Monday, April 30, 2012

Using Stereotypes as Tactics/Strategies

Jane Juffer says in her book Single Mother that tactics are "determined by the absence of power just as a strategy is organized by the postulation of power" (Juffer 36). That is, a tactic is a response when something is out of your control, whereas strategy is created as when you assume your own power.  

Binyavanga Wainaina writes in How to Write About Africa a satire of common stereotypes made by the western world about the continent. His essay, in which he makes such obviously inaccurate statements, is a movement to act against the ignorance of many people. He says of media, "be sure to leave the strong impression that without your intervention and your important book, Africa is doomed", because often that is the impression we are given.
"In your text, treat Africa as if it were one country. It is hot and dusty with rolling grasslands and huge herds of animals and tall, thin people who are starving. Or it is hot and steamy with very short people who eat primates. Don’t get bogged down with precise descriptions. Africa is big: fifty-four countries, 900 million people who are too busy starving and dying and warring and emigrating to read your book."
So what is it that Wainaina is really doing with these stereotypes? He's obviously not just being sarcastic. Through his remarks, we as readers know he is not being serious on the surface, but that between the lines he is making a point. He can't do anything about it in a radical way, so he assumes a tactic - responding to the media in the only way he can to grab their attention. No one, otherwise, will hear the voice of reason and believe that Africa actually isn't what it's stigmatized as.

A similar kind of example is used in Season of Migration to the North by Tayib Salih. The character, Mustafa Saiid, puts on a mask, as Frantz Fanon famously puts it, using his race and the romantic stereotypes that come along with being Arab to get what he wants. The absurdity of some of his statements are clear - he over-dramatizes the sensuality of his bedroom with bright colors and speaks of magic carpets to seduce women, a few of which eventually die from "longing". But this is a tactical response of his hatred against western culture and its stereotypes and misguidings of his identity.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Politics and Space: Non-differentiation between church and state

Its political season in the Bahamas - election day has just been announced and now its time to get all riled up to support those I'd like to see in power. As I am abroad and won't be home for elections (which I can only say breaks my heart since I spent 2 hours on my birthday in a pharmacy waiting on a line to get my voters card), the best I can do is support my favorite party or candidate. There have always been two major political parties - the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) and the Free National Movement (FNM) - just as in the United States, as well as independent candidates and less well known parties which are hardly ever even acknowledged. Now here is where it turns funny - I've said before that everything in the Bahamas is about who you know - who you are is completely dependent on who your parents are, and that stream of thought follows into politics. During political season, your identity  is often determined by who you vote for. If your grammy is an FNM, your daddy's an FNM, and if your friend's a PLP, her mother will be too. Very rarely will you find someone who does not support the party that their family do, and that passes down from generation to generation. It gets really ugly if you do: it demonstrates lack of loyalty, you'll get beat, disowned - just don't go there (just kidding, sort of).

"Sea of Red" FNM supporters at a Rally
 Now people get really out of hand demonstrating their "loyalty" and it gets pretty dirty. There are rallies and motorcades to show your support, yes, but it really becomes more of a competition based on the name of the parties themselves and the citizens support, rather than the actual candidates. If you see a sea of red shirts, you know your in an FNM crowd; if you see yellow, you're in PLP territory. And they will do anything to defend or promote their party. On the FNM website, there is a picture in an article here showing PLP supporters simulating violence against the FNM's on an official branch's facebook page - PLP in yellow watching a car run over an "FNM" dummy in red. You may say, its just a red shirt right? How are you so sure that's what they are trying to say? Because it's always that serious.

FNM spokesperson says in response, "As the country is seeking ways to reduce violence, PLP supporters are promoting the idea of violence against political opponents. The PLP would be better served spending their time putting out a plan, than engaging in this kind of behaviour". And with this kind of behavior, we do wonder who is actually capable of leading the country. The truth is, despite who I support, that neither party is.

There are comments (well justified) that suggest that people are all in a frenzy about supporting a color, rather than an actual candidate and that the parties condone this behaviour to gain support - the blind leading the blind, because neither party is really doing anything to help the country progress. In fact, its only choosing the best of the worst, because neither government will do what it needs to do. But that's always been the case in the Bahamas. Most citizens are too loyal to support anyone else - until recently. This season, there is a new party, one that has surprisingly gained a large amount of supporters in a small amount of time, called the Democratic National Alliance (DNA). Their selling point is essentially what President Obama's was during his campaign, that he could bring what other parties couldn't, we need a change, it's time for a new era, etc.

The problem is that the leader is young and hardly has any experience - and because of that, older voters will not vote for him. Further, these new generation of leaders can speak 'yes we can' all they want - the Bahamas is not in a position where it is prepared for a change because of the way our government works. As long as the Bahamas doesn't separate church from state, little can be done, because decisions are made for the wrong reasons and by the wrong people. Lines are blurred because the spaces of government and the church aren't different. Yes, the Bahamas is supposed to be a Christian nation, but in religion only. And not even the DNA, our so called agents of change, have made that differentiation. This is shown when we look at the biographies for each constituency's candidates: for my constituency, Yamacraw, we are informed here that Maurice Smith is "a born again Christian" and "a member of Abundant Life Bible Church, with a continuing mandate of spreading the Gospel of Jesus Christ". Please, please, tell me. How is this relevant to how he is going to help run the country? I applaud him for his faith, which I support, but I don't want to vote for him because of it. It's because it's what Bahamians want to hear, apparently.

We've learned in class that there is a relationship of space in terms of power and power relations. Focault's Discipline and Punish tells us in his example of the non-differentiation in the spaces of prisons and schools that its the ideology that's the biggest connection between the spaces. We want things to merge because the ideas we have for both of the spaces to be the same, even if we don't realize we are doing it. But the church was not meant to rule the state if the government is going to be doing their jobs. The DNA knows that they have to continue merging church and state in order to be considered. But the only way the Bahamas is going to progress is by separating the two. None-the-less, they are using a strategy in which they reorganize the idea of government, where the normal ideas of politics and government aren't condoned, which I must commend them for. In reference to Steve's comment in class, rather than wearing "combat boots" to the dance, they are having a completely different dance all together. They are, at least, trying. Until they get their act together though, I'll stick with what I know.

There's no way you'll guess who I want to vote for

Sunday, April 1, 2012

The Hunger Games, Racism and Representation

I'm pretty sure that everyone by now has at the very least heard of The Hunger Games. If you haven't read or watched it, beware of spoilers. In fact, you should probably just stop at the end of this paragraph. Consider this paragraph as my blog for you, the single person in North America who has not at least read the book or watched the movie. The world famous trilogy and subsequent movie phenomenon ranked in the United States as the third-best debut in box office history. Despite the novels getting mostly positive reviews, the movie received an onslaught of negative ones that had nothing to do with the story-line itself. These criticisms had completely to do with racism, outrages against the casting of two subordinate characters appearing all over Facebook and Twitter.

Rue, played by Amandla Stendberg, 7th from the left.
Quick Recap of book: Post-Apocalyptic world, selected children (tributes) have to compete in the Hunger Games as punishment for a past rebellion, and fight to the death until there is one victor. Katniss, the main character, forms an alliance with Rue, another tribute.

A friend of mine brought to my attention a blog that was written here and then upon some further research here, about these racist comments. But what I really wanted to comment on on this blog was on how representation skews our perceptions of what we think or don't think we enjoy - whether that's race, sexual orientation, or any other "norm" that may be somewhat different (including congressmen wearing hoodies). And that is where everything started connecting. When watching the documentary The Celluloid Closet in class, we learn that we think that this idea of being gay is wrong, because the normal representation of sexual relationships is heterosexual, but what we don't realize is that what we were taught to believe as an accurate image created by Hollywood, is actually skewed. Similarly, we act in the same way when it comes to race.

Back to the movie: People said that they didn't enjoy the movie because Rue, a character that plays a significant role in the movie - not in actual screen time, but in quality - was black and they felt that *SPOILER* when she was murdered, it wasn't as sad as when they thought she was some pure innocent white girl. This is all, of course, despite the fact that she is described in the book as having dark skin and dark eyes. God forbid the director and producer of the movie actually follow the casting descriptions, or that readers actually read the book if they are going to complain about it. My question is, regardless of what she looks like, when did purity and innocence become represented by blonde white children?

Ah yes, that face is obviously the epitome of evil.
"Kk call me racist but when I found out rue was black her death wasn't as sad...",
"Why does rue have to black not gonna lie kinda ruined the movie",
"Why did the producer make all the good characters black"
These are all quotes print screened from Twitter. (See, again, here for more of these quotes - it will make you question why your even living in the first place). It's sad, really. Amandla Stenberg is absolutely adorable - I have no idea how you can cast anyone anymore innocent-looking than that. But these people tell you exactly how, exactly what they think it represents - have a blonde white girl play the role.

I don't even know what to say here. I am become increasingly and increasingly more irritated and disbelieving of the ignorance of society. You don't care as much about the murder of a child because she was black? Because she's not the image of purity that you were expecting? Because she wasn't the image of innocence that you thought the character should have been represented as? This is the problem with representation - society has an image of something in their head and become offended when they can't understand, in their ignorance, that that image isn't true. We think that the image of innocence is this particular idea, and so there is no room for any other form of it, even if the only difference is something as insignificant as race. Thus, we don't desire or like anything else that doesn't fit that standard, or even take a step back and consider, maybe we are the ones with the wrong perception here.

Other, other or "Other"

Jacques Lacan, the french psychoanalyst and psychiatrist that I touched on briefly in a previous post, is a Freudian that focuses a lot on language, the unconscious, ego and the self. In The Agency of the Letter..., despite being Freudian, he refutes Freud's idea of the unconscious as instinctual, suggesting that "the unconscious is structured like a language". It is not separate from the conscious, or an 'other' of the conscious, but as complex and structured as the conscious itself. In fact, it is so sophisticated that it is "the discourse of the Other", and therefore the "locus in which speech is constituted".

There is a distinction between Other and other that must not be confused, however. The little other is simply a reflection of the ego; its not really even an other at all and is actually something like another "I". It seems as if Lacan is suggesting that there is someone thinking in our place and that is a metonymic chain of significations that represents our identities. But, the big Other is a completely other idea. It is representative of our unconscious, which is the recognition of our desire and vice versa. He goes on further to say that it connects or other and ourselves.

This is such a compelling concept, considering what the word "Other" actually signifies. Particularly in post colonial studies, the "Other" is something that is obviously, not ourselves - when we are describing the other, we are actually identifying who we are not based on the characteristics (like ethnicity) that we are. Without the "Other", we cannot define ourselves because we have nothing to compare ourselves to. For example, I don't know that I am white until I see a black person to compare myself to; this realization comes with the concept of otherness and binary opposition. But the point is, the word "Other" represents something that is not ourselves - so why does Lacan suggest that the Other is a part of ourselves?

In the Second Sex, french female existentialist Simone de Beauvoir, argues that women have been defined as the "Other", relative to men in the same way that slaves were othered by their slave-owners. Further, she says, "humanity is male and man defines woman not in herself, but as relative to him; she is not regarded as an autonomous being", and further, "He is the Subject, he is the Absolute – she is the Other." She also points out that Julien Benda, a french philosopher in his Rapport d’Uriel, states that "Man can think of himself without woman. She cannot think of herself without man" - she wants significance by herself, but cannot attain it. My question is, does this lack of autonomy of the other, mean that they are really part of something else - that being ourselves?

Could she have possibly gotten this idea of autonomy from Descartes and Lacan? Descartes, in saying, "I think, therefore I am", suggests that the "I" is no longer autonomous. Our thinking process doesn't happen autonomously; it is determined socially and as a product of our culture - our desire, that is. Lacan suggests, "I think where I am not; therefore, I am where I do not think" - thus, the real me is beyond my thinking. So, maybe all others are the same.