The Political Memoir of a Feminist Militant

Home > Other > The Political Memoir of a Feminist Militant > Page 12
The Political Memoir of a Feminist Militant Page 12

by Andrea Dworkin


  with the workers in the hotel and the local chapter of the

  Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now

  (ACORN) to protest the pornography and prostitution so

  densely located there. This woman might well have made my

  bed that morning. It was an overwhelming mandate. Of

  course we said yes and tried to get the NOW women to join,

  which they pretty solidly refused to do.

  New Orleans is like most other cities in the United States

  in that the areas in which pornography and prostitution flourish are the areas in which poor people, largely people of color, live. We were being invited to stand up with them against the

  parasitic exploitation of their lives, against the despoiling of

  their living environment.

  The group was poor. They took packages of paper plates,

  wrote on the plates “No More Porn, ” and stuck the inscribed

  plates up on storefronts and bars al along Bourbon Street.

  Demonstrators also carried NOW logos. There were maybe a

  hundred people marching (as opposed to the thousand or

  so back in the hotel). I was privileged to speak out on the

  street with my sisters, a bullhorn taking the place of a microphone.

  134

  Sister, Can You Spare a Dime?

  Meanwhile someone in the leadership of NOW had called

  the police to alert them to an illegal march, a march without

  a permit. As our rally came to an end and we were marching

  out of the French Quarter the police approached. We ran. They

  ar ested one of us at the back of the line. He, an organizer

  from Minneapolis, went to jail for the night, a martyr for the

  feminist cause. And it became a bad feminist habit for the rich

  to rat out the poor, turn on the poor, keep themselves divided

  from the poor - no mixing with the dispossessed. The ladies

  with the cash to go to New Orleans from other parts of the

  country did not want to be mistaken for the downtrodden.

  135

  The Women

  The first time a woman came up to me after a speech to say

  that she had been in pornography was in Lincoln, Nebraska -

  at a local NOW meeting in the heartland. I knew a lot about

  pornography before I started writing Pornography: Men

  Pos es ing Women because, as an intellectual, I had read a lot of

  literary pornography and because, as a woman, I had prostituted. In pornography one found the map of male sexual dominance and one also found, as I said in a speech, “the

  poor, the illiterate, mar ied women with no voice, women

  forced into prostitution or kept from get ing out and women

  raped, raped once, raped twice, raped more times than they

  [could] count.”

  Pornography brought me back to the world of my own

  kind; I looked at a picture and I saw a live woman.

  Some women were prostituted generation after generation

  and, as one woman, a third-generation prostitute, said, “I’ve

  done enough to raise a child and not make her a prostitute

  and not make her a fourth generation. ”

  I found pride - "I got a scar on my hand; you can’t real y

  see it, but a guy tried to slice my throat, and I took the knife

  136

  The Women

  from him and I stabbed him back. To this day I don’t know if

  he’s dead, but I don’t care because he was trying to take my

  life. ”

  I found women whose whole lives were consumed by

  pornography: “I’ve been involved in pornography al my life

  until 1987. I was gang-raped, that’s how I conceived my

  daughter, and she was born in a brothel in Cleveland, Ohio”;

  the child “was beaten to death by a trick - she used to get beat

  up a lot by tricks. I’ve often wondered if some of the physical

  damage that was done to her simply [was because] maybe a

  child’s body wasn’t meant to be used that way, you know.

  Maybe babies aren’t meant to be anally penetrated by things

  or snakes or bot les or by men’s penises, but I don’t know for

  sure. I’m not really sure about that because that’s what my life

  was. ”

  This same woman has “films of pornography that was taken

  of me from the time I was a baby until just a few years ago. ”

  I even found women wanting something from the system:

  “I wish that this system, the courts and, you know, our judicial system that’s supposed to be there to help would have done something earlier in our life. I wish they would have

  done something earlier in our daughter’s life and I wish that

  they would do something now. ”

  Women in pornography and prostitution talked to me, and

  I became responsible for what I heard. I listened; I wrote; I

  learned. I do not know why so many women trusted me

  137

  Heartbreak

  enough to speak to me, but underneath anything I write one

  can hear the percussive sound of their heartbeats. If one has to

  pick one kind of pedagogy over al others, I pick listening. It

  breaks down prejudices and stereotypes; it widens self-imposed

  limits; it takes one into another’s life, her hard times and, if

  there is any, her joy, too. There are women whose whole lives

  have been pornography and prostitution, and still they fight

  to live.

  The world gets meaner as prostitution and pornography are

  legitimized. Now women are the slave population, an old

  slavery with a new technology, cameras and camcorders. Smile;

  say “bleed” instead of “cheese. ”

  I’m tired, very weary, and I cry for my sisters. Tears get

  them nothing, of course. One needs a generation of warriors

  who can’t be tired out or bought of . Each woman needs to

  take what she endures and turn it into action. With every tear,

  accompanying it, one needs a knife to rip a predator apart;

  with every wave of fatigue, one needs another platoon of

  strong, tough women coming up over the horizon to take

  more land, to make it safe for women. I’m willing to count the

  inches. The pimps and rapists need to be dispossessed, forced

  into a mangy exile; the women and children - the world’s true

  orphans - need to be empowered, cosseted with respect and

  dignity.

  138

  Counting

  Are there really women who have to worry about a fourth

  generation’s becoming prostitutes? How many are there? Are

  there five, or 2, 000, or 20 million? Are they in one place - for

  instance, the Pacific Northwest, where the woman I quoted

  lives - or are they in some sociological stratum that can be isolated and studied, or are they al in Thailand or the Philippines or Albania? Are there too many or too few, because in either

  case one need not feel responsible? Too many means it’s too

  hard to do anything about it; too few means why bother. Is it

  possible that there is one adult woman in the United States

  who does not know whether or not a baby’s body should be

  penetrated with an object, or are there so many that they

  cannot be counted - only their form of saying "I don’t know”

  comes in the guise of labeling the penetration "speech” or

  “free speech”?

  A few nights ago I heard the husband of a close frien
d on

  television discussing antirape policies that he opposes at a

  university. He said that he was willing to concede that rapes

  did take place. How white of you, I thought bitterly, and then

  I realized that his statement was a definition of “white” in

  139

  Heartbreak

  motion - not even “white male” but white in a country built

  on white ownership of blacks and white genocide of reds and

  white-indentured servitude of Asians and women, including

  white women, and brown migrant labor. He thought that

  maybe 3 percent of women in the United States had been raped,

  whereas the best research shows a quarter to a third. The male

  interviewer agreed with this percentage pulled out of thin air:

  it sounded right to both of them, and neither of them felt

  required to fund a study or read the already existing research

  material. Their authority was behind their number, and in the

  United States authority is white. Whatever trouble these

  two particular men have had in their lives, neither has had

  to try to stop a fourth generation, their own child, from prostituting.

  “I had two daughters from [him], ” said a different woman,

  “and he introduced me into heroin and prostitution. I went

  further into drugs and prostitution, and al my life the only

  protection I ever had was my grandmother, and she died

  when I was five years old. ” This woman spoke about other

  males by whom she had children and was abused. She spoke

  about her mother, who beat her up and closed her in dark

  closets. It’s good that her grandmother was kind because her

  grandfather wasn’t: “I can’t remember how old I was when

  my grandfather started molesting me, but he continued to

  rape me until I became pregnant at the age of thirteen. ” Can

  one count how many women there are on our fingers and

  140

  Counting

  toes, or does a bunch of us have to get together to have enough

  fingers and toes, or would it take a small army of women to

  get the right numbers?

  There is another woman who was left in a garbage can

  when she was six months old. She was born drunk and had to

  be detoxified in her incubator. She was, in her own words,

  “partially mentally retarded, ” “abandoned, ” and “raised in and

  out of foster homes, ” some of which she says were good. She

  had the chance to stay with a foster family but chose to be

  with her father, since that was her idea of family. He was a

  brute, good with his fists, and first raped her when, as a child,

  she was taking a bath with her kid brother; and like many incest-

  rapists, he’d rape her or make her perform sex acts and then

  give her a child’s reward. “I just wanted him to be my father;

  that’s al I wanted from him, ” she said. At twelve she was

  stranger-raped. The stranger, a fairly talented pedophile, would

  pick her up from school and talk with her. Eventual y he

  slammed her against a garage and raped her: “Nobody had

  ever talked to me about rape, so I figured he was just showing

  me love like my father did. ” On having the rape discovered,

  the girl was called no good, a whore, and shunned by her

  family. “My father had taught me most of what I needed to

  learn about pleasing men, ” she says. “There was a little bit more

  that [the pimp] needed to teach me. So [the pimp] would

  show me these videos, and I would copy on him what I saw

  was going on in the videos, and that’s how I learned to be a

  141

  Heartbreak

  prostitute. ” Her tricks were professional men. She worked in

  good hotels until she found herself streetwalking. “I ended up

  back in prostitution. I worked out on Fourth Street, which is

  the strip, and St. Carlos in San Jose. There were [many] times

  that I would get raped or beat up. ” Daddy pimped.

  One night she was trying to bring home her quota of

  money when a drug-friend of her father’s came by. “He raped

  me, he beat me up, he held a gun [in] his hand [to my head].

  And I swear to this day I can stil hear that gun clicking. ”

  She then worries that she is taking up too much of my time.

  I’m important; she’s not. My time matters; hers doesn’t. My

  life matters; hers does not. From her point of view, from the

  reality of her experience, I embody wealth. I speak and some

  people listen. I write and one way or another the books get

  published from the United States and Great Britain to Japan

  and Korea. There is a splendidness to my seeming importance,

  especial y because once parts of my life were a lot like parts of

  hers. How many of her are there? On my own I’ve counted

  quite a few.

  These women are proud of me, and I don’t want to let them

  down. I feel as if I’ve done nothing because I know that I

  haven’t done enough. I haven’t changed or destabilized the

  meaning of “white, ” nor could anyone alone. But writers

  write alone even in the context of a political movement. I’ve

  always seen my work as a purposeful series of provocations,

  especially Pornography: Mlen Pos es ing Women, Ice and Fire,

  142

  Counting

  Intercourse, and Mercy. In other books I’ve devoted myself to

  the testimony of women who had no other voice. These

  books include Let ers from a War Zone, currently being published in Croatia in its lonely trip around the world; the introduction to the second edition of Pornography: Men Pos es ing Women, which can also be found in Life and Death: Writings

  on the Continuing War Against Women, a collection of essays;

  and In Harm’s Way: The Pornography Civil Rights Hearings,

  edited with Catharine A. MacKinnon and published by Harvard

  University Press. I still don’t get to be white, because the

  people who care about what I say have no social importance.

  I’m saying that white gets to say, “Yes, it happened” or "No,

  it didn’t. ” I’m saying that there are always either too many or

  too few. I’m saying that I don’t count sheep at night; I see in

  my mind instead the women I’ve met, I see their faces and I

  can recollect their voices, and I wish I knew what to do, and

  when people ask me why I'm such a hard-ass on pornography

  it’s because pornography is the bible of sexual abuse; it is

  chapter and verse; pornography is the law on what you do to

  a woman when you want to have mean fun on her body and

  she’s no one at al . No one does actually count her. She’s at the

  bot om of the barrel. We’re al stil trying to tel the white guys

  that too many - not too few - women get raped. Rape is the

  screaming, burning, hideous top level of the rot en barrel,

  acid-burned damage, what you see if you look at the surface

  of violence against women. Rape plays a role in every form of

  143

  Heartbreak

  sexual exploitation and abuse. Rape happens everywhere and

  it happens al the time and to females of al ages. Rape is

  inescapable for women. The act, the attempt, the threat - the

  three dynamics
of a rape culture - touch 100 percent of us.

  144

  Heartbreak

  How did I become who I am? I have a heart easily hurt. I

  believed that cruelty was most often caused by ignorance.

  I thought that if everybody knew, everything would be different. I was a silly child who believed in the revolution. I was torn to pieces by segregation and Vietnam. Apartheid broke

  my heart. Apartheid in Saudi Arabia still breaks my heart.

  I don’t understand why every story about rising oil prices does

  not come with an addendum about the domestic imprisonment of women in the Gulf states. I can’t be bought or intimidated because I’m already cut down the middle. I walk

  with women whispering in my ears. Every time I cry there’s a

  name at ached to each tear.

  My ideology is simple and left: I believe in redistributing

  the wealth; everyone should have food and health care, shelter

  and safety; it’s not right to hurt and deprive people so that

  they become prostitutes and thieves.

  What I’ve learned is that women suffer from terrible shame

  and the shame comes from having been complicit in abuse

  because one wants to live. Middle-class women rarely understand how complicit they are unless they’ve experienced torture,

  145

  Heartbreak

  usually in the home; prostituting women know that every

  breath is bought by turning oneself inside out so that the

  blood covers the skin; the skin is ripped; one watches the

  world like a hunted animal on al fours in the darkest part of

  every night.

  There is nothing redemptive about pain.

  Love requires an inner fragility that few women can afford.

  Women want to be loved, not to love, because to be loved

  requires nothing. Suppose that her love brought him into

  existence and without it he is nothing.

  Men are shits and take pride in it.

  Only the toughest among women wil make the necessary

  next moves, the revolutionary moves, and among prostituted

  women one finds the toughest if not always the best. If prostituted women worked together to end male supremacy, it would end.

 

‹ Prev