HOOKS Bell - Outlaw Culture
HOOKS Bell - Outlaw Culture
HOOKS Bell - Outlaw Culture
‘The reader discovers … that bell hooks is a joy to read, her work a
nimbly written hybrid form of social commentary, by turns personal,
political, and in-your-face.’
Publishers Weekly
Routledge Classics contains the very best of Routledge publishing
over the past century or so, books that have, by popular consent,
become established as classics in their field. Drawing on a fantastic
heritage of innovative writing published by Routledge and its
associated imprints, this series makes available in attractive,
affordable form some of the most important works of modern times.
Resisting representations
First published 1994 by Routledge
ISBN10: 0-415-38958-5
ISBN13: 978-0-415-38958-7
for John Amarh—stepping out on faith
CONTENTS
Introduction: The heartbeat of cultural revolution
Index
INTRODUCTION
The heartbeat of cultural revolution
We begin our talk about cultural studies with the color red, with its
meaning in black life. Already they know that red is a color for
seduction and desire. We talk about the Lawrence painting, what
they see when they really look at it—hard—hard. We talk about
everything we see that we like, the way the lovers are sitting on the
couch with the record player beside them, looking like they are
dancing, only they are sitting down. We try and imitate them. We talk
about the jet black color of their bodies and the bright red of the table
next to them. Already they know about color caste, about the way
dark black color makes one less desirable. Connecting all these
pieces, we find a way to understand Jacob Lawrence, desire and
passion in black life. We practice culture criticism and feel the fun
and excitement of learning in relation to living regular life, of using
everything we already know to know more.
Even though cultural studies that looks at popular culture has the
power to move intellectuals both out of the academy and into the
streets where our work can be shared with a larger audience, many
critical thinkers who do cultural criticism are afraid to make that
move. They prefer to score points by remaining in the academic
world and representing radical chic there. This is especially the case
when academics feel they are less cool if they attempt to link cultural
studies’s intellectual practice with radical politicization. The desire to
“appear cool” or “down” has led to the production of a body of
cultural studies work in the United States that appropriates and
rewrites the scripts and meanings of popular culture in ways that
attribute to diverse cultural practices subversive, radical
transgressive intent and power even when there is little evidence to
suggest this is the case. This has been especially true of the
academic work produced about popular icons (Madonna, for
example). Voyeuristic cannibalization of popular culture by cultural
critics is definitely dangerous when the intent is purely opportunistic.
However, when we desire to decolonize minds and imaginations,
cultural studies’ focus on popular culture can be and is a powerful
site for intervention, challenge, and change.
I believe in the power of Madonna, that she has the balls to be the
patron saint of new feminism.
Gone is the “hot” Madonna who dares to challenge the status quo.
There is nothing “fierce” or even interesting about the Vanity Fair
photographs. And they do not evoke in me fierce response. Looking
at them I just simply felt sad. After all her daring, her courageous
challenging of sexist constructions of female sexuality, Madonna at
the peak of her power has stopped pushing against the system. Her
new image has no radical edge. The loss of that subversive style is
all the more evident in Sex. Suddenly, nothing about Madonna’s
image is politicized. Instead, with the publication of Sex, she
assumes the role of high priestess of a cultural hedonism that seeks
to substitute unlimited production and pursuit of sexual pleasure for a
radical, liberating political practice, one that would free our minds
and our bodies.
I think for the most part if women are in an abusive relationship and
they know it and they stay in it, they must be digging it. I suppose
some people might think that’s an irresponsible statement. I’m sure
there are a lot of women in abusive relationships who don’t want to
be, who are trapped economically; they have all these kids and they
have to deal with it. But I have friends who have money and are
educated and they stay in abusive relationships, so they must be
getting something out of it.
More than any visual image in Sex, these remarks signal Madonna’s
break with feminist thinking. Reflecting a patriarchal standpoint,
these statements are more than just irresponsible; they are
dangerous. Madonna uses her position as cultural icon to sanction
violence against women. And the tragedy of it all is that these
statements are inserted in an utterly gratuitous manner. They are in
no way connected to the visual images of heterosexual S/M. By
making them, Madonna uses Sex as a platform to express right-wing
antifeminist sentiments that, if uttered in another context, might have
provoked public protest and outrage.
This message has so seduced Madonna that now she can share the
same phallic rap with her feminist sisters and all her other fans. Most
of the recent images she projects in videos, films, and photographs
tell women and everyone that the thrill, the big orgasm, the real
freedom is having the power to choose to dominate or be dominated.
This is the message of Sex.
We heard of this woman who was out of control. We heard that she
was led by her feelings. That her emotions were violent. That she
was impetuous. That she violated tradition and overrode convention
… We say we have listened to her voice asking, “Of what materials
can that heart be composed which can melt when insulted and
instead of revolting at injustice, kiss the rod? … And from what is
dark and deep within us, we say, tyranny revolts us; we will not kiss
the rod.
2
ALTARS OF SACRIFICE
Re-membering Basquiat
Those folks who are not moved by Basquiat’s work are usually
unable to think of it as “great” or even “good” art. Certainly this
response seems to characterize much of what mainstream art critics
think about Basquiat. Unmoved, they are unable to speak
meaningfully about the work. Often with no subtlety or tact, they
“diss” the work by obsessively focusing on Basquiat’s life or the
development of his career, all the while insisting that they are in the
best possible position to judge its value and significance. (A stellar
example of this tendency is Adam Gopnik’s 1992 piece in the New
Yorker). Undoubtedly it is a difficult task to determine the worth and
value of a painter’s life and work if one cannot get close enough to
feel anything, if indeed one can only stand at a distance.
Ironically, though Basquiat spent much of his short adult life trying to
get close to significant white folks in the established art world, he
consciously produced art that was a barrier, a wall between him and
that world. Like a secret chamber that can only be opened and
entered by those who can decipher hidden codes, Basquiat’s
painting challenges folks who think that by merely looking they can
see. Calling attention to this aspect of Basquiat’s style, Robert Storr
has written, “Everything about his work is knowing and much is
about knowing.” Yet the work resists “knowing,” offers none of the
loose and generous hospitality Basquiat was willing to give freely as
a person.
Even though socially Basquiat did not “diss” those white folks who
could not move beyond surface appearances (stereotypes of
entertaining darkies, pet Negroes and the like), in his work he serves
notice on that liberal white public. Calling out their inability to let the
notion of racial superiority go, even though it limits and restricts their
vision, he mockingly deconstructs their investment in traditions and
canons, exposing a collective gaze that is wedded to an aesthetic of
white supremacy. The painting “Obnoxious Liberals” (1982) shows
us a ruptured history by depicting a mutilated black Samson in
chains and then a more contemporary black figure, no longer naked
but fully clothed in formal attire, who wears on his body a sign that
boldly states, “Not For Sale.” That sign is worn to ward off the
overture of the large, almost overbearing white figure in the painting.
Despite the incredible energy Basquiat displayed playing the how-to-
be-a-famous-artist-in-the-shortest-amount-of-time game— courting
the right crowd, making connections, networking his way into high,
“white” art places—he chose to make his work a space where that
process of commodification is critiqued, particularly as it pertains to
the black body and soul. Unimpressed by white exoticization of the
“Negro,” he mocks this process in works that announce an
“undiscovered genius of the Mississippi delta,” forcing us to question
who makes such discoveries and for what reason.
Braithwaite affirms that Basquiat felt there was a cultural fusion and
synthesis in the work of black male jazz musicians that mirrored his
own aspirations. This connection is misunderstood and belittled by
Gopnik in his essay “Madison Avenue Primitive” (note the derision
the title conveys) when he arrogantly voices his indignation at
Basquiat’s work being linked with that of great black jazz musicians.
With the graciousness and high-handedness of an old-world
paternalistic colonizer, Gopnik declares that he can accept that the
curator of the Basquiat show attempted to place him in a high-art
tradition: “No harm, perhaps, is done by this, or by the endless
comparisons in the catalogue of Basquiat to Goya, Picasso, and
other big names.” But, Gopnik fumes, “What is unforgivable is the
endless comparisons in the catalogue essays of Basquiat to the
masters of American jazz.”
Gopnik speaks about Basquiat’s own attempts to play jazz and then
proceeds to tell us what a lousy musician Basquiat really was. He
misses the point. Basquiat never assumed that his musical talent
was the same as that of jazz greats. His attempt to link his work to
black jazz musicians was not an assertion of his own musical or
artistic ability. It was a declaration of respect for the creative genius
of jazz. He was awed by all the avant-garde dimensions of the music
that affirm fusion, mixing, improvisation. And he felt a strong affinity
with jazz artists in the shared will to push against the boundaries of
conventional (white) artistic tastes. Celebrating that sense of
connection in his work, Basquiat creates a black artistic community
that can include him. In reality, he did not live long enough to search
out such a community and claim a space of belonging. The only
space he could claim was that of shared fame.
Willingly making the sacrifice in no way freed Basquiat from the pain
of that sacrifice. The pain erupts in the private space of his work. It is
amazing that so few critics discuss configurations of pain in
Basquiat’s work, emphasizing instead its playfulness, its celebratory
qualities. This reduces his painting to spectacle, making the work a
mere extension of the minstrel show that Basquiat frequently turned
his life into. Private pain could be explored in art because he knew
that a certain world “caught” looking would not see it, would not even
expect to find it there. Francesco Penizzi begins to speak about this
pain in his essay, “Black and White All Over: Poetry and Desolation
Painting,” when he identifies Basquiat’s offerings as “self-
immolations, Sacrifices of the Self” which do not emerge from desire,
but from the desert of hope.” Rituals of sacrifice stem from the inner
workings of spirit that inform the outer manifestation.
—Marie-France Alderman
bell A friend from Ireland once said to me, “You know, you’ll
hooks: never make it in the United States because there’s no
place for passion”—not to mention for being a passionate
woman. That’s probably what feminism was initially
about: How do we make room for self-determining,
passionate women who will be able to just be? I am
passionate about everything in my life—first and
foremost, passionate about ideas. And that’s a
dangerous person to be in this society, not just because
I’m a woman, but because it’s such a fundamentally anti-
intellectual, anti-critical thinking society. I don’t think we
can act like it’s so great for men to be critical thinkers
either. This society doesn’t want anybody to be a critical
thinker. What we as women need to ask ourselves is: “In
what context within patriarchy do women create space
where we can protect our genius?” It’s a very, very
difficult question. I think I most cultivated myself in the
home space, yet that’s the space that is most
threatening: it is much harder to resist a mother who
loves you and then shames you than it is an outside
world that does the same. It’s easier to say “no” to the
outside world. When a lover tells you—as I’ve been told
—“My next girlfriend will be dumb,” I think, “What is that
message about?” Female creativity will have difficulty
making itself seen. And when you add to that being a
black female or a colored female, it becomes even more
difficult.
Marie- What about the representation of black female creativity
France in recent films?
Alderman:
bh: What’s Love Got to Do With It, The Bodyguard, and
Poetic Justice involve passionate black women
characters, but they all rely on this packaging of black
women musical icons— Janet Jackson, Tina Turner, and
Whitney Houston. No one says you have to see The
Bodyguard because Whitney Houston is such a great
actress, because we know she’s not a great actress at
all. We’re going to see what this musical icon does in this
movie. Is this Hollywood saying we still can’t take black
women seriously as actresses?
MFA: Perhaps only as entertainers—
bh: Why does the real Tina Turner have to come in at the
end of What’s Love Got to Do With It? It’s like saying that
Angela Bassett isn’t a good enough actress—which I
didn’t think she was—by the way, and that’s part of why,
in a sense, it becomes Larry Fishburne’s narrative of Ike,
more so than the narrative of Tina Turner. It’s a very
tragic film, because you sit in the theater and you see
people really identify with the character of Ike, not with
the character of Tina Turner. In my essay “Selling Hot
Pussy,” in Black Looks, I talked about how Ike
constructed the whole idea of Tina Turner’s character
from those television movies of Sheena, Queen of the
Jungle.
MFA: And you talk about how she was, in fact, anything but a
wild woman.
bh: I, Tina, Tina Turner’s autobiography, is so much about
her tragedy—the tragedy of being this incredibly talented
woman in a family that didn’t care for you. Then you meet
this man who appears to really care for you, who exploits
you, but at the same time, you’re deeply tied to him. One
of the things in the film that was so upsetting was when
Tina Turner lost her hair. The filmmakers make that a
funny moment. But can we really say that any woman
losing her hair in this culture could be a funny moment?
No one ever speculates that maybe Tina stayed with Ike
because as a woman with no hair in this culture, she had
no real value. That no amount of wigs …
MFA: or great legs …
bh: … no amount of being this incredible star could make up
for the fact that she had bald spots. I mean, think about
the whole relationship—not only of women in general in
this culture to hair, but of black women to hair. What’s
Love takes that incredibly tragic moment in a young
female’s life and turns it into laughter, into farce. What I
kept thinking about was why this culture can’t see a
serious film that’s not just about a black female tragedy,
but about a black female triumph. It’s so interesting how
the film stops with Ike’s brutality, as though it is Tina
Turner’s life ending. Why is it that her success is less
interesting than the period of her life when she’s a
victim?
MFA: Tina Turner lost control of her own story somewhere
along the line.
bh: Part of what remains tragic about a figure like Tina
Turner is that she’s still a person who has to work
through that image of her that Ike created. I don’t know if
this is true but I heard that she sold her story to
Hollywood but didn’t ask to go over the script or for rights
of approval. Obviously, she didn’t. Otherwise how could it
have become cinematically Ike’s story? And why do we
have to hear about Larry Fishburne not wanting to do this
film unless there can be changes in Ike’s character;
unless that character can be softened, made to feel more
human? I mean, Fuck Ike! That’s how I feel. You know,
all these black people—particularly black men—have
been saying to me, “Ike couldn’t have treated her that
bad.” Why don’t they say, “Isn’t it tragic that he did treat
her so bad?” This just goes to show you how we, as
black people in this country, remain sexist in our thinking
of men and women. The farcical element of this film has
to do not just with the producers thinking that white
people won’t take seriously a film about a black woman
who’s battered and abused but that black people won’t
either. So you have to make it funny. I was very
frightened by the extent to which laughter circulated in
that theater over stuff that wasn’t funny. That scene with
her hair is so utterly farcical. The fact is that no fucking
woman—including Tina Turner—is beautiful in her body
when she’s being battered. The real Tina Turner was sick
a lot. She had all kinds of health problems during her life
with Ike. Yet the film shows us this person who is so
incredibly beautiful and incredibly sexual. We don’t see
the kind of contrast Tina Turner actually sets up in her
autobiography between, “I looked like a wreck one
minute, and then, I went on that stage and projected all
this energy.” The film should have given us the pathos of
that, but it did not at all because farce can’t give you the
pathos of that.
MFA: When you talk about Tina Turner going from a victimized,
overworked woman, who is always sick, to an entertainer
who jumps to the stage—that’s consistent with a
conception of black life that goes from the cotton field to
tap dancing.
bh: Absolutely.
MFA: Maybe we can’t imagine anything about black lives
beyond that.
bh: We can’t imagine anything else as long as Hollywood
and the structures of filmmaking keep these very
“either/or” categories. The Bodyguard makes a significant
break with Hollywood construction of black female
characters—not because Whitney Houston has sex with
this white man, but because the white man, Frank
Farmer, says that her life is valuable, that her life is worth
saving. Traditionally, Hollywood has said, “Black women
are backdrops; they’re dixie cups. You can use them and
dispense them.” Now, here’s a whole film that’s saying
just the opposite. Whether it’s a bad film is beside the
point. The fact is, millions and millions of people around
the world are looking at this film which, at its core,
challenges all our perceptions of the value of not only
black life but of black female life. To say that a black,
single mother’s life is valuable, is really a very
revolutionary thing in a society where black women who
are single parents are always constructed in the public
imagination as unbeautiful, unsexy, unintelligent,
deranged, what have you. At the same time, the film’s
overall message is paternalistic. I found it fascinating that
we see Kevin Costner’s character related to God, Nation,
and country.
MFA: The same thing happened in Dances with Wolves.
bh: And in The Crying Game, where you have white men
struggling with their identity. In The Bodyguard, we’re
dealing with a white boy who is the right, for God, for
country but who somehow finds himself at a moment of
crisis in his life—having sex, falling in love with this black
woman. That’s what he needs to get himself together but
once he’s together, he has to go back. So, we have the
final shots in the film where he’s back with God and
Nation. It’s all white. It’s all male, and of course, the film
makes us feel that he’s made the right choice. He didn’t
allow himself to be swept away by otherness and
difference, yet the very reason this film can gross $138
million is that people are fascinated right now with
questions of otherness and difference. Both Kevin
Costner and Neil Jordan repeatedly said that their films
had nothing to do with race. Kevin Costner said that “it
would be a pity if people went to see The Bodyguard and
thought it was about race.” Well, why the fuck does he
think millions of people want to see it? Nobody cares
about white men fucking black women. People care
about the idea of a rich white man—the fictional man,
Frank Farmer, but also the real Kevin Costner—being
fascinated by Whitney Houston. They went to see a film
about love, not about fucking, because we can see any
number of porno films where white men are fucking black
women. The Bodyguard is about a love so powerful that
it makes people transgress certain values. Think again
about how it compares with The Crying Game, where
once again, we have this theme of desire and love so
powerful that it allows one to transcend national identity,
racial identity, and finally, sexual identity. I find that to be
the ultimate reactionary message in both of these films:
We don’t need politics. We don’t need struggle. All we
need is desire. It is desire that becomes the place of
connection. This is a very postmodern vision of desire, as
the new place of transgression that eliminates the need
for radical politics.
MFA: In their introduction to Angry Women, Andrea Juno and
V. Vale explained the current fascination with gender
bending and sexual transgression as a reaction to over-
population. In other words humans know they’ve
outgrown a certain system and “are starting to exercise
their option to reinvent their biological destinies.” Could
that be why desire has become so important?
bh: That’s a mythopoetic reading that I don’t have problems
with, but I think the interesting thing about it is that it
returns us to a dream that I think is very deep in this
society right now, which is a dream of transformation— of
transforming a society—that doesn’t have to engage in
any kind of unpleasant, sacrificial, political action. You
know a film I saw recently that was very moving to me—
and I kept contrasting it to Menace II Society—was the
film Falling Down. There is a way to talk about Falling
Down as describing the end of Western civilization. Black
philosopher Cornel West talks about the fact that part of
the crisis we’re in has to do with Western patriarchal
biases no longer functioning, and there is a way in which
Falling Down is about a white man who’s saying, I trusted
in this system. I did exactly what the system told me to
and it’s not working for me. It’s lied to me.” That doesn’t
mean you have the right to be so angry that you can
attack people of color or attack other marginal groups. In
so many ways, though, that’s exactly how a lot of white
people feel. There’s this sense that if this white
supremacist capitalist patriarchy isn’t working for white
people—most especially for working-class white men, or
middle-class white men—it’s the fault of some others out
there. It’s in this way that the structure has fed on itself.
The fact is when you have something that gets as fierce
as the kind of greed we have right now, then white men
are going to have to suffer the fallout of that greed as
well. That’s one of the scary things about Bosnia and
Croatia: we’re not seeing the fallout played out on the
field of the bodies of people of color—which is what
America is used to seeing on its television. The dead
bodies of color around the world symbolize a crisis in
imperialism and the whole freaky thing of white
supremacy. It’s interesting that people don’t talk about
ethnic cleansing as tied to mythic notions of race purity
and white supremacy which are so much a part of what
this country is struggling with. What South Africa is
struggling with—that myth of white supremacy—is also
being played out by black Americans when we overvalue
those who are light-skinned and have straight hair, while
ignoring other black people. It all shows how deeply that
myth has inserted itself in all our imaginations. Falling
Down captures not only the horror of that but also the
role that the mass media has played in that. In the one
scene where the white man is trying to use that major
weapon and the little black boy shows him how to, the
man says to this little boy, “Well, how do you know how
to use it?” The boy says, “I’ve seen it in movies.”
Two fine examples of this “eating” are the Hollywood film The
Bodyguard and the independent film The Crying Game. Both films
highlight relationships that cross boundaries. The Crying Game is
concerned with exploring the boundaries of race, gender, and
nationality, The Bodyguard with boundaries of race and class. Within
their particular genres, both films have been major box office
successes. Yet The Crying Game received critical acclaim while The
Bodyguard was overwhelmingly trashed by critics. Magazines such
as Entertainment Weekly gave grades of “A” to the first film and “D”
to the latter. Though it is certainly a better film by artistic standards
(superior acting, more complex plot, good screen writing) the
elements of The Crying Game that make it work for audiences are
more similar to than different from those that make The Bodyguard
work. The two films are both romances. They both look at “desire”
deemed taboo and exploit the theme of love on the edge.
In both The Crying Game and The Bodyguard it is the racial identity
of the black “female” heroines that gives each movie its radical edge.
Long before any viewers of The Crying Game know that Dil is a
transvestite, they are intrigued by her exoticism, which is marked by
racial difference. She/he is not just any old black woman; she
embodies the “tragic mulatto” persona that has always been the slot
for sexually desirable black female characters of mixed race in
Hollywood films. Since most viewers do not know Dil’s sexual
identity before seeing the film, they are most likely drawn to the
movie because of its exploration of race and nationality as the
locations of difference. Kevin Costner’s insistence that The
Bodyguard is not about an interracial relationship seems ludicrously
arrogant in light of the fact that masses of viewers flocked to see this
film because it depicted a relationship between a black woman and a
white man, characters portrayed by big stars, Costner and Whitney
Houston. Black female spectators (along with many other groups)
flocked to see The Bodyguard because we were so conscious of the
way in which the politics of racism and white supremacy in
Hollywood has always blocked the representation of black women as
chosen partners for white men. And if this cannot happen, then black
females are rarely able to play the female lead in a movie as so often
that role means that one will be involved with the male lead.
Most critical reviews of The Crying Game did not discuss race, and
those that did suggested that the power of this film lies in its
willingness to insist that race and gender finally do not matter: it’s
what’s inside that counts. Yet this message is undermined by the fact
that all the people who are subordinated to white power are black.
Even though this film (like The Bodyguard) seduces by suggesting
that it can be pleasurable to cross boundaries, to accept difference, it
does not disrupt conventional representations of power, of
subordination and domination. Black people allow white men to
remake them in the film. And Dil’s transvestism appears to be less
radical when she eagerly offers her womanly identity in order to
satisfy Fergus without asking him for an explanation. Fergus’s
actions are clearly paternalistic and patriarchal. Dil gives that Billie
Holiday “hush now, don’t explain” kind of love that misogynist, sexist
men have always longed for. She acts in complicity with Fergus’s
appropriation of Jody.
Despite flaws, both The Crying Game and The Bodyguard are daring
works that evoke much about issues of race and gender, about
difference and identity. Unfortunately, both films resolve the tensions
of difference, of shifting roles and identity, by affirming the status
quo. Both suggest that otherness can be the place where white folks
—in both cases white men—work through their troubled identity, their
longings for transcendence. In this way they perpetuate white
cultural imperialism and colonialism. Though compelling in those
moments when they celebrate the possibility of accepting difference,
learning from and growing through shifting locations, perspectives,
and identities, these films ultimately seduce and betray.
5
CENSORSHIP FROM LEFT AND RIGHT
Recently, the Canadian government refused to allow my book Black
Looks: Race and Representation into Canada. Copies were being
shipped to a radical bookstore. They were held as “hate” literature. It
seemed ironic that this book, which opens with a chapter urging
everyone to learn to “love blackness,” would be accused of
encouraging racial hatred. I doubt that anyone at the Canadian
border read this book: the target for repression and censorship was
the radical bookstore, not me. After a barrage of protests, the
government released the books suggesting that they were held
simply because there had been a misunderstanding about their
content. Despite the fact that the books were released, it was
another message sent to remind radical bookstores—particularly
those that sell feminist, lesbian, and/or overtly sexual literature— that
the state is watching them and ready to censor.
More than the censoring of books, the issue of whether the work of
individual African American rap musicians should be censored has
been the catalyst compelling many black folks to consider issues of
censorship. Conservatives in black communities are as motivated to
censor as are their counterparts in other communities. Support for
censorship in black communities is rarely noticed when mass media
highlights this issue. The lack of coverage does not mean that
support for censorship is not growing among black people. Yet few, if
any, black leaders call attention to the dangers to progressive
political work when censorship is condoned.
This remains true for feminist movement; it is not less true for black
liberation struggle. In the heyday of civil rights struggle, black power
movement folks were often “excommunicated” if they did not simply
support the party line. This was also the case in white male-
dominated “left” political circles. Censorship of dissenting voices in
progressive circles often goes unnoticed. Radical groups are often
so small that it is easy to punish folks using tactics that may not be
apparent to those outside the group. Usually, repression is enforced
by powerful members of the group threatening punishment, the most
common being some form of ostracization or excommunication. This
may take the form of no longer including an individual’s thoughts or
writing in relevant discussions, especially publication, or excluding
individuals from important meetings and conferences. And in some
cases it may take the form of a consistent, behind-the-scenes effort
to cast doubt verbally on their credibility.
Black scholar Henry Louis Gates, Jr., a major mover and shaker in
intellectual and academic circles, published an essay focusing on
“black anti-Semitism” on the Op-Ed pages of the New York Times. I
found this essay very problematic. Although it contained a useful and
necessary critique of black anti-Semitism, particularly in regard to
certain narrow-minded nationalist strains of Afrocentric thinking and
scholarship, there was no careful attempt in the writing to
contextualize the relationship between black folks and white Jews in
a manner that would oppose any monolithic construction of black
people as anti-Semitic. Disturbed by this piece, I worried that the
gaps in this essay would serve to legitimate further silencing of black
voices who are in any way critical of white Jews, and that the essay
would create further unnecessary divisions and conflicts.
Though compelled by serious political concerns to respond to this
essay, I hesitated. Initially, I suppressed the impulse to write a
response because I feared negative repercussions from black and
white readers. Interrogating this fear, I saw it is as rooted in my
desire to belong, to experience myself as part of a collective of black
critical thinkers and not as estranged or different. And frankly, I
feared punishment (i.e., not being offered desired jobs, grants, etc.).
Even though I felt these fears were not rational— since I made
peace long ago with the reality that dissenting opinions often make
one an outsider—these fears not only made me pause; for a time
they acted as censors. It troubled me that as “established” as I am,
and by that I mean being a full professor with tenure, I could fear
speaking my mind. I wondered how someone less established could
dare to speak freely if those of us who have the least to lose are
afraid to make our voices heard.
Black folks do not hold public forums where we talk about ways we
might promote a climate of critical discourse that supports and
highlights the primacy of free speech while simultaneously furthering
our struggles for black self-determination. If we do not address the
issue of censorship in a thoughtful and complex manner, then old
unproductive, habitual responses will determine the scope of our
discourse. What cultural conditions enable black male thinkers to be
critical of black women without being seen as giving expression to
sexist or misogynist opinions? And what critical climate will allow
black women a space to critique one another without fear that all ties
will be disrupted and severed?
Usually, critique causes some pain and discomfort. I know the
feeling. I will never forget the day I went to my favorite bookstore
hoping to rid myself of a serious case of the blues only to open the
anthology Homegirls to a passage declaring that I was “so
homophobic [I] could not even bring myself to use the word lesbian”;
this was part of a larger critique of my first book, Ain’t I a Woman:
Black Women and Feminism. I felt devastated—not because I could
not receive fierce intellectual critiques of my work, but because this
particular declaration was simply untrue, yet I knew it would
influence folks’ perceptions of me. I was deeply hurt. But it was up to
me to cope with that hurt, put it in perspective, and respond to the
issues and the individuals in an open-minded way. This is by no
means an easy process. For those who are profoundly committed to
free speech, to sustaining spaces for critical discourse where folks
can speak their minds (hopefully constructively and in ways that do
not threaten to malign and symbolically assassinate others), then
there has to be a celebration of differing opinions even when there
are conflicts, even when there are hurt feelings.
No wonder, then, that women who want to be sexual with men are
perversely reinventing feminism so that it will satisfy patriarchal
desires, so that it can be incorporated into a sexist phallic imaginary
in such a way that male sexual agency as we now know it will never
need to change. Representing a larger structure of white male
power, Tad Friend, in conjunction with those who edited and
published this piece, show contempt for any radical or revolutionary
feminist practice that upholds dialogue and engagement with men,
that sees men as comrades in struggle. Contrary to what this
magazine and the mass media in general project in complicity with
opportunistic white female allies (e.g., Camille Paglia, Naomi Wolf),
older feminists like myself were supporting the inclusion of men in
feminist movement (actually writing and publishing articles to push
this point) years ago. Contrary to Esquire’s suggestion that there is
“a new generation of women, who are embracing sex (and men!),”
we are witnessing a new generation of women who, like their sexist
male counterparts, are aggressively ahistorical and unaware of the
long tradition of radical/revolutionary feminist thought that celebrates
inclusiveness and liberatory sexuality. Both these groups prefer to
seek out the most conservative, narrow-minded feminist thought on
sex and men, then arrogantly use these images to represent the
movement.
An editor and reader of my work laments that not enough folks read
me, know who I am. But she confesses, “It has to do in part with the
academic way you write! Why, if you just let yourself go, you could
be the black Camille Paglia!” This statement kept me laughing
throughout the day. Though full of sass and wit, Paglia’s Sexual
Personae is tediously academic. (And no doubt as unread by
mainstream readers as most other English department literary
criticism). Many books bought nowadays remain unopened, bought
not for their ideas but because the hype surrounding the author
entices. That’s why I give my own awards each year to “The Most
Bought Least Read Books.” So far, I know of no studies done to see
how writers feel when they have a mega-financial success with a
work that for the most part goes unread.
To begin with, I need to make it clear to those who don’t know that
the throwing-shade, dissin’, “reading” style that carried Miss Camille
to fame was a persona she assembled after years of
ethnographically studying the mannerisms of vernacular black
culture, especially black gay sub-culture, and most especially the
culture of the black queen. And girlfriend ain’t even ashamed about
this background, not at all embarrassed to say shit like:
My mentors have always been Jews, Harold Bloom and so on, and
they’re the only ones who can tolerate my personality! But at any
rate, when I got to Yale … whoa! Culture shock! Because I saw the
way the WASP establishment had the Ivy League in a death grip. In
order to rise in academe, you have to adopt this WASP Style. It’s
very laid-back. Now, I really can’t do it, but I call it “walking on eggs
at a funeral home.” Now I’m loud. Did you notice? I’m very loud. I’ve
had a hell of a time in academe. This is why I usually get along with
African Americans. I mean, when we’re together, “Whooo!” It’s like I
feel totally myself—we just let everything go!
Naturally, all black Americans were more than pleased to have Miss
Camille give us this vote of confidence, since we live to make it
possible for white girls like herself to have a place where they can be
“totally” themselves.
Come to think of it, not only is Miss Camille working the positive tip
of transgressive black sub-culture, she really took some “how to get
ahead and succeed on TV” lessons from Shahrazad Ali! The mix of
sassy dissin’ witty radical “reads” with straight-ahead conservative-
speak spices things up in just the way that makes it the kind of
border-crossing cultural criticism everybody can groove on. Even
though it does seem that radical chic was absorbed by the
rearticulation of mainstream, white supremacist capitalist patriarchal
values. I mean girlfriend bashed feminism left, right, and center
telling us “current feminism” was “in a reactionary phase of hysterical
moralism and prudery, like that of the Temperance movement a
century ago.” And when it came down to really talking about
changing canons and curricula and divesting of some white
supremacy, all Miss Camille could say was, “African Americans must
study the language and structure of Western public power while still
preserving their cultural identity, which has had world impact on the
arts.” Oh, we so hurt! Miss Camille, you mean all you think we can
do is dance and sing? We read and write now, yes, ma’am.
The spotlight that the white male-dominated, racist, and sexist mass
media turned on Camille Paglia has begun to dim. The lights are
dimming not because she has ceased to be witty, stopped her
sensational sound bites, or is any less stridently passionate in her
trashing of feminism, but because the seductive young are on her
turf, competing and claiming air time. Without Paglia as trailblazer
and symbolic mentor, there would be no cultural limelight for white
girls such as Katie Roiphe and Naomi Wolf. And no matter how hard
they work to put that Oedipal distance between their writing and
hers, they are singing the same tune on way too many things. And
(dare I say it?) that tune always seems to be a jazzed-up version of
“The Way We Were”—you know, the good old days before feminism
and multiculturalism and the unbiased curriculum fucked everything
up. Come to think of it, Miss Camille was among the first white male-
appointed female voices to proclaim that “we need a new kind of
feminism, one that stresses personal responsibility and is open to art
and sex in all their dark, unconsoling mysteries. The feminist of the
fin de siècle will be bawdy, streetwise, and on-the-spot
confrontational, in the prankish, sixties ways.” Never mind that many
living feminists personify all this. Our problem is that we are just fast,
fresh girls that Paglia does not know—and if she did she would
pretend not to, ’cause recognizing us would mean that much of what
she has to say about feminism would be exposed for what it is: the
stuff of sexist fantasy. This is not to say there is no basis in reality
use for her critique, only that the basis is small and does not
represent any feminist norm. Paglia, like those who come in her
wake, chooses easy targets. She calls out the conservative crowd,
the antimale, antisex, close-your-skirts-and-cross-your-legs, gender-
equality-with-men-of-their-class, reformist, professional girls she
knew up close and personal.
In most of her work, Paglia makes the female body the site of her
insistence on a binary structure of gender difference, particularly in
relation to the issue of sexuality, of desire and pleasure. Without ever
using words such as inferior and superior, she implies the
naturalness of these distinctions with statements that affirm
hierarchy:
Not every point Paglia makes is inaccurate. Indeed, she has been
difficult to dismiss precisely because her ideas often contradict one
another. There is often a conservative and radical mix. This
ambiguity notwithstanding, most of her primary ideas are rooted in
conservative, white supremacist capitalist patriarchal thought.
Shrewdly, Paglia avoids public appearances with individuals, myself
included, who might undermine the negative representation of
feminist thought she has helped popularize. Radical/revolutionary
feminist thought and practice must emerge as a force in popular
culture if we are to counter in a constructive way the rise of Paglia
and those who eagerly seek the same spotlight. This means that we
must work harder to gain a hearing.
There must be more effort to write and talk about feminist ideas in
ways that are accessible. Those of us who already have been
successfully working in this way must strive individually and
collectively to make our voices heard by a wider audience. If we do
not actively enter the terrain of popular culture, we will be complicit in
the antifeminist backlash that is at the heart of the mass media’s
support of antifeminist women who claim to speak on behalf of
feminism. This speaking is really a seductive foreplay that intends to
provoke, excite, and silence. The time has come to interrupt,
intervene, and change the channel.
8
DISSIDENT HEAT
Fire with fire
It is difficult not to be nostalgic for that camaraderie (we were not all
white, not all straight, not from the same class or national
backgrounds, some of us were deep into spiritual stuff and others
had no use for gods) watching young college-educated women come
to feminist thinking without an engagement with feminist movement,
lacking a commitment to feminist politics that has been tested in
lived experience. It is tempting for these young women to produce
feminist writing that is self-indulgent, opportunistic, that sometimes
shows no concern for promoting and advancing feminist movement
that seeks to end sexist exploitation and oppression. It is equally
tempting for this new group of thinkers and writers to seek to shield
themselves from critique by setting up a scenario that suggests they
are being crushed or harshly judged by older feminists who are
jealous of their rise to power. Many established feminists would
testify that throughout feminist movement there has been an effort to
engage new work critically and rigorously. Such critical interrogation
maintains the integrity of feminist thought and practice. Reading
work by new feminist writers, I am most often struck by how this
writing completely ignores issues of race and class, how it cleverly
makes it seem as though these discussions never took place within
feminist movement. These attitudes and assumptions are given
voice in the recent work of Katie Roiphe and Naomi Wolf.
Unlike Roiphe, whose book The Morning After has been harshly
critiqued by many established feminist writers and thinkers, Wolf’s
work, Fire with Fire, strategically manages to avoid rigorous critique
even though it has been subjected to some very negative reviews.
Given the visceral response many feminists had to Roiphe’s work I
was fascinated by the fact that they seemed not to be equally
disturbed by Fire with Fire—especially since many passages in
Wolf’s work could easily have been excerpts from The Morning After.
For example, in the section entitled “Harassment and Date Rape:
Collapsing the Spectrum,” Wolf recalls her sense of empathy at the
many stories she heard about rape at a rally, only to highlight her
awareness of stories that struck “a false note.” She recalls, “In one of
those moments, a grieving woman took the mike and recounted an
episode that brought her shame, embarrassment, humiliation, or
sorrow, an episode during which she was unable to vocalize ‘No.’”
Wolf tells readers:
My heart went out to her because the event had felt like a rape.
There had, doubtless, been many ways in which that woman’s sense
of self, of her right to her own boundaries, had been transgressed
long ago. But I kept thinking that, as terrible as it is to be unable to
speak one’s claim to one’s body, what the sobbing woman described
was not rape. I also thought of how appalled I would be if I had had
sex with someone whose consent I was certain of, only to find myself
accused of criminal behavior.
While I agree with her insistence that feminist thought and theory do
not fully speak to the needs of masses of women and men, I do not
think that we should strive to stimulate that interest by packaging a
patronizing, simplistic brand of feminism that we can soft-sell.
Luckily, the publication of Fire with Fire has created a public space
where Wolf has many opportunities to engage in critical discussion
about the meaning and significance of her work. Hopefully, the
success of this work, coupled with all the new information she can
learn in the wake of dissident dialogues, will provide her time to read
and think anew. Like Wolf, I believe feminist thinking is enriched by
dissent. Opposing viewpoints should not be censored, silenced, or
punished in any way. Deeply committed to a politics of solidarity
wherein sisterhood is powerful because it emerges from a concrete
practice of contestation, confrontation, and struggle, it is my dream
that more feminist thinkers will live and work in such a way that our
being embodies the power of feminist politics, the joy of feminist
transformation.
9
KATIE ROIPHE
A little feminist excess goes a long way
More than any work by Wolf, Katie Roiphe’s The Morning After is a
harbinger of this trend. It attempts to construct and attack a
monolithic young “feminist” group that shares a common response to
feminist thinking, most particularly around issues of sexuality and
physical assault. The book begins with the evocation of a cultural
family genealogy in which feminism is evoked as a legacy handed
down from mother to daughter, a strategy which from the onset
makes feminism at least symbolically a turf that, like a small country,
can be owned and occupied by some and not others. Hence, the
white book-writing women within feminism can have daughters such
as Roiphe who feel that they are the movement’s natural heirs. It is
just this claim to ownership of feminist movement that women of
color and progressive white women have challenged, insisting on the
ongoing understanding that feminism is a political movement—that
all who make a commitment to the tenets belong, that there are no
owners.
In this book, the feminist agendas that are talked about, however
negatively, are always only those set by white females. Purporting to
bring a newer, fresher feminist vision, The Morning After disturbs
precisely because of the erasure of difference both in its
perspectives on the issues discussed and the overall erasure of the
voices and thoughts of women of color. This latter erasure cannot be
viewed as a sign of the author’s ignorance or naiveté. That erasure
is opportunistic. It has more to do with the fact that many feminist
thinkers and activists who are women of color would be among those
who do not neatly fit into the categories Roiphe erroneously
suggests constitute the feminist norm. My decision to write about
Roiphe’s work was prompted by the fact that the only time she
mentioned a woman of color (specifically a black woman) she did so
with the intent to ridicule and devalue her work. This gesture did not
appear to be innocent. It fit all too well Roiphe’s construction of a
feminist arena where the chosen (who are coincidentally young,
white, and privileged) don their boxing gloves to see who is the
better feminist.
Earlier in this piece I stated that I was compelled to write about The
Morning After in part because I found it both significant and
disturbing that the only mention of a single woman of color occurs in
a context where she is devaluing that writer’s work. This dismissal
connects with the recent attack on Women’s Studies published in
Mother Jones, which also suggested that among those not very
academic folks who are being read (and should not be) were black
women writers: myself and Audre Lorde. I wonder about this need to
trash black women writers and critical thinkers who have been
among those who have worked hardest to challenge the assertion
that the word “woman” can be used when it is the specific
experience of white females that is being talked about, who have
argued that race and class must be considered when we develop
feminist thought and theory. Doesn’t this need reflect a competitive
impulse, a desire to wrest the discourse of the movement away from
these directions? By this I mean that individual white women who
feel that some feminists, “women of color in particular,” should not
have shifted the direction of feminist thinking by insisting that white
women confront white supremacy, are now seeking to shift the
movement back to those stages when it was acceptable to ignore,
devalue, even trash these concerns. And it is interesting that this
effort to denigrate black women writers emerges at a time when so
many progressives move to challenge literary canons so that they
will include the works of women of all colors are themselves being
attacked and challenged. With her seemingly innocent assertion
about Walker’s work, Roiphe, along with other white women who
take similar standpoints (for example, the white woman reporter who
trashed Toni Morrison in an editorial about the Nobel Prize), unites
with conservative thinkers (many of whom are white and male) who
hold similar views, who also have the power in many instances to
prevent those works from being published, reviewed, read, or
studied.
All too often in The Morning After, Roiphe evokes a vision of feminist
movement that simplistically mirrors patriarchal stereotypes. No
doubt it is this mirroring that allows her voice, and not the voices of
visionary critiques of feminist dogma, to receive such widespread
attention and acclaim. Roiphe ends her book warning readers about
the dangers of “excessive zeal” in relation to advancing political
concerns, cautioning that it can lead to blind spots, a will to
exaggeration, distortions in perspective. Regrettably, Roiphe did not
allow her work to be guided by this insight.
Rape, spouse abuse, sexual harassment on the job, are all essential
to the perpetuation of a sexist society. For the sexist, violence is the
necessary and logical part of the unequal, exploitative relationship.
To dominate and control, sexism requires violence. Rape and sexual
harassment are therefore not accidental to the structure of gender
relations within a sexist order.
Like many black men, they are enraged by any feminist call to
rethink masculinity and oppose patriarchy. And the courageous
brothers who do, who rethink masculinity, who reject patriarchy and
rape culture, often find that they cannot get any play—that the very
same women who may critique macho male nonsense contradict
themselves by making it clear that they find the “unconscious
brothers” more appealing.
On college campuses all over the United States, I talk with these
black males and hear their frustrations. They are trying to oppose
patriarchy and yet are rejected by black females for not being
masculine enough. This makes them feel like losers, that their lives
are not enhanced when they make progressive changes, when they
affirm feminist movement. Their black female peers confirm that they
do indeed hold contradictory desires. They desire men not to be
sexist, even as they say, “But I want him to be masculine.” When
pushed to define “masculine,” they fall back on sexist
representations. I was surprised by the number of young black
women who repudiated the notion of male domination, but who
would then go on to insist that they could not desire a brother who
could not take charge, take care of business, be in control.
Talking with women of varying ages and ethnicities about this issue, I
am more convinced than ever that women who engage in sexual
acts with male partners must not only interrogate the nature of the
masculinity we desire, we must also actively construct radically new
ways to think and feel as desiring subjects. By shaping our eroticism
in ways that repudiate phallocentrism, we oppose rape culture.
Whether this alters sexist male behavior is not the point. A woman
who wants to engage in erotic acts with a man without reinscribing
sexism will be much more likely to avoid or reject situations in which
she might be victimized. By refusing to function within the
heterosexist framework that condones male erotic domination of
women, females would be actively disempowering patriarchy.
For the past several months, the white mainstream media has been
contacting me to hear my views on gangsta rap. Whether major
television networks, or small independent radio shows, they seek me
out for the black and feminist take on the issue. After I have my say, I
am never called back, never invited to do the television shows, the
radio spots. I suspect they call me, confident that when we talk they
will hear the hardcore “feminist” trash of gangsta rap. When they
encounter instead the hardcore feminist critique of white supremacist
capitalist patriarchy, they lose interest.
Witness the recent piece by Brent Staples in the New York Times,
entitled “The Politics of Gangster Rap: A Music Celebrating Murder
and Misogyny.” Defining the turf, Staples writes, “For those who
haven’t caught up, gangster rap is that wildly successful music in
which all women are ‘bitches’ and ‘whores’ and young men kill each
other for sport.” No mention of white supremacist capitalist patriarchy
in this piece. Not a word about the cultural context that would need
to exist for young males to be socialized to think differently about
gender. No word about feminism. Staples unwittingly assumes that
black males are writing their lyrics off in the “jungle,” faraway from
the impact of mainstream socialization and desire. At no point does
he interrogate why it is huge audiences, especially young white male
consumers, are so turned on by this music, by the misogyny and
sexism, by the brutality. Where is the anger and rage at females
expressed in this music coming from, the glorification of all acts of
violence? These are the difficult questions that Staples feels no need
to answer.
More than anything, gangsta rap celebrates the world of the material,
the dog-eat-dog world where you do what you gotta do to make it
even if it means fucking over folks and taking them out. In this world
view killing is necessary for survival. Significantly, the logic here is a
crude expression of the logic of white supremacist capitalist
patriarchy. In his new book Sexy Dressing Etc., privileged white male
law professor Duncan Kennedy gives what he calls “a set of general
characterizations of U.S. culture,” explaining that “it is individual
(cowboys), material (gangsters), and philistine.” This general
description of mainstream culture would not lead us to place gangsta
rap on the margins of what this nation is about but at the center.
Rather than seeing it as a subversion or disruption of the norm, we
would need to see it as an embodiment of the norm.
That viewpoint was graphically highlighted in the film Menace II
Society, a drama not only of young black males killing for sport, but
which included scenes where mass audiences voyeuristically
watched and in many cases enjoyed the kill. Significantly, at one
point in the film we see that the young black males have learned
their gangsta values from watching movies and television and shows
where white male gangsters are center stage. The importance of this
scene is how it undermines any notion of “essentialist” blackness
that would have viewers believe that the gangsterism these young
black males embraced emerged from some unique black cultural
experience.
When I interviewed rap artist Ice Cube for Spin magazine recently,
he talked about the importance of respecting black women, of
communication across gender. In our conversation, he spoke against
male violence against women, even as he lapsed into a justification
for antiwoman lyrics in rap by insisting on the madonna/whore split
where some females “carry” themselves in a manner that determines
how they will be treated. But when this interview came to press it
was sliced to ribbons. Once again it was a mass media set-up. Folks
(mostly white and male) had thought that if the hardcore feminist
talked with the hardened mack, sparks would fly; there would be a
knock-down, drag-out spectacle. When Brother Cube and myself
talked to each other with respect about the political, spiritual and
emotional self-determination of black people, it did not make good
copy. I do not know if his public relations people saw the piece in its
entirety and were worried that it would be too soft an image, but
clearly folks at the magazine did not get the darky spectacle they
were looking for.
After this conversation, and after talking with other rappers and folks
who listen to rap, it became clear that while black male sexism is real
and a serious problem in our communities, some of the more
misogynist stuffin black music was there to stir up controversy, to
appeal to audiences. Nowhere is this more evident than in the image
used with Snoop Doggy Dogg’s record Doggystyle. A black male
music and cultural critic called me from across the ocean to ask if I
had checked this image out, sharing that for one of the first times in
his music-buying life he felt he was seeing an image so offensive in
its sexism and misogyny he did not want to take it home. That image
—complete with doghouse, “Beware the Dog” sign, a naked black
female head in the doghouse, her naked butt sticking out—was
reproduced “uncritically” in the November 29, 1993 issue of Time
magazine. The positive music review of this album written by
Christopher John Farley titled “Gangsta Rap, Doggystyle” makes no
mention of sexism and misogyny, or any reference to the cover. If a
naked white female body had been inside the doghouse, presumably
waiting to be fucked from behind, I wonder if Time would have
reproduced an image of the cover along with their review. When I
see the pornographic cartoon that graces the cover of Doggystyle I
do not think simply about the sexism and misogyny of young black
men, I think about the sexist and misogynist politics of the powerful
white adult men and women (and folks of color) who helped produce
and market this album.
In her book Misogynies, Joan Smith shares her sense that while
most folks are willing to acknowledge unfair treatment of women,
discrimination on the basis of gender, they are usually reluctant to
admit that hatred of women is encouraged because it helps maintain
the structure of male dominance. Smith suggests, “Misogyny wears
many guises, reveals itself in different forms—which are dictated by
class, wealth, education, race, religion, and other factors, but its
chief characteristic is its pervasiveness.” This point reverberated in
my mind when I saw Jane Campion’s widely acclaimed film The
Piano, which I saw in the midst of the mass media’s focus on sexism
and misogyny in gangsta rap. I had been told by many friends in the
art world that this was “an incredible film, a truly compelling love
story.” Their responses were echoed by numerous positive reviews.
No one speaking about this film mentions misogyny and sexism or
white supremacist capitalist patriarchy.
The nineteenth-century world of the white invasion of New Zealand
is utterly romanticized in this film (complete with docile happy darkies
—Maori natives—who appear to have not a care in the world). And
when the film suggests they care about white colonizers digging up
the graves of their dead ancestors it is the sympathetic poor white
male who comes to the rescue. Just as the conquest of natives and
lands is glamorized in this film, so is the conquest of femininity,
personified by white womanhood, by the pale, speechless, corpse-
like Scotswoman Ada who journeys into this dark wilderness
because her father has arranged for her to marry the white colonizer
Stewart. Although mute, Ada expresses her artistic ability, the
intensity of her vision and feelings, through piano playing. This
passion attracts Baines, the illiterate white settler who wears the
facial tattoos of the Maori—an act of appropriation that makes him
(like the traditional figure of Tarzan) appear both dangerous and
romantic. He is Norman Mailer’s “white negro.” Baines seduces Ada
by promising to return the piano that Stewart has exchanged with
him for land, and the film leads us to believe that Ada’s passionate
piano playing has been merely a substitution for repressed eroticism.
When she learns to let herself go sexually she ceases to need the
piano. We watch the passionate climax of Baines’s seduction as she
willingly seeks him sexually. We watch her husband Stewart in the
role of voyeur, standing with his dog outside the cabin where they
fuck, voyeuristically consuming their pleasure. Rather than being
turned off by her love for Baines, it appears to excite Stewart’s
passion; he longs to possess her all the more. Unable to win her
back from Baines, he expresses his rage, rooted in misogyny and
sexism, by physically attacking her and chopping off her finger with
an ax. This act of male violence takes place with her young
daughter, Flora, as a witness. Though traumatized by the violence
she witnesses, she is still about to follow the white male patriarch’s
orders and take the bloody finger to Baines, along with the message
that each time he sees Ada she will suffer physical mutilation.
Violence against land, natives, and women in this film, unlike that of
gangsta rap, is portrayed uncritically, as though it is “natural”—the
inevitable climax of conflicting passions. The outcome of this
violence is all positive. Ultimately, the film suggests Stewart’s rage
was only an expression of irrational sexual jealousy, that he comes
to his senses and is able to see “reason.” In keeping with the male
exchange of women, he gives Ada and Flora to Baines. They leave
the wilderness. On the voyage over, Ada demands that her piano be
thrown overboard because it is “soiled,” tainted with horrible
memories. Surrendering it she lets go her longing to display passion
through artistic expression. A nuclear family now, Baines, Ada, and
Flora resettle and live happily ever after. Suddenly, patriarchal order
is restored. Ada becomes a modest wife, wearing a veil over her
mouth so that no one will see her lips struggling to speak words.
Flora has no memory of trauma and is a happy child turning
somersaults. Baines is in charge.
The Piano seduces and excites audiences with its uncritical portrayal
of sexism and misogyny. Reviewers and audiences alike seem to
assume that Campion’s gender, as well as her breaking of traditional
boundaries that inhibit the advancement of women in film, indicate
that her work expresses a feminist standpoint. And indeed she does
employ feminist tropes even as her work betrays feminist visions of
female actualization, celebrating and eroticizing male domination.
Smith’s discussion of misogyny emphasizes that woman-hating is
not solely the province of men: “We are all exposed to the prevailing
ideology of our culture, and some women learn early on that they
can prosper by aping the misogyny of men; these are the women
who win provisional favor by denigrating other women, by playing on
male prejudices, and by acting the ‘man’s woman’.” Since this is not
a documentary film that needs to remain faithful to the ethos of its
historical setting, why is it that Campion does not resolve Ada’s
conflicts by providing us with an imaginary landscape where a
woman can express passionate artistic commitment and find
fulfillment in a passionate relationship? This would be no more
farfetched than her cinematic portrayal of Ada’s miraculous
transformation from muteness into speech. Ultimately, Campion’s
The Piano advances the sexist assumption that heterosexual women
will give up artistic practice to find “true love.” That “positive”
surrender is encouraged by the “romantic” portrayal of sexism and
misogyny.
While I do not think that young black male rappers have been
rushing in droves to see The Piano, there is a bond between those
folks involved with high culture who celebrate and condone the ideas
and values upheld in this film and those who celebrate and condone
gangsta rap. Certainly, Kennedy’s description of the United States as
a “cowboy, gangster, philistine” culture would also accurately
describe the culture evoked in The Piano. Popular movies that are
seen by young black females—for example Indecent Proposal, Mad
Dog and Glory, True Romance, One False Move—all eroticize male
domination that expresses itself via the exchange of women as well
as the subjugation of other men through brutal violence.
To take gangsta rap to task for its sexism and misogyny while
accepting and perpetuating expressions of that ideology which
reflect bourgeois standards (no rawness, no vulgarity) is not to call
for a transformation of the culture of patriarchy. Ironically, many black
male ministers who are themselves sexist and misogynist are
leading the attacks against gangsta rap. Like the mainstream world
that supports white supremacist capitalist patriarchy, they are most
concerned with advancing the cause of censorship by calling
attention to the obscene portrayals of women. For them, rethinking
and challenging sexism both in the dominant culture and in black life
is not the issue.
Gangsta rap is part of the antifeminist backlash that is the rage right
now. When young black males labor in the plantations of misogyny
and sexism to produce gangsta rap, white supremacist capitalist
patriarchy approves the violence and materially rewards them. Far
from being an expression of their “manhood,” it is an expression of
their own subjugation and humiliation by more powerful, less visible
forces of patriarchal gangsterism. They give voice to the brutal, raw
anger and rage against women that it is taboo for “civilized” adult
men to speak. No wonder, then, that they have the task of tutoring
the young, teaching them to eroticize and enjoy the brutal
expressions of that rage (both language and acts) before they learn
to cloak it in middle-class decorum or Robert Bly-style reclaimings of
lost manhood. The tragedy for young black males is that they are so
easily duped by a vision of manhood that can only lead to their
destruction.
Feminist critiques of the sexism and misogyny in gangsta rap, and in
all aspects of popular culture, must continue to be bold and fierce.
Black females must not allow ourselves to be duped into supporting
shit that hurts us under the guise of standing beside our men. If
black men are betraying us through acts of male violence, we save
ourselves and the race by resisting. Yet our feminist critiques of
black male sexism fail as meaningful political interventions if they
seek to demonize black males, and do not recognize that our
revolutionary work is to transform white supremacist capitalist
patriarchy in the multiple areas of our lives where it is made
manifest, whether in gangsta rap, the black church, or in the Clinton
administration.
12
ICE CUBE CULTURE
A shared passion for speaking truth bell hooks and Ice Cube in
dialogue
At the end of Class, Paul Fussell’s playful book on the serious issue
of social status, there is a discussion of a category outside the
conventional structures entitled “The X Way Out.” Folks who exist in
category X, he reports, “earn X-personhood by a strenuous effort of
discovery in which curiosity and originality are indispensable.” They
want to escape class. Describing the kind of people who are Xs,
Fussell comments:
Privileged black folks who are pimping black culture for their own
opportunistic gain tend to focus on racism as though it is the great
equalizing factor. For example, when a materially successful black
person tells the story of how no cab will stop for the person because
of color, the speaker claims unity with the masses of black folks who
are daily assaulted by white supremacy. Yet this assertion of shared
victimhood obscures the fact that this racial assault is mediated by
the reality of class privilege. However hurt or even damaged the
individual may be by a failure to acquire a taxi immediately, that
individual is likely to be more allied with the class interests of
individuals who share similar status (including whites) than with the
needs of those black folks whom racist economic aggression render
destitute, who do not even have the luxury to consider taking a taxi.
The issue is, of course, audience. Since all black folks encounter
some form of racial discrimination or aggression every day, we do
not need stories like this to remind us that racism is widespread.
Nonblack folks, especially whites, most want to insist that class
power and material privilege free individual black folks from the
stereotypes associated with the black poor and, as a consequence,
from the pain of racial assault. They and colonized black folks who
live in denial are the audience that must be convinced that race
matters. Black bourgeois opportunists, who are a rising social class
both in the academy and in other spheres of cultural production, are
unwittingly creating a division where, “within class, race matters.”
This was made evident in the Newsweek cover story, “The Hidden
Rage of Successful Blacks.” Most of the black folks interviewed
seemed most angry that they are not treated as equals by whites
who share their class. There was less rage directed at the systemic
white supremacy that assaults the lives of all black folks, but in
particular those who are poor, destitute, or uneducated. It might help
convince mainstream society that racism and racist assault daily
inform interpersonal dynamics in this society if black individuals from
privileged classes would publicly acknowledge the ways we are hurt.
But such acknowledgements might only render invisible class
privilege, as well as the extent to which it can be effectively used to
mediate our daily lives so that we can avoid racist assault in ways
that materially disadvantaged individuals cannot. Those black
individuals, myself included, who work and/or live in predominantly
white settings, where liberalism structures social decorum, do not
confront fierce, unmediated, white racist assault. This lived
experience has had the potentially dangerous impact of creating in
some of us a mind set that denies the impact of white supremacy, its
assaultive nature. It is not surprising that black folks in these settings
are more positive about racial integration, cultural mixing, and border
crossing than folks who live in the midst of intense racial apartheid.
There’s also a crying desire for representation. That’s what you see
when audiences refuse to allow any critique of artists. I’ve witnessed
this personally. At one forum, Spike Lee was asked several
questions by a number of people, myself included, about his
representations in his movies. The audience went wild with hysterical
outbursts to “shut up,” “sit down,” “make your own goddam movies,”
“who are you, this man is doing the best he can, and he is giving us
dignified images, he is doing positive work, why should you be
criticizing him?” I admit that there is often trashing just for the sake of
trashing. But even when it is clear that the critique is trying to
empower and trying to heal certain wounds within our communities,
there is not any space within our culture to constructively critique.
There is an effort simply to shut people up in order to reify these
gods, if you will, who have delivered some image of us which seems
to affirm our existence in this world. As if they make up for the lack,
but, in fact they don’t. They can become part of the hegemony.
This is certainly true of Spike Lee. Despite the hype that continues to
depict him as an outsider in the white movie industry, someone who
is constantly struggling to produce work against the wishes and
desires of a white establishment, Lee is an insider. His insider
position was made most evident when he was able to use his power
to compel Warner to choose him over white director Norman Jewison
to make the film. In the business to make money, Warner was
probably not moved by Spike’s narrow identity politics (his insistence
that having a white man directing Malcolm X would be “wrong with a
capital w!”), but rather by the recognition that his presence as a
director would likely draw the biggest crossover audience and thus
insure that the movie would be a financial success.
The fact is there’s a gap between what blacks would like to see in
movies about themselves and what whites in Hollywood are willing to
produce. Instead of serious men and women encountering
consequential dilemmas, we’re almost always minstrels, more than a
little ridiculous; we dance and sing without continuity, as if on the end
of a string.
The first half of the film constantly moves back and forth from neo-
minstrel spectacle to tragic scenes. Yet the predominance of
spectacle, of the coon show, whether or not an accurate portrayal of
this phase of Malcolm’s life, undermines the pathos that the tragic
scenes (flashbacks of childhood incidents of racial oppression and
discrimination) should, but do not, evoke. At the same time, by
emphasizing Malcolm as street hustler, Spike Lee can highlight
Malcolm’s romantic and sexual involvement with the white woman
Sophia, thereby exploiting this culture’s voyeuristic obsession with
interracial sex. It must be remembered that critics of Lee’s project,
like Baraka, were concerned that this would be the central focus so
as to entertain white audiences; the progression of the film indicates
the astuteness of this earlier insight about the direction Lee would
take. While his relationship with Sophia was clearly important to
Malcolm for many years, it is portrayed with the same shallowness of
vision that characterizes Lee’s vision of interracial romance between
black men and white women in Jungle Fever. Unwilling and possibly
unable to imagine that any bond between a white woman and a
black man could be based on ties other than pathological ones, Lee
portrays Malcolm’s desire for Sophia as rooted solely in racial
competition between white and black men. Yet Malcolm continued to
feel affectional bonds for her even as he acquired a radical critique
of race, racism, and sexuality.
The Malcolm we see at the end of Spike Lee’s film is tragically alone,
with only a few followers, suicidal, maybe even losing his mind. The
didacticism of this image suggests only that it is foolhardy and naive
to think that there can be meaningful political revolution—that truth
and justice will prevail. In no way subversive, Malcolm X reinscribes
the black image within a colonizing framework.
Cultural critics rarely talk about the poor. Most of us use words such
as “underclass” or “economically disenfranchised” when we speak
about being poor. Poverty has not become one of the new hot topics
of radical discourse. When contemporary Left intellectuals talk about
capitalism, few if any attempts are made to relate that discourse to
the reality of being poor in America. In his collection of essays
Prophetic Thought in Postmodern Times, black philosopher Cornel
West includes a piece entitled “The Black Underclass and Black
Philosophers” wherein he suggests that black intellectuals within the
“professional-managerial class in U.S. advanced capitalist society”
must “engage in a kind of critical self-inventory, a historical situating
and positioning of ourselves as persons who reflect on the situation
of those more disadvantaged than us even though we may have
relatives and friends in the black underclass.” West does not speak
of poverty or being poor in his essay. And I can remember once in
conversation with him referring to my having come from a “poor”
background; he corrected me and stated that my family was “working
class.” I told him that technically we were working class, because my
father worked as a janitor at the post office, however the fact that
there were seven children in our family meant that we often faced
economic hardship in ways that made us children at least think of
ourselves as poor. Indeed, in the segregated world of our small
Kentucky town, we were all raised to think in terms of the haves and
the have-nots, rather than in terms of class. We acknowledged the
existence of four groups: the poor, who were destitute; the working
folks, who were poor because they made just enough to make ends
meet; those who worked and had extra money; and the rich. Even
though our family was among the working folks, the economic
struggle to make ends meet for such a large family always gave us a
sense that there was not enough money to take care of the basics.
In our house, water was a luxury and using too much could be a
cause for punishment. We never talked about being poor. As
children we knew we were not supposed to see ourselves as poor
but we felt poor.
Television shows and films bring the message home that no one can
truly feel good about themselves if they are poor. In television
sitcoms the working poor are shown to have a healthy measure of
self-contempt; they dish it out to one another with a wit and humor
that we can all enjoy, irrespective of our class. Yet it is clear that
humor masks the longing to change their lot, the desire to “move on
up” expressed in the theme song of the sitcom The Jeffersons. Films
which portray the rags-to-riches tale continue to have major box-
office appeal. Most contemporary films portraying black folks—
Harlem Nights, Boomerang, Menace II Society, to name only a few—
have as their primary theme the lust of the poor for material plenty
and their willingness to do anything to satisfy that lust. Pretty Woman
is a perfect example of a film that made huge sums of money
portraying the poor in this light. Consumed and enjoyed by
audiences of all races and classes, it highlights the drama of the
benevolent, ruling-class person (in this case a white man, played by
Richard Gere) willingly sharing his resources with a poor white
prostitute (played by Julia Roberts). Indeed, many films and
television shows portray the ruling class as generous, eager to
share, as unattached to their wealth in their interactions with folks
who are not materially privileged. These images contrast with the
opportunistic avaricious longings of the poor.
Towards the end of the seventies, black folks were far less interested
in calling attention to beauty standards. No one interrogated radical
activists who begin to straighten their hair. Heterosexual black male
leaders openly chose their partners and spouses using the
standards of the color-caste system. Even during the most militant
stages of black power movement, they had never really stopped
allowing racist notions of beauty to define female desirability, yet
they preached a message of self-love and an end to internalized
racism. This hypocrisy also played a major role in creating a
framework where color-caste systems could once again become the
accepted norm.
Color-caste hierarchies embrace both the issue of skin color and hair
texture. Since lighter-skinned black people are most often genetically
connected to intergenerational pairings of both white and black
people, they tend to look more like whites. Females who were the
offspring of generations of interracial mixing were more likely to have
long, straight hair. The exploitative and oppressive nature of color-
caste systems in white supremacist society has always had a
gendered component. A mixture of racist and sexist thinking informs
the way color-caste hierarchies detrimentally affect the lives of black
females differently from black males. Light skin and long, straight
hair continue to be traits that define a female as beautiful and
desirable in the racist white imagination and in the colonized black
mind set. Darker-skinned black females work to develop positive
self-esteem in a society that continually devalues their image. To this
day, the images of black female bitchiness, evil temper, and
treachery continue to be marked by darker skin. This is the
stereotype called “Sapphire”; no light skin occupies this devalued
position. We see these images continually in the mass media
whether they be presented to us in television sitcoms (such as the
popular show Martin), on cop shows, (the criminal black woman is
usually dark), and in movies made by black and white directors alike.
Spike Lee graphically portrayed the conflict of skin color in his film
School Daze, not via male characters but by staging a dramatic fight
between light-skinned women and their darker counterparts. Merely
exploiting the issue, the film is neither critically subversive nor
oppositional. And in many theaters black audiences loudly
expressed their continued investment in color-caste hierarchies by
“dissing” darker-skinned female characters.
These are troubled times for black women and men. Gender
conflicts abound, as do profound misunderstandings about the
nature of sex roles. In black popular culture, black females are often
blamed for the problems black males face. The institutionalization of
black male patriarchy is often presented as the answer to our
problems. Not surprisingly, a culture icon like Malcolm X, who
continues to be seen by many black folks as the embodiment of
quintessential manliness, remains a powerful role model for the
construction of black male identity. Hence, it is crucial that we
understand the complexity of his thinking about gender.
Malcolm often blamed black women for many of the problems black
men faced, and it took years for him to begin a critical interrogation
of that kind of misogynist, sexist thinking. It seems ironic that Bruce
Perry’s recent biographical study, Malcolm: A Life of the Man Who
Changed Black America, which offers much needed and previously
unavailable information and attempts to “read” Malcolm’s life critically
using a psychological approach, holds the women in Malcolm’s life
accountable for any behavior that could be deemed dysfunctional.
Though Perry appears to be appalled by the depths of Malcolm’s
sexism and misogyny at various periods of his life, he does not
attempt to relate this thinking to the institution of patriarchy, to ways
of thinking about gender that abound in a patriarchal culture, nor
does he choose to emphasize the progressive changes in Malcolm’s
thinking about gender towards the end of his life. To have focused on
these changes, Perry would have had to rethink a major premise of
his book, that the “dominating” or abandoning black women in
Malcolm’s life created in him a monstrous masculinity, one that so
emotionally crippled him that he was unable to recover himself and
was, as a consequence, abusive and controlling towards others.
While we black men may understand the reasons for Martin’s and
Malcolm’s or our own sexism, we must not excuse it or justify it, as if
sexism was not and is not today a serious matter in the African
American community. As we blacks will not permit whites to offer
plausible excuses for racism, so we cannot excuse our sexism.
Sexism like racism is freedom’s opposite, and we must uncover its
evil manifestations so we can destroy it.
Few black men have taken up Cone’s challenge. And the teachings
of Malcolm X are often evoked by black men today to justify their
sexism and the continued black domination of black females.
The truth is, despite later changes in his thinking about gender
issues, Malcolm’s earlier public lectures advocating sexism have had
a much more powerful impact on black consciousness than the
comments he made during speeches and interviews towards the end
of his life which showed a progressive evolution in his thinking on
sex roles. This makes it all the more crucial that all assessments of
Malcolm’s contribution to black liberation struggle emphasize this
change, not attempting in any way to minimize the impact of his
sexist thought but rather to create a critical climate where these
changes are considered and respected, where they can have a
positive influence on those black folks seeking to be more politically
progressive. In his autobiography, Malcolm declared his ongoing
personal commitment to change: “My whole life has been a
chronology of changes—I have always kept an open mind, which is
necessary to the flexibility that must go hand in hand with every
intelligent search for truth.” Given progressive changes in Malcolm’s
thinking about gender prior to his death, it does not seem in any way
incongruous to see him as someone who would have become an
advocate for gender equality. To suggest, as he did in the speeches
of his last year, that black women should play an equal role in the
struggle for black liberation, constitutes an implicit challenge to sexist
thinking. Had he lived, Malcolm might have explicitly challenged
sexist thinking in as adamant a manner as he had advocated it.
Cone makes this insightful observation in his discussion of Malcolm’s
sexism:
This seems ironic since Shabazz’s refusal to talk with Perry implies
that she does not see him as the spokesperson to interpret
Malcolm’s life and work. But like Perry, she does not fully interrogate
the question of gender from a nonsexist perspective. If Shabazz
cannot interrogate her own sexist thinking it is understandable that
she may be unable to interrogate publicly Malcolm’s gendered habits
of being. She may not wish to discuss openly either his sexism or the
fact that his changed attitudes were possibly not reflected in his
personal life. Similarly, it may be difficult for Malcolm’s daughters to
be publicly critical, or self-reflexive about his attitudes towards
females, his thinking on gender, because they may only remember
that period when he was most committed to a benevolent patriarchal
stance and was the kind of father who was rarely home. We can only
hope that as time goes on, as black people collectively fully accept
that we can know the negative aspects of our cultural icons without
losing profound respect for their personal and political contributions,
all who knew Malcolm X intimately will feel that they can speak more
openly and honestly about him. Shabazz may then also be able to
be more openly critical of black male domination.
Despite Malcolm’s sexism, he helped Shabazz to become a more
politically aware person. Interviewed in the February 1990 issue of
Emerge Magazine, which focused on “Remembering Malcolm X 25
Years Later,” Betty Shabazz honestly states that she was politicized
through her relationship to Malcolm, the man.
It was again in the company of Fannie Lou Hamer, shortly before his
death, that Malcolm made one of his most powerful declarations on
the issue of gender. Calling Hamer “one of this country’s foremost
freedom fighters” at the Audubon Ballroom, Malcolm declared: “You
don’t have to be a man to fight for freedom. All you have to do is be
an intelligent human being. And automatically, your intelligence
makes you want freedom so badly that you’ll do anything, by any
means necessary, to get that freedom.” Here Malcolm was clearly
rethinking and challenging his own and others’ privileging of the
black male’s role in resistance struggle. Another factor that caused
Malcolm to rethink his attitudes towards women was the tremendous
support black females extended to him after his break with the
Nation, as well as his growing awareness that it was black women
who were often the hardworking core of many black organizations,
both radical and conservative.
This is a fine example of the way Perry attempts to stack the deck
psychologically against Malcolm, using his sexist thinking and
actions to define the man. Perry refuses to acknowledge those
profound changes in Malcolm’s thinking about gender, even his
rethinking his relationships to family, because these changes disrupt
Perry’s critique. They suggest that while it may be accurate to say
that Malcolm’s sexist thinking about women in general and black
women in particular was reinforced by his relationships to his mother
and older sister, it is equally accurate to say that as he began to
replace these dysfunctional kinship bonds with new ties with women,
he began a kind of personal self-recovery that enabled him to see
women differently. Interaction with black women such as Fannie Lou
Hamer and Shirley Graham Dubois, intelligent powerful leaders,
made intense impressions on Malcolm X. Given that many of his
misogynist viewpoints on women continually referred to the female
body, to female sexuality, it’s important to note that in an attempt to
redress, Malcolm’s later speeches emphasized black female
intellectualism and intelligence. Hence, he could assert: “I am proud
of the contribution women have made. I’m for giving them all the
leeway possible. They’ve made a greater contribution than many
men.”
From the onset when I began to use the phrase “white supremacist
capitalist patriarchy” to describe my understanding of the “new world
order,” folks reacted. I witnessed the myriad ways this phrase
disturbed, angered, and provoked. The response reinforced my
awareness that it is very difficult for most Americans, irrespective of
race, class, gender, sexual preference or political allegiance, to really
accept that this society is white supremacist. Many white feminists
were using the phrase “capitalist patriarchy” without questioning its
appropriateness. Evidently it was easier for folks to see truth in
referring to the economic system as capitalist and the
institutionalized system of male gender domination as patriarchal
than for them to consider the way white supremacy as a foundational
ideology continually informs and shapes the direction of these two
systems of domination. The nation’s collective refusal to
acknowledge institutionalized white supremacy is given deep and
profound expression in the contemporary zeal to reclaim the myth of
Christopher Columbus as patriotic icon.
Despite all the contemporary fuss, I do not believe that masses of
Americans spend much time thinking about Columbus. Or at least
we didn’t until now. Embedded in the nation’s insistence that its
citizens celebrate Columbus’s “discovery” of America is a hidden
challenge, a call for the patriotic among us to reaffirm a national
commitment to imperialism and white supremacy. This is why many
of us feel it is politically necessary for all Americans who believe in a
democratic vision of the “just and free society,” one that precludes all
support of imperialism and white supremacy, to “contest” this
romanticization of Columbus, imperialism, capitalism, white
supremacy, and patriarchy.
The idea that it was natural for people who were different to meet
and struggle for power merged with the idea that it was natural for
whites to travel around the world civilizing non-whites. Despite
progressive interventions in education that call for a rethinking of the
way history is taught and culturally remembered, there is still little
focus on the presence of Africans in the “New World” before
Columbus. As long as this fact of history is ignored, it is possible to
name Columbus as an imperialist, a colonizer, while still holding on
to the assumption that the will to conquer is innate, natural, and that
it is ludicrous to imagine that people who are different nationally,
culturally, could meet each other and not have conflict be the major
point of connection. The assumption that domination is not only
natural but central to the civilizing process is deeply rooted in our
cultural mind-set. As a nation we have made little transformative
progress to eradicate sexism and racism precisely because most
citizens of the United States believe in their heart of hearts that it is
natural for a group or an individual to dominate over others. Most
folks do not believe that it is wrong to dominate, oppress, and exploit
other people. Even though marginalized groups have greater access
to civil rights in this society than in many societies in the world, our
exercise of these rights has done little to change the overall cultural
assumption that domination is essential to the progress of
civilization, to the making of social order.
Clearly the Africans and Native peoples who greeted them on these
shores offered each other a way of meeting across difference that
highlighted the notion of sharing resources, of exploring differences
and discovering similarities. And even though there may not remain
a boundless number of documents that would affirm these bonds, we
must call attention to them if we would dispel the cultural assumption
that domination is natural.
They are very simple and honest and exceedingly liberal with all they
have, none of them refusing anything he may possess when he is
asked. They exhibit great love toward all others in preference to
themselves.
The Columbus legacy is clearly one that silences and eradicates the
voices—the lives—of women of color. In part to repair the damage of
this history, the way it has been taught to us, the way it has shaped
how we live our lives, we must seize this moment of historical
remembering to challenge patriarchy. No amount of progressive
rethinking of history makes me want to call to mind the fate of native
women during the imperialist conquest of the Americas. Or the
extent to which their fate determined the destiny of enslaved African
Americans. There is only sorrow to be found in evoking the intensity
of violence and brutalization that was part of the Western
colonization of the minds and bodies of native women and men. We
can, however, call that legacy to mind in a spirit of collective
mourning, making our grief a catalyst for resistance. Naming our
grief empowers it and us. Chickasaw writer Linda Hogan [in her
essay “Columbus Debate” from the October 1992 issue of Elle]
reminds us of the depth of this sorrow.
The sixties Black Power movement shifted away from that love ethic.
The emphasis was now more on power. And it is not surprising that
the sexism that had always undermined the black liberation struggle
intensified, that a misogynist approach to women became central as
the equation of freedom with patriarchal manhood became a norm
among black political leaders, almost all of whom were male. Indeed,
the new militancy of masculinist black power equated love with
weakness, announcing that the quintessential expression of freedom
would be the willingness to coerce, do violence, terrorize, indeed
utilize the weapons of domination. This was the crudest embodiment
of Malcolm X’s bold credo “by any means necessary.”
Peck offers a working definition for love that is useful for those of us
who would like to make a love ethic the core of all human interaction.
He defines love as “the will to extend one’s self for the purpose of
nurturing one’s own or another’s spiritual growth.” Commenting on
prevailing cultural attitudes about love, Peck writes:
In the past, most folks both learned about and tended the needs of
the spirit in the context of religious experience. The
institutionalization and commercialization of the church has
undermined the power of religious community to transform souls, to
intervene politically. Commenting on the collective sense of spiritual
loss in modern society, Cornel West asserts:
Often when Cornel West and I speak with large groups of black folks
about the impoverishment of spirit in black life, the lovelessness,
sharing that we can collectively recover ourselves in love, the
response is overwhelming. Folks want to know how to begin the
practice of loving. For me that is where education for critical
consciousness has to enter. When I look at my life, searching it for a
blueprint that aided me in the process of decolonization, of personal
and political self-recovery, I know that it was learning the truth about
how systems of domination operate that helped, learning to look both
inward and outward with a critical eye. Awareness is central to the
process of love as the practice of freedom. Whenever those of us
who are members of exploited and oppressed groups dare to
critically interrogate our locations, the identities and allegiances that
inform how we live our lives, we begin the process of decolonization.
If we discover in ourselves self-hatred, low self-esteem, or
internalized white supremacist thinking and we face it, we can begin
to heal. Acknowledging the truth of our reality, both individual and
collective, is a necessary stage for personal and political growth.
This is usually the most painful stage in the process of learning to
love—the one many of us seek to avoid. Again, once we choose
love, we instinctively possess the inner resources to confront that
pain. Moving through the pain to the other side we find the joy, the
freedom of spirit that a love ethic brings.
You have to have compassion because it gives you the juice, the
power, the passion to move. When you open to the pain of the world
you move, you act. But that weapon is not enough. It can burn you
out, so you need the other—you need insight into the radical
interdependence of all phenomena. With that wisdom you know that
it is not a battle between good guys and bad guys, but that the line
between good and evil runs through the landscape of every human
heart. With insight into our profound interrelatedness, you know that
actions undertaken with pure intent have repercussions throughout
the web of life, beyond what you can measure or discern.
addiction 271–2
Almodóvar, Pedro 59
Amadeus (film) 56
anti-Semitism 80
Artforum 29
Baker, Josephine 24
Basquiat, Gerard 38
Bassett, Angela 45
Bernhard, Sandra 56
Black Looks: Race and Representation (hooks) 43, 45, 73, 78, 89,
231, 235, 281
Black Studies 3, 4, 7
Bloom, Harold 97
Bomb magazine 64
Bordo, Susan 14
Bosnia 50
Burnett, Charles 58
Canadian government 73
Christianity 268–9
confidence 78–9
cross-dressing 246–7
Davidson, Jaye 65
death 244–5
degradation, sex as 94
denial 288
destiny 268
drugs 272–3
Dubois, Shirley Graham 228
Ebony 64
eco-feminism 200
Edward, Robert 31
Elle 240
Europe 9–10, 67
femininity 21
freedom 289–98
gayness 17–18, 21
Giroux, Henry 4
Griffin, Susan 26
hair: loss 46, 262; natural hairstyle 205, 207; straight 51, 209;
weaves 210; wigs 97, 206, 210
Harper’s 191
hip-hop 190
homoeroticism 15–16
I, Tina (Turner) 45
Ice-T 150
identity politics 70
incest 249–50
integration 205
Interview 29
IRA 70
Jackson, Janet 45
jazz 35–6
Ju Dou (film) 58
Juno, Andrea 49
Laing, R.D. 55
Lancaster, Burt 58
Lawrence, Jacob 2, 3
Maasai art 32
McLaren, Peter 4
Malcolm X: and color caste 204; family of 186, 204, 221–7; and
gender 214–30; as icon 189, 190, 214, 221; image 148, 180, 188–9;
and King 291; Lee film 149, 181–92; marketing of 180; Perry
biography 75, 215–30; on struggle 8, 206; on warmth 152
Maori 139–40
masculinity 130
menopause 262
Minimalism 276
Muslims 155
Nazism 22
Nolte, Nick 57
On Our Backs 14
Orth, Maureen 12
Palac, Lisa 94
Parton, Dolly 97
passion 44, 60
Penizzi, Francesco 37
Pinkie (film) 63
Plath, Sylvia 55
Playboy 14
Players 14
poverty 193–201
pseudonyms 107
quilts 285–6
Rainmaker (film) 58
rape: colonization 237–8; date rape 109, 121; rap and 129, 136; rape
culture 128–33; responses to 109, 251; statistics 55
red color 2
Ricard, René 38
RuPaul 97
Sayles, John 58
self-defense 152
Serreau, Coline 61
sex-radical practice 19
sexism: and black family 228; and black liberation struggle 291; as
cultural norm 135–6; feminist commitment to end 127; relation to
racism 7, 21–2
Sexton, Anne 55
sexuality: and feminism 85–95; as liberatory 91, 251; and power 60;
and rape 133
socialism 173
Storr, Robert 28
storytelling 246
Streisand, Barbra 57
“style” 154
Supreme Court 77
technology 268–9
telephone 271
Tentler, Kate 9
Treut, Monika 54
2 Live Crew 74
Visions 44
voudoun 41
Weiner, Lawrence 54
wellness 288
Whitaker, Forest 68
“White” (Dyer) 21
Yale University 3
Yearning: Race, Gender and Cultural Politics (hooks) 246, 255, 276
Yo-Yo 162
Z magazine 248