Now's not the time to be doing that, I have a presentation to finish!
Alright. Then let's use whatever threads we see each other on indiscriminately. So I kind of assumed that discussing the changes was sufficient and actually enacting them weren't no thang. So I didn't. However, I totally forget what you wanted me to change now that you apparently actually want me to do that.
Okay. So. Individualism.
First of all, feminism has long had an emphasis on individualism as a living philosophy. Particularly the self-actualization themes that become dominant through the second wave. I believe the reason for this is two-fold: one, the western intellectual heritage emphasizes this so it's only natural that feminism, a logical conclusion of said western values, features this. Second, the 1950s featured a culture which both promoted autonomy and denied it to women, which created a feeling that they were being denied something they were basically trained to value by society.
The Feminine Mystique supplies insight into this. It is not a complete picture, because it is extremely high-level analysis, unlike, say, some low level factual statements about how feminism ought to view the issue of gay marriage made by me on a previous thread, which were and are not really up for debate as they are true in an objective sense.
So anyway, the short of it is that feminism and individualism are linked in a philosophical-historical context, but the philosophy itself doesn't impose individualism. Feminists can, and many do, be collectivists, as feminism allows for even extremely strict societal roles so long as they aren't based on gender. Feminism isn't nor is it intended to be a complete ethical philosophy: for example, with a few minor but necessary changes, oligarchical collectivism could be rendered unobjectionable on purely feminist grounds while still retaining its core values of unending and purposeless cruelty.
So my individualism, anyway, stems from the same source. Individualism is not an ape that evolved into feminism but rather one of a common ancestor. As for my own take on it, I said my mantra: Only Atlas was free.
Faulkner would advise me to strike it from my vocabulary, and he's no doubt right, as I find it too clever for my own good. Attachment is the enemy of the enlightened mind and all that. Second, I know Atlas holds up the heavens, not the earth. Shut up, the earth thing has been around over a thousand years and the analogy works.
So basically, I'm a strong believer in the notion that human behavior is dictated primarily by social context and culture. Indeed, most of our discussion on how to make people better has come to the same dismal conclusion that we don't even know how to create a society that creates good, self-realized individuals. However, we both advocate the creation of a
society that produces these reliably. This Aristotelian approach to the issue, I think, is the best.
But that's hard. As I mentioned, society is a difficult thing to tackle. No one controls it. No one commands it. No one person even fully grasps it. We are not, despite our angstier, teen-age-y-er notions, able to see and embrace or reject all of society. Even with our most brilliant, high-level analysis (you guys don't HAVE to read
The Feminine Mystique I guess), we are like Dante glancing through an aperture at the truth and MAN that was obscure I'm on fire.
So basically, there's a lot of stuff dictating our life experience that we can't really control. There are sorta three ways to go here. The first is one extreme: we can't really control our lives or the world around us. This grants a sort of existential freedom. It is freeing to have no responsibility and have your life controlled by external forces.
Then there's the most defensible position, which is that you can change some stuff, and you totally should to make your life and the world better but there's a lot we really don't control and you shouldn't get too torn up about all of that. If people like this one, totally get it. Really, the main flaw is that it fails to clarify where it is on the spectrum. It accepts that the locus of control isn't on either extreme but it doesn't really inform one as to how far in any direction to put it.
On that note, I lean mostly towards the opposite extreme. I ultimately place most everything under the control of the individual, including incredibly vast things like, say, the role of gender in society. One extreme requires complete surrender, where as the other requires the individual -- each individual -- to take responsibility for everything and everyone. One is not super free, because you don't
control anything. The other requires you to bear the weight of the world on your shoulders, and with a lot of responsibility, that kinda ties you to things too. As a person who hates the unfreedom of responsibility incredibly taxing, it's a hard thing for me to embrace. But there we find Atlas, forced into his prison, able to hold the world or drop it, with only one choice he can ever make but at least he was free to choose.
Yes, I know the myth, get off me. It's called poetic license :P