Rosa Luxemburg
Naomi Baker's
new book is to be commended as she has rescued a significant number of radical
Women of the seventeenth century from what E.P. Thompson once called the “enormous
condescension of posterity”.[1]
History and Historians in general have not been kind to women who were
radicalised during the English Revolution. There is a dearth of material on
women’s struggle. No major biography exists of two of the most important
Leveller women, Katherine Chidley and Elizabeth Lilburne.
Baker is a senior
lecturer in English Literature at the University of Manchester. Her new book is
well written and is a meticulous examination of women who not only had to
battle against their male counterparts but also had to struggle against the
violent attacks of the English aristocracy and sections of the bourgeoisie who
refused to accept their democratic right to protest against social inequality and
tyranny.
Radical
Religious Women of the Seventeenth Century is set within the context of the long
political crisis of the 17th century, which saw commercial expansion, the rise
of towns and manufacturers, a crisis of monarchy and landed privilege, and produced
an explosive alignment of forces. As Frederick Engels shows,
“When Europe
emerged from the Middle Ages, the rising middle-class of the towns constituted
its revolutionary element. It had conquered a recognised position within medieval
feudal organisation, but this position, too, had become too narrow for its
expansive power. The development of the middle-class, the bourgeoisie, became
incompatible with the maintenance of the feudal system; the feudal system,
therefore, had to fall.”[2]
As Engel
correctly states, the seventeenth century was a period of social and economic
upheaval in which religious dissent fused with emerging political and social
currents. The decomposition of feudalism led to the emergence of new classes
and struggles. The rapid growth of sects like the Quakers and Ranters, which
fueled peasant and urban uprisings, was bound up with transformations in
production and class alignments.
Women such
as Anne Hutchinson, Margaret Fell, Lady
Anne Conway, Katherine Chidley, and the many unnamed women who participated in
sects (Quakers, Ranters, Levellers’ sympathisers, and radical Baptists) played
vital roles in contesting clerical and state authority, defending popular
religious autonomy, and advancing early arguments for conscience, equality and
popular rights. Their struggles are best understood as part of the bourgeois
revolutions and the awakening of radical thought, which began with the Reformation
and culminated in the 1640 English bourgeois revolution.
Religious
sects took full advantage of the world turned upside down, undertaking radical
pamphleteering and mass mobilisation. This created political spaces where
women, both poor and rich, could express themselves as radicals, preachers,
writers, and organisers. Baker believes there was no single “school”; women
appeared across all economic, political, and social tendencies, but upon
reading the book, it seems a significant number were protesting against social
inequality. As Christopher Hill observed, the English Revolution helped many
women both to establish their own independence and to visualise a total escape
for the poorer classes. It was the poorer classes that suffered the greatest
degradation regularly through jail, torture, war and disease.
Margaret
Fell was a Quaker who combined religious dissent with organisational work within
meetings and through pamphlets, arguing for spiritual equality in ways that had
political consequences. The Levellers included women like Katherine Chidley,
who wrote, "Have we not an equal interest with the men of this Nation, in
those liberties and securities contained in the Petition of Right, and the
other good laws of the land? Are any of our lives, limbs, liberties or goods to
be taken from us more than from men, but by due process of law and conviction
of twelve sworn men of the neighbourhood”?[3]
Leveller
women like Chidley supported petitions, military grievances, and political club
activity; they pressed for legal changes and denounced arbitrary power. Ranters
and some Diggers, though numerically smaller, pushed the limits of acceptable
discourse, challenging sexual, familial, and proprietary norms. Large numbers
of women-led relief networks, parochial committees and protests against price
rises and conscription-like abuses, linking economic suffering to political
demands.
These
activities were expressions of class interests formed by material necessity:
survival, defence of household livelihoods, resistance to arbitrary levies and
enclosures. For many women, the fight for social and political equality would
be their first involvement in politics. It can be said without contradiction
that women like Katherine Chidley and Elizabeth Lilburne laid the basis for
future struggles of working-class women, such as the suffragettes.
The
phenomenon of radical religious women in the seventeenth century — sectarians,
prophetic preachers, petitioners and organisers among Quakers, Ranters,
Baptists and other sects should be grasped scientifically by placing it in the
framework of historical materialism. These women did not act in a vacuum: their
ideas, forms of organisation and modes of struggle were rooted in shifting
modes of production, class relations and state power.
Marxism
begins from the premise that the economic base shapes the ideological
superstructure. Religious movements did not float free of material life; they
arose from and reflect concrete social relations. As Karl Marx maintained,
there is a dialectical relationship between the economic base and the ideological
superstructure writing in the book A Contribution to the Critique of Political
Economy he makes the following point “In
the social production of their existence, men inevitably enter into definite
relations, which are independent of their will, namely relations of production
appropriate to a given stage in the development of their material forces of
production. The totality of these relations of production constitutes the
economic structure of society, the real foundation, on which arises a legal and
political superstructure and to which correspond definite forms of social
consciousness. The mode of production of material life conditions the general
process of social, political and intellectual life.”[4]
Acts carried
out by female radicals should be analysed dialectically: the religious idiom
contained egalitarian content (an attack on hierarchical priesthood, the
struggle for spiritual equality developed into political militancy, but it also
carried conservative potential that confined it to moral appeals without
linking it to collective economic struggle.
Naomi
Baker's” interest in seventeenth-century radical religious women is
commendable, but the struggle of these women should be treated as a social
phenomenon rooted in material conditions. Individual biographies and religious
language matter, but only within a historical‑materialist account that connects
ideas to class relations, production, and the state.
Radical women
who expressed religious language or organised through faith-based networks must
be analysed in relation to the continuity of such traditions. Are the struggles
of these women grounded just in the defence of household subsistence, wages, or
communal relief, or do they articulate wider class demands? Seventeenth-century
women were moved from religious protest to political action; their modern
counterparts must be evaluated by whether their struggles advance class action
or merely moral protest.
There is a Contemporary
relevance to this book. For a Marxist, the emancipation of women is
inseparable from the socialist revolution. Historically, religious radicalism
only played a progressive role when it politicised oppressed layers and helped forge
independent class organisations. But it becomes reactionary when it replaced
class struggle with appeals to conscience, charity, or bourgeois courts. Thus,
comparing Naomi Baker’s seventeenth-century radical women with today's radicals
is useful only to the extent that it helps activists draw lessons for the
upcoming socialist revolution.
[1]
E. P. Thompson, The Making of the English Working Class (New
York: Vintage Books, 1963), 12.
[2]
Socialism: Utopian and Scientific- Friedrich Engels, 1880
[3]
Women's Petition (1649)-From J. O'Faolain and L Martines, Not in God's Image
(New York: Harper and Row, 1973), pp. 266-267.
[4]
A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy






