Notes
1. This article’s argument is
based on Joan Scott’s notions of experience and of gender
as nodes for the exploration of historical change. The title is
meant to reflect the article’s indebtedness to her
groundbreaking essays, ‘The Evidence of Experience’
in Hesse Biber, Gilmartin and Lydenberg, Feminist
Approaches to Theory and Methodology and ‘Gender: A
Useful Category of Historical Analysis’, Chapter Two, in
Scott, Gender and the Politics of History.
2. See for example Harris, ‘Not
Waving or Drowning’, Outskirts, vol 8, May,
2001.
3. For the way I use
‘group’ here, see Young’s article,
‘Gender as Seriality’ in Young, Intersecting
Voices: Dilemmas of Gender, Political Philosophy and
Policy. She argues that a socially-recognised collectivity
comes together progressively to form a self-conscious group
with common goals when historical pressures push together those
from the collectivity who identify with a particular role and
feel they are being denied the opportunity to fulfil their
role.
4. The fear of the
‘failure’ of feminism among older feminists because
there is no ‘succeeding generation’ is not, of
course restricted to the discussions generated by this
conference or even only to second wave or Australian feminists.
See for example, Jane Long’s ‘A Certain Kind of
Modern Feminism’ in Outskirts, Vol 8, May,
2001.
5. Again, these were not new
perceptions. See Long op cit.
6. Bail, DIY Feminism,
p16.
7. Bail’s popular influence was
also strengthened by her representation in the blurb of DIY
Feminism as ‘a frequent commentator on youth and pop
culture’.
8. For a review of contemporary
youthful feminisms significant to Australia, see Harris, op
cit, pp 2-3.
9. Bail, op cit, p 4.
10. Weedon, Feminism, Theory
and the Politics of Difference, pp 1-4. With specific
reference to Australia, Larbalestier, ‘Identity and
Difference’ in Caine, Australian Feminism: A
Companion, p 150; Oldfield, “Suffrage’ in
Caine op cit, pp 497-498.
11. See, among many other sources,
Larbalestier, ibid; Oldfield, ibid; Lake, Getting
Equal, pp 19-45 and pp 227 ff.
12. Even Bail seems to understand
this in a truncated and fuzzy way. Again to draw on
Bail’s ideas, after suggesting that feminine collectivism
is ‘old fashioned’, she highlights the losses in
those social services affecting women and suggests that
‘young women have to take on the responsibility of
maintaining these kinds of services to ensure that they
continue in the face of budget cuts and a more hostile
political climate’. Bail, op cit, p 14.
13. Jane Long addressed some
problems associated with this kind of thinking in her 2001
exploration of the issue of division between older and
contemporary feminism: Long, Jane, op cit, pp 3-4.
14. ‘Subjects are constituted
discursively and experience is a linguistic event (it
doesn’t happen outside established meanings), but neither
is it confined to a fixed order of meaning. Since discourse is,
by definition shared, experience is collective as well as
individual’. Scott, ‘The Evidence of
Experience’, p 93.
15. Scott, op cit, p 96.
16. Thompson, The Making of the English Working
Class.
17. Weedon, op cit, pp 1-4; Pateman, The Sexual
Contract, ‘Contracting In’; Gatens,
Feminism and Philosophy, p 8.
18. Faludi, Backlash, Chapter Three.
19. For class see Curthoys, ‘Doing It For
Themselves’ in Saunders and Evans, Gender Relations
in Australia: Domination and Negotiation p 426; Lake,
Getting Equal, p 219, p 232-233. For association with
youthful femininity as a characteristic of second wave feminism
see, for example, Lake, Getting Equal, pp 6-9.
20. Kaplan, The Meagre Harvest, pp 6-8.
21. Johnson, The Modern Girl, pp 66-67, pp 74-78.
22. Following Scott, I draw on Foucauldian notions of the modern
subject as shaped into self-surveillance through practices in
which they are gently and constantly corrected into performing
in a certain way. Finally, this performance seems
‘natural’ to them: Scott, ‘Gender: A Useful
Category of Historical Analysis”, p 42 and Note 35. For
evidence of how reading was a tool for shaping girls in British
societies see Kate Flint, The Woman Reader, 1837-1914, Chapter
Five: Advice Manuals, Chapter Six: Reading at School,
especially pp 118-121. For reading as a tool in twentieth
century Australia, see Webb unpublished PhD thesis, University
of Wollongong, ‘Australian Girl Readers: Femininities and
Feminism in the Second World War (1939-1945)’.
23. In their reviews of memory theory, Kotre in White Gloves and
Draaisma in Why Life Speeds Up as You Get Older, both argue
that long-lived memories are influenced by novel experiences
and by repeated experiences. Kotre, pp 87-106; Draaisma, p 196
and throughout Chapter Five.
24. Weedon, Feminism, Theory and the Politics of Difference, pp 5
ff; Weedon, Feminist Practice and Poststructuralist Theory, pp
75.
25. Weedon, Feminist Practice and Poststructuralist Theory, pp 75
26. Raissiguier, ‘The Construction of Marginal
Identities’: in Hesse-Biber, Gilmartin, Lydenberg,
Feminist Approaches to Theory and Methodology. De Lauretis,
‘Eccentric Subjects: Feminist
Theory and Historical Consciousness’ in Feminist
Studies, 16, No 1, Spring, 1990.
27. De Lauretis, op cit, p 135; Raissiguier, op cit, p 143.
28. De Lauretis, op cit, p 136; Raissiguier, op cit; p 145.
29. De Lauretis, op cit, p 136; Raissiguier, op cit, pp 140-141.
30. Matthews, ‘Education for Femininity’ in Labour
History, 1983, (45), pp 32-33.
31. Gatens, Feminism and Philosophy, p 17 and throughout.
32. Gatens, op cit, pp 5-8, pp 14-17.
33. Gatens, op cit, pp 5-8, pp 15-16. 34. For the relationship between capitalism and public regulation see Rabinow, The Foucault Reader, pp 17-18. For how, in the first half of the twentieth century, ‘modern’ Australia had reached the point of extending the public regulation of the population in order to ensure capitalism continued to grow see Whitwell, Making the Market, p 3, pp 11-15 . For the way girls and women were a part of this ‘modernity’ see Kingston, My Wife, My Daughter and Poor Mary Ann; Reiger, The Disenchantment of the Home. 35. For an overview, see Theobald, Knowing Women, pp 196-199. For the interwar situation, Cunningham, McIntyre and Radford, Review of Education in Australia, 1939, p 19, p 21. 36.For the contemporary interwar recognition that elementary education was being affected and extended by notions of modernity see for example Tate, ‘Problems of Administration’ in Cole, The Education of the Adolescent in Australia, pp 14-17. For an analysis of some early effects, see Holbrook, ‘Apathetic Parents and Wilful Children? Vocational Guidance in the 1930’s’ in Theobald and Selleck, Family, School and State in Australian History. 37. Elder, Catriona, ‘“The Question of the Unmarried”: Some Meanings of Being Single in Australia in the 1920’s and 1930’s’, Australian Feminist Studies, No 18, Summer, 1993, pp 151-173. 38. For the role of girls and women at home in British societies in the interwar years see Dyhouse, Girls Growing Up in Late Victorian and Edwardian England. For the domestic role of most Australian elementary school girls at the beginning of the second world war see Webb, op cit, Chapter 2, ‘Memories’ section, p 81.
39. Tinkler, ‘At Your Service: The Nation’s Girlhood and the Call to Service in England, 1939-50’, European Journal of Women’s Studies, vol 4, part 3, 1997, pp 353-354. 40. Reynolds, ‘Citizenship and Geography Education’, ANZHES Conference, 1996, p 578. 41. Darian Smith, On the Home Front, p174; Oppenheimer, All Work and No Pay, p 92, p 114. 42. For an example of the ambiguities girls were faced with in the elementary school classroom, see paragraph (b) of the Civics and Morals section of the ‘History and Civics’ syllabus in the New South Wales Department of Education Course of Instruction for 1941, p 43. For the extent to which elementary school girls were seen as intended for future domesticity, see Lushey, ‘Programmes of Study and Local Adaptation’ in Cole, The Primary School Curriculum in Australia, pp 179-180. 43. For an understanding of how a notion that is apparently fragile and nascent can also be progressively expanding in its effect see Young’s article, ‘Gender as Seriality’ in Young, Intersecting Voices: Dilemmas of Gender, Political Philosophy and Policy. As I have noted, she argues that a collectivity comes together as a group when historical pressures push together those who identify with a particular role. She goes on to argue that if the pressures change the group will disperse, but the group can return if pressures return. 44. New South Wales Department of Education 1941 Course of Instruction, p 152. 45. The New South Wales 1941 Course of Instruction expands the notion of ‘[r]eading skills’ beyond reading lessons and into the ‘contents subjects’, pp 157-159. For an example of gazette discussion see W H Ellwood, Chief Inspector of Primary Schools, ‘Notes on Revised Subject Headings: Reading Oral and Silent’, Education Gazette and Teachers’ Aid, Victorian Department of Education, 17 July, 1941, pp198-201. For an example of expert discussion see Lushey, op cit, p 150, pp 152 ff. 46. Lushey, op cit, pp 152-155. 47. New South Wales’ Course of Instruction, 1941, p 154; Ellwood, ibid. 48. New South Wales’ Course of Instruction, 1941, p 178. 49. See Webb, op cit, Chapter Two. 50. Oppenheimer, op cit, p 49. 51. Spaull, Education in the Second World War, p 58, p 61, and wartime school magazines and papers. The University of Wollongong holds the extensive pan-Australian collection dating back to some earliest copies and begun by Doris Chadwick, editor of the New South Wales departmental school magazine. 52. Spaull, op cit, p 58; Grade VII, Supplement to the Children’s Hour, South Australian Department of Education, March, 1940 53. Webb, op cit, Chapter Two. 54. McKernan, All In!, Chapters Four and Five. 55. Webb, op cit, Chapter Two. 56. Webb ibid. 57. Spaull, Education in the Second World War, pp 58-5; see also school departmental magazines such as South Australia’s The Children’s Hour, Grade VII, April, 1941, p 7-8 and June, 1942, p 60. 58. Spaull, op cit, p 58. 59. The February 1944 edition of the Grade VII school magazine for South Australia featured on its front cover a photograph captioned, ‘Her excellency the Lady Gowrie selecting toys at the Christmas Tree section of the S[chools] P[atriotic] F[und] Handicraft Rally for POW Funds. On the Right is the Lady Muriel Barclay, President of the Red Cross’; Spaull, op cit, pp 58-62; Oppenheimer, op cit, p 152 for an idea of what ‘comforts’ were. 60. Oppenheimer, op cit, p 140, p 143. 61. Darian Smith, op cit, pp 55-77, pp117-138, Chapter Five. References
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Dr Rosemary Ferguson Webb is an English
teacher at the Illawarra Institute of Technology. Her doctorate
(2005, University of Wollongong) is in History and her thesis
addresses the effect of subjectivity and agency on feminine
identity (Australian Girl Readers, Femininities and Feminism in
the Second World War (1939-1945): a Study of Subjectivity and
Agency). While it explores a particular period, the thesis has
general applicability for those interested in the sources of
women’s social power. Earlier this year it was considered
as a potential project for Picador’s
‘Thesis-to-Book’ venture. She has published in
History journals (OHAA Journal and RAHS Journal) and also in
ephemera and book collection magazines, and presented papers at
a History of the Book in Australia conference and the
conference on Australian and International Feminisms.
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