Monthly Archives: May 2007

Feminism

Marx, wages and a little too much hero worship

I couldn’t resist it last night – even though there were many other things that I should have been doing – an event “to mark International Workers’ Day and the 35th anniversary of the Wages for Housework Campaign”, being held by the Kentish Town Women’s Centre. The speaker was Selma James, one of the intellectual forces of the early women’s movement, and it was a fascinating if somewhat frustrating evening.

The subject of the talk was “What the Marxists never told us about Marx”, and it was primarily a theoretical talk, covering some basic labor theory of value stuff, then some divergence from the “orthodox” line, if there is such a thing, to claim that Marx did appreciate the value of women’s unpaid labour in the home.

James is an obvious intellectual powerhouse and a patrician, if I can be allowed such a term, of the Left, a fine speaker. And as an “introduction to one aspect of Marxism” lecture this could hardly be faulted. And in the “question time” she came up with some great soundbites: “Capitalism has a smell you know. Its agents have a smell, a political smell.” We are all, she suggested “drenched in the ideology and reality of the market”.

Yet I was disappointed there wasn’t more about “wages for housework” (almost it seems what is happening by default with the return of the cleaner, the nanny, the au pair etc).

And I was left feeling without a shadow of a doubt that this was not where I belonged, politically or by era. Perhaps I’m too much of a postmodernist – or perhaps just a sceptic – but to claim that the writings of one person has all of the answers, as James does (let alone a man with a beard who lived 150 years ago) seems to me a ridiculous exercise in hero worship, or else an act of ventriloquism – when someone wrote as many words as Marx, you can find hints of pretty well anything in them. (The old Leninist from whom I learnt my basic Marx nearly had apoplexy when I said that to him, but I retain the view – I like “Marx the anarchist”, but there are lots of different Marxes.)

And talking about “The Revolution”, however much that was qualified as something with many different forms definitely brings out the postmodernist in me.

But it was a great banner…

selma

Science

We walk faster these days – really!

It almost sounds like the realms of the Ignoble prize – measuring how fast people walk at different places and times, but actually this study is absolutely fascinating – for once confirming the sort of folk wisdom that so often is debunked by scientific measurement.

An experiment conducted in 32 cities has revealed that average walking speeds have increased by about 10 per cent since 1994….The steepest acceleration was found in Asian “tiger” countries such as China and Singapore, which have experienced particularly marked social and economic change.
Pedestrians in these nations walk between 20 and 30 per cent faster than they did in the early 1990s. Singapore has the quickest walkers in the world. London was the fastest-paced British city, but finished only 12th in the final league table, behind supposedly more laid-back cities such as Copenhagen (2nd) and Dublin (5th).

Of course it then raises lots of interesting questions of interpretation: is this a good or a bad thing? You could easily spin it either way.

History

History Carnival

Is Web 2.0 modelled on Eighties Lego? – makes sense when you think about the generation making it…

This and other delights at the History Carnival No 52, now on ClioWeb. (If you are thinking “it seems to be a while”, it has gone monthly.)

Feminism

Torture by man-made laws

Yes, Ireland and the abortion law again:

A pregnant 17-year-old in state care in Ireland began a court battle yesterday to be allowed to travel to England for an abortion, as the country’s failure to resolve the ambiguities in its abortion laws threatened to erupt into a constitutional crisis.
The teenager, who is four months into the pregnancy, is seeking an abortion because the baby has got a rare brain condition and will not live more than three days after birth, she has been told…
The government agency has overruled her wish for an abortion in Britain.

The legal challenge will be tomorrow – in courts where the judges have accused politicians of wimpishly failing to tackle the Catholic Church to clarify the law. So you can probably blame the politicans and Church in easy measure for the torture this poor young woman must be suffering, when she’s obviously already got plenty of other problems.

Then, this only just belongs in the same post, since it is on one level trivial – but my blood pressure was raised this morning (is the Telegraph a health hazard?) by a piece linking alcohol and breast cancer.

The study, by the University of Mississippi Medical Centre, found that mice fed the equivalent of two drinks a day developed breast tumours twice the size of those given no alcohol, suggesting that malignant cells grew faster in the presence of alcohol.

Scary! Well no … if you read far enough.. “”Don’t forget the study was conducted on mice, so it’s too early to make any new recommendations,” he cautions.”

Again – an attempt to control women’s bodies and actions. Classic Mail/Telegraph stuff, but a particularly egregious example.