Missoni, Fall 2017. Photo: Valerio Mezzanotti for the New York Times.

White Privilege and the Pussy Hat

Reading The Pictures
Vantage

--

by Wendy Kozol

The global circulation of the pink pussy hat as a symbol of feminism took on an increasingly commodified tone recently when it walked down Angela Missoni’s fashion runway in Milan, Italy on the heads of glamorous, super-thin, female-presenting models.

Since commodification often accompanies mass social movements, this is not an unexpected development. Beyond popular appropriations of social justice advocacy, though, it is worth thinking about how this spectacle of pink normativity once again imposes a radicalized claim of gender universalism that has long haunted feminism movements.

White supremacy has plagued feminism.

In 1869, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony denounced the 15th Amendment according African American men the right to vote before women. Well within the mainstream of racial sentiment, in the women’s suffrage journal The Revolution, Stanton and Anthony wrote:

What reason have we to suppose the African would be more just and generous than the Saxon has been?…how insulting to put every shade and type of manhood above our heads, to make laws for educated refined, wealthy women….

Divisions that split the woman’s suffrage movement for most of the late 19th century appeared to heal by the early years of the next century as advocates came together to fight for the passage of the 19th Amendment. Subsequent struggles for civil rights led to further activism for gender, sexuality and disability equality.

Judicial and legislative actions have secured legal rights for marginalized people in ways that were unimaginable in the first decades after the failed dream of Reconstruction. The failure of legal rights to secure social, cultural and political justice, however, has compelled people to once again take to the streets to march for reproductive justice, pay equity, health care, climate change and other pressing concerns. And yet something remains amiss in the unifying symbol of the pussy hat.

Photo: Kevin Banatte/afroCHuBBZ

Among the myriad photographs of January 21st Women’s Marches from around the world, one powerfully captures the contradictory forces that have haunted feminist movements since the 19th century. In the center of the composition leading this post, three blond white women in pussy hats stand with their backs to the Capitol, one taking a selfie while the other two check their phones. In front of them, a black woman eats a lollipop while holding a sign: ‘Don’t forget: White Women Voted for Trump’ (above). Seemingly unaware of the women behind her, the black woman gazes towards something beyond the photographic frame. Just as she remains isolated from the white women protesters, they appear unaware of her critique. Herein lies the dilemma captured by the camera’s gaze — even as feminisms have (often successfully) promoted the possibilities of change through collective action, intractable racial divisions continue to plague the very ideal of unity.

January 21 signaled an important moment of possibility sparked by the outrage against the violent misogyny associated with the election of Donald Trump. This photograph, however, asks viewers to grapple with the historical persistence of white privilege in the feminist movement. Re-appropriating the color pink as a symbol of unity, the color of princess culture made popular by Disney and Mattel, resonates with now-discredited 1970s claims of “Sisterhood Is Powerful.”

Feminists have since pointed out that “Sisterhood Is Powerful” a slogan intended to universalize opposition to patriarchal oppression in fact excluded women of color, gender non-conforming people and queers. But, the slogan stuck, evident in the posters, tee shirts, and bumper stickers that helped to popularize and commodify mainstream feminism.

Like “sisterhood is powerful” and like the pussy hat, the title, “The Women’s March,” seems tone-deaf to its universalizing assumptions too. Why “women” in an era when transgender people are gaining greater visibility and more rights, even as they face vicious pushback as with the so-called bathroom bill passed in North Carolina in 2016?

Of course, no protest movement has ever been pure and uncontaminated. Even as marginalized people call on those with privilege to be inclusive, not all white participants in women’s marches are tone deaf to the racism associated with the pussy hat. Photographs of the January 21 march also depict signs carried by white women, along with those of marginalized folks, which acknowledge and denounce this feminist history of privilege and exploitation.

Photo: @ellevhall via Twitter.

One photograph features a white woman wearing a pink tee shirt holding a sign in front of her face that says: “White Women: we have a lot to make up for.” Smaller letters state: “voted for a racist, ableist, jingoist, misogynist con man” among other language about cultural appropriation and erasing women of color from feminist histories.

As this last image demands, gender advocacy needs to reckon with, rather than ignore or deny, the racism that has been built into the fabric of feminist movements. And, this in turn should also remind us to acknowledge how ethnocentrism, heteronormativity, ableism, and classism have likewise structured this and other movements for social justice. The challenge for feminist activists is to reconcile histories of oppression with strategizing for change in ways that resist the seductions of popular slogans and commodified symbols.

Originally published by Reading The Pictures, the only site dedicated to the daily review of news and documentary photography. Sign up for the Reading The Pictures Week in Re-View email. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

--

--

Reading The Pictures
Vantage

Official feed of the visual politics + photojournalism site, ReadingThePictures.org. (Formerly BagNewsNotes.)