ConceptualizingDifferencein Caribbean Fe
ConceptualizingDifferencein Caribbean Fe
ConceptualizingDifferencein Caribbean Fe
Conceptualizing 'Difference' in
Caribbean Feminist Theory
RHODA REODOCK
196
Conceptualizing 'Difference' in Caribbean Feminist Theory / 197
The main focus of the black feminist critique was the invisibility/ab-
sence/erasure of black women from the feminist discourse. For example, the
popular early analogy between 'blacks' and 'women' denied the existence of
black women with experiences that diflFered from those of black men and white
women. One of the earliest writings on this was Audre Lorde's "Open Letter
to Mary Daly" (1983), where she expressed the pain she felt at not seeing her
experience expressed in Daly's then most recent book Gyn/Ecology.
Black women also accused white women of refusing to examine the efFects
white racism had on the experiences of black women. In highlighting sexism
and ignoring racism, white feminists were denying an important factor in
configuring the experience of black women as well as not exploring their own
complicity along with white men in this process. From very early, therefore,
the situation of the black woman in the United States was described as being
one of double jeopardy, where their life chances were determined both by race
and sex. In later years this was expanded to include class as it was realized that
the structuring of race in the United States was such that class had been 'raced'
and 'gendered' so that an understanding of black women's situation had to
consider the difficult economic situation in which most of them found
themselves. The black feminist critique also raised the issue of class to mainly
middle class feminists, contrasting the economic circumstances and work-life
experiences of both groups.
198 / New Caribbean Thought
Postmodernism
In recent times this black feminist concern with difference has received a fillip
from the popularization of poststructuralist and postmodernist discourses,
particularly in their challenge of hegemonic universals and their understanding
of power as a dispersed phenomenon. For example, the work of Jean-Jacques
Lyotard, who challenged the role of hegemonic metanarratives that serve to
silence and deny competing discourses through the creation of overarching
and totalizing universals, and that of Michel Foucault, who questioned the
false power of hegemonic knowledges and the institutionalized structures that
sought to control the creation and dissemination of knowledge, have influ-
enced the black feminist discourse. Foucault also stresses the need to critique
existing understandings of power as overriding and dominant and calls on us
to see power in various forms and in social relations where we would not have
seen it before. Finally, Jacques Derrida questions the Western tradition of
constructing knowledge in binary opposites where the first term is the signifier
of the Other and where the second term is defined in opposition or in contrast
to the first; for example, white/black, unity/diversity, man/woman. He calls
for a deconstruction of these controlling systems of meaning and for the
opening up of new ways of understanding difference, and the specificities of
its historical, social and cultural construction in ways that do not lead us into
new essentialisms.
Conceptualizing 'Difference' in Caribbean Feminist Theory / 199
For many black feminists, mainstream (that is, white) feminism had created
an essentialized woman, one based on the experience of mainly white middle
class women of the North. This model ignored the fact that black women had
had a difFerent experience. This approach is expanded on by bell hooks (1992),
who in opening up a discourse on black postmodernism sees its utility not only
in the de-essentializing of woman per se but, further, in a de-essentializing of
blackness through a recognition that there may be difFerent ways of being
authentically black. In addition, this approach heightens the recognition, often
ignored by early black feminists, that the black experience has not been
singular. Increasingly today, diflFerences in class within the black community
have meant that the experiences of black women could be vastly difFerent.
Deconstructing Blackness
The term 'black' has always been a problematic one, the main problem being
its emergence within the modernist era as an oppositional term for white and
the differential meanings that it has had in difFerent contexts. For example,
whereas in the United States the word 'black' referred specifically to the
descendants of African slaves or any other person who had the slightest trace
of African ancestry, in Europe in general and Britain in particular the word
'black' was used as a political oppositional term to encompass a wide range of
racialized groups. In the words of Avtah Brah (1996):
The concept 'black' now emerges as a specifically political term embracing African-Carib-
bean and South Asian peoples. It constitutes a political subject inscribing politics of
resistance against colour-centred racisms. The term was adopted by the emerging coalitions
amongst African-Caribbean and South Asian organisations and activists in the late 1960s
and 1970s. They were influenced by the way that the Black Power movement in the USA,
which had turned the concept 'black' on its head, divested it of its pejorative connotations
200 / New Caribbean Thought
While for almost two decades the term 'black' served as a useful unifying
mechanism through which South Asian and African Caribbean activists were
able to make successful demands upon the British state, this term has come
under increasing attack. According to Brah, ethnicist scholars have argued that
the term 'black' in Black Power ideology referred specifically to the historical
experience of people of sub-Saharan African descent, and was designed primar-
ily for them. When applied to South Asians, the term black did not have the
same cultural meanings, such as those associated with black music, and so was
relevant to South Asians in a political sense only (Brah 1996).
The argument about the term 'black' has been echoed in the Caribbean as
well. Well into the 1980s the nascent Hindu Women's Organization ques-
tioned the use of the term 'black' to refer to Caribbean people of Indian
ancestry. They too argued that 'black' had a meaning and relevance to people
of African descent that it did not have for Indians and so was a hegemonic
concept that denied the specificity of the Indian Caribbean experience (Red-
dock 1993). While the British critics suggested the replacement of the term
'black' by Indian or Asian, the Caribbean activists initially called for the term
'brown' then later for Indian Caribbean, a term that stressed the cultural and
historical specificities of that group.
While Brah argues that the term does not necessarily have to be defined in
essentialist terms, and can have different political and cultural meanings in
different contexts, we have a situation where African diaspora feminists, after
decades of arguing against a erasure of their specific experience, are being cast
in a similar position in relation to South Asian identities. What is clear is that
the existing and now hegemonic discourse of race, class and gender that
developed in the North is inadequate to deal with the differing complexities
of the Third World. But then again, it is possible that the overarching
dominance of the white audience in the North has overshadowed the very real
differences that exist among women of colour there.
Conceptualizing 'Difference' in Caribbean Feminist Theory / 201
In the last two decades, since the end ofthe cold war and the disappointment
in the promise of modernization and socialism, there has been an upsurge of
small- and large-scale conflicts based on ethnic and religious differences. While
the politics of difference quite correcdy directs us to the social, cultural and
political marginalization of groups by dominant and hegemonic practices and
discourses, the violence that accompanies much of this conflict has particular
consequences for women.
Women are subject to some of the worst physical and emotional violence
in open conflict situations, including rape and forced pregnancy. Women are
often called upon to wear the 'ethnic markers' of their community resulting
in calls for 'returns' to the veil, to 'femily' or other symbols of female
subordination. This has become particularly important under circumstances
of economic liberalization experienced in the South, as structural adjustment
policies that limit the availability of already scarce resources are introduced.
It is imperative, therefore, that women's movements tackle head-on the
issue of difference, exploring its complexities of empowerment and oppression
in ways that open it up for debate. In this way, women can themselves assess
the situation and chart a way forward.
We in the Caribbean are no strangers to racism, having experienced some of its most
extreme manifestations during slavery and for some time after its abolition. However,
given the numerical advantage of persons of African descent in the region, it has been
possible since the end of colonial rule, and particularly since the 1970s, to weaken the
hold of racism. White men (both local and foreign) may still control the economies of
the region but black men have achieved political power and do exercise considerable
control over the public sector. To the extent then that power changed hands, it went
from white men to black men; women did not feature in that equation. Caribbean
women therefore have not found it necessary to differentiate feminism into 'black' and
'white*. (1)
202 / New Caribbean Thought
In conclusion. Tang Nain argued for a change from the label 'black feminism'
to antiracist or socialist feminism as a more acceptable alternative. The former
term she saw as divisive and based on a narrow understanding of feminism.
This article was important as it is one of the only documents that provides a
clear critique ofblack feminism from the perspective of a woman of colour. At
the same time, however, her paper failed to draw reference to the issues of race
and difference within the Caribbean itself
field of journalism have all been attempts to grapple with the experience of colonialism
from an anti-imperialist framework which included the perspectives of race and class . . .
In the Caribbean then, the discourse has been one of reclaiming identity. The reclaimed
identity, however, has been predominantly African. (23)
This is not surprising as the Caribbean, possibly excluding parts of the Hispanic
Caribbean, is a primarily Creole space, and one where major stru^les took place
(and still take place) for the valorization of African-derived languages, lifestyles
and cultural forms. The term 'creole' here is derived from the work of Edward
Kamau Brathwaite in his essay "Contradictory Omens". In this essay he defines
the process of 'creolization', the creation of Creole society as taking place
through the forced acculturation of Africans to European norms and behav-
iours, the inadvertent assimilation of Europeans to African norms and the
unconscious and reciprocal interculturation of one to the other (Brathwaite
1977: 11). This process he saw as resulting in a new cultural creation - a creole
society, comprising a continuum of cultural and linguistic forms ranging from
the prestigious and more accepted Euro-Creole forms to the more despised
and often hidden Afro-Creole or folk forms.
In Trinidad and Tobs^o, Guyana, and Suriname, Indians comprise a much
larger proportion of the population than in other parts of the region. As
latecomers, however, they were never totally integrated into the dominant
Creole cultural paradigm. In recent times, however, due to a strong Indian
identity movement and the increasing economic and political power of the
Indian community, this is changing. This identity movement has included
cultural nationalist tendencies as well as religious fundamentalist movements
of Hindus and Moslems. All this has served to place the issue of difference
squarely on the table.
In the main, this is a correct analysis although not yet understood by feminist
scholars in all parts ofthe region. But the weaknesses in this analysis could also
be explained by the absence of Indian women themselves as writers of those
analyses. As soon as this changed, the discourse also changed. My main
criticism of this argument, however, would be her choice ofthe word Afrocen-
tric, for this gives an incorrect understanding of the mainstream discourse.
Indeed, Afrocentrism is also a minority discourse within the region; the
majority of African descendants have more of a Creole consciousness than an
Afrocentric one.
This view of a Creole consciousness is supported by Rishee Thakur in his
review essay "Orientalism Revisited" (1993), where he comments that
[cjomplaints of the essential Afrocentric character of the Caribbean functions along the
same lines. As with the 'Indo-Caribbean' it is not certain what Afrocentric means other
than the fact that the Governments and major institutions ofthe Caribbean are dominated
by Afro-Caribbeans.' But there is really nothing Afrocentric in that, if Afrocentric means
traditions and practices that have their roots in Africa and were reconstituted in a
post-slavery Caribbean. What is at issue is who gets to manage the post-colonial settlement,
codified and organised around the creolised ideals of an Anglo-Christian tradition, West-
minster and all. (13)
Thus the patriarchal context as it existed in Trinidad in 1917 was that of a competition
among males of different racial groups, each jostling for power of one sort or the other -
economic, political, social status and so on. In the face of a hegemonic control by the white
group and another kind of dominance by the 'creole' population, the contestation was both
a definition of masculinity between men of different races, and for Indian men to retrieve
a ruptured patriarchy from the ravages of indentureship and thus be better placed to
compete in this patriarchal race. This required a consolidation of the patriarchal system
brought from India. (32)
It brings to mind the ways in which struggles for identity and nation are always
couched in masculinist language often referring to restoring a 'manhood' of
some sort.
At another level altogether. Honor Ford-Smith's oral testimony, "Grandma's
Estate", in SISTREN and Ford-Smith's Lionheart Gal (1986), provides yet
another example of the conceptualization of difference in Caribbean feminist
thinking. In that collection, her use of Standard English at once distinguishes that
piece from the others (written, at Ford-Smith's insistence to the publishers, in the
language ofthe authors, Jamaican 'creole'). In the veryfirstline she identifies herself
as the offspring of a brown woman and a white man, differentiating herself by
class and colour from the other contributors in the text. In this article she also
chronicles her African grandmother's quest to get rid of their blackness through
her children and her children's children, with the end result being that
Ford-Smith herself is, for all intents and purposes, a white Jamaican. But like
other women in that text, Ford-Smith fights the battles of race, class and gender
that are part and parcel of life in the postcolonial Caribbean, in her specific
case exploring the contradictory locations of persons such as herself in the
evolving realities ofthe region (SISTREN and Ford-Smith 1986: 177-97).
Ford-Smith's work raises the issue of white Caribbean feminists, their confiic-
tual situation within the postcolonial s t r u c k for identity and their positioning
within the Caribbean women's movement.
For my own part as an Afro-Caribbean feminist activist/scholar, I was
acutely aware ofthe differences hetween myself and Indo-Caribbean women.
This difference was, to me, both a real difference and a constructed difference.
It served to maintain cultural spaces through which men could maintain
control over 'their' women and also alternate their behaviours towards women
of different groups according to the ethnic stereotypes. It was my experience,
for example, that African and Indian women were constantly being defined in
opposition to each other, Indian women were or are what African women were
or are not. This, within the ethnic contestations and configurations of our
society, served to narrow the options and spaces available to the women
concerned.
It was for this reason, therefore, that in my own historical research begun
some years ago, my efforts at understanding the experiences of Indian women
was as important to me as was my understanding of African women. Not
simply because it was politically correct to do so but because our differences
had in some way contributed to what we had now been constructed to be. In
other words, it was impossible to know myself if I did not know my Other/s.
208 / New Caribbean Thought
Note
1. That was until recently. Both Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago now have Indian
prime ministers and predominantly Indian Cabinets.
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