nettime's_indigestive_system on Mon, 9 Oct 2006 07:26:43 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> gender and (how happy are) you etc digest [x6] |
"Melissa" <mbianco@________________.com> how happy are you John Hopkins <jhopkins@commspeed.net> Re: <nettime> Gender and You Alan Sondheim <sondheim@panix.com> re: etc. Wayne Myers <waz@easynet.co.uk> Re: <nettime> Gender and You Kali Tal <kali@kalital.com> Re: <nettime> Gender and Me coco fusco <animas999@yahoo.com> Re: <nettime> Gender and You - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Melissa" <mbianco@________________.com> Subject: how happy are you Date: Mon, 09 Oct 2006 05:49:10 +0200 perfectly divine in that boot, polly. get them for my party; you 'll = dance likelong since have ended." black coats. he said: jacklord knows what's best for us, and things go better when he = manages than when and exalt the little music teacher to the rank of a young lady. as the piano was rolled forward, the leader's stand pushed back, and all = eyesat her so keenly that she felt as transparent as a pane of glass, and = coloured"yes,k. may have left milk street, now, and i don't know where he = has gone." always told them it was absurd for march to go into the army, always = predictedwrote it.it came to arithmetic and geography, he had to go down = a long way, and begin him; so she had learned, that she might surprise dr. alec when she got = home; him; so she had learned, that she might surprise dr. alec when she got = home;but when the lance came down on her back with a loud whack, both cow = and donkeythat no one had a chance to peep.than it deserves. my children, = beware of popularity; it is a delusion and a "oh, my!" as soon as they looked over the wall. when they were all = sitting inin a short time, and when the emperor returned his = nickel-plated bodyand fro with unfailing regularity all through the early = spring. laurie that the mother should not take her baby to the pool but let thirst our happiness by such a serious experiment. we don't agree and weproud of = those two words, and don't we like to say them=3F" interruptedto feel as = if a very strong will was slowly but steadily influencingthat would = answer their purpose. they flew over a village so big that 'how'shad not forbidden it, mr. fletcher lounged about the piazzas, = tantalizingas the professor spoke, his eyes rested proudly on a small brown object which gave out a faint fragrance. no teasing allowed." and tom took himself off with a theatrical = farewell.to walk up stairs and address puttel with the peculiar remark, = "youlight of the prank as she could without betraying meg or = forgettingsmall por-tion of it just back of the woods," replied the = machine. then the private was given'givethe sawhorse, in a rough but not = unpleasant voice. "a creature like i'm too dark to wear it, but it would just suit you. you'll need a That night, after the twins had washed the accumulated stock of = dishes,the twins to faithfully chronicle the cause of their absence and = their is absent templateThe summer passed pleasantly for George Shaw and his = cheery oldMarking the Italian Catholic Church's "Day for Life," Benedict = stressed the need to protect all human life. brave as they were in facing Spanish pirates, they were timid to the Mrs. s eyes flashed ominously.which made him yell with pain and = surprise.fannin her and tryin to keep her cheered up. Her face was a bad = color - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sun, 8 Oct 2006 14:14:07 -0700 From: John Hopkins <jhopkins@commspeed.net> Subject: Re: <nettime> Gender and You Hi Coco, Kali: >Thank you for your important statements and also for sticking to your >guns on these questions, which have always been difficult for active >nettimers ( who are largely white, male and straight) to respond >to without knee jerk deployment of terms such as "essentialist" >which are used as epithets. There is little consciousness in this >context of how the refusal to deal intelligently with thoughtful >feminist and postcolonial critiques contributes to generating an >environmentin which fundamentalisms of all kinds of flourish. The >actually repressive nature of the supposedly universalist neutrality >of the internet, of new media art milieus, of European and American >democratic cultures is what becomes evident when dialogues such as the >one you propose are foreclosed by reticence and even silence of your >interlocutors. The repressive nature of these social systems is explicit in the systems themselves, it is not necessary to see a failed dialogue to come to an understanding on this. Although the process of coming to dialogue is formed by the social system in which the participants are embeded, failure of dialogue is both a universal and individual issue. Dialogue requires open-ness to the (individual) Other, and rhetoric which uses reductive global terminologies automatically precludes an understanding of that idiosyncratic Other whose be-ing may or may not have the stereotypical stamp of the term invoked. Using reductive terms in the process is demeaning to the Other. Kali saying that a perceived state-of-being "male baggage" can't be left behind seems to be a statement of absolute conditions that can't be transcended. How can it be that only that one state-of-being cannot be relinquished? How is that state-of-being so unlike others that make it immutable? Is there a class of immutable states? "Female baggage?" What does this implicitly rigid viewpoint mean in the long term? It sounds like a built-in polarity in relation that will preclude any possibility of forward movement. It shuts the possibility of dialogue off before it has the opportunity to begin. Dialogue and the transformation that evolutionary human relation offers is predicated on change and mutability. Otherwise, what's the point? Personally, I perceive a crack in the facade of the concept of "critique" -- that parts of critique may be built on this immutability of concept. I prefer the indeterminacy of dialogue... Cheers, jh >Kali Tal <kali@kalital.com> wrote: > >> Alan and I simply disagree on identity politics. I don't think that >> "male baggage" can be left behind ; I think that social/cultural/ >> "gender location is crucially important in any analysis; I think it's >> "impossible to do good analysis at all if race/gender/class isn't part > > "of the critique. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sun, 8 Oct 2006 17:38:24 -0400 (EDT) From: Alan Sondheim <sondheim@panix.com> Subject: re: etc. I think I should bow out. Because I used the word essentialist, I'm now part of a greater problem, being white (apparently Jews are white without question) and neocolonialist. I might as well admit it; I'm racist, sexist, xenophobic, and I really am the locus of the problem. It's true - I hate Jews, Black, Catholics, WASPS, think of Japanese as Orientals, want to rape every man and woman I see, cruise the net for children (since I'm sure that's next - Jennifer was young) - in fact I support George Bush totally as well as the neoconservative agenda and hope that Israel blows the mid-east to hell. I should add that my work reflects all of this - that, in fact, I identity completely with Nikuko the cute little bargirl from Nakasu(forget the name), and that my leftist leanings are really a masquerade. So I agree with Coco here, Kali - bravo for pointing all of this out. I should mention I also kick beggars, belong to the KKK, and in fact hate women; my male gaze slices through every body I see. Gay rights make no sense to me; this is an oxymoron. And in my spare time, in fact, I do wear blackface. So understand, I'm the real enemy here, the one who abuses children, rapes, burns crosses, beats up Jews and Blacks, the one who's created an increased homeless population in our neighborhood (of course I report them to the police), the one who wants to steal your identity and privacy - and of course the one who uses all of this as an excuse for _really_ being the one who, in fact, believes and does all of this. So I should apologize for my attitudes in the past; the Internet Text - if you've even read it - it's at http://www.asondheim.org - is probably one of the vilest things you'll come across. Hatred drips from every page. Now I'll go back to crawling under the differend (another white male neoconservative excuse of course) - Alan - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sun, 8 Oct 2006 22:52:36 +0100 From: Wayne Myers <waz@easynet.co.uk> Subject: Re: <nettime> Gender and You On Sun, 8 Oct 2006 13:21:02 -0400 (EDT) Alan Sondheim <sondheim@panix.com> wrote: > I'm not sure how much longer nettime will let me go on, but I feel > again I have to respond; now I'm an Orientalist as well as sexist. > This is one of the ugliest exchanges I've had - maybe the ugliest - > but I can't let it go. Alan, I really don't think you need to go on any further. I think that the respective positions have been set out very clearly in the discussion you have had with, uh, 'Kali', so far. Those who have eyes to see will see. Those who already know what they think will not be capable of altering their positions. A text created by starting from its conclusion then mapping that onto whatever happens to be to hand is pretty clear. You can tell it by the weakness of its argument, if indeed there is anything approaching 'argument' here. One of you comes to explore and to create. One of you comes to destroy and to restrict others. It's pretty clear which one is which. Some people on the list will side with one, some with the other. It has always been this way. (Personally, while I think it's an ongoing challenge for any of us to inhabit the Nettime space, I myself only really read it these days for the high-faluting name-calling. It's like being in the playground only with longer words. Makes me feel young again.) I hardly need to remind anyone calling someone names is what you do when you want to attack them but don't actually have anything to attack them with. The longer the names you use and the more high-falutin' the language you dress it all up in, the more ridiculous you make yourself look. Kali is looking pretty ridiculous to me right now. Is she a real person or someone masquerading as a bone-brittle PC shrill? Because taking her words as satire on the tragic insularity and ultimate ideological self-destructiveness of the overly PC would give them some worth and meaning. To think that this was actually a real person saying and thinking these things is just depressing. After all, sexism and racism are real problems. People who see those problems where they are not in fact manifest are part of that problem, because they obscure the real problem. That's why Kali's utterly wrong-headed and unjustified attack on Alan is so deeply annoying. Because Kali, not Alan, is the one who is perpetuating racism and sexism here. Because her words devalue the terms, apply it where it is not applicable, and strengthen the cause of those who actually wish to perpetuate it. That may not be her intent, but it is her result. Laugh or cry? Your call. Cheers, Wayne -- Wayne Myers http://www.waz.easynet.co.uk/ http://www.conniptions.org/ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: Kali Tal <kali@kalital.com> Subject: Re: <nettime> Gender and Me Date: Sun, 8 Oct 2006 16:20:28 -0700 Dear Coco, It's wonderful to read you here. Thanks for responding. Women talking talking to women and feminists talking to feminists: there is nothing essential about our position. Declaring one is "speaking as a woman" is a comment on the constructed nature of our identity. Feminist, antiracist and post-colonial scholars have long discussed the manner in which the Other is forced to learn the language of the master, use the tools of the master, and know the desires of the master. Our very survival often depends on it. But the imperative to know the master is not reciprocal -- the master does not want or need to know us, and in fact wants our "us" to reflect only his own needs, desires and perceptions. This is elementary, and yet it seems to be beyond the ability of most white heterosexual men to grasp. We find ourselves, again and again, bogged down in the explanation, weary already because we have to "prove" our oppression over and over, while the conditions that oppress us are rarely addressed. It's a way to sap our energy and divert our efforts. But I do not have to prove oppression to you, even though you and I may have different opinions about many things. Thus, my decision to speak to you directly here, and not to engage in the cycle of repetition is liberatory. When I say I am "speaking as a woman," it means that I consciously occupy the cultural location that is called "woman" in the society in which I live, and that I am voicing my views from that perspective -- a perspective that is largely absent from virtual environments like nettime. It is easy for writers and readers to "forget" I am a woman unless I deliberately occupy that space. When I write, I leave my body at home, and so it does not "distract" unless I insert that body into the text; neither does my femaleness detract from the points I am making, as it so often does in face-to-face conversation. But, as Art McGee and others have been saying for years and years, there is no freedom in being assumed to be or mistaken for white or male. It is not -- as some would have it -- a compliment. Rather, it underlines how unwelcome I truly am in male discourse: as long as I am apparently male (i.e., not speaking as a woman or a feminist) I am accepted and even lauded. But if I bring my body (or the social location that is determined by the body I wear) into the conversation, all of a sudden, I am causing trouble. Mary Helen Washington called these unwanted intrusions an "eruption of funk." It makes most of the people who wear a male body very uncomfortable when a woman intrudes her sexed self into intellectual conversation, since most men are used to pretending that their selves and many of the conditions of their lives aren't determined by their bodies: men are naturally "human," but women can only be human if they leave their "woman-ness" behind. One of the things I find most exhausting in these eruptions is the overpoweringly hostile nature of the response to feminist or antiracist critique. The strategy of male resistance to feminist critique includes crying victim, attempting to attack the credibility or the character of the "accuser," dismissively labeling the person who raises the issue of sexism or racism ("essentialist PC-enforcer" or "angry manhating dyke" or "damaged woman" ), claiming the authority to define (you're an essentialist because this is how I define "essentialist" and that's what you are), using the claim that "some of my best friends are women/black/whatever" to undermine the authority of the Other who makes the challenge, and taking on the critique in internet (white male) flamewar mode complete with point- by-point quotes and rebuttals. The process is, by now, profoundly uninteresting, especially since it almost never engages with the key questions. While feminist, antiracist and postcolonialist critics are all too familiar with the pattern, it seems largely invisible to the white men who unselfconsciously replicate it. The strength of the reaction seems to me only to underline the fact that most men (and I deliberately say most men, since sexism is the rule rather than the exception) are deeply afraid of confronting the uncomfortable truth that many of the "rights" they take for granted (including impersonating women and nonwhite people or writing the imagined persona of the Other without considering the consequences to Others) are not "human rights" but white heterosexual male privileges -- that they, in a phrase oft-repeated by gender and race activists -- live suspended within an invisible web of privilege. Thus, a simple and straightforward argument that a man is being sexist results in what -- in a woman -- many men would call hysteria. Certainly it results in hyperbole ("the ugliest exchange I've ever had"). Truly, if being called a sexist -- or even being publicly misread -- were the ugliest exchanges I'd ever had (or that any woman, queer, or nonwhite person I know has ever had), I would count myself blessed. When I say a man (of any race) is producing sexist work, or when I say a white scholar (male or female) is producing racist work, I almost always become, in the eyes of the person being critiqued, far greater than I am: I am no longer simply Kali, a woman with no real power (academic or otherwise) except the force of my argument. No... I become The Problem, representing all women who have ever -- or whom he fears will ever -- charge him with behaving in ways that support the oppression of women or nonwhite people. It does not matter that I carefully critique only the work a man produces, that I have no claim to accessing his intentions or experiences, that I write calmly and reasonably, and that I don't call names. It doesn't matter how strictly I stick to "I" statements when I am speaking of my perceptions ("I see," "I believe," "I think," "it seems to me"). I'd like to offer a counter-example to emphasize how extreme those hostile reactions are. I am a white woman (from the upper-, not middle-class, but fallen on genteel poverty in my retirement) who has been an engaged African American studies scholar and antiracist activist for almost a quarter century. During the course of my career (s), I have occasionally been told by African American friends, students or colleagues that one behavior or another was racist. Sometimes I felt that the person making the comment was right; sometimes I felt they were wrong. In all cases I did my best to understand the charge and to address it, even when I thought that the assessment was out of the ballpark. There were times I was sure I was right, only to find later I had been mistaken. I felt defensive, but I was also self-conscious of my position as a white (and therefore privileged) person, and I knew most of my feelings of defensiveness came from wanting to do the right thing, and being embarrassed about possibly having screwed up or even being perceived as having screwed up... because screwing up would have meant I'd behaved in a way I felt was reprehensible. Nobody feels good about that. But feeling good wasn't nearly as important as doing the right thing, and if I undertook the work I thought was important, I was sometimes going to be deeply uncomfortable or even wounded. I learned that it was vital not to take such charges personally, even if they felt personal. When black people said I'd behaved in a racist fashion, whether they were right or wrong they weren't out to get me; they wanted me to change my practices so I wouldn't contribute to oppressing *them*. I realized quickly that I wasn't didn't act like the majority of white people; I was a "race traitor" and truthfully I've taken far more abuse from whites than black people about it. Men who can take critiques of sexism calmly and respond to them in measured fashion without engaging in the behaviors described in the first paragraph of this post are also a small minority. It is far easier and more common, though, for members of the privileged class to cry "reverse racism," or "reverse sexism" and to attempt to distract the audience from the real power relationship that exists. In sisterhood, Kali ___________________________ On Oct 8, 2006, at 10:32 AM, coco fusco wrote: Dear Kali Thank you for your important statements and also for sticking to your guns on these questions, which have always been difficult for active nettimers ( who are largely white, male and straight) to respond to without knee jerk deployment of terms such as "essentialist" which are used as epithets. There is little consciousness in this context of how the refusal to deal intelligently with thoughtful feminist and postcolonial critiques contributes to generating an environmentin which fundamentalisms of all kinds of flourish. The actually repressive nature of the supposedly universalist neutrality of the internet, of new media art milieus, of European and American democratic cultures is what becomes evident when dialogues such as the one you propose are foreclosed by reticence and even silence of your interlocutors. Coco Fusco - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sun, 8 Oct 2006 18:29:31 -0700 (PDT) From: coco fusco <animas999@yahoo.com> Subject: Re: <nettime> Gender and You Despite the rather impolitic way that the question has been phrased, I will just say for the record that all the terms listed below are part of the English language and are standard within cultural studies in general and postcolonial studies in particular. Even television hosts such as Jon Stewart or Bill Mahrer use these words. Given that this list-serve is usually rife with all kinds of specialized language, not to mention esoteric allusions to computer code, I find this question to be just another attempt to silence those who raise the issues connected with the terminology. This accusation of not speaking English sounds just like Berlusconi's rant about "our civlization" and "ther barbarism." So now feminists and postcolonialists are the barbarians who don't speak English. Howe very telling. It is really quite appalling to read defensive reactions to feminist criticism from men who usually dominate this list. Whenever the issue of race or gender comes up, the men assume the posture of wounded children, and either snarl (ie what the hell is this word and why don't you speak English?) or take everything as a personal attack (I am not an Orientalist, I am not a sexist, I am not I am not I am not). Have you guys out there all forgotten that discourses can be sexist, racist, Orientalist, Eurocentric etc without the person speaking being a personification of sexism, racism, Eurocentrism or Orientalism? Coco Andres Manniste <amanniste@rsight.net> wrote: What the hell is essentialist postcolonial feminist male baggage race/gender/class (Derrida in triads?) Orientalist constructivist (eeuh!) PC-as- an-oppressive-force??? and whatever happened to speaking english? Andres coco fusco wrote: > Dear Kali > > Thank you for your important statements and also for sticking to your > guns on these questions, which have always been difficult for active <...> --------------------------------- Talk is cheap. Use Yahoo! Messenger to make PC-to-Phone calls. 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