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<nettime> pope-on-a-rope digest [x5: butt, tal, pentecost, miller, baldwin (sondheim by proxy)] |
Re: <nettime> On brouhahas and battles Danny Butt <db@dannybutt.net> Kali Tal <kali@kalital.com> Claire Pentecost <cpentecost@artic.edu> "E. Miller" <subscriptionbox@squishymedia.com> Give the Female Pope a Rope "Charles Baldwin" <Charles.Baldwin@mail.wvu.edu> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: Danny Butt <db@dannybutt.net> Subject: Re: <nettime> On brouhahas and battles Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2006 22:29:54 +1300 Speaking of the language of 40 years ago, some of it sounds pretty relevant! "I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the negros great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizens Councilor or the Ku Klux Klan, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to order than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another mans freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a more convenient season. Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection." -- Martin Luther King, Letter From The Birmingham Jail, April 16, 1963. On 16/10/2006, at 8:05 AM, E. Miller wrote: > Hi Martha, thanks for your thoughtful reply. <...> -- http://www.dannybutt.net - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: Kali Tal <kali@kalital.com> Subject: Re: <nettime> On brouhahas and battles Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2006 03:43:17 -0700 Eric, Martha said, and I am underlining, that you are incorrect in your assumption that "your generation" has somehow progressed to the point where male and female equality is considered "natural" and where problems like the wage gap are simply "structural," rather than ideological. The research and the numbers (despite your personal experience) prove you wrong. If feminists are fighting the battles of forty years ago, it is because they were were never won. You paint us as some sort of dinosaurs not in touch with "today." But... many feminists are out in their streets and communities dealing with all generations on a regular basis, and quite a few of us are in the academy dealing with students of the "latest" generations of adults day in and day out. Probably, we're out there talking to other people (male and female) about gender issues a lot more often than you are... and yet you believe your perspective is more informed. But let's look at your claims and your rhetoric: > I feel comfortable saying that my generation is lucky enough to > take for granted a baseline assumption of gender equality. In > practice, yes, there are huge problems -- witness the wage gap. But > to my perspective, those seem like structural issues that are being > addressed by generational change and changed expectations, and aren't > best tackled by 'to-the-barricades' rhetoric, or castigation of other > supportive voices because they don't toe the ideological line. No feminist on nettime-l has employed "to-the-barricades" rhetoric in this discussion. And no one has castigated "supportive voices." What we have done is point out that feminism is still institutionalized, and that some men (including you) are reinforcing sexist structures with your arguments... even if those arguments are *intended* to help us. I think I can safely say that most feminists would be delighted to drop the burden of proving we're oppressed if the majority of men would accept the results of decades of research and study of women's oppression. That you don't (and that you make a weak argument that sexism's ideological position is no longer the majority position), is, as quite a few feminists pointed out, part of the problem. The evidence you use to support your claims simply doesn't stand up to scrutiny. For example, you pick on the phrase Martha used: "Playboy mentality." You treat the phrase as if it refers literally to men who read Playboy, and then "prove" her wrong by pointing out that Playboy is increasingly marginalized as a publication. That's a rhetorical strategy aimed at undermining her authority by making her look quaint, out of date, and faintly ridiculous (right in line with your "corset" comment). Her real point (a point that was quite clear to me, and I'd wager clear to the majority of female readers) is that *you* are recapitulating a kind of liberal apologist argument women heard repeatedly in the 1960s from "well-meaning" men who still... don't get it. Let's look at the structural integrity of your Playboy argument: because a certain pornographic magazine (once an icon, but now out-of- date) has lost most of its trend-setting power, this means that the pornography arm of institutionalized sexism (the "Playboy mindset") has also become irrelevant and unimportant to consider. But... generalizing from the specific is another logical fallacy. Playboy's demise doesn't mean the demise of porn. In fact, a good argument can and has been made that Playboy's power as an institution is reduced because of a hyper-abundance of porn, flooding the internet, our email boxes, and streetcorner sales kiosks. When trading of porn created by amateurs rivals or replaces professionally produced porn, it can more reasonably be taken as an indication of the heightened popularity of sexist representations of the female body than as counter-indications of popularity... especially since the essential depictions of female sexuality have not changed at all. Add to this the global economy's contribution to turning sex-tourism into a billion-plus dollar industry -- making exoticised porn-stereotype purchased-sex available even to members of the middle class. Then.. there's the "tarring and feathering" metaphor you employ. I'll assume an educated man like yourself knows that tarring and feathering was a lynching technique commonly used in the U.S. up through the 1800s and into the early 1900s to punish blacks and race traitors who questioned white supremacy. To paint Alan as being "lynched" by people who protest his sexism is, again, a sheerly rhetorical technique aimed at undermining our authority without actually contesting our arguments. Rhetorically, you turn women into a white lynch mob attacking a presumably innocent man for their nefarious purposes. This is bad, any way you look at it: sloppy argumentation, even if you don't believe in women's equality. It's reminiscent of Clarence Thomas's claim that those supporting the woman he'd sexually harassed were engaging in a "high-tech lynching." Do you really want to join conservative men like Thomas in attacks against women? If so, I'd think it undermines your claim to really be on our side. Honestly, what's the difference (except in scale) between equating women critics with a lynch mob, and going to a Rush Limbaugh extreme and calling us "Feminazis"? (And isn't this Martha's point? That you're unconsciously supporting institutionalized sexism?) You make it clear you don't know Alan's work well. And you especially don't know Alan's take on feminism. I do. I've been reading his writing for a decade now and I don't like it. But I dislike it for very clear reasons I'm willing to articulate... not based on fuzzy, misinformed beliefs or emotional biases. The feminists with whom Alan has most deeply engaged are French feminists like Irigary and Cixous. This is partly why I found his dismissive charge that I am "essentialist" reprehensible. The school of thought usually referred to as "the French feminisms" is deeply essentialist (specifically celebrates essentialism) in its ideology and beliefs. It is the wellspring of the idea of "l'ecriture feminine" -- a theory of woman's writing that assumes that it is rooted in women's bodies... down to the level of the "the two lips" (vaginal lips) that allegedly define both the bodies of women and the body of their work. Alan, however, has taken this essentialist feminist theory and appropriated it -- acting as if, in his "body" of online writing, he can EMbody "the feminine" down to the essential level that Irigary and Cixous describe. Irigary and Cixous would have found this laughable, and in fact they write about the pathetic nature of male attempts to don the (n their eyes superior) bodies of women. I, on the other hand, as a constructionist, find both the French feminists and Alan objectionable on the grounds that there is nothing "natural" about the way gender is created and enforced in a sexist society. So we have an ideological argument, Alan and I, whether he wants to acknowledge and talk about it or not and whether you can see it or not. That the speech of women critics sounds to you like "a historical documentary" isn't so much an indication of our out-dated nature, but an indication of how powerful and successful the revisionist attacks on the history of the 1960s have been. The purpose of the revisionists was specifically to undermine and trivialize the radical protests of the Sixties, and to turn today's youth into jaded consumers of a "Sixties product," with revolution repackaged as fashion statement. (I wrote at length about this in an article called "From Panther to Monster," about the revision of black radicalism into gangsta chic: http://freshmonsters.com/kalital/Text/Articles/ Monster.html.) Calling feminist critique of sexist structures "counter-productive," and placing the burden on us to attract and interest (entertain) you with an updated "Feminism 4.0" allows you to sidestep your own responsibility for perpetuating a system that oppresses us. If you're truly the product of as liberated an upbringing as you claim, you wouldn't be keeping women busy answering your charges that we're a reactionary old guard; you'd be out there trying to figure out how to help us bridge the wage gap and those other "structural" problems you think are still in place. And if you did that, after a while a smart guy like you would come to see that sexism is still ideological and still the rule rather than the exception. Kali - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2006 10:55:13 -0500 From: Claire Pentecost <cpentecost@artic.edu> Subject: Re: <nettime> On brouhahas and battles A great many of these missive missiles seem to me to have a fairly retrograde understanding of what feminism is. I would like to propose another way of looking at the question: Feminism is a lens, an analytic and ultimately ethical tool for understanding how power works in a patriarchal society. Feminists are people who find this tool especially relevant to understanding how the world around them works, and, assuming they are active, if not activists, incorporating that understanding into what they do toward changing business as usual. Don't get me wrong -- it's not only about the lenses through which we choose to make an analysis of power, but also about the choices we make in our actions. And I am not pretending that lenses are neutral. From there stem a panoply of positions of advocacy, solidarity, aggrievement, accusation, incredulity, defensiveness, etc. on all sides., which of course are going to be tendentious. They are tendentious because the understanding of power fundamentally organized through patriarchy is still very much in process, and may always be. The ways that patriarchy saturates power relations is so deep, so integrated into our subjectivities that understanding it remains quite fugitive, especially in liberal democratic affluent societies where very sophisticated psycho-social screens arise repeatedly in the face of critique and protest (see also the ways power is organized around white supremacy aka racism, and wealth aka class). Even though specific cases are all relevant, in the end nothing is really proven by specific cases. You have to look at an entire insidious architecture and its effects and feedback loops. The E. Millers of the world (apologies E.Miller) can look around themselves and say I see all these empowered women, but this won't comprise an adequate view. In one general trend, I would say the most _obvious_ and obviously egregious "examples" have been de-visibilized in the places generally pushed beyond our field of everyday vision-- to lower economic classes and "off-shore." Notoriously these structures of oppression--gender, race and class being shorthand for the big ones articulated in our era's intellectual culture to a point where many are happy to dismiss them as cliche-- almost always work together and very complexly. I would venture that you rarely have one working without at least some undergirding of another. One of the really interesting things to ask is: How are we made blind to the continued consolidation and maintenance of power along the logic of patriarchy? How is a systematic ignorance or dullness to these conditions maintained AND REFRESHED all the time? Because it is. Highly visible individualized phenomena like Condi Rice, Hilary Clinton, Madeleine Albright, usually become illustrations for both sides! For both men and women, to understand it -- and especially to answer the question of how our IGNORANCE is continually refreshed-- requires getting a very wide perspective on your own experience and beyond our own experience. It is simply not enough to say "who reads Playboy anymore?.... it's so clearly irrelevant today, etc." First of all, do you know who reads Playboy? Second of all, in a consumer capitalist culture (if that is where we are focusing for now) do you really think the relevant cultural products would have stopped "evolving' ? There are countless publications and websites and films, etc created to appeal to different ages, generations, economic positions --in other words finely calculated market driven demographics-- that perpetuate the logic of patriarchal power often in more complex ways. Even something like the Tom Leykis show [U.S. nationally syndicated radio show wildly popular in some places] which on its face is gruesomely misogynist includes some good ideas in its daily harangue, i.e., always use birth control if you don't want to have kids, women shouldn't depend on men for economic stability or self image, even if this is contradicted by his explicit message that women are worthless if they are not young and hot and are like cars --should never be acquired permanently because they get old and worn out, better to rent and trade in whenever you want a new one. Granted that what is now known as identity politics started by asserting the basic right of all people to speak for themselves and to have agency in the politics of representation that effect them, one of the "blind alleys" it has taken us into is an idiotic focus on the authority of the individual speaker. Hence a woman can say in myriad ways "I don't feel oppressed" and this is taken as the last rites of feminism, sigh of relief, etc., etc. Add to this the mindfuck of affluent capitalist hyperindividualism in which someone says I work in an office run by cool women, my girlfriend makes more money than me, i'm a man who is insecure about my looks, etc. and that is the whole story of the end of sexism. Sorry but any one of our personal experience scenarios is only going to tell us so much; it takes some effort to get beyond it and though personal experience is not insignificant it does not enlighten the person at the center of it if they don't do the work to put it in a larger, much larger perspective. One of the real battles of the 'information age' is whether we will use it to learn about ourselves and other worlds or let it be used to clutter our thinking in the service of a systematic ignorance that serves those already enjoying the most power and security. It is not simply about men ganging up on women or women ganging up on men even if that still does happen. It is not simply about individual men being better off than women they know or the reverse. Among other things, it's about value systems and their generalized relation to gender. For example, the relative worth of activities that might be classified as the reproduction of daily life and subjectivity, the labor of care. It is still true that all activities in these categories-- childcare, primary education, basic hygiene and body care, household maintenance and sanitation, daily sustenance, care of the aging, care of the disabled-- are all "feminized" work. They are low status and very low pay. They are perhaps the culture's lowest priority, even if we couldn't go on without them. Many of them are jobs performed by people without any job stability or legal status. Most jobs related to the production of our food, the actual daily production-- bottom rung. Many of these jobs are performed by men. But i would argue that in the status hierarchies concomitant to patriarchy as we know it all jobs in categories of sustenance, care, maintenance, are low status and that is because those areas of life have been and still are associated with the unpaid, under recognized (symbolically) labor of women. For other examples of where the structures of patriarchy have huge consequences you only have to look at regions where HIV is spreading rapidly in heterosexual populations. It is well known that women's lack of power is disastrous for the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. But don' think that is a third world problem. Our government's policies of withholding funding from organizations that don't toe the ABSTINANCE as the only solution line is both international and domestic. One need look no further than home to be reminded of how control of women's sexuality is fundamental to the health of patriarchal power. What do you think all the fuss is about regarding sex education in the schools? And pasting the image of hot synthetic babes on every available surface, that's about controlling women's sexuality too. That's all i have time for now but couldn't resist jumping in, since i have been trying to sort these things out for myself. oh and if you are allergic to the words patriarchy or white supremacy, pffff, it's a fact. thanks to the listening energy of nettime, claire At 12:05 PM -0700 10/15/06, E. Miller wrote: >Hi Martha, thanks for your thoughtful reply. <...> -- ---------------------- Claire Pentecost Associate Professor Department of Photography The School of the Art Institute of Chicago www.clairepentecost.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2006 10:54:56 -0700 Subject: Re: <nettime> On brouhahas and battles From: "E. Miller" <subscriptionbox@squishymedia.com> Hi Claire, this was a great post. Thanks. Again, you won't get argument from me on the overall issues of gender equality; the day we have a woman elected president here in the US, and the media aren't saturated with 'can she take off the apron and run the country?' stories, that's when we might be able to say that we're approaching a better, more level playing field. But my point was (and is) tactics as expressed through language and which battles are chosen. Or call it marketing, or positioning, or strategy, or whatever. Specifically: > The ways that patriarchy saturates power relations is so > deep, so integrated into our subjectivities that understanding it > remains quite fugitive, especially in liberal democratic affluent > societies where very sophisticated psycho-social screens arise > repeatedly in the face of critique and protest While this may be true (and I would largely agree that it is) the language _sounds_ like "you don't know the thetans are there but they are!" or "God placed the fossils there as part of his master plan to fool us, but the earth is only 6000 years old" or "the black helicopters emit the brain control waves as commanded by the jet contrails "... or pick your own personal favorite cult conspiracy theory and note the use of 'you can't see it but it's there' themes. Substitute "the Roswell alien mind control devices" for "patriarchy" in a text like this and you have the arguments -- nearly verbatim -- of the tinfoil hat crowd. And when this type of ideologically-driven language is used to crucify a sympathetic voice like Alan's, it makes the position look...well, just nuts, frankly, to many members of the Jon Stewart generation, where earnest denunciations of a sexist Matrix elicit snickers rather than solidarity. Particularly when an increasing number of people, like me, have had life experiences contradictory to the 'stealth sexism' argument. Why not use language that doesn't sound like a finger being jabbed in someone's chest? Why not assume that most of the audience is not actively engaged in a subconscious conspiracy to subjugate women? That's all I'm saying. Eric On 10/16/06 8:55 AM, "Claire Pentecost" <cpentecost@artic.edu> wrote: > A great many of these missive missiles seem to me to have a fairly > retrograde understanding of what feminism is. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2006 08:26:32 -0400 From: "Charles Baldwin" <Charles.Baldwin@mail.wvu.edu> Subject: Give the Female Pope a Rope I was asked to forward this by Alan Sondheim. Give The Female Pope a Rope Too often have the forces gone astray That force one's hand; and yet another day Brings nothing new. Everything is lost In this or other groping holocaust. I write the only way I know how to; Thus write reversed in letters as a Jew Who claims his right to silent speech, Lest some good offal - whom I won't beseech - States, nothing is the same between us two; You shouldn't speak unless you're spoken to. I raise my Vajra, Siva's darkling spell Holds me in thrall; I'll take you all to hell And back, and forth, and all across the town Of knaves and fools who want to hold me down. My writing blisters, cuts the flesh, and seeps Like acid on the eyes; the reader weeps - She sees naught, hears what? I cannot guess - Smells naught, breathes, and touches even less. I claim the right to both the West and East As Occident or Orient, I trample; I'm the beast Of World Wars Three and Four, not to mention Five; I flay men, women, children, skin theorists alive. To hell with them who take words as the hammer Meant for cruelty, for I'm a culture jammer: And just as you speak from your flesh and blood I speak your bones and body born of mud. I take your words, and turn them inside-out Until they scream forgiveness from your ugly mouth That squeals traitor, revelation's sin - You can't know what a State you've put me in. I'll name it: State of Exculpation, Fear - The State of Fabrication - I am the seer Who speaks with bloody mouth, speaks to one and all - Who leans with bloody back against the bloody wall Where traitors die, where theory sickens, stains While I remember boxcars, people, trains. While I remember Beirut, Iraq, Iran, Theory steps, confers, and to a man Or woman sets up condemnation In no uncertain terms! It tells the nation Hold back, desist, go home, now end the war! Books appear, and seminars, and more! And manifestos filled with deconstruction, Petitions, mandates, anything that sucks on The use, employment, of illicit power - For theory triumphs! This is theory's hour! I'm on my side and I can only urge I'm recognized as enemy or sourge - It's all there, attested-to, I'm sure Celia shits on me, my writing's but manure Without the Jewels men wear; please don't sift - There's nothing down there, just ask Doctor Swift. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net