While nomadic subjectivity is primarily
about the 'act of going', movement for its own sake is not the point:
the goal of any nomadic journey is always to destabilize the binary
terms that it moves between.
Introduction: Women in universities
- an old, old problem
From a feminist perspective, it is more than
a little axiomatic to say that higher education has traditionally
produced and reproduced, naturalized and valorized specific sets
of behavior, specific forms of knowledge and specific versions of
intellectual practice which celebrate that which is coded as masculine
at the expense of that which is produced as feminine.
The production of this opposition is attendant
on the primacy of the western cultural separation of the public
from the private and the celebration of all that is associated with
the first term at the expense of all that is subsumed under the
second. This, in turn, is based on the construction of masculinity
as synonymous with rationality, intellect, reason, culture and the
production of femininity as all that is not male: in this binaristic
logic women are irrational, emotional and nurturing. Braidotti (1994a)
summarizes the situation well when she writes:
the universalistic stance, with its conflation
of the masculine to represent the human and the confinement of the
feminine to a secondary position of devalued "otherness", rests
upon a classical system of dualistic oppositions, such as, for instance;
nature/culture, active/passive, rational/irrational, masculine/feminine.
Feminists argue that this dualistic mode of thinking creates binary
differences only to ordain them in a hierarchical scale of power
relations. (p. 155)
Consistent with this logic, the university
has been naturalized as a homogeneous male institution: the true
home, if you like, of the 'enlightened male subject'.
Women's marginality within academic environments
manifests itself in diverse and complex ways. Women have been consistently
absent, not just from the classrooms, offices, and meeting places
of Academe, but also from the discourses, texts, and subjects on
which a university education is based (Rich, 1979). There are fewer
women academics in universities than men, they tend to be concentrated
in the lower employment categories, and by extension, more likely
to be engaged in teaching than in research. Women have been under
represented on decision making bodies, and have encountered a 'glass
ceiling' in attempts to achieve promotion (Porter, 1995).
The phallocentric nature of university environment
has prompted significant debate among feminists in academia and
given rise to a wide range of activities designed, in one way or
another, to challenge the dominant masculinist culture. Despite
many years of effort, however, universities remain male dominated
environments within which women continue to be employed at lower
levels, on shorter contracts, and with narrower career prospects.
In other words, there exists a significant
gap between the hopes many of us held for the future of women in
universities and the current (on-going) realities faced by those
of us working in these environments. It is this gap and what it
tells us about the on-going need for feminist reform in academic
circles that has inspired this paper. More specifically, we are
interested in using the work of feminist scholar Rosi Braidotti
as a basis for identifying a particular 'mindset' that is valuable
for thinking about the on-going challenges associated with the cultural
transformation of university environments. We will illustrate the
need for and value of these mindsets through a discussion of one
particular university, and one specific attempt by women within
that university to improve women's participation in research activity.
This introduction, then, is followed by four
main sections. In the first, we demonstrate the ways in which our
case site, Central Queensland University, reflects the same kind
of phallocentric ideologies that can be seen to characterize university
environments more generally. In the second, we outline some of the
major (feminist) strategies developed within this university to
improve women's research activity and discuss some of the differences
of opinion concerning how this is best achieved. In the third section,
we will explore what it is that Rosi Braidotti's model of nomadic
subjectivity offers to those women engaged in the work of cultural
transformation, and in the fourth and final section, we will provide
a brief example of how nomadic consciousness can shape the day-to-day
practice of women academics.
As any exploration of gender and its consequences
necessitates analysis of the particular context within which women
are located, it is necessary for us to begin this paper with a brief
overview of the particular university that we will be using to illustrate
our points.
Section one: An old problem in a new context
Women at Central Queensland University
Defined as a multi-campus, integrated regional
university, Central Queensland University (CQU) is one of Australia's
newest universities having been established first as an Institute
of Education and awarded university status in 1992. It has its largest
campus in Rockhampton, Queensland, and constituent campuses in the
smaller cities of Gladstone, Bundaberg, Mackay, and Emerald catering
for an enrollment of approximately 15,000 students (with most of
these studying primarily in distance mode). The majority of the
university's staff and students are located at one of these campuses
although there are a range of employees located at campuses in Brisbane,
Sydney, Melbourne, and also in Fiji, Singapore, and Hong Kong.
These students are distributed along traditional
gendered lines with women occupying the majority of space in Arts
(73%), Education (78%) and Health Science (79%) but moving only
gradually into Science (26%) and even more slowly into computing
(8%) or Engineering (8%).
Just as the student body continues to reflect
long standing patterns of gender segregation, so, too, does the
CQU staffing profile demonstrate an uneven distribution of men and
women at the top and bottom of the academic scale. Out of all of
the academic women employed at the University, 37% are located at
the lowest level, level A (compared to 17.62% of men); 41% are at
level B (compared to 30% for men); 16% of women and 39 % of academic
men are employed at Level C; and a mere 5% of women (as opposed
to 13% of men) are employed at Associate Professor or Professor
level.
These staffing/student profiles are further
complicated by the university's regional/rural location. The main
campus at CQU is located in Rockhampton, a city which prides itself
on being the 'beef capital' of the world, and which is flanked at
every entrance by oversize statutes of various breeds of bull.
While clearly there is nothing automatically
sinister about statues of these very worthy animals, it does, perhaps,
go at least some way towards signifying a fairly broad based endorsement
of masculine culture which underpins both Central Queensland generally,
and the University itself. The individual experiences of women within
the University indicate that there are still a great number of (mostly)
men in senior positions who are often ignorant about and/or hostile
towards any kind of 'feminist' or women-centred thoughts. To provide
two brief examples, one staff member was advised that the feminist
research she wished to undertake was "not a structural priority"
within the university while another was told that feminism was not
an appropriate methodology for postgraduate research.
These brief anecdotes illustrate what is,
by and large, a suspicious attitude within the university to feminism
and feminists. This attitude, coupled with the staff/student profiles
introduced above, has a number of consequences for women at CQU:
consequences similar to those experienced by women at other universities
throughout Australia and the world. Relative to men, women are more
likely to be: employed on a short-term contract; combining higher
degree study with full-time work; teaching higher numbers of students;
supervising fewer post-graduates; applying for fewer research grants;
in receipt of less grant funding; and employed at the lower end
of the relevant scale.
This context has given rise to considerable
debate among-between women and men at CQU and various programs designed
to improve the skills/opportunities/confidence of academic and non-academic
women have been put into place. The past six years have seen the
introduction of programs focused on improving women's research skills/abilities
and profiles (Women in Research); a broad based professional development
program (Women at CQU: Making a Difference); a Senior Women's Program;
and a broad based professional development program for general staff
(Springboard). The university has also developed a detailed Sexual
Harassment Policy and a Gender Representation on Committees policy.
Despite these initiatives, however, recent surveys of women at CQU
have identified an ongoing belief that the university's 'culture'
- and its attitude towards women - have been extremely slow to change
(Affirmative Action Working Party, 1996; Mulherin, Gregor, Rowan,
1996). These feelings appear to be well supported by analysis of
the rise and fall of some of the key initiatives focused on women.
A brief exploration of one of the highest profile of these initiatives
- Women in Research - is instructive.
Women in Research: A brief case
In 1994, a research team at CQU began to investigate
the relationship between gender and the research activities of women
at CQU. The resultant "Research Factors" survey sought to identify
those factors that impacted upon women's participation in various
forms of research activity (Cox, Eade, Gregor, McNamee, 1995). When
completed, the survey showed that women were significantly more
likely than men to: have experienced a break in full time employment;
be employed on a part time or fractional basis; be employed in their
present occupation for less than six years; have been engaged in
research activity for less than five years; be engaged in higher
degree study; be less (formally) academically qualified; have lower
levels of research activity; and to have not applied for research
funding.
In responding to the data reported by the
Research Factors survey, a range of women at CQU met throughout
1994 and 1995 to debate the 'best ways' in which they could respond
to this situation. This led ultimately to the creation of a group
known as Women in Research. The group's overarching aim was to work
to improve women's research skills, activities and profiles through
a range of formal and informal mechanisms. Financial support was
sought and obtained from the Vice-Chancellor of the University and
after a sustained period of lobbying, the Chair of the group was
accepted as a member of the University's Research Management Committee.
In addition to this, the group supported the
following kinds of activities:
Research training workshops (and follow up
one-on-one support) intended to help women develop the skills necessary
to undertake research activity
Visiting speaker series intended to provide
information on specific topics and also to serve as positive role
models
Work in progress forums within which women
present and receive feedback on their research
Occasional Papers publications designed to
encourage women into refereed publications
Various networking opportunities (newsletters;
lunches; amyl networks; and so on)
From 1994 to 1998, the group's activities
remained relatively frequent, and institutional awareness of and
support for the group appeared strong. There was evidence that high
numbers of women were participating in the group's professional
development activities, and women were both more likely to apply
for and to receive internal grant funding in 1996 than they were
in 1994.
Despite the undoubtedly positive achievements
of the group, this is not quite the success story that we once felt
it to be. Over the past two years the profile of the group has declined,
the activities have fallen off, the group has lost its position
on the research management committee, and few women on campus actively
identify with the group. Perhaps most significantly, women in a
survey taken to respond to the federal government's call for submissions
regarding the future of AA/EEO legislation, identified that while
they were still unhappy about their current status within the University,
they were disinclined to attend professional development programs
targeted at women (Affirmative Action Working Party, 1996).
In other words, despite a sustained effort
on the part of a number of women, one of this institution's (women's)
key attempts to respond to the particular needs of women came, for
a significant time, to a halt. Now, in the year 2000, the group
is once again starting to come together, to meet regularly, and
to attempt to develop a range of strategies that will respond to
women's on-going identification of their 'marginal' status in the
university; despite their continuing under-representation in research
activities; their lack of success in attracting internal research
funds; and the institution's increasing emphasis on the importance
of research activity.
In working, once more, to generate activities
designed to support women engaged in research at CQU, those associated
with Women in Research must deal with the same old problems concerning
women's status and participation within university cultures and
a new, but very real, challenge: how to sustain individual and organizational
commitment to gender reform in an environment that has proven itself
to be extremely resistant to transformation? In this paper we are
interested in exploring some of the ways in which we believe challenges
such as those faced by a re-emerging Women in Research group can
be usefully approached. A crucial opening move involves acknowledging
that there are significant differences of opinion among women (at
CQU and elsewhere) about the need for, or possibility of, or ways
to achieve this on-going work of cultural transformation. In the
next sections of this paper, we will explore competing opinions
concerning the underlying or fundamental nature of the problem that
groups such as Women in Research must respond to and then go on
to outline a theoretical framework that we believe provides a useful
means for conceptualizing marginality, resistance, transformation,
and the on-going nature of gender based reform.
Section Two: Debates over the nature of
the problem
Firstly, then, many of the debates that have
taken place within and about Women in Research have reflected a
widespread uncertainty as to the nature of the problem faced by
women. In many cases, discussions about the relative status of women
and men and the necessary responses to this differential status
fall within the long-standing sameness-difference debates that dominated
feminist critical thinking at the turn of the century and intermittently
ever since.
The basic dilemma is quite simple - is it
better for women to assert their sameness to, or their difference
from, men in the quest for 'equal' rights? Either position, however,
is decidedly complex and both have been well represented in the
discussions among Women in Research members. The insistence that
women are the 'same' as men is based on the claims of 'natural justice'
and suggests that women deserve equal treatment to men because of
the shared human capacity to reason (Bacchi, 1990, p. 10). Those
who argue from the 'same as' perspective have generally sought to
construct the female body as a 'neutral' site.
The claim that women are 'different' from
men says that women are in need of different kinds of support structures
and different kinds of opportunities while also being likely to
operate in different ways and for different reasons (for analysis
see Hills, 1996; 1998). Those arguing from this perspective insist
on the immediacy of the body to women's existence and argues that
this difference must be acknowledged and valued within any particular
contex - such as a university, for example.
Let us illustrate both positions through reference
back to the CQU context. Firstly, if one argues that women are the
same as men, then the quest for equal rights is generally limited
to providing what could be seen as technically equal access to the
same opportunities. In this equal opportunity model, the woman who
is 'good enough' will ultimately reap the rewards associated with
research success in a university environment. What is not attended
to, in this model, is the extent to which women's progress continues
to be measured against normative masculine models. Similarly, the
physical realities of being a woman tend to be denied with the institution
displaying little real tolerance for the interrupted career pathways
or the day-to-day realities of childcare or motherhood.
To claim a similarity with men, therefore,
is to continue to be defined by a male centered logic. That is,
by arguing that we can be 'as good as', 'equal to', or even 'better
than' men, we are continuing to define ourselves in terms of the
criteria established to keep us out of the space in the first place.
Those who insist on 'sameness' ignore the fact that while women
may well gain access to the same sites as men the meanings that
will be made out of their presence in that site will continue to
be markedly different.
On the other hand, to hope for a recognition
and valuing of differences is to pursue an impossible goal. In a
patriarchal context, it is impossible for women to be defined as
different from men and still accorded 'equal' value. Within patriarchy
men must always have higher status. In addition to this, where such
arguments are based on either issues of biological or psychological
difference, then we are off on the pathway to essentialist representations
of women which are always used to justify different treatment of
men and women; and to support the production of spaces such as universities
as the 'natural' homes for 'men', 'masculinity', 'intellect', and
'rationalism'. It is within this version of the difference debate
that women are reinscribed as fundamentally different (in nature,
personality, and ability) from men, and thus as 'naturally' suited
to different spheres of activity, or different activities within
any particular sphere. This kind of argument has been used to support
claims that men are, for example, naturally better researchers,
while women's strengths lay primarily in the classroom.
The dangers of both the same-different positions,
then, are that we are constantly brought back to a masculine frame
of reference within which women are constructed as the problem.
As Lloyd (cited in Wearing, 1996, p. 49) notes: "Both of these ideas
accord males centrality, normality, and the power to define the
female in their interests and on their terms." Bacchi (1990, p.
xvi) makes the consequences of this clear: "The assumptions...seems
to be that, if we get an answer to the question of difference, everything
else will fall into place. Men do not have to change, nor does the
system, except to the extent that it must 'accommodate' women."
One of the major challenges facing those seeking
to effect some kind of cultural transformation, therefore, is to
develop a way of articulating the diverse experiences of women -
and their generally differential status in relation to men - in
ways that are not phallocentric. Grosz (1989) writes:
patriarchal systems of representation always
submit women to models and images defined by and for men. It is
the submission of women to representations in which they are reduced
to a relation of dependence on men. There are three forms phallocentrism
generally takes: whenever women are represented as the opposites
or negatives of men; whenever they are represented in terms the
same as or similar to men; and whenever they are represented as
men's complements. In all three cases, women are seen as variations
or versions of masculinity - either through negation, identity or
unification into a greater whole. (p. xx)
These comments provide an uncanny reflection
of the ways in which Women in Research have been positioned and
conceptualized within the university. While Women in Research achieved
some success, and won some concessions from university management,
these successes depended largely upon the willingness of those 'in
power' to accept either the sameness or difference perspective that
was endorsed by whoever was speaking on behalf of Women in Research
at any particular time. It is our frustration with this phallocentric
bind that has driven us to look for alternative ways of conceptualizing
women's location and activities within University contexts. However,
the path towards finding new images for Women in Research has been
far from smooth.
Searching for a New Image
The apparent difficulty of conceptualizing
women, let alone female academics, outside the usual stereotypes
of Woman can be illustrated through the experience of finding a
logo for Women in Research (WIR). Over several months, there were
efforts to develop a logo: a logo which would be distinctive, draw
on women's history through the callers of white, green, and purple
and indicate our concern with research. Several attempts by graphic
artists to work to our specifications and suggestions came up with
a number of ludicrous, even insulting rough drawings. The final
straw for the committee was a stylized square made up of parts of
women's bodies with a pen superimposed on a set of cheeks. This
image was apparently offered in full seriousness and the artist
responsible was quite upset by the rejection of his work. After
the group managed to locate a different graphic designer, she came
up with a stylized WIR lettering which turned into a great banner
and letterhead. This whole process took approximately 18 months
and consumed valuable energy. It also reinforced the group's awareness
of the need for them to continue to be mindful of the group's general
public presentation.
While this example offers a clear and literal
illustration of the limiting ways in which women are constructed
in university contexts, there are far too many examples that spring
from 'everyday' practices. For example, individual women with ambition
are described as 'macho', 'butch', or being 'on the make'; women
who are promoted are seen as moving 'too far, too fast'; 40 year
old men are 'young turks' but 40 year old women are 'no spring chickens'.
In addition to this, we've been told that equity, is not a suitable
goal for any research center that is committed to excellence. When
we've conducted workshops specifically for women we've been called
isolationist and discriminatory; when we've conducted workshops
for women and men we've been accused of being co-opted by the establishment.
We've been token women, phallic women, failed women, sad women and
all the kinds of bunny-boiling vixens made famous by Glenn Close
in the movie Fatal Attraction. Within this culture, it seems almost
impossible for women to be represented in any 'positive' way or
outside of phallocentric logic.
Despite the ease with which we can access
a ready bank of examples to illustrate our point the various positions
offer no real choice at all. That is because these options circulate
within the terms of the sameness-difference debate discussed above
for they illustrate how feminist academics are so often judged against
the impossible and undesirable ideals of becoming the same as men
or becoming Woman - a specific and limited kind of woman - and in
both cases feminist academics will always be found lacking. From
our perspective, however, these static definitions lack the ability
to conceptualize feminist subjectivity in positive, celebratory,
or multiple terms. Clearly, new ways of thinking about and therefore
practicing and living as feminist academics needs to be developed.
We need new strategies - new ways of conceptualizing difference
- if we are to chart a way out of the masculinist terrain of university
culture.
From our perspectives, then, what women at
CQU are most in need of is a language for speaking about their on-going
experience of marginality in ways that move beyond the limitations
of the phallocentric models identified above.
More than this, we need a way of recognizing
two things. First, we need a means of acknowledging that there are
different and equally valid ways of pursuing the feminist project
of reinventing cultural space. Second, we require a framework that
can acknowledge that it is the multiplicity of feminist practice,
(when the multiplicity is not read against a hierarchy where some
'feminists' are better than other 'feminists'), which will transform
cultural contexts and lead us out of a phallocentric deadlock.
We are not looking for a survival package
- we are looking for a positive way forward. For these reasons we
find ourselves very much in accord with Betsy Wearing (1996, p.
68) who writes: "The way forward then is to deconstruct woman as
'other' to men, while retaining difference and the acceptance and
respect of one's own body and that of the different sex." We are
very committed indeed to identifying what is, for us at least, a
positive way forward in this context. This leads to our exploration
of new ways of thinking about this challenge.
Section Three:
A new way of thinking: women and nomadic
subjectivity
Thus far, we have mapped out some of the limiting
ways in which women have been positioned within the space of the
university. Universities, however, cannot be understood in homogenous,
static, or monolithic terms. Clearly, cultures and the individuals
within them are sites for diversity and struggle. Recent feminist
theory, with its attention to the dynamics of power, has highlighted
that while various social institutions (such as universities) reproduce
dominant images, practices, and gender norms, they do not form a
coherent or unchallengeable front. On the contrary, Moira Gatens
(1996a) argues that "different aspects of contemporary liberal sociabilities
jostle against each other, create paradoxes of all kinds, and present
opportunities for change and political action" (p. xi). For this
reason, Gatens (1996b) argues that a rigid and exclusionary politics
for feminism is not sufficient to address the complexity of our
present. Feminist politics, she suggests, needs to "engage with
the sexual norms of our culture on two fronts: the macropolitical
and the micropolitical" (Gatens, 1996b, p. 178).She argues for the
need both to address the ways in which female subjectivity is constructed
in a restrictive manner through various patriarchal institutions
and discourses and to experiment with the possibilities of creating
new discourses, ways of speaking about and speaking as women. According
to Gatens (1996b) "we do not have to choose between this or that:
we may say feminist politics this and feminist politics that" (p.
178).
Acknowledging that there are multiple ways
in which otherness is constructed, and similarly, multiple ways
in which it is deconstructed, makes room for political movement
and opens spaces for multiple and varied contributions to this project.
Such a framework means that if women and feminism are invested in
multiple ways, then accordingly their struggles will be multiple.
Judith Butler (1990) recognizes this potential when she argues that:
If identities were no longer fixed as the
premises of a political syllogism, and politics no longer understood
as a set of practices derived from the alleged interests that belong
to a set of ready-made subjects, a new configuration of politics
would surely emerge from the ruins of the old. (p. 149)
Rather than searching for a new essentialist
unity, Donna Haraway (1990) argues that there has been a "growing
recognition of another response through coalition - affinity, not
identity" (p. 197). Haraway (1990) goes on to remind us that:
The permanent partiality of feminist points
of view has consequences for our expectations of forms of political
organization and participation. We do not need a totality in order
to work well. The feminist dream of a common language, like all
dreams for a perfectly true language, of a perfectly faithful naming
of experience, is a totalizing and imperialist one. (p. 215)
Taking up Haraway's (1990) rejection of a
"dream of a common language" (p. 215) and sharing Butler's and Gatens'
concern for a new configuration of feminism, Rosi Braidotti (1994a)
calls for a nomadic type of feminist practice, "where discontinuities,
transformations, shifts of levels and locations can be accounted
for, exchanged, and talked about" (p. 172). Braidotti (1994a) draws
on and extends Deleuze and Guattari's (1987) notion of nomadic subjectivity
to detail a sexually specific kind of feminist consciousness that
uses both the macro-politics of the fixed identity Woman and the
micro-politics of women in a politically transformative process
she calls "becoming-post-Woman-women" (p. 169).
The nomad appeals to Braidotti because of
its abilities to pass through occupied territories (such as universities)
while remaining in excess of them - its necessity of operation on
partial and discontinuous identities and its ability to make transitory
connections. It is precisely because of the nomad's ability to make
transient connections and its transgressive and mobile image that
Braidotti (1994a) has chosen this as her figuration for a new feminist
subjectivity and politics. She writes:
Being a nomad, living in transition, does
not mean that one cannot or is unwilling to create those necessarily
stable and reassuring bases for identity that allow one to function
in a community. Rather, nomadic consciousness consists in not taking
any kind of identity as permanent. The nomad is only passing through;
s/he makes those necessarily situated connections that can help
her/him to survive, but s/he never takes on fully the limits of
the national, fixed identity. The nomad has no passport - or has
too many of them. (p. 33)
As an insistence on mobility and a refusal
to be 'pinned down' or trapped within the options offered by masculinist
discourses is one of the hallmarks of nomadic feminism, we find
that it provides the means to break out of the limited options detailed
above. Indeed, nomadic subjectivity exists in excess of the limitations
of a context. In Braidotti's (1994a) terms: "As an intellectual
style, nomadism consists not so much in being homeless, as in being
capable of recreating your home everywhere" (p. 16). The nomad,
she argues:
[I]s a figuration for the kind of subject
who has relinquished all idea, desire or nostalgia for fixity...[it]
expresses the desire for an identity made of transitions, successive
shifts...without and against an essential unity...as Deleuze put
it, the point of an intellectual nomad is about crossing boundaries,
about the act of going (Braidotti, 1994a, p. 23)
While nomadic subjectivity is primarily about
the 'act of going', movement for its own sake is not the point:
the goal of any nomadic journey is always to destabilize the binary
terms that it moves between. Furthermore, where one goes depends
(for Braidotti) on where one starts and one of the coordinates here
is sexual difference. Thus embodied identity is the starting point
of nomadic journeys. Three levels of sexual difference are central
to Braidotti's project of the feminist nomadism and they all have
to do with theorizing difference as positive. First, the difference
between the sexes; second, differences among women; and third, the
differences within each woman. At each of these levels, Braidotti's
model of nomadic feminism answers our own need for ways of conceptualizing
women in education and Women in Research that do not fall back into
simplistic or essentializing categories.
Level one
The central strategy of the first level of
the project is the political need to locate subjectivity in the
body. This is not a call for essentialist notions of a natural body
but for embodied subjectivity which, as a site of difference, replaces
the universal subject (male, white, middle-class, and heterosexual)
with one structured by a multiplicity of intersecting axes such
as gender, sexuality, race, age and ethnicity. Such a strategy is
extremely useful for feminist attempts to de-essentialize the body
for it denies the universalizing assumptions of man as the norm
against which woman is devalued and makes visible the specificities
of both male and female subjectivities. As she writes:
The starting point for the project of sexual
difference - level one - remains the political will to assert the
specificity of lived, female bodily experience... and the will to
reconnect the whole debate on difference to the bodily existence
and experience of women. (Braidotti, 1994a, p. 160)
At this level, the project of nomadic feminism
provides a way of speaking about the differences between the sexes
not in essentializing/phallocentric terms as deviations or devaluations
but as differentially situated, embodied, and asymmetrical speaking
positions. At this first level, then, Braidotti's political project
is concerned with the affirmation of embodied subjectivity that
is combined, by necessity, with the critique of supposedly neutral
theoretical models. For those of us working at CQU, this involves
recognizing that women who undertake research do so in particular
bodies that are positioned in different relationships to the university
generally and the research culture/activities more specifically.
Level two
The second level of Braidotti's political
agenda is based on acknowledging the differences among women. This
involves conjugating the specifics of female subjectivity with the
feminist concern for the deconstruction of the signifier 'Woman
as other'. Here the coordinates of the molar identity "woman" set
the specific starting points for a feminist process of becoming.
The starting point for this strategy is the recognition that the
political project of feminism has a commitment to deconstructing
the phallocentric signifier of 'Woman' and to celebrating the many
differences between women. This second level is about denying the
monolithic and essential category of 'Woman' as it has been historically
produced and moving to an understanding of women. At this level,
women at CQU are challenged to acknowledge - in more than just a
tokenistic fashion - the existence and significance of substantial
differences between us. While our quest for a presence and a voice
within the university culture has encouraged us to present a 'united
front' it is vital that our attempts to communicate to those in
powerful positions about our shared experiences of disadvantage
do not become an excuse for denying the point that not all women
at CQU - nor anywhere else - are disadvantaged in the same way or
for the same reasons. Nor, indeed, do they feel the same way about
their positions/experiences.
Level three
Braidotti's final point is to highlight the
differences within each woman. Here, she uses the nomadic model
of embodied subjectivity to view difference as internal to the subject
where our desires cause a multiplicity within ourselves. Subjectivity
does not correspond to consciousness. Instead, our multiplicity
is characterized by both conscious and unconscious desires. According
to Braidotti (1994a):
what feminism liberates in women is also their
desire for freedom, lightness, justice, and self-accomplishment.
These values are not only rational political beliefs, they are also
objects of intense desire. (p. 167)
This desire towards feminism connects the
three layers of Braidotti's (1994a) map of feminist subjectivity
for it is activated by personal experience and is a pre-condition
for the capacity to articulate feminist politics as "willful social
transformation" (p. 167).
Overall, Braidotti's political project is
to provide female feminists with a map that depicts the multiple,
sexually specific and often contradictory ways of conceptualizing
female subjectivity. The feminist subject might use this map to
navigate ways out of phallocentric gender dualisms and create new
versions of "post-Woman women" (Braidotti, 1994a, p. 169). This
is a call not for pluralism but for the interconnection of particularities
that can be established through a recognition of diversity within
feminists and feminisms. A crucial point here for women at CQU is
that Braidotti's identification of multiplicity as a 'real' and
'legitimate' characteristic of feminist thought and gender reform
allows us to acknowledge and embrace our own diverse and multiple
responses to our contexts. Instead of searching for 'the one true
path' to lead us out of a phallocentric culture, women are genuinely
and consistently freed within this framework to recognize the multiple
ways in which we can contribute to the transformation of university
culture.
Processes of transformation
Braidotti's framework is valuable to us because
it provides a liberating representation of the work associated with
transforming university environments. As a critical strategy the
multiple and mobile lines of nomadic feminism not only form connections
between our lived experience and our critical activity, but they
can also be used to form non-hierarchical, experimental, and transformative
alliances across diverse fronts in a feminist community. Our differences
become strengths not weaknesses, as nomadic feminism charts political
movement between different forms of resistance and conceptualizes
multiple responses to specific contexts without privileging one
form over the other. In this framework, the multiple ways in which
women interact or represent themselves within specific contexts
are not judged in relation to each other but, rather, can be conceptualized
as multiple contributions to the process of social transformation.
This is significant for it means that there
is no need to work for one, essentially superior model of resistance
or transformation. Each response is conceptualized as contributing
to social transformation. For this reason, Braidotti (1994b) calls
for a multiplicity of alternative subjectivities or what she (following
Haraway) calls feminist figurations. She argues:
Figurations are not pretty metaphors: They
are politically informed maps, which play a crucial role at this
point in the cartography of feminist corporeal materialism in that
they aim at redesigning female subjectivity...In this respect, the
more figurations that are disclosed in this phase of feminist practice,
the better. (Braidotti, 1994b, p. 181)
Braidotti also acknowledges the crucial point
that while some figurations will constitute radical departures from
norms for women, others may not; indeed others may have the appearance
of fairly traditional feminine practice. What is significant is
the way in which these traditions are taken into non-traditional
spaces or territories. From this perspective, simply being a woman
in a university can be a transgressive act.
Acknowledging that there are multiple ways
in which women can deterritorialize traditional roles, images and
spaces for women in universities is an important means of making
visible diverse ways of being a 'female academic', a 'feminist',
or a 'woman'. This allows women to recognize their own contributions
to the broad political project of feminist reform, without requiring
them to demonstrate how their contribution matches up to any feminist
dogma. Such a framework might prevent us from being immobilized
in orthodoxy. In other words, it might enable us to move beyond
feelings of inadequacy and anxiety about not settling in the 'correct'
position: feelings that can have such an inhibiting effect on new
feminist practice. Relinquishing this desire for the one 'true'
way forward, makes room for multiple, diverse and, at times, contradictory
pathway towards social and political transformation. This is crucial,
for, it is only by working across multiple fronts that the resistance
and transformation of masculinist, patriarchal or phallocentric
cultures becomes conceivable. Just as importantly, this nomadic
framework allows for the diverse pathways followed by individuals
in their transformative projects to be acknowledged as important
and strategic political interventions.
Section four:
Nomadic subjectivity and women in universities:
What can it mean for us?
Rather than concluding this paper with a discrete
example of nomadic practice, we want to highlight the politics and
practices of nomadism in terms of multiple characteristics, which
are themselves unstable, shifting and most importantly, open to
negotiation and contestation. This can work as a framework to energize
and sustain us in the work of gender reform, rather than as a set
of prescriptive guidelines that would ultimately alienate and exhaust
us.
From our perspective, nomadic subjects are
feminists engaged in the fundamentally political project of reconceptualizing
difference as a positivity (Hills, 1998). Sustaining this project
is a commitment to the creation of alliances across and within disciplines
and physical locations. From this basis, a nomadic politics and
different nomadic subjects may share some of the following characteristics:
a commitment to identifying the phallocentric
bias inherent in our culture, which manifests itself particularly
in the tendency to leap from the particular to the universal (Braidotti,
1994a, p. 219) and a determined insistence on the politics of sexual
difference
a commitment to occupying and deterritorializing
spaces traditionally coded as masculine and feminine and opening
up new possibilities for self-image and identification in women
by attaching meanings to the site that transgresses traditional
and dominant meanings; by occupying spaces traditionally coded as
male women may make connections or assemblages with the signifying
practices of that space in order to problematize, exhaust and denaturalize
these conventions
an associated commitment to the transgression
and displacement of the cultural codes of gender and the interruption
and deconstruction of conventional images of "Woman"
a refusal to rank or hierarchize various
figurations and a critique of the implicit system of values conveyed
by high theory in its support of a conventional image of thought
(Braidotti, 1994a, p. 211)
a desire to make connections across disciplines
and across time zones: in a process known as "female bonding" (Braidotti,
1994a, p. 207)
Clearly, this list is not exhaustive. While
the characteristics outlined above clearly operate in terms of the
feminist commitment to personal and cultural change, they are not
constrained within rigid or formulaic notions of what that change
should look like or how it should be achieved.
For example, the Women in Research group at
the Central Queensland University has taken an inclusive approach
to the support of research by, for, and about women, a significantly
under-represented group in research endeavors at this university
as in others across the country. This strategic choice has not been
a 'watering down' of feminist agendas nor a 'failure of nerve' to
be separatist but rather a recognition that multiplicity, diversity
- and the often unlikely alliances that spring from them - are crucial
political interventions into the complex and shifting institutional
contexts of our present time. As Braidotti (1994a) puts it, "nomadic
politics is a matter of bonding, of coalitions, of interconnections"
(p. 35).
From our perspective, a new politics based
on nomadic consciousness enables feminists to operate on multiple
fronts and meet the increasingly diverse challenges within and across
the shifting dynamics of university culture. We find the strategies
of nomadic practice extremely productive because they allow us to
challenge very different but equally phallocentric ways of defining
feminists from positions, which remain in excess of binaristic structures.
In other words, the figuration of the nomad appeals to us because
it enables us to articulate our difficult relation to both the patriarchal
discourses of university culture and the exclusionary discourses
of political dogma while speaking as feminist academics. The figure
of the nomad, then, is a way of articulating the paradoxical relation
of women and university culture for it is both inside and outside
the terrain it covers. It also allows us to celebrate difference
among and within women. From this perspective, disagreement, opposition,
and contradiction are not seen as signs of weakness but rather they
are important markers of the necessarily complex, diverse and multiple
positions taken up by feminists across the political spectrum.
From this basis we would argue that it is
a matter of political urgency for women to take up multiple positions
within university culture: deterritorializing traditionally male
environments and reinventing them for a post-gender age. Thus, as
women in higher education travel in diverse directions, resisting
settlement and fixity, adopting fluid, multiple and mobile subjectivities,
and operating across and against boundaries and borders, they open
up new possibilities for post-Woman-women within all spaces of the
academy.
Some Parting Comments
This paper has described the geographically
and historically specific politicized space of the Central Queensland
University and has charted some of the ways in which women are 'positioned'
and how they can 're-position' themselves within this space. The
feminist engagement with nomadism discussed above offers a particular
means of surveying, contesting and transforming this territory.
However, we do not want to argue that there is anything inherently
radical about nomadic practices nor that they will be transgressive
or transformative in every context. Indeed, we want to make it clear
that we are not arguing for the adoption of nomadic feminism per
se. Nomadic feminism is one strategy currently adopted by women
at this university who are facing the dilemma of yet another backlash.
Ironically, the one constant we can count
on is that the specificities of this context will shift. It is on
this point, however, that nomadic feminism can be most instructive
for it enables us to see that as our context changes so must our
responses to it change. We cannot rely on habituated responses or
purist dogmas but must be mobile enough to develop new strategies
that are specific to the constantly altering self-representations
of a regional university. Such a strategy has the political ability
to "call into being new, alternative ways of constructing the female
subject" (Braidotti, 1994a, p. 208). This new mode of appreciating
feminist activity in higher education might then resonate with the
feminist desire for personal and cultural change, and enable us
to transform how we conceptualize both women and universities.
Dr. Elizabeth Hills is a lecture in
Multimedia in the Faculty of Informantics and Communications at
the Central Queensland University, Rockhampton, Australia. Dr. Hills
can be reached via e-mail at e.hills@cqu.edu.au
Dr. Leonie Rowan is a senior lecturer
in the Faculty of Education and Creative Arts at the Central Queensland
University, Rockhampton, Australia. Dr. Rowan can be reached at
l.rowan@cqu.edu.au
Endnotes
iIt is important to acknowledge that the structure,
constitution, and eventual activities of this group were not easily
developed. There were serious differences among those who attended
initial meetings concerning the best way to address the problem
as well as considerable disagreement concerning the nature of the
problem itself. These differences of opinion related, among other
things, to issues such as: the image the group wished to present;
the extent to which it should identify itself as overtly feminist
or even as targeted exclusively at women, whether or not men were
entitled to membership of the group; whether or not it was possible
for the group to work for change 'within' traditional university
structures; or whether it was necessary/desirable to pursue a more
radical model whereby the women declared their independence from
existing university structures, and of course, the processes by
which decisions about these preceding questions would be made.
Clearly, all of these debates have occurred
among many different women in many different environments throughout
the world. What we are interested in here is the collective anxiety
of the group to forge a 'coherent' and 'singular' identity and the
long-term consequences that this has had. Ultimately, the 'majority'
of the members were keen to ensure that the group developed a high
profile within the university and that its eventual policies and
activities were widely understood and uniformly promoted. Inevitably,
this meant that some members of the initial working party were dissatisfied
by the decisions taken by the group and withdrew.
Those who remained within the working party
adopted what might be called a "Gorbachev" approach to reform seeking
to effect change from within the existing university structures
and through negotiation rather than confrontation. The resultant
terms of reference and activities reflected this decision.
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