Marilyn Frye, a famous feminist author, once said the following about realizing one's oppression:
Consider a birdcage. If you look very closely at just one wire in the cage, you cannot see the other wires…It is only when you step back, stop looking at the wires one by one, microscopically, and take a macroscopic view of the whole cage, that you can see why the bird does not go anywhere.[1]
I am critical of the radical vegan activists who tie all social oppression together, who recognize the ways in which all of the following themes can create inequality: gender, sex, sexuality, poverty, race, class, age, ability. The problem is that although this is true, to use all of these rather strong radical political stances all at once dissuades the average listener from hearing. In reality, we are forced to normalize ourselves in an effort to gain coverage from the media and the average passerby. Given the massive budgets behind meat advertising, we have to make our voices be heard as much as possible.
So I am finding myself in this strange crevice, this strange space of social inequality overwhelm, where my radical feminist politics can never cross with my radical animal rights efforts, except perhaps amongst already radical folks. Where my critiques of current economic structures cannot find its way into these campaigns, for fear of overwhelming the average listener with more than one non-conventional notion at a time. Too much new and we shut down, after all.
But there's definitely something about all this that hurts. Something that hurts about only being able attack one inequality at a time, an impatience, a hunger for change, a need for change that drives me mad. I want to be able to fight against gender norms, against horrendous foreign aid programs, against AR-abusers, but I simply can't get past the fact that it's not efficient to overlap my efforts.
I see the wires of the cage,
but I can't see how they all work together.
How can I break the cage ?
There are way too many birds in here,
and time is running out.
We've gotta get out.
[1] Marilyn Frye, The Politics of Reality: essays in feminist theory. Crossing Press: Freedom, California, 1983; pps 2-7
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