Scott Michaelsen and Scott Cutler Shershow, Practical Politics at the Limits of
Community: The Cases of Affirmative Action and Welfare
- Abstract:
In the wake of a number of studies of the relationship between
post-structuralism and the "political," this article demonstrates how a
post-structuralist Marxism can be applied to particular instances of
politico-economic decision-making. Through an examination of U.S. court
cases that address affirmative action and welfare, the authors reveal the
limits of both "left" and "right" versions of these policies and show
how the entire spectrum of conventional opinion unites around (and
remains unable to escape) certain founding assumptions. In particular,
the traditional conceptualizations of affirmative action and welfare
reach their limit in the figures of mandated white supremacy and enforced
economic inequality. The authors also suggest that it is precisely at
these limits that another form of politics emerges--one influenced in
particular by a broadly Marxian/Derridean trajectory and Jean-Luc Nancy's
work on community. This form of politics involves what the authors call
"calculation in order to end calculation," by which all conventional
notions of giving or sharing must be radically reconfigured at the limit
of identity itself. Such a politics would produce an "affirmative
action" policy not strictly affirmative of anything, not even
"diversity," a policy whose goal would be absolute
deracialization; and a "welfare" policy no longer founded in
exclusion and the preservation of scarcity, but re-conceived as an
expenditure without reserve: an offering or sharing of well-being to an
"all" that remains forever open.--sm and scs
Samir Dayal,
Inhuman Love: Jane Campion's The Piano
- Abstract:
Jane Campion's The Piano has been praised as a film about a
woman's self-assertion against an oppressive patriarchal and colonial
economy which defines a woman's place ultimately within the institution of
bourgeois marriage. Ada McGrath, the protagonist, is championed for her
moving, if ironic, self-assertion: she chooses not to speak, but lets her
piano express her innermost feelings. And yet, viewers have also felt
disappointed and troubled because Ada appears to accede to a demeaning
self-prostitution to win back her piano, a "bargain" that Campion
apparently "resolved" by marrying her to the man who seduces her. How
then could Ada be an exemplar of feminist resistance? This essay argues
that this disappointment is not only unwarranted but obscures the film's
power and insights into desire and psychic drive. Ada's
resistance must be understood in its colonial and feminist dimensions. But
the film's true richness lies in its exploration of desire, its rendering
of Ada's self-assertion as a kind of inhuman love. The film demonstrates an
extraordinary understanding of desire as crucial to subjectivity and of
jouissance as the subject's impossible goal. Ada's pursuit of
desire and jouissance comes to a crisis in her near
self-annihilation. The essay develops some insights of Lacanian
psychoanalytic theory to show that the film merits renewed and deeper
theoretical analysis as a representation of a kind of love that challenges
the categories of conventional love and highlights its misfirings, but by
the same token illuminates insights into this most universal and defining
human experience.--sd
Brian Donahue,
Marxism, Postmodernism, Zizek
- Abstract:
This article addresses some of the challenges to Marxism posed by the
conditions of late capitalism and by the theoretical discourses of
postmodernism, and makes a case for the continued relevance and value of
Marxist theory for an ostensibly post-Marxist, would-be post-ideological
period. The developments in the theory of ideology advanced in Slavoj
Zizek's work, focusing on the role of psychology in the functioning of
ideology under conditions of late capitalism, are then taken as valuable
criticisms and revisions of the Marxist tradition that open useful
avenues for critically understanding American culture and society in
recent decades. Two of Zizek's key--and related--insights are then
examined in relation to two well-known American films: the first, that
the dominant subjective structure of postmodern society is that of the
"pathological narcissist," is developed through a reading of Citizen
Kane, particularly in light of Zizek's assessment of the role of the
"maternal superego" in this subjective structure; and the second, that
the breakdown between the simulacrum and the Real in postmodern society
must be understood in terms of the attenuation of the Symbolic order, is
developed through a reading of Pulp Fiction, framed in terms of
the often-repeated concern about "desensitization" toward violence in a
society in which the simulacrum is alleged to have usurped the Real. The
essay concludes with a claim that Zizek should be understood not as a
cynical, apolitical ironist, as some have critically read him, but
rather as a "late Marxist" in the Jamesonian sense.--bd
Jim Hicks,
"What's It Like There?": Desultory Notes on the Representation of Sarajevo
- Abstract:
In the prologue to his influential, now perhaps infamous, Balkan
Ghosts, Robert D. Kaplan asks, and answers, the following question:
"What does the earth look like in the places where people commit
atrocities?" A similar inquiry seems implicit in my own titular question
and probably lurks behind the readerly glance of almost anyone who chooses
to write, or peruse, an essay like mine. Part autobiography, part
photographic essay, part critique, part anecdote, parable, and comedy of
errors, my text offers, more than anything else, a note of caution. What
is it we see, if we see? After the original, oral presentation of this
essay, one audience member described it as an attempt to walk the line
between a necessary silence and the obligation to witness. My own sense
of it is that the essay wanders around more than most and isn't all that
certain of what it finds. Doing so is an attempt to do justice to the
Benjaminian sense of experience--events for which categories are
lacking--and thus to counteract, in some small fashion, our
all-too-common, post-Eliot sense of ourselves as born-again Tiresians
(we've seen it all, and can do nothing). If such an excursion can be said
to have a purpose, it is to induce at least a suspicion of something that,
for several years now, has been my own answer to the Kaplans of this
earth. All appearances asides, what Sarajevo most feels like is
home.--jh
Thomas Swiss and Seb Chevrel,
The Narrative You Anticipate You May Produce
- Abstract:
This piece is a collaborative experiment in New Media Poetry combining
text, images, and sound. Following the artist Christo's work ("wrapped"
objects like Running Fence, Wrapped Pont Neuf, etc.), the collaborators on
this piece developed one answer to the question: what might "wrapped"
language look like in a digital environment? It is "interactive,"
requiring the reader/viewer to locate and click on bits of language
(phrases, lines) as they appear on the screen. Before the piece begins,
the order of the pages is randomly shuffled. The resulting order is
represented by the serial number (in red) at the top of the screen. The
backgrounds and animations on each page are randomly drawn. Finally, the
reader's interaction with the screen is what sets the words in their final
states.--ts and sc
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