Review of Passionate Politics: The Life and Times of Charlotte Bunch
By Mary Hawkesworth

An Interview with Sharon La Cruise
By Anne Keefe

Review of Daisy Bates: First Lady of Little Rock
By Zoë Burkholder

   
   
 
 
     
 

Charlotte Bunch at Woman’s Shelter, Peru. Used with permission.

   
             
 
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  issue 4.2 |  
           
 

Journal Issue 4.2

   
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An Interview with Charlotte Bunch

Interview by Alyssa Rorke

CB: For me, there are two different ways that I see activism in the academic world. The one that I'm most engaged in is how you seek to change things outside of the world, and where feminist theory and discussion and analysis can help you think more self-consciously and more effectively about how to do that. There's another kind of activism in the university which I also do, but it's not my focus, and that's just how you try to change things in the university. And I think in general we don't talk enough about that, about how we actually want to affect the university itself. My focus is really on the change in the world. But I do think that many feminist professors have been seriously engaged in activism in the university, and that's fine, that's an arena of activism. But I think for others, there is a kind of academic mystique, that just thinking about the ideas is all you have to do. I don't particularly buy that, I think your arena can be the university; it could be your discipline, it can be your neighborhood, your community, but if you aren't engaging the ideas somewhere, I don't really think you get the full impact of what they mean.

AR: I want to bring us back to the film, and discuss how you think your film contributes to the feminist pedagogy and how it serves as a pedagogical tool in the classroom.

CB: Well, you know when they first approached me about doing a film, Joyce Warshow, who was the one who originated it, the one who ended up doing the final editing, I told her no. I wasn't ready to do a film because I was too immersed in the work, and I was afraid that having a film about me would actually have an impact on how people saw my work, and I didn't see that as useful at the time. She came back to me around the time of my 60th birthday and at that point, I felt that it did make sense to do a film because so much of what I saw in teaching was that the history of feminism in this wave (or this period if we don't use waves anymore) since the 60s, 70s, and 80s was lost, that students really didn't know what it was like. They might read a few pieces but they didn't have a feeling for what it was like. And so I began to see the film as a way to convey through my life what those movements have been about, and how we also were affected by each other. The civil rights movement affected the women's movement and the anti-war movement and the different layers of activity were not just separate things that now get studied often in isolation, but actually that the intersection of race and class and gender have always been present in the feminist movement. And we didn't call it that in the beginning but it's always been present and just knowing that would strengthen people's ability to think about how they connect to that past. And I think a lot of writing about the movement doesn't convey the dynamism of what was going on. So that was my motivation in deciding to, in essence, expose myself to a film, and I also think from teaching what I see: I use films in my own class, and I see the power of the films. I mean, I used to be in a tribunal, just now twenty years old. Still in every class, I see how people suddenly understand from the film what the struggle around women's rights as human rights was, [this happens] in a way that could take me weeks of talking about in the classroom. And I see other films that Julie [Rajan] and I have used in teaching together, about the women's movement in India or the women's movement in some other part of the world, and it suddenly makes visible what I try to say when I say that there are women's movements everywhere. We aren't telling them to have a movement, they are making their own movements. And what we want to do is to learn from them. And in all these different ways I feel that film and video in the classroom is very important to bringing the ideas to life. So knowing that from teaching, and feeling like a lot of what I had seen in my life was now, if not misrepresented, was at least being lost and sometimes misrepresented. I thought well, okay, a video about a person's life who has been publicly engaged for all these years is another way of showing and bringing to life for students the women's movement in this country in an earlier period and how it naturally led to engagement with the global movement. People always ask me how could you go elsewhere and tell people what to do-- well, I don't go elsewhere and tell people what to do, I go elsewhere to find out what they're doing and see what the connections are that we can make. And so I thought, well, a film was a good way to convey what that means.

AR: And it seems that when film is used in the classroom it kind of breaks up the waves and makes [the history of feminisms] non-linear and that's something I wanted to address, how theory is generational. But while it probably changes, the film kind of keeps it from being completely chronological and I guess that moves us into the final topic I wanted to get into, which is the state of feminist scholarship. This was something that was addressed in that 1996 interview, and I wanted to see if anything has changed since then, if your feelings toward it have changed, and how what we are doing here with Films for the Feminist Classroom might contribute to that change.

CB: Well, I love what you're doing with Films for the Feminist Classroom because I think that today, even more than twenty years ago, students in particular experience the world through a visual mode, and its therefore very important to have this connection between the films and the ideas that are being written about, because that is the mode of the world today. I think the issues continue to be the same, but they always have a different form at every moment because each era has its own flavor and particular ways that these issues occur. So as I mention the issue of feminism in relation to race and class, I mean this was a big debate for me in the 60s and 70s, it's still a debate today, but we have different tools for that debate. We have learned different things, different things have happened. So on the one hand it's the same issue, but one needs a constantly refreshed thinking about it. What I have found in working in feminist public policy is that there's a real need to link the feminist theory to the actual outcomes in public policy. In the 70s I worked in a public policy institute and that made me think: what are the consequences of this. But we didn't have very many feminists in government, or feminists that were already in power, to actually try out these ideas. And unfortunately I feel that there's a big gap between the feminists in public policy and the feminist theory today. What little feminist theory we had in the 70s was much more connected to what we were trying to do in activism, and what we were trying to do--I lived in Washington--in government, because there weren't as many of us. And in a funny way, although we weren't as many, we had the public attention because it was new. I think there are many more feminists in the world today, actually, but it's harder to get the attention because it's not new. And I think we tend to work in more silos, in separate ways, so part of what I'm always trying to do with thinking about these issues is figure out how to connect them. But you can't possibly read all the feminist theory that exists today in any field, and so I think it makes it harder somehow to keep that connection because in a way our very success makes it sometimes harder to keep up with how to relate them. So I think we need to think again about, it's not in every area, but how do we link those silos and open that up. I probably read a lot about the application of feminist ideas and public policy but I don't read very much feminist theory that isn't connected to that anymore, because there's simply so much out there. And if you look at what's out there globally, and you're trying to work globally, even more so. So I do feel that there's a lot interesting happening, but it's not as effective as it could be because it's very siloed. And in a way, even though we strive for interdisciplinary, maybe occasionally some scholars who use the work across lines like Mary Hawkesworth does, most of the people are still in a silo that's maybe a new combination of disciplines but not really connecting all of it. But it's hard to connect all of it, there's a lot. And that's good, but it poses new challenges.
   
  


 

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