacifism. Since I amongst the Celtic tribes during the other-language-worlds.
worked as the director of the Women's Roman period, contrasting them with the I was particularly interested in Jo
International League for Peace and Greenham Common women. In this con- Vellacott's article on feminist con-
Freedom's legislative office in Washing- nection, I would recommend the National sciousness and the first world war. She
ton, D.C. from 1964 to 1966, I know the Film Board film, Behind the Veil, to get a shows the split within the National Union
history of the W F very well, and even picture of the extent of female activity of Women's Suffrage Societies before
had the experience of talking once with throughout history. and duringWorld War 1,and asks whether
Alice Paul about the WIL's position on Micheline de S k e , in the third article, it would have been different had the
ERA. And I talked several times with makes the case that pacifists are, in a feminist pacifists been able to carry the
Dorothy Detzer when she was retired and sense, trapped between war as a logical majority within the National Union with
living in Washington,and then in Califor- consequence of relations of force and an them during the war. My additional ques-
nia. She wrotea fascinatingaccountof her intolerable servitude. She feels that fem- tion is how to change the power system so
work for the WILPF in her book,Appoint- inists cannot ignore the dangers posed by that when women do get in (e.g.. Margaret
ment on the Hill (Henry Holt & Co.,N.Y., militarism, nor be satisfied with "a miti- Thatcher, Golda Meier, Indira Gandhi),
1948). gated form of pacifism which pretends to they do not "out-do" the men. As has been

CANADIAN WOMAN STUDIESLES CAHIERS DE LA FEMME


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