Kristen R. Ghodsee
When
Americans think of Communism in Eastern Europe, they imagine travel
restrictions, bleak landscapes of gray concrete, miserable men and women
languishing in long lines to shop in empty markets and security
services snooping on the private lives of citizens. While much of this
was true, our collective stereotype of Communist life does not tell the
whole story.
Some
might remember that Eastern bloc women enjoyed many rights and
privileges unknown in liberal democracies at the time, including major
state investments in their education and training, their full
incorporation into the labor force, generous maternity leave allowances
and guaranteed free child care. But there’s one advantage that has
received little attention: Women under Communism enjoyed more sexual
pleasure.
A comparative sociological study of East and West Germans conducted after reunification in 1990 found
that Eastern women had twice as many orgasms as Western women.
Researchers marveled at this disparity in reported sexual satisfaction,
especially since East German women suffered from the notorious double
burden of formal employment and housework. In contrast, postwar West
German women had stayed home and enjoyed all the labor-saving devices
produced by the roaring capitalist economy. But they had less sex, and
less satisfying sex, than women who had to line up for toilet paper.
How to account for this facet of life behind the Iron Curtain?
Consider
Ana Durcheva from Bulgaria, who was 65 when I first met her in 2011.
Having lived her first 43 years under Communism, she often complained
that the new free market hindered Bulgarians’ ability to develop healthy
amorous relationships.
“Sure,
some things were bad during that time, but my life was full of
romance,” she said. “After my divorce, I had my job and my salary, and I
didn’t need a man to support me. I could do as I pleased.”
Ms.
Durcheva was a single mother for many years, but she insisted that her
life before 1989 was more gratifying than the stressful existence of her
daughter, who was born in the late 1970s.
“All
she does is work and work,” Ms. Durcheva told me in 2013, “and when she
comes home at night she is too tired to be with her husband. But it
doesn’t matter, because he is tired, too. They sit together in front of
the television like zombies. When I was her age, we had much more fun.”
Last
year in Jena, a university town in the former East Germany, I spoke
with a recently married 30-something named Daniela Gruber. Her own
mother — born and raised under the Communist system — was putting
pressure on Ms. Gruber to have a baby.
“She
doesn’t understand how much harder it is now — it was so easy for women
before the Wall fell,” she told me, referring to the dismantling of the
Berlin Wall in 1989. “They had kindergartens and crèches, and they
could take maternity leave and have their jobs held for them. I work
contract to contract, and don’t have time to get pregnant.”
This generational divide between daughters and mothers who reached adulthood on either side of 1989 supports
the idea that women had more fulfilling lives during the Communist era.
And they owed this quality of life, in part, to the fact that these
regimes saw women’s emancipation as central to advanced “scientific
socialist” societies, as they saw themselves.
Although
East European Communist states needed women’s labor to realize their
programs for rapid industrialization after World War II, the ideological
foundation for women’s equality with men was laid by August Bebel and
Friedrich Engels in the 19th century. After the Bolshevik takeover,
Vladimir Lenin and Aleksandra Kollontai enabled a sexual revolution in
the early years of the Soviet Union, with Kollontai arguing that love
should be freed from economic considerations.
Russia
extended full suffrage to women in 1917, three years before the United
States did. The Bolsheviks also liberalized divorce laws, guaranteed
reproductive rights and attempted to socialize domestic labor by
investing in public laundries and people’s canteens. Women were
mobilized into the labor force and became financially untethered from
men.
In
Central Asia in the 1920s, Russian women crusaded for the liberation of
Muslim women. This top-down campaign met a violent backlash from local
patriarchs not keen to see their sisters, wives and daughters freed from
the shackles of tradition.
In
the 1930s, Joseph Stalin reversed much of the Soviet Union’s early
progress in women’s rights — outlawing abortion and promoting the
nuclear family. However, the acute male labor shortages that followed
World War II spurred other Communist governments to push forward with
various programs for women’s emancipation, including state-sponsored
research on the mysteries of female sexuality. Most Eastern European
women could not travel to the West or read a free press, but scientific
socialism did come with some benefits.
“As
early as 1952, Czechoslovak sexologists started doing research on the
female orgasm, and in 1961 they held a conference solely devoted to the
topic,” Katerina Liskova, a professor at Masaryk University in the Czech
Republic, told me. “They focused on the importance of the equality
between men and women as a core component of female pleasure. Some even
argued that men need to share housework and child rearing, otherwise
there would be no good sex.”
Agnieszka
Koscianska, an associate professor of anthropology at the University of
Warsaw, told me that pre-1989 Polish sexologists “didn’t limit sex to
bodily experiences and stressed the importance of social and cultural
contexts for sexual pleasure.” It was state socialism’s answer to
work-life balance: “Even the best stimulation, they argued, will not
help to achieve pleasure if a woman is stressed or overworked, worried
about her future and financial stability.”
In
all the Warsaw Pact countries, the imposition of one-party rule
precipitated a sweeping overhaul of laws regarding the family.
Communists invested major resources in the education and training of
women and in guaranteeing their employment. State-run women’s committees
sought to re-educate boys to accept girls as full comrades, and they
attempted to convince their compatriots that male chauvinism was a
remnant of the pre-socialist past.
Although
gender wage disparities and labor segregation persisted, and although
the Communists never fully reformed domestic patriarchy, Communist women
enjoyed a degree of self-sufficiency that few Western women could have
imagined. Eastern bloc women did not need to marry, or have sex, for
money. The socialist state met their basic needs and countries such as
Bulgaria, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and East Germany committed
extra resources to support single mothers, divorcées and widows. With
the noted exceptions of Romania, Albania and Stalin’s Soviet Union, most
Eastern European countries guaranteed access to sex education and
abortion. This reduced the social costs of accidental pregnancy and
lowered the opportunity costs of becoming a mother.
Some
liberal feminists in the West grudgingly acknowledged those
accomplishments but were critical of the achievements of state socialism
because they did not emerge from independent women’s movements, but represented
a type of emancipation from above. Many academic feminists today
celebrate choice but also embrace a cultural relativism dictated by the
imperatives of intersectionality. Any top-down political program that
seeks to impose a universalist set of values like equal rights for women
is seriously out of fashion.
The
result, unfortunately, has been that many of the advances of women’s
liberation in the former Warsaw Pact countries have been lost or
reversed. Ms. Durcheva’s adult daughter and the younger Ms. Gruber now
struggle to resolve the work-life problems that Communist governments
had once solved for their mothers.
“The
Republic gave me my freedom,” Ms. Durcheva once told me, referring to
the People’s Republic of Bulgaria. “Democracy took some of that freedom
away.”
As
for Ms. Gruber, she has no illusions about the brutalities of East
German Communism; she just wishes “things weren’t so much harder now.”
Because
they championed sexual equality — at work, at home and in the bedroom —
and were willing to enforce it, Communist women who occupied positions
in the state apparatus could be called cultural imperialists. But the
liberation they imposed radically transformed millions of lives across
the globe, including those of many women who still walk among us as the
mothers and grandmothers of adults in the now democratic member states
of the European Union. Those comrades’ insistence on government
intervention may seem heavy-handed to our postmodern sensibilities, but
sometimes necessary social change — which soon comes to be seen as the
natural order of things — needs an emancipation proclamation from above.
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