Tags
Ayn Rand, Friedrich Engels, G.W.F. Hegel, gender, Georg Lukács, Karl Marx, Nancy Hartsock, Patricia Hill Collins, race
Standpoint theory begins from a genuinely important insight: people’s knowledge comes above all from their life experience, and so different people will have different insights and recognize different things. Our life experience does shape what we see and don’t see, and can blind us to things that others see in their position. This difference can in turn become a problem in the context of power relations, when only the experience of the powerful is represented, and other perspectives are ignored and therefore become missing. Standpoint theory’s best moment was probably Patricia Hill Collins’s 1986 sociology article “Learning from the outsider within“, which pointed out that sociological generalizations at that time were generally made by white men, and thus missed things that were clearer to black women:
sociological generalizations about families that do not account for Black women’s experience will fail to see how the public/private split shaping household composition varies across social and class groupings, how racial/ethnic family members are differentially integrated into wage labor, and how families alter their household structure in response to changing political economies (e.g., adding more people and becoming extended, fragmenting and becoming female-headed, and migrating to locate better opportunities). (Collins S29)
I think Collins was right about the sociology of the time; there were important aspects of social life that white male sociologists had missed because they hadn’t experienced them. No doubt there were additional contexts where academic or journalistic writing had to that point been focused on more privileged groups, and attention to marginalized groups proved a useful corrective.
Most standpoint theory – including the very influential writing of Nancy Hartsock – misrepresents the value of this insight, in a crucial way. Black women’s insights were particularly valuable simply because they had been left out of sociology through the ’80s. That problem can be fixed by making sure a wide range of life experiences, including theirs, is represented, in sociology or any other field where it was lacking. Representing that range might be more difficult than it sounds, but as long as it is represented (which could be more difficult than it sounds), then the problem is fixed.
But typical standpoint theorists like Hartsock, drawing from Georg Lukács’s standpoint Marxism, go beyond that point and thereby make a crucial error: they think that the value of marginalized groups’ perspectives is not merely that they are different and underrepresented than more privileged groups’, but that they are inherently better! Hartsock took up what she referred to as Marx’s “proposal that a correct vision of class society is available from only one of the two major class positions in capitalist society” (“The feminist standpoint” 284). On such a view it is not just that the bourgeoisie misses things that come up in the proletariat’s experience (thus leading them to errors like commodity fetishism), but that only the proletariat is even capable of understanding the class society. Hartsock tried to apply such a view to gender, arguing that there are insight only women can have because of their life situation – an approach that, I have argued, fell apart on its own terms. But that didn’t stop Hartsock’s approach from being wildly popular in the Social Justice movement, with its binary divisions between privileged and marginalized.
Marx too had an important insight about the bourgeoisie – that they build up a whole ideological system (classical economics, more or less) to defend their interests and pretend that their self-interest is everyone’s. (It is still worth noting that at the same time Marx admires the bourgeoisie, which has “accomplished wonders far surpassing Egyptian pyramids, Roman aqueducts, and Gothic cathedrals”.)
Regarding, the proletariat, on the other hand, Marx got it completely wrong! Even if we were to think of Communism as real Marxism, the proletariat never once led one of the Communist revolutions. The ones who have seen things in a Marxist way and changed society accordingly have, by and large, been intellectuals – what Lenin called the “vanguard class”. Sometimes you can lump intellectuals into the proletariat when they’re paid for their work – but not always, most notably in the case of Marx’s collaborator and co-writer Friedrich Engels, the bourgeois owner who paid to make Marx’s work possible. Even from a perspective that views Marx’s theory as largely correct, the bourgeois Engels seems to have seen things better than most proletarians historically did.
The crucial error at the heart of standpoint theory is to see the differences in knowledge as being asymmetrical: not merely that the marginalized have a different view which we must take care to represent adequately, but that their marginalization makes their view inherently better. And there is no reason to believe that that is the case – certainly not in Hartsock’s original formulation, which, again, fell apart on its own terms.
Indeed, there are ways that being oppressed can make one’s view worse, less accurate. Science education is a privilege, but it is a privilege that leads one to understand better than one would without it. People enter government demanding various programs that they back away from once they see the budget math doesn’t add up – their newfound privilege teaches them something real. As Martha Nussbaum once noted, one thinks badly if one is hungry. Even Hartsock claims that activities of childrearing and housework under contemporary capitalism are “constructed in ways which systematically degrade and destroy the minds and bodies of those who perform them.” (“Standpoint” 302) Having your mind systematically degraded and destroyed doesn’t seem like the sort of thing that gives you an inherently better understanding!
Victimhood can be particularly damaging to one’s understanding. Consider Ayn Rand: genuinely oppressed by a Communist government, she then built a particularly vicious capitalist philosophy out of her determination to be anything but. The proverb says it best there: to the mouse, there’s no beast greater than the cat.
Marx and Lukács get some of their proto-standpoint ideas from Hegel, whom I have great sympathy with. But the most important thing about Hegel for me is his dialectical approach – and standpoint theory can lead us to the exact opposite of that. Dialectic is about seeing truth in all positions, preserving the appearances or prevalent ordinary beliefs. When done modestly, as in Collins’s examples, a standpoint approach can help us see all positions by showing us views we wouldn’t have otherwise considered. But in its more common variations, like Hartsock’s and the bastardized takes so common in the Social Justice movement, standpoint theory is actively hostile to the ordinary beliefs of the privileged, treating someone’s privileged status as a reason to dismiss their views. It was ubiquitous circa 2019 to see Social Justice activists’ eyes roll dismissing an Atlantic or other article on the grounds that it was written by “just another white guy” – in sharp contrast to Collins herself, who actually condemned the “marginalized is always right” view.
Being oppressed doesn’t necessarily mean you understand the oppressive situation better. It might, but it might mean you understand it worse. We don’t know that at the start of the inquiry. What we do know is that your experience is different from that of someone who is not so oppressed, whose experience is not so closely wrapped up in that situation. And so it is important to listen – to both sides. Standpoint theory is right on this much: non-oppressed people will not have a full view of their oppression if they do not listen to oppressed people. But just as much, oppressed people will not have a full view if they do not listen to those who aren’t oppressed.

I continue to read these articles with deep fascination and appreciation for the discrimination of thought presented. It shares a great expose on the difference between the individual interpretation of their personal experience and the extrapolation of that experience into generalized social constructs, meanings, and morals. (In my way of thinking, of course.)
Reading this reminds me of forming ideas from the ongoing processing of my own experience from 40-ish years in primary care medicine, where every person with whom I sat in my little exam rooms was the center of truth and understanding….for themselves.
Some could not see beyond their own experiences but made up constructs of understanding that made their world more whole and understandable.
Others could see life beyond their own experience, but seemed to imbue a greater “reality” and truth to their own experiences and understanding than to others’, not realizing they had placed themselves above the experience of others.
Very few others saw their experience and person-hood as no better or worse than any others, but just a part of their life. In a quiet and safe environment, their honesty about themselves was astounding and moving, providing a greater glimpse into their reality and that of others. However, if you degraded them actively for their experiences (talking to them as if they were marginalized), then they became quite agitated and angry and grabbed common socially expressed injustices wandering around the world of media at the time. Over time their indignation at others who spoke in any demeaning way took on different word constructs to fling back in their defense.
It seems build into the majority of us that there is:
1. an ability to identify patterns, be it experiences, words, music, colors, images, people, perceptions, etc. It is said the human brain is the most efficient pattern-generating entity in the universe.
2. an inherent arrogance baked into the function of consciousness, that somehow because “I am conscious of something, I know it best.” It appears unspoken but acted out more times than appreciated.
3. an ability to abstract our own experience into the external world and forget that our own experiences are the basis of our understanding and that it may not be someone else’s.
Because of these built-in capacities (and all the other variables that influence them) it seems quite easy to promulgate any theory of one’s choosing, based fundamentally on one’s personal experience. It is probably impossible to create in words an all-inclusive discourse.
I greatly enjoy your writing and the clarity it brings to my constant organizational efforts of the experiences in my life.
I have always considered the experience of reality analog, and understanding digital. Reality is analog and our words digital. We can fight over words but never reality, in whose presence there are no words.
Thank you for letting me share my thoughts!