The Slumflower is a small part of a much bigger problem
- Text by Esmé Ara’resa
There are two camps of Feminism in the digital world; those that join the dance and those that lament LATE STAGE CAPITALISM’S COMMODIFICATION OF ALL-THE-THINGS!
I’ve turned off my proverbial caps lock button. More accurately, it was worn down, push by push, over many years of participating in feminist discourse online. What was dispiriting to me was the slow realisation that the dissenting camp is just as broken in its politics as the dancing camp is accused of being. A few years ago, I decided to disengage from basically all popular forms of feminist activism. I decided to focus my resources on the deep work of living in a way that makes the world a more liberating place for myself and other women, quietly. But ignoring problems doesn’t really make them go away, especially not when it pays to be problematic.
Enter Chidera Eggerue, professionally known as The Slumflower. She is the author of the bestselling book on self-love What a Time to be Alone, a TED Talk speaker, and the social media influencer behind hashtags #SaggyBoobsMatter and #BlockHimParty. It would be unfair to call Eggerue the problem. It’s not her, it’s what she represents. Given what can at best be described as liberally borrowing from other feminist thinkers her politics have always been a little wanting. Recently she morphed from body-positive spokesperson/ playfully abrupt agony aunt into a hyper-capitalist using the feminist label as a carte blanche for little more than raging misandry. A few recent, choice tweets (now deleted) include:
“I don’t have time to think about the reasons why the system you created at my expense to benefit you is now choking you…If men are committing s*icide because they can’t cry, how’s it my concern?”
“Men are murdering us and abusing children and you think I have time to theorise on why they can’t cry? Lmao not me hun.”
“Until young men are being married off at the age of six and having acid thrown in their faces for declining sexual advances, you can’t change my mind.”
If this was all you had heard of Eggerue before, you might be forgiven for assuming she is uniformly unpopular. Rather, an interestingly diverse set of people seek to defend and protect her both personally and in terms of her politics. Neoliberal writers and cultural commentators argue that any opinion held by a woman is valid and feminist, just a different type of feminism. Some academics and activists argue that pushing back against her is elitist gate-keeping. Young supporters who feel affirmed by her message of self-preservation, self-love and digestible, liberal interpretations of feminist theory feel deeply confused or offended when you speak against her.
Adding to this, there is a difficulty in critiquing Eggerue openly due to how easy a victim she is. She isn’t likeable. She doesn’t entirely fit in – with her Blackness, her roots in (pre-gentrification) Peckham, her university dropout status, and her youth. Despite her achievements and relative popularity, these qualities will do little to redeem her if and once certain elements of mainstream media decide her opinions are newsworthy, making it conflicting for those with honest intentions to openly criticise her. These dynamics are all due to Eggerue being one of the very few female voices – and specifically, very few black, female voices – represented in the media. Among feminists who are black there seems to be a collective consciousness that to go against her is to have even less representation, or to risk becoming the go-to black person used as evidence against the misogynoir levelled against her. So there is a tacit resignation among fellow black feminists to pick battles and leave her rhetoric under-challenged – admittedly, I am only writing this piece because white feminists in mainstream media who are ill-equipped to criticise Eggerue are doing exactly what many of us foresaw they would.
Nonetheless, these dynamics work perfectly to Eggerue’s end, which she plainly shares is to ‘secure the bag;’ keeping the pop feminist platitudes and the outrage flowing grows her platform, a tested means to the end of more money. She intelligently navigates the dynamics that enable her, choosing which tweets to double down on and which to delete then tamely repackage to the press. While some might find this distasteful, it must be stressed that neither Eggerue nor any other opinionated person owes the Internet their agreeableness. At the very least, however, we all owe it to one another to be responsible and ethical.
I question how responsible it is to peddle transactional relationships like having groceries paid for and dating rich white men as feminist, reparational acts when feminism is by definition structural and not interpersonal. I question how ethical it is to make intellectually dishonest claims about the reasons for male suicide in order to justify why not to care about it or make it a feminist priority. I question how responsible it is to seemingly romanticise male genocide.
I mostly question how a brand of feminism that claims not to care about men, seems so intensely obsessed with them. Whilst Eggerue is ‘guilty’ of all of the above, she isn’t alone. Followers have said that she admits coming into her ideas on self-worth and feminism after spending over a year getting over a man she had dated for three months. I think deep, unresolved pain is most people’s route and anchor to Popular Feminism. Whilst the movement can be a powerfully cathartic force for its participants, it isn’t healthy or sustainable for that pain to remain unresolved, unstudied. All it truly is, is profitable. Yet whenever The Slumflower decides to pursue new business, the opportunity won’t disappear with her. We, the varying stakeholders, will simply bestow the social currency upon another charismatic personality, and another, and another because Pop Feminism necessarily fails to dig deeper than the idea of equity and liberation favouring go-getting individuals. This is the problem.
Esmé is a writer, entrepreneur, and author of the new eBook Everyday Wellbeing available in May 2019. Follow her on Twitter.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
Nxdia: “Poems became an escape for me”
What Made Me — In this series, we ask artists and rebels about the forces and experiences that shaped who they are. Today, it’s Egyptian-British alt-pop shapeshifter Nxdia.
Written by: Nxdia
Kathy Shorr’s splashy portraits inside limousines
The Ride of a Lifetime — Wanting to marry a love of cars and photography, Kathy Shorr worked as a limousine driver in the ’80s to use as a studio on wheels. Her new photobook explores her archive.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Lewd tales of live sex shows in ’80s Times Square
Peep Man — Before its LED-beaming modern refresh, the Manhattan plaza was a hotbed for seedy transgression. A new memoir revisits its red light district heyday.
Written by: Miss Rosen
In a world of noise, IC3PEAK are finding radicality in the quiet
Coming Home — Having once been held up as a symbol of Russian youth activism and rebellion, the experimental duo are now living in exile. Their latest album explores their new reality.
Written by: Isaac Muk
Are we steamrolling towards the apocalypse?
One second closer to midnight — While the rolling news cycle, intensifying climate crisis and rapidly advancing technology can make it feel as if the end days are upon us, newsletter columnist Emma Garland remembers that things have always been terrible, and that is a natural part of human life.
Written by: Emma Garland
In a city of rapid gentrification, one south London estate stands firm
A Portrait of Central Hill — Social housing is under threat across the British capital. But residents of the Central Hill estate in Crystal Palace are determined to save their homes, and their community.
Written by: Alex King