Catharine A. MacKinnon From Practice to Theory, or What is a White Woman Anyway?* And ain't I a woman? - Sojourner Truth1 Black feminists speak as women because we are women ... - Audre Lorde- It is common to say that something is good in theory but not in practice. I always want to say, then it is not such a good theory, is it? To be good in theory but not in practice posits a relation between theory and practice that places theory prior to practice, both methodologically and normatively, as if theory is a terrain unto itself. The conventional image of the relation between the two is first theory, then practice. You have an idea, then act on it. In legal academia you theorize, then try to get some practitioner to put it into practice. To be more exact, you read law, review articles, then write more law review articles. The closest most legal academics come to practice is teaching - their students, most of whom will practice, being regarded by many as an occupational hazard to their theorizing. The postmodern version of the relation between theory and practice is discourse unto death. Theory begets no practice, only more text. It proceeds as if you can deconstruct power relations by shifting their markers around in your head. Like all formal idealism, this approach to theory tends unselfconsciously to reproduce existing relations of dominance, in part because it is an utterly removed * Reprinted from Yale Journal of Law andFeminism, (1991b), 4 (13) pp. 13-22. This paper benefited from the comments of members of the Collective on Women of Color and the Law at Yale Law School. 1. Bert J. Loewenberg & Ruth Dugin (1976, p. 235). 2. Audre Lorde (1984, p.60). The whole quotation is "Black feminists speak as women because we are women and do not need others to speak for us." 45 Catharine A. MacKinnon elite activity. On this level, all theory is a form of practice, because it either subverts or shores up existing deployments of power, in their martial metaphor. As an approach to change, it is the same as the conventional approach to the theory/practice relation: head driven, not world driven. Social change is first thought about, then acted out Books relate to books, heads talk to heads. Bodies do not crunch bodies or people move people. As theory, it is the de-realization of the world. The movement for the lil>eration of women, including in law, moves the other way around. It is first practice, then theory. Actually, it moves this way in practice, not just in theory. Feminism was a practice long before it was a theory. On its real level, the Women's Movement - where women move against their determinants as women - remains more practice than theory. This distinguishes it from academic feminism. For women in the world, the gap between theory and practice is the gap between practice and theory. Wc know things with our lives, and live that knowledge, beyond anything any theory has yet theorized. Womens practice of confrontation with the realities of male dominance outruns any existing theory of the possibility of consciousness or resistance. To write the theory of this practice is not to work through logical puzzles or entertaining conundra, not to fantasize Utopias, not to moralize or tell people what to do. It is not to exercise authority; it does not lead practice. Its task is to engage life through developing mechanisms that identify and criticize rather than reproduce social practices of subordination and to ma_ke_töols öf women's consciousness and resistance that fu70íěTá~practical struggle to end inequalit>\This kind of theory requires humility and_it requires participation. I am saying: we who work with law need to be about the business of articulating the theory of womens practice - womens resistance, visions, consciousness, injuries, notions of community, experience of inequality. By practical, I mean socially lived. As our theoretical question becomes "what is the theory of womens practice", our theory becomes a way of moving against and through the world, and methodology becomes technology. Specifically - and such theory inhabits particularity - I want to take up the notion of experience "as a woman" and argue that it is the practice of which the concept of discrimination "based on sex" is the legal theory. That is, 1 want to investigate how the realities of women's experience of sex inequality in the world have shaped some contours of sox discrimination in the law. Sex equality as a legal concept has not traditionally been theorized to encompass issues of sexual assault or reproduction because equality theory has been written out of men's practice, not women's. Men's experiences of group-based subordination have not centered on sexual and reproductive abuse, although they include instances of it Some men have been hurt in these ways, but they are few and are not usually regarded as hurt because they are men, but in spite of it or in derogation of it. Few men are, sexually and reproductively speaking, "similarly situated" to women but treated better. So sexuality and reproduction are not 46 From Practice to Theory **L regarded as equality issues in the traditional approach.3 Two intrepid, indomitable women, women determined to write the practice of their lives onto the law, moved the theory of sex equality to include these issues. In her case, Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson^ Mechelle Vinson established that sexual harassment as a working environment is sex discrimination under civil rights law. Her resistance to her supervisor Sidney Taylor - specifically, her identification that his repeated rape, his standing over her in the bank vault waving his penis and laughing, were done to her because she was a woman -changed the theory of sex discrimination for all women. In her case, California Federal Savings and Loan Ass