butler 2012

TDR: Special Consortium Issue: Precarity and Performance, 56.4 (Winter 2012)

And who can afford to live out a life in which one’s labor is disposable and the worth of one’s knowledge unrecognizable by prevailing market standards? The result is surely rage. But perhaps we can ask more precisely, how to make sense of bodies who assemble on the street, or
who occupy buildings, or who find themselves gathering in public squares or along the routes that cross city centers?

In some ways, the question is too large, since there are all kinds of assemblies: the revolutionary assemblies in Tunisia and Egypt, the demonstrations against educational cuts and the emerging hegemony of neoliberalism in higher education that we have seen in Athens, Rome, London, Wisconsin, and Berkeley, to name but a few. And then there are the demonstrations that are without immediate demands, such as Occupy Wall Street.

Then, of course, there are the riots in the UK, which are also without explicit demands but have a political significance that cannot be underestimated when we consider the extent of poverty and unemployment among those who were looting.

When people take to the streets together, they form something of a body politic, and even if that body politic does not speak in a single voice — even when it does not speak at all or make any claims — it still forms, asserting its presence as a plural and obdurate bodily life.

What, then, is the political significance of assembling as bodies, stopping traffic or claiming attention, or moving not as stray and separated individuals, but as a social movement of some kind?

This assembling of bodies does not have to be organized from on high (the Leninist presumption), nor does it need to have a single message (the logocentric conceit) to exercise a certain performative force in the public domain. The “we are here” that translates that collective bodily presence might be re-read as “we are still here,” meaning: “we have not yet been disposed of.”

Such bodies are precarious and persistent, which is why I think we have always to link precarity with forms of social and political agency where that is possible. When the bodies of those deemed “disposable” assemble in public view, they are saying, “We have not slipped quietly into the shadows of public life; we have not become the glaring absence that structures your public life.”

In a way, the collective assembling of bodies is an exercise of the popular will, and a way of asserting, in bodily form, one of the most basic presuppositions of democracy, namely, that political and public institutions are bound to represent the people, and to do so in ways that establish equality as a presupposition of social and political existence.

So when those institutions become structured in such a way that certain populations become disposable, are interpellated as disposable, deprived of a future, of education, of stable and fulfilling work, of even knowing what space one can call a home, then surely the assemblies fulfill another function, not only the expression of justifiable rage, but the assertion in their very social organization, of principles of equality in the midst of precarity.

Bodies on the street are precarious — they are exposed to police force, and sometimes endure physical suffering as a result. But those bodies are also obdurate and persisting, insisting on their continuing and collective “thereness” and, in these recent formations, organizing themselves without hierarchy, and so exemplifying the principles of equal treatment that they are demanding of public institutions.

In this way, those bodies enact the message, performatively, even when they sleep in public, or when they organize collective methods for cleaning the grounds they occupy, as happened in Tahrir and on Wall Street. If there is a “we” who assembles there, at that precise space and time, there is also a “we” that forms across the media, and that calls for the demonstrations and broadcasts its events.

Some set of global connections is being articulated, a different sense of the global from the “globalized market.” And some set of values is being enacted in the form of a collective resistance: a defense of our collective precarity and persistence in the making of equality and the many-voiced and unvoiced ways of refusing to become disposable.

I think it may be important to keep active the relationship between the various meanings of the precarious that both Isabell and Jasbir have laid out: (1) precariousness, a function of our social vulnerability and exposure that is always given some political form, and precarity as differentially distributed, and so one important dimension of the unequal distribution of conditions required for continued life;

but also (2) precaritization as an ongoing process, so that we do not reduce the power of precarious to single acts or single events. Precaritization allows us to think about the slow death that happens to targeted or neglected populations over time and space. And it is surely a form of power without a subject, which is to say that there is no one center that propels its direction and destruction.

If we only stayed with “precaritization,” I am not sure that we could account for the structure of feeling that Lauren has brought up. And if we decided to rally under the name of “the precarious” we might be making a social and political condition into an identity, and so cloaking some way that that form of power actually works.

So maybe precarious is what we feel, or would rather not feel, and its analysis has to be linked to the impetus to become impermeable, as so often happens within zones of military nationalism and rhetorics of security and self-defense.

But it seems also important to call “precarious” the bonds that support life, those that should be structured by the condition of mutual need and exposure that should bring us to forms of political organization that sustain living beings on terms of equality. It is not just that a single person is precarious by virtue of being a body in the world.

Although that is surely true, since accidents happen and some of us are then snuffed out or injured irreversibly. What seems more important than that form of existential individualism is the idea that a “bond” is flawed or frayed, or that it is lost or irrecoverable.

And we see this very prominently when, for instance, Tea Party politicians revel in the idea that those individuals who have failed to “take responsibility” for their own health care may well face death and disease as a result.

In other words, at such moments, a social bond has been cut or destroyed in a way that seeks to deny a shared precariousness and the very particular ethos and politics that ideally should follow from that — one that underscores global interdependence and objects to the radically unequal distribution of precarity (and grievability).

So I want to caution against an existential reading and insist that what is at stake is a way of rethinking social relationality. We can make the broad existential claim, namely, that everyone is precarious, and this follows from our social existence as bodily beings who depend upon one another for shelter and sustenance and who, therefore, are at risk of statelessness, homelessness, and destitution under unjust and unequal political conditions.

As much as I am making such a claim, I am also making another, namely, that our precarity is to a large extent dependent upon the organization of economic and social relationships, the presence or absence of sustaining infrastructures and social and political institutions.

In this sense, precarity is indissociable from that dimension of politics that addresses the organization and protection of bodily needs. Precarity exposes our sociality, the fragile and necessary dimensions of our interdependency.

Whether explicitly stated or not, every political effort to manage populations involves a tactical distribution of precarity, more often than not articulated through an unequal distribution of precarity, one that depends upon dominant norms regarding whose life is grievable and worth protecting, and whose life is ungrievable, or marginally or episodically grievable — a life that is, in that sense, already lost in part or in whole, and thus less worthy of protection and sustenance.

In my own view, then, we have to start from this shared condition of precarity (not as existential fact, but as a social condition of political life) in order to refute those normative operations, pervasively racist, that decide in advance who counts as human and who does not.

My point is not to rehabilitate humanism, but rather to struggle for a conception of ethical obligation that is grounded in precarity.

No one escapes the precarious dimension of social life — it is, we might say, our common non-foundation. Nothing “founds” us outside of a struggle to establish bonds that sustain us.

I thought to take up this question of the human since references to precarity sometimes rely on ideals of humanization and sometimes actually decenter the human itself. It is always possible to say that the affective register where precarity dwells is something like dehumanization.

And yet, we know that such a word relies on a human/animal distinction that cannot and should not be sustained. Indeed, if we call for humanization and struggle against “bestialization” then we affirm that the bestial is separate from and subordinate to the human, something that clearly breaks our broader commitments to rethinking the networks of life.

On the one hand, I want to be able to say that the “human” operates differentially, as Fanon clearly thought it did ([1952] 2008; [1961] 2005), such that some are humanized and others are not, and that this inequality must be opposed. But the critical task is to find a way to oppose that inequality without embracing anthropocentrism. So we have to rethink the human in light of precarity, showing that there is no human without those networks of life within which human life is but one sort of life.

Otherwise, we end up breaking off the human from all of its sustaining conditions (and in that way become complicit with the process of precaritization itself ). So the point is not to develop a conception of the human that would include every possible person first because such conceptions come to operate as exclusionary norms, and they are based on this breaking off of the human from its own material need, and the broader fields of life in which that need is implicated.

To think critically, usefully, about how the norm of the human is constructed and maintained requires that we take up a position outside of its terms, not as the nonhuman or even the anti-human, but rather precisely through thinking forms of sociality and interdependence, no matter how difficult, that are irreducible to uniquely human forms of life and so cannot be adequately addressed by any definition of human nature or the human individual. To speak about what is living in human life is already to admit that human ways of living are bound up with nonhuman modes of life.

Indeed, the connection with nonhuman life is indispensable to what we call human life. In Hegelian terms, if the human cannot be the human without the inhuman, then the inhuman is not only essential to the human, but is therefore the essence of the human. The point is not to simply invert the relations, but rather to gather and hold this merely apparent paradox together in a new thought of “human life” in which its component parts, “human” and “life,” never fully coincide with one another. In other words, if we have to hold onto this term “human life” in order to describe and oppose those situations in which “human life” is jeopardized, it will have to be done in such a way that the very conjunction — human life — will on occasion seek to hold together two terms that repel one another, or that work in divergent directions.

Human life is never the entirety of life, and life can never fully define the human — so whatever we might want to call human life will inevitably consist of a negotiation with this tension. Perhaps the human is the name we give to this very negotiation.

What seems to follow is this: while it is important to ask, Whose life qualifies as a human life?, we have also to ask the inverse question: What of human life is inevitably nonhuman?

If there is a human life that does not qualify as human, that has to be marked and opposed, then the question becomes: Through what modes of sociality is that opposition articulated?

And how do those modes of oppositional sociality redefine and resituate the human in light of animal and organic networks of life? There has to be a way to find and forge a set of bonds that can produce alliances over and against this grid of power that differentially allocates recognizability and uses the “human” as a term through which to institute inequality and unrecognizability.

The beginning of such alliances can be found in ethical formulations such as these: even if my life is not destroyed in war, something of my life is destroyed in war when other lives are destroyed in war, and when living processes and organisms are also destroyed in war. Since the existence of other lives, understood as any mode of life that exceeds me, is a condition of who I am, my life can make no exclusive claim on life (“I am not the only living thing”). At the same time, my own life is not every other life, and cannot be (“My life is not the same as other lives”).

In other words, to be alive is already to be connected with, dependent upon, what is living not only before and beyond myself, but before and beyond my humanness. No self and no human can live without this connection to a biological network of life that exceeds and includes the domain of the human animal.

This is why in opposing war, for example, one not only opposes the destruction of other human lives, but also the poisoning of the environment and the assault on living beings and a living world.

Ž critique of Butler October 2010

Žižek Penn Humanities Forum 13 Oct. 2010
pure surface, frozen image, positive ethical utopia of eternity, this image is real and at the same time virtual. Plato has to corected, a Platonic ideal is not deeper, just an ethical act when it occurs, this is eternity, this is the Real. The Real as virtual.

I am against the notion of Otherness Universal solidarity of struggle. India I had a wonderful time. I was in a taxi with my friend and the driver asked in his language to Ž’s friend … dirty joke as entry exchange of obscenity as moment of solidarity, we are not politically correct b.s., to have authenticate relation to other you need a surplus enjoyment, and then you can go on to talk seriously.   I don’t understand my culture, I don’t understand yours, ditto for you, but we have a common universality of struggle.  we are eternal.  this is a sublime moment.

Real as virtual
flesh, blood veins, repuslive body of decay, we take recourse in decaying body in order to avoid fascination of the Real.
real that emerges in the guise of an illusory spectacle, this is what we deny when we cut up chickens on stage, directly address the audience etc.
There is nothing transgressive talking about veins, shit underneath, aging bodies, gas, there is nothing sublime going on here.
Ethical Experience and critique of Judith Butler
This dimension of eternity is necessary to supply the big motive of pomo ethics, the precarious fragility of human being
caught in decentred representations, this precarious state of subjectivity which for Butler and Levinas accounts for zero level of all ethics.
The others face makes an unconditional demand on me. The encounter with the other which opens up the space for discourse, the Real of a violent encounter which throws me off my existence as a simple human animal.
Crux of the difference between Žižek and Butler
Desire is desire of the other.
dimension of ethical in psychoanalytic experience.
In my unconditional responsibility, I assume supremacy over the other (acts of charity, bombard us with images of starving children).  Butler explains which faces are worthy of grief and which are not, the pictures dying of napalm, helped end Vietnam war.  But Ž says images of sick and starving children, fragility of other staring back at you has the obverse, the moment the other doesn’t want to play this role, we all love this weak other, like Starbucks ads say we can save by buying a capuccino, but the minute they the other organize, they become terrorists.  Who cares about computers when kids are starving in Africa says Bill Gates.  This is an effort at depoliticization. Forget about politics and ideology, and get together, business and charity and don’t think.
Starbucks is today the example of Levinasian ethical paradigm
This vulnerable precarious other
Žižek goes into the animal that I am. Another gaze excluded by Levinas, the gaze of a wounded suffering animal.
dfas
Monstrosity of the HUMAN
What are we for animals?  This is not New Age b.s.  If you turn around the perspective and ask simply not what does it mean the gaze of the frightened animal, but what do you see in the animals gaze, you see your own monstrosity, this is what philosophers don’t want to talk about.  What?  DEATH DRIVE.
Kant: Man is an animal that needs a master, wild irrational excess of violent freedom in man, which animals don’t have, which is why animals don’t need education, it is nature “turned against itself”an excess of wild freedom.
What were the first Christians in the eyes of the Jewish establishment. What kind of monsters were they?

Locate properly our Monstrosity
So called fundamentalists are not egotists, but are ready to sacrifice their lives, same with capitalists, MEME, spreads like a computer virus, it programs its own retransmission, we humans are nonetheless are unwitting victims of a thought contagion.  Daniel Dennett too. we are dealing with a parasite that occupies the individual and uses it for its own purposes.  An idea can spread even if in the long term it can only bring destruction to its bearers.  CAPITAL: like a meme, they use us to reproduce and multiply itself, the productive force, the capitalist process of production is development of productive forces, capitalism is NOT sustained by greed of capitalists, greed is subordinated to impersonal power of capital.  What we need is MORE not less EGOTISM.  In Lacanian terms, individual greed and striving of capital to expand is difference between DESIRE AND DRIVE.  Krugman says most of would still follow the herd even knowing there would be a breakdown.  Memetic functioning of capitalist drive.
Fetishist Disavowal
Marx’s key insight remains valid  Freedom is not located in political sphere proper, are human rights respected, is there free judiciary etc.  The key to freedom for Marx is apolitical network of social relations from market to family, a change in social relations which appear apolitical, a change that can’t be done through elections in narrow sense, we don’t vote about who owns what, about relations in factory.  Radical changes in this domain have to be done outside legal sphere.  This limitation of legal democratic approach was shown in Obama’s reaction to BP oil spill.  Sue them! it is all held within a narrow legalistic frame. The true task is not COMPENSATION, but to change situation so that they won’t be in situation to cause damage
They tell you about global warming and then you go outside and see the sun and the birds chirping and you say “my god can this be true”
Humanity should get ready to live in a more plastic nomadic way.  Large population migrations will be necessary, desertification, global warming, large population movements who will organize it. Trans-state global mechanism to do it.
Sometimes the impossible happens: The Act  You do something which within the existing ideological universe appears impossible, but while doing it it creates its own possibility, through the act itself it becomes possible.  This is what we need.
Future: continuation of the present, full actualization of the tendencies already here.

The ultimate horizon of the future, some ecological breakdown, zero-point, a virtual attractor to which our reality if left to itself tends.  We have to break with this through acts, there is no future in future, there is something in avenir.

Avenir: what is to come, a break with the present

We should adopt catastrophe as virtual point.  Bring logic of existing system to end, there is ecological breakdown.  OK this is our destiny, but we can indefinitely postpone it, and slowly undermine it.  Admit the catastrophe as a destiny, but not as natural necessity, but as symbolic destiny, this does not mean it will really arrive, it is a dialectical point, destiny is inevitable, but what we can change is the inevitability of destiny.  If everything is predestined why work, why not sit and masterbate, no if there is a concept marxists should take from theology it is predestination.  It is predestined, we are not free within this predestiny but we are free to change destiny itself.

Every new work of art changes the entire past.   Kafka created his own predecessors.
Commodity Fetishism

butler vulnerability

Rethinking Vulnerability and Resistance: Feminism & Social Change
Women Creating Change

Istanbul Workshop, September 16-19, 2013
Co-directors: Judith Butler and Zeynep Gambetti

There is always something both risky and true in claiming that women are especially vulnerable. The claim can be taken to mean that women have an unchanging and defining vulnerability, and that kind of argument makes the case for paternalistic protection. If women are especially vulnerable, then they seek protection, and it becomes the responsibility of the state or other paternal powers to provide that protection. On the model, feminist activism not only petitions paternal authority for special dispensations and protections, but affirms that inequality of power situates women in a powerless position and, by implication, men in a more powerful one, or it invests state structures with the responsibility for facilitating the achievement of feminist goals. In yet other instances, women struggle to establish practices (self-defense) and institutions (battered women’s shelters) that seek to provide protection without enlarging paternalistic powers. Continue reading “butler vulnerability”

zupančič sexual difference pt 3

Sexual Difference  Her lecture at EGS 2011 Summer course

Goto part 2

And sex does not function as a stumbling block of meaning (and of the count) because it is considered morally naughty. It is considered morally naughty because it is a stumbling block of meaning.

This is why the moral and legal decriminalization of sexuality should not take the path of its naturalization (“whatever we do sexually is only natural behavior”).

We should instead start from the claim that nothing about (human) sexuality is natural, least of all sexual activity with the exclusive aim of reproduction.

There is no “sexual nature” of man (and no “sexual being”). The problem with sexuality is not that it is a remainder of nature that resists any definite taming; rather, there is no nature here — it all starts with a surplus of signification.

If we now return to the question of what this implies in relation to ontology in general, and, more specifically, to the performative ontology of contemporary gender studies, we must start from the following, crucial implication: Lacan is led to establish a difference between being and the Real.

The real is not a being, or a substance, but its deadlock.

It is inseparable from being, yet it is not being. One could say that for psychoanalysis, there is no being independent of language (or discourse) — which is why it often seems compatible with contemporary forms of nominalism.

All being is symbolic; it is being in the Other. But with a crucial addition, which could be formulated as follows: there is only being in the symbolic except that there is real.

There “is” real, but this real is no being. Yet it is not simply the outside of being; it is not something besides being, it is — as I put it earlier — the very curving of the space of being.

It only exists as the inherent contradiction of being. Which is precisely why, for Lacan, the real is the bone in the throat of every ontology: in order to speak of “being qua being,” one has to amputate something in being that is not being.

That is to say, the real is that which the traditional ontology had to cut off in order to be able to speak of “being qua being.” We only arrive to being qua being by subtracting something from it — and this something is precisely that which, while included in being, prevents it from being fully constituted as being. The real, as that additional something that magnetizes and curves the (symbolic) space of being, introduced in it another dynamics, which infects the dynamics of the symbolic, makes it “not all.”

It is because sexual difference is implicated in sexuality that it fails to register as symbolic difference.

Indeed, psychoanalysis doesn’t try to de-essentialize sexual difference. What de-essentializes it most efficiently (and in the real) is its implication in sexuality as defined above; that is, as the out-of-beingness of being.

And this is what psychoanalysis brings out and insists upon — as opposed to the gender differences, which are differences like any other, and which miss the point by succeeding too much, and by falling in the trap of providing grounds for ontological consistency.

It might seem paradoxical, but differences like form- matter, yin-yang, active-passive  … belong to the same onto-logy as “gender” differences.

Even when the latter abandon the principle of complementarity and embrace that of gender
multiplicity, it in no way effects the ontological status of entities called genders. They are said to be, or to exist, emphatically so. (This “emphatically” seems to increase with numbers: One is usually timid in asserting the existence of two genders, but when passing to the multitude this timidity disappears, and their existence is firmly asserted.)

If sexual difference is considered in terms of gender, it is made — at least in principle — compatible with mechanisms of its ontologization.

De-sexualization of ontology (its no longer being conceived as a combinatory of two, “masculine” and “feminine” principles) coincides with the sexual appearing as the real/disruptive point of being.

And taking the sexual away (as something that has no consequences for the ontological level) opens again the path of the ontological symbolism of sexual difference.

This is why, if one “removes sex from sex,” one removes the very thing that has brought to light the problematic and singular character of sexual difference in the first place. One doesn’t remove the problem, but the means of seeing it and eventually tackling it.

Continued in pt 4 the final part

copjec sexual difference 2012

Joan Copjec (2012): The Sexual Compact, Angelaki: Journal of the Theoretical Humanities, 17:2, 31-48

The psychoanalytic category of sexual difference was from this date deemed suspect and largely forsaken in favor of the neutered category of gender. Yes, neutered, I insist on this; for it was specifically the sex of sexual difference that dropped out when this term was replaced by gender.

Gender theory not only thrust the term sexual difference out of the limelight but also it removed the sex even from sex. For, while gender theorists continued to speak of sexual practices, they ceased to question what sex is; no longer the subject of serious theoretical inquiry, sex reverted then to being what it was in common parlance: that which is involved in a highly restricted set of activities or in attachments to certain objects or person.

Although it was acknowledged that sexual difference was conceived by psycho-analysis not as a biological given but as an effect of a specific technique, or apparatus – namely language – the new wave of feminists worried that the structuralist conception of language was ahistorical and produced effects that were invariant. For this reason the apparatus (l’appareil) of language was dislodged from its role as the smithy of sex and replaced by historically variable technologies or dispositifs – that is, the complex machinery of social practices and knowledges, relations of power, norms and ideals – responsible for constructing gendered positions and relations.

The recourse to technologies of gender quickly encountered a problem, however:that of technological determinism. How to insure that what came out of the machine was not simply what was put into it, that the gendered subject was not completely stripped of autonomy? This problem was fixed by a well-recognized and anodyne truth: techniques had to be continually redeployed, repeated, but repetition always fails because nothing can be repeated in the same way twice. Or: there is no such thing as repetition.

It was on this denial of repetition that gender theory staked its hope, for the dooming of repetition meant variation was inevitable and this margin of variation, this slim difference, was seized upon as the site of resistance, the launching pad of thousands of small differences. 35

The elimination of sexual difference in favor of a study of the social technologies of gender construction left biology behind altogether and produced subjects without any vitality, subjects without bodies or, more precisely, subjects without sexual organs 38

Sex can never be put on display because it is nothing other than that teetering, unsettling displacement which permanently throws the subject’s identity off balance. In short, Foucault attributed to Freud a position he never held and then attacked it, arguing that far from demanding release from the shackles of power, sex operates in solidarity with it; sex, the notion of sex, Foucault insisted, is saturated with power through and through.

In truth, Lacan and Foucault wereon the same side in regard to the way sex had – incorrectly – become a political factor during this period and the role it was being made to play in the new paradigm of human domination. Both cautioned the students that the demand for sexual liberation did not oppose power but, on the contrary, played into its hands. What they disagreed on was what sex meant, how it was conceived, in psychoanalysis.

Lacan argued forcefully that sex is not repressed, that the mechanism of repression does not apply to it, and for this very reason it made no sense to say that sex sought to be liberated from repression. Lacan thus enjoined the students not to sacrifice their enjoyment to those in power by parading it, exposing it as if it were a predicate – more: the major one – of their identity.

In Foucault’s view, sex was nothing more than a fictional construct of power that serves to bind subjects to unified, determinate, and normative identities. Political opposition to bio-power must take the form, therefore, not of liberating suppressed sexual identities but of liberating oneself from them, freeing oneself from classification by their categories.

Thus, while Lacan and Foucault were allied in their opposition to the demand for the liberation of sex, on the grounds that this demand was a ruse of power, Lacan put all his energy into showing that sex, or jouissance, was not answerable to the opposition liberation/repression and castigated the jouissance restructured by the demand for liberation as a sham, while Foucault pursued the idea that sex and the demand to be liberated, to be known, to assert one’s identity, were inextricably intertwined. 39

 

 

Ž politics between fear and terror the act 2006

Slavoj Zizek.  Politics between Fear and Terror Atkinson Hall, University of California, San Diego. November 15, 2006.

Ethics of the Real, an act.

Here it is!  What would be a more AUTHENTIC ACT?

The lie is the form of tragedy itself. The true horror, Gulag, Holocaust is that they are more tragic than tragedy.  Tragedy still presupposes a minimum of dignity.

What dies on the cross is God himself. The catastrophe of the Holocaust was a catastrophe for God himself.

What we know, known knowns, there are known unknowns.

There is always a minimal tension in us between belief and disbelief. Did the ancient Greeks believe in their myths?

How social groups work We never simply have rules.  You obey you’re in, you disobey you’re out.  No, if you obey rules, sometimes you’re seen as an idiot.  Not simply obey the rules, but to know which rules to violate.   The first question you ask yourself, “Is it really prohibted, do it but do it discreetly, or is it really prohibited.”  Or the opposite, something is secretly a call to do it, but in a certain way: You are allowed, permitted to do it, a freedom of choice on condition you do not do what you are permitted.  Japan in workers can use 40 days of holiday, but they are expected not to use the right in its full extent.

The famous Judith Butler anecdote: You Owe Me No Apology! I used vulgar words. So I saw I did something terribly wrong, and called her later to apologize. Our entire ethical substance hangs on these implicit rule, cannot be normalized or canonized. This is one of the problems of political correctness, it tends to legalize what should function as spontaneous set of rules. The moment you have to do it the battle is already lost. It is obscene to say, “I oppose to rape” and then to give arguments. I want to live in a society where the I don’t have to argue for this.

butler disrupting kinship

Judith Butler and Hélène Cixous and Avital Ronnell at the New School in October of 2011.

🙂 This talk needs more attention than I can give it now. Cixous is hypnotizing in a way which bounces off Butler nicely

The word kinship feminist anthropology ask forms of relationship exceed form of family, then family is but 1 historical instance of kinship.
How do we distinguish between family, kin, community, and even broader modes of belonging we founder on the categories themselves
open-ended temporal  iteration, a constitutive disruption, we can’t begin with stipulative definitions, we can only know kinship relations through the breach

At what moments does one become kin?  Sudden swing that belongs to affective life. I belong here, I will die if I stay here.  It is not an order that quells a disturbance or disruption, a breach prior to any question to Order or Law, they arrive later to make sense of the breach.  The repetition of the breach is the sign and substance of kinship itself.
All seek to codify …
Oedipus Could not properly recognize his mother/father, could not recognize them consciously, how can unconscious forms of intimating take place?
Funny moment
Antigone she contradicts, an impossible utterance which one is the brother?
Extended portion of her talk dedicated to Bachae a blind frenzy, Dionysus, Pentheus has lost control of women, submit delerious, guilt ridden recognition, the position of the father is articulated through a double lie
Kinship is then … articulated in the breach and guilt and sorrow that follow, relations enacted precisely through the disruptions, displacement, modes of passionate unknowingness, living out a set of passions that constantly disrupt one another

Discussant:

Judith Butler replies:

Butler mentions that Derrida was critiquing Levi-Strauss theory of kinship structure is iterable, is a temporal elaboration, iterable defined by its ruptures, ruptures constitutive of structure. the rupture in structure as iterability.

METAPHORICITY OF BLOOD

Butler in conversation

Dr. Judith Butler follow-up discussion the next day after 2012 Wall Exchange lecture at the Vogue Theatre in downtown Vancouver on May 24, 2012

Here is an extended answer on neoliberalism in relation to state, rejects role of public intellectual, and think tea party uses a mode of rationality which does not accord with her view of the world.

butler vancouver bodies street social ontology precarious

Dr. Judith Butler delivers the spring 2012 Wall Exchange lecture at the Vogue Theatre in downtown Vancouver on May 24, 2012

Requirements of the body

Thriving of body

Livable life without positing single ideal for that life not based on essence, Donna Harraway, complex relationalities that constitute bodily life, we don’t need ideal forms of human, complex ways of understanding sets of relationships

Bodies form in networks of resistance, and produce structures of support and dependency also to evince

Key point on bodies, not only agentic, active cannot understand forms of relationality if we don’t understand complex relation vulnerability and activity of political resistance.  We are vulnerable on the street, w/o permits opposing police/state … shorn of protection  Critiques bare life is political exposure.

VULNERABILITY AND DEFIANCE women-vulnerability then petition paternal state. Invests state with responsibility for achievement of feminist goals.
Woman are vulnerable and capable of resistance.  Feminist self-defence — slut walks, those who oppose harassment and injury.  Good reasons to argue differential vulnerability

Are you a post-Feminist? the question that emerges HOW TO THINK THE VULNERABILITY OF WOMEN AND FEMINIST AGENCY

How to make feminist claim effectively, feminist resist modes of paternalism that re-instate modes of inequality.  Gender-defining attributes vulnerability/invulnerability as distributed unequally under capitalism.  Manage populations is to distribute vulnerability unequally, so that vulnerable precarious populations, and political strategies are devised to ameliorate conditions of precarity.  Unveven Grievability of populations more worthy of memorialization and public grieving than others, populations ungrievable, whose labour is episodic or precarious, abandoned through negligence, injurable, with impunity, implict/explicit marking.

Redistributive strategies: invulnerable/impermeable without needs of protection.  Effects of field of power that acts through bodies.  Feminine – vulnerable, masculine = impermeable, invulnerable  Psychoanalytic feminists forgetting of one’s own vulnerability and projection elsewhere.  I was never vulnerable, and if it was it wasn’t true and I have no memory … political syntax of disavowal.

Some person or group denies vulnerability modes of denial/disavowal  neoliberal economics act as if you are invulnerable to living with anxiety, dispossessed.  Those who seek to expose others to vulnerability, obtain position of invulnerability for themselves.  SHARED VULNERABILITY less as existential as claim BODIES ARE INVARIABLY dependent on social institutions/relations and instiutions.

Social Ontology  Basis for new forms of coalition, seen in contemporary politics of the Street. Bodily vulnerable presupposes a social world, vulnerable to others, and institutions, a social modality through which bodies exist my vulnerability your vulnerability, vulnerability can be projected and denied, exploited and manipulated in the production of inequality.

social contract efforts to challenge and contest, under the name of precarity, takes aim at forms of rationality/representation and strategy that inform this condition

Differential modes of vulnerability

Not one subject does this to another, rather a set of strategies produce the situatioin in which the population cannot appear at all, in the USA native peoples, and Canada is related.  Native peoples are given discursive life about founding of America, but these narratives become the means of effacement, acts of slaughter and killing which is still called Columbus Day.  Re-Name Indigenous Peoples Day.

Comparative study of genocide, or comparable history of forcible displacement: Congo, Germany, will there be an memory, a memory maintained through discursive and transmissible means, to preserve the memory of vulnerability of bodies, requires a memorialization that must be repeated over time and space, memory is socially maintained and not cognitive.  Its a social process.

Argentine: Mothers in Buenos Aires, to publicly protest disappearance of their children not identitarian nor maternalist, opposed brutality of the regime, protest any forgetting of that brutality.

Two points about vulnerability 1. vulnerability cannot be associated exclusive w/ injurability.  Part of what a body does, is to open on to the body of another, set of others, bodies are not enclosed, always OUTSIDE themselves, dispossessed through the senses, lost in another, tactile/visual/auditory comport us beyond ourselves.  Modes of ecstatic relationality  2. Body can be a site where memories are transmitted, body is a point of transfer, where your history passes through mine, I don’t have to experience your history to transmit your history, a certain operation of translation that doesn’t purport to translate everything.  Bound up with one another.  Mode or relationality

We not just as bodies these spatial and bounded creatures.  We can never transcend that boundary completely, but we are also the histories we never lived, but we transmit in the name of the history of the oppressed.  Israel prohibits expression of na’qba.  They are seeking to regulate memory, to consign a form of dispossession and suffering to oblivion.

In all of these struggles the body is central to the fight against oblivion.  No history can be inscribed on a body without vulnerability, the body not as substance and enclosure, but a site of injurability passionate exposure, receptivity

Body and Coalition

Vulnerability and ordinary discourse as episodic, the condition of our vulnerability is not precisely changeable a certain way of opening on to the world, asserts our existence as a relational one.  A condition co-extensive with human/creaturely life.  Vulnerability is a way of opening up to the world, it asserts our very existence as a relational one.

Adrianna Cavarerro One of the key moments of politics, constitutive ethical moment: WHO ARE YOU??  not necessarily a single person that poses this question, who are you space of appearance for the other, no pre-established category will be able to answer in advance the question that is posed.  The who are you is infinitely open unanswerable in order to remain an ethical one.

Precariousness precarity is differentially distributed.  Isabel Lorry, Larent Berlant, under conditions of neoliberalism.   Maybe precarious is what we feel or rather not feel, and feel the impetus to not feel it, precarious those bonds that sustain forms of life.  dispose them towards equality as ideal worth struggling for.  A bond is flawed or frayed is lost irrecoverable.

The Tea Party  rejoice about individuals who fail to take responsibility, will face death or disease as result.  People who don’t take responsibility, will face death, rejoice clapping.  At such moments a social bond has been destroyed, in ways that deny a shared precariousness, a shared ethos and politics, one that underscores local and global interdependence, and resists unequal distribution of precarity and grievability.  We really need to see the precarity of the one who takes that sadistic joy, the bond of interdependency with the one whose death is being joyously imagined.

Break with lure of paternalism, not rejecting all the state. We cannot presume interdependency is same as social harmony. constituted from the inside, from the condition of a pre-contractual set of relations that pertain to social embodiment, negotiated in social/political/economic spheres.

Interdependency is not social harmony, not way to dissociate dependency and aggression once and for all.  We require one another to live, our survinal and  well being are negotiate in economic/political spheres, our precarious is what makes spheres blend into each other.

Seeking recourse to broad existential and humanist claims BUT, we see we have left existential domain, risk of statelessness, precarious defines our existence as POLITICAL beings, and political Whose lives preserved, protected valued, mourned, and whose disposable and ungrievable.  Dependent on economic and social structures.

Precarity indissocialbe from that politics of interdependency … our common non-foundation, nothing founds us outside of a struggle to establish those bonds by which we are sustained.  Political significance as assembling as BODIES, does not have to be organized on high, nor have a central message to assert a PERFORMATIVE FORCE we are HERE, we are STILL HERE, we have not yet been DISPOSED of, precarity with social and political forms of agency.  When the bodies deemed disposable assembe in public view its a way of saying we have not disappeared.  Political and public institutions are bound to represent the people, and EQUALITY as presupposition of existence.

Eygptian Revolution transitional military government, way a certain sociability was established in the square, horizontal relations, relations of equality became part of the very resistance.

Non-Violence

Unchosen proximity to those we’ve never chosen to be close to a pre-contractual inter-dependency is at work, it is always necessary, and sometimes promising and alive. ends at 1:09 30 seconds

On Precarity producing possibility of lives not touched by other lives IMPERMEABLE TO INCURSION, militarism/nationalism, stoked by idea of never being attacked or one coming into territory that can do harm, anti-immigration discourses … dealing with situation of precarity at those moments, a spectre of being destoryed, penetrated, agressed upon suggests a level of political anxiety that focuses on body and capacity of body to be entered, aggressed upon, to have its solidity and control threatened at fundamental level.  It is a political strategy to effectively externalize and deposit that felt sense of precarity in other populations and keep populations precarious who are feared and loathed.  they end up increasing their own sense of precarity through a mode of subjugation that is unlivable in those who must live it.

Occupy Movement Occupy moment is not over, what are the new strategies, what are the new ways of occupying buildings, producing demonstrations and getting the word out.   Armed revolutionary struggle?? What we are seeing are contours of a new form of conflict, it began as movement draw attention to differential levels of wealth, rich are getting richer and fewer and poor are getting larger and poorer.  Police power became at forefront of movement when public space was taken away through police action.  Traditional modes of civil disobedience and non-violence are not recognized, police don’t handcuff, they were thrown to ground and beaten.  It effectively says traditions governing non-violent civil disobedience are no longer being honoured.  Making protests larger, global, over-whelming, so actual legitimacy of state is called into question.

Non-Violence briefly  is NOT passivity, it is the cultivation of the force of resistance, it involves bodily action, pressure and presence, and is not simply taking-it.

Strategic Essentialism I don’t think we are the 99% is strategic essentialism.  Isn’t the only basis on which we mobilize together.  It is an umbrella term to include differences without asserting economic oppression as the primary mode of oppression.  There are struggles race/sexuality/gender … those struggles are absolutely necessary and we shouldn’t lament them.  We are having those struggles and that is what unity means, unity means struggling.  I resist the language of FRAGMENTATION, groups do leave, they can’t be in coalition together, Hanging IN, in coalitions where it isn’t easy, open conflict/struggle, that is UNITY, unity is agreeing to stay in and struggle, unity is not uniformity.  Because they stay together because the STAKES are really high.

migrants The effort to de-politicize migrants, is a certain kind of training in good citizenship.  Accept implicit forms of censorship as preconditions of your membership.

Vulnerability in a way I’m saying 2 things at same time: 1 vulnerability is shared condition that can not be denied, 2 vulnerability is a condition that is denied all the time.forms of torture that took place under Bush Administration, involved efforts to feminize the bodies of Arab men in out-sourced prisons.  I think it is a complex issue, the way in which torture worked to emasculate at the same time it identified/consolidated the idea, that those tortured are homosexual/women.  The position of intense vulnerability would be that of homosexual or woman.

Physical violence and vulnerability:   I support non-violent forms of resistance, but one of most important things for me, was learning forms of self-defense.  That I wouldn’t be ok on the street if I didn’t have skills of self-defense.  When a cop is coming at you with a baton, or when you’re being sprayed, there is a right to self-defense and what is the form that takes.  Forms of COLLECTIVE support, to make it difficult for that attack to take place.  Interpose themselves in front of one another.  Sometimes our act of defense will be re-named as provocation, there is no way to fully control how it will signify.  Politically self-defense works in some ways I don’t agree with … use self-defense to legitimate every act of aggression.  It’s a very vigilant practice to insist on self-defense and to make it not an alibi for the kind of violence we are opposing.  Don’t replicate the violence we are opposing but to stop the violence.

Tea Party:  I am in favour of freedom of assembly, I am anxious that freedom of assembly is being taken away in many parts of the globe.  Should be for on the left and the right.  I would defend the right of horrible people to collect on street, including Tea Party cause there’s a LIBERAL core to my Leftism.   I hate it, but I wouldn’t take their right away.

Vulnerability of pre-contract:  only ethically obligated to those with whom we are already contracted belong to same nation-state we are born into/legalized within. We have to think ethical/political obligations that exceed the forms of contract.  Contracts tend to produce ideas of nation state that are exclusionary, what are my extra-nation obligations, who am I when I am not an individual, do I need another kind of political vocabulary.   It’s always possible to say, well, if you think of sexually progressive circles, they make a contract to enter into an arrangement, they are vulnerable in a way they didn’t think, now can’t be in that contract … a kind of leftist conceit, we have the ideal form, consent to ideal form and find out its radically unlivable.  What are the conditions of liveablity, how to communicate them, and how to live them.  What are the concrete conditions of liveability, pertain to organizatio of our ethical and poltiical bonds.  We are vulnerable in ways that can’t be accomodated by ideas of choice and knowledge that are presupposed by contract, we are already vulnerable to others that in effect define us as bodily and social beings and what does that say about our global responsibilities and what does that say about us as global creatures.

Dr. Judith Butler has a follow-up discussion with UBC Faculty at the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies at UBC

chow butterfly

Teresa de Lauretis. “Popular Culture, Public and Private Fantasies: Femininity and Fetishism in David Cronenberg’s ‘M. Butterfly'” Signs, 24.2 (1999): 303-334.

When, on their way to prison, in the paddy wagon scene, Song, naked at his feet, tries to convince Rene to accept the Butterfly fantasy as a gay fantasy (“under the robes, beneath everything, it was always me…. I am your Butterfly”), Rene rejects him, saying: “I’m a man who loved a woman created by a man. Anything else simply falls short.”‘ He cannot accept Song’s transvestite fantasy of Butterfly, ostensibly because his fantasy is heterosexual; one could say, heterosexist. But what is a woman created by a man if not the masquerade of femininity? Then it is not the revelation of Song’s maleness — which Rene has obviously disavowed, known and not known, all along — that causes him to lose his love object, but the end of the masquerade. With it comes the realization that what he loved was not Song but Butterfly, the masquerade of femininity; that the object of his desire is a fantasy object, Butterfly, and that object alone can sustain his desire. 321

Butterfly, then, is a fetish in the classical,  psychic sense  defined by Freud: it  is an object which  wards off  the  threat of  castration always looming above the male subject and allays his  fear of homosexuality. It is quite literally an object, the sum  of the accoutrements  that  make up the masquerade of femininity: the oriental woman  costume, the long black hair, the face paint and rouge, the long red fingernails – all the props that Rene will barter from the prison guard for his final performance.

But the fetish is a particular object, set in a mise-en-scène and a scenario, a narrative, from which it acquires its psychic value as object and signifier of desire. This is Butterfly, a fantasy object which enables Rene’s desire and the very possibility of existing as a desiring subject, for desire is the condition of psychic existence. 321

The distinction between our two conceptualizations of the Butterfly trope in the film is the distinction between fetish and phallus.

By saying that Song’s Butterfly is the phallus, which must remain veiled, masqueraded (“the veiled thing that is the ‘oriental woman”‘), Chow adheres to the Lacanian definition of woman’s position in desire: she wants to be the phallus, the signifier of the desire of the Other. But what about Song’s desire? Since the Butterfly fantasy is also the scenario of Song’s desire, to equate “Butterfly” with the phallus is to assume that Song’s homosexual desire is from the position of a woman (woman as phallus).

Which is to see homosexuality as sexual and gender inversion, in the old sexological formula that Lacan’s theory raises to a higher level of abstraction.27 Here is where my reading and Chow’s part ways or diverge — on the issue of the nature of desire and the conditions of spectatorial identification.

Not surprisingly, the film elicits in me a very different fantasy.  …

[Chow denies or minimizes] the significance of Song’s homosexual desire  for Rene, although her identification, unlike theirs, is not with Gallimard but with Song; in other words, Chow’s referring to Song as “she” signals her  identification of Song as a woman, but also her identification with Song as a woman. However, if one defines Song as a woman solely on account of gender, without consideration of sexuality and desire, the motivation for his actions and his sexual relationship with Rene can only be a political one: Song is a spy, does what he does for  the love of his country, not of Rene — a characterization the film ironizes (most evidently in the two scenes between Song and Comrade Chin) and openly disallows.

Alternatively,  Song’s motivation  is  one of anticolonial  resistance and revenge: he just plays the role of Butterfly to turn the orientalist fantasy against its colonial, imperialist creator. In my view, the film also belies this reading, especially (but not only) in the paddy wagon scene after the trial, when Song tries in vain to convince Rene to accept his transvestite fantasy of Butterfly as a gay fantasy. There, when the spying game is all played out, it seems to me beyond doubt that, whatever else he may be, Song is a man who loves a man.

eyers signifier in isolation signifier in relation

Eyers, Tom. Lacan and the Concept of the ‘Real’ New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.

it is my contention that Lacan’s work, early and late, and following Freud’s example, maintains the immanence of the Real in the Symbolic, against the arguments of those who see a gradual displacement of questions of language in the later seminars in favour of accounts of the Real, jouissance, etc. Underlying this chapter, indeed the totality of this book, is the contention that Lacan always considers language as fundamental to the Real, to sexuality and so on, and vice versa.  (note 34, pg. 179)

Lacanian reinvention of the notion of the signifier tout court, predicated as it is on a displacement of any Saussurian certainty as to the signifier’s connection to the signified. 37
:)Yes, I agree that Lacan broke this tight relationship between signifier and signified. Scary?

:)constitutive interpenetration of Symbolic and Real,

Lacan, far from being a thinker of a hypostatized linguistic lack or void, insists on the singularityand substan-tial persistenceof those elements in the Symbolic that immanently escape any negative constitution of reference and that point to the ultimate overdetermination of the Symbolic by the Real,… Overdetermination, to be clear, signifies in this instance the absolute reliance of the production of meaning on those Real elements of the Symbolic that, while inherently meaningless, nonetheless provide the ground for meaning’s emergence. 37

🙂talks about Real elements of the Symbolic that although meaningless provide the ground for “meaning’s emergence.” Booya

Lacan’s philosophy of language will accordingly be distinguished from both the structuralist emphasis on complex totalities and the post- structuralist logic of a potentially limitless semiotic freeplay; Lacan, I will argue, manages, in part through his codevelopment of the relationality of the signifier and the material underside of the same, to avoid theorizing language either as an internally complex but exhaustive totality or as an endlessly creative, pliable resource.

The rich paradox at the heart of Lacan’s Symbolic is precisely the simultaneous insistence, then, on the irrecuperability of the rift between signifier and signified, and the equal insistence that a limited, contingent and material ‘stopping up’ of significatory freeplay is inevitable, with the notable caveat that such points of consistency are guaranteed not through the ruse of a transcendental signifier or an external guarantor of meaning, but by the repetitive, contingent iteration of the signifier’s materiality, its tendency to slip loose of or withdraw from networks of relation.

Terms including ‘letter’, ‘unary trait’, ‘phallic signifier’, ‘empty signifier’ and others are used, if not interchangeably, then to designate different aspects of the same phenomenon, namely the material insist-ence of the signifier beyond any significatory function. As a result, in this chapter I begin to develop what will be a central typology to be used throughout the rest of the book, namely the distinction between what I call the ‘signifier- in-relation’ and the ‘signifier- in-isolation’.

These concepts are intended to condense Lacan’s multifarious terms relating to language into their most pertinent, opposing characteristics: the ‘signifier- in-relation’ designates the signifier as it exists negatively, defined purely by relation to other signifiers and producing meaning as the result of its perpetual displacement along the axes of metaphor and metonymy, while the ‘signifier- in-isolation’ designates the signifier as Real, isolated in its material element away from the networks of relation that render it conducive to meaning.

🙂Eyers is now using the above distinction to claim that psychotics are not entirely outside the Symbolic.

Must psychosis be explained as entirely outside the ambit of Symbolic logic, or is it rather just an unmediated dyadically organized Symbolic logic that prevails in psychotic subjectivity? 39-40

Here, we come to recognize that, far from the Symbolic being radically foreclosed or revoked by the phenomena of psychosis, the rejection of the paternal signifier makes operative and primary those Real, aspects of signification – which is to say, signifiers torn away from the negative constitution of meaningful communication and tied to the aggressive movements of primary identification – that, as we shall see, must be presupposed, if kept at bay, for ANY signification to be operative for the subject. 41

For the common variety of neurotic, which by the end of Lacan’s teaching must be considered to be anyone who has acceded fully to the Symbolic, the dyadic logic of demand that accompanies primary narcissism has been nuanced with the metonymy of desire in the signifier; desire, properly speaking, is absent for the psychotic precisely by virtue of the lack of a full installation of the paternal law.  42

🙂The materiality of the signifier is Eyers’ Signifier in Isolation. 

It is worth asking about the ‘nature’ of these isolated elements of the Symbolic, for it is partly in Lacan’s elaboration of this most material, which is to say most insistent and non- relational, aspect of signification that he most fully departs from, and subverts, Saussure’s insistence on the inevitability of the relationship between the signifier and the signified. 42

butler academic freedom bds

Judith Butler: text of remarks at Brooklyn College February 7, 2013

Usually one starts by saying that one is glad to be here, but I cannot say that it has been a pleasure anticipating this event. What a Megillah! I am, of course, glad that the event was not cancelled, and I understand that it took a great deal of courage and a steadfast embrace of principle for this event to happen at all. I would like personally to thank all those who took this opportunity to reaffirm the fundamental principles of academic freedom, including the following organizations: the Modern Language Association, the National Lawyers Guild, the New York ACLU, the American Association of University Professors, the Professional Staff Congress (the union for faculty and staff in the CUNY system), the New York Times editorial team, the offices of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Governor Andrew Cuomo and Brooklyn College President Karen Gould whose principled stand on academic freedom has been exemplary.

The principle of academic freedom is designed to make sure that powers outside the university, including government and corporations, are not able to control the curriculum or intervene in extra-mural speech. It not only bars such interventions, but it also protects those platforms in which we might be able to reflect together on the most difficult problems. You can judge for yourself whether or not my reasons for lending my support to this movement are good ones. That is, after all, what academic debate is about. It is also what democratic debate is about, which suggests that open debate about difficult topics functions as a meeting point between democracy and the academy. Instead of asking right away whether we are for or against this movement, perhaps we can pause just long enough to find out what exactly this is, the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, and why it is so difficult to speak about this.

I am not asking anyone to join a movement this evening. I am not even a leader of this movement or part of any of its governing committee, even though the New York Times tried to anoint me the other day—I appreciated their subsequent retraction, and I apologize to my Palestinian colleagues for their error. The movement, in fact, has been organized and led by Palestinians seeking rights of political self-determination, including Omar Barghouti, who was invited first by the Students for Justice in Palestine, after which I was invited to join him. At the time I thought it would be very much like other events I have attended, a conversation with a few dozen student activists in the basement of a student center. So, as you can see, I am surprised and ill-prepared for what has happened.

Omar will speak in a moment about what the BDS movement is, its successes and its aspirations. But I would like briefly to continue with the question, what precisely are we doing here this evening? I presume that you came to hear what there is to be said, and so to test your preconceptions against what some people have to say, to see whether your objections can be met and your questions answered. In other words, you come here to exercise critical judgment, and if the arguments you hear are not convincing, you will be able to cite them, to develop your opposing view and to communicate that as you wish. In this way, your being here this evening confirms your right to form and communicate an autonomous judgment, to demonstrate why you think something is true or not, and you should be free to do this without coercion and fear. These are your rights of free expression, but they are, perhaps even more importantly, your rights to education, which involves the freedom to hear, to read and to consider any number of viewpoints as part of an ongoing public deliberation on this issue. Your presence here, even your support for the event, does not assume agreement among us. There is no unanimity of opinion here; indeed, achieving unanimity is not the goal.

The arguments made against this very meeting took several forms, and they were not always easy for me to parse. One argument was that BDS is a form of hate speech, and it spawned a set of variations: it is hate speech directed against either the State of Israel or Israeli Jews, or all Jewish people. If BDS is hate speech, then it is surely not protected speech, and it would surely not be appropriate for any institution of higher learning to sponsor or make room for such speech. Yet another objection, sometimes uttered by the same people who made the first, is that BDS does qualify as a viewpoint, but as such, ought to be presented only in a context in which the opposing viewpoint can be heard as well. There was yet a qualification to this last position, namely, that no one can have a conversation on this issue in the US that does not include a certain Harvard professor, but that spectacular argument was so self-inflationary and self-indicting, that I could only respond with astonishment.

So in the first case, it is not a viewpoint (and so not protected as extra-mural speech), but in the second instance, it is a viewpoint, presumably singular, but cannot be allowed to be heard without an immediate refutation. The contradiction is clear, but when people engage in a quick succession of contradictory claims such as these, it is usually because they are looking for whatever artillery they have at their disposal to stop something from happening. They don’t much care about consistency or plausibility. They fear that if the speech is sponsored by an institution such as Brooklyn College, it will not only be heard, but become hearable, admitted into the audible world. The fear is that viewpoint will become legitimate, which means only that someone can publicly hold such a view and that it becomes eligible for contestation. A legitimate view is not necessarily right, but it is not ruled out in advance as hate speech or injurious conduct. Those who did not want any of these words to become sayable and audible imagined that the world they know and value will come to an end if such words are uttered, as if the words themselves will rise off the page or fly out of the mouth as weapons that will injure, maim or even kill, leading to irreversibly catastrophic consequences. This is why some people claimed that if this event were held, the two-state solution would be imperiled—they attributed great efficacy to these words. And yet others said it would lead to the coming of a second Holocaust—an unimaginable remark to which I will nevertheless return. One might say that all of these claims were obvious hyperbole and should be dismissed as such. But it is important to understand that they are wielded for the purpose of intimidation, animating the spectre of traumatic identification with the Nazi oppressor: if you let these people speak, you yourself will be responsible for heinous crimes or for the destruction of a state, or the Jewish people. If you listen to the words, you will become complicit in war crimes.

And yet all of us here have to distinguish between the right to listen to a point of view and the right to concur or dissent from that point of view; otherwise, public discourse is destroyed by censorship. I wonder, what is the fantasy of speech nursed by the censor? There must be enormous fear behind the drive to censorship, but also enormous aggression, as if we were all in a war where speech has suddenly become artillery. Is there another way to approach language and speech as we think about this issue? Is it possible that some other use of words might forestall violence, bring about a general ethos of non-violence, and so enact, and open onto, the conditions for a public discourse that welcomes and shelters disagreement, even disarray?

The Boycott Divestment and Sanctions movement is, in fact, a non-violent movement; it seeks to use established legal means to achieve its goals; and it is, interestingly enough, the largest Palestinian civic movement at this time. That means that the largest Palestinian civic movement is a non-violent one that justifies its actions through recourse to international law. Further, I want to underscore that this is also a movement whose stated core principles include the opposition to every form of racism, including both state-sponsored racism and anti-Semitism. Of course, we can debate what anti-Semitism is, in what social and political forms it is found. I myself am sure that the election of self-identified national socialists to the Greek parliament is a clear sign of anti-Semitism; I am sure that the recirculation of Nazi insignia and rhetoric by the National Party of Germany is a clear sign of anti-Semitism. I am also sure that the rhetoric and actions of Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad are often explicitly anti-Semitic, and that some forms of Palestinian opposition to Israel do rely on anti-Semitic slogans, falsehoods and threats. All of these forms of anti-Semitism are to be unconditionally opposed. And I would add, they have to be opposed in the same way and with the same tenacity that any form of racism has to be opposed, including state racism.

But still, it is left to us to ask, why would a non-violent movement to achieve basic political rights for Palestinians be understood as anti-Semitic? Surely, there is nothing about the basic rights themselves that constitute a problem. They include equal rights of citizenship for current inhabitants; the end to the occupation, and the rights of unlawfully displaced persons to return to their lands and gain restitution for their losses. We will surely speak about each of these three principles this evening. But for now, I want to ask, why would a collective struggle to use economic and cultural forms of power to compel the enforcement of international laws be considered anti-Semitic? It would be odd to say that they are anti-Semitic to honor internationally recognized rights to equality, to be free of occupation and to have unlawfully appropriated land and property restored. I know that this last principle makes many people uneasy, but there are several ways of conceptualizing how the right of return might be exercised lawfully such that it does not entail further dispossession (and we will return to this issue).

For those who say that exercising internationally recognized rights is anti-Semitic, or becomes anti-Semitic in this context, they must mean either that a) its motivation is anti-Semitic or b) its effects are anti-Semitic. I take it that no one is actually saying that the rights themselves are anti-Semitic, since they have been invoked by many populations in the last decades, including Jewish people dispossessed and displaced in the aftermath of the second world war. Is there really any reason we should not assume that Jews, just like any other people, would prefer to live in a world where such internationally recognized rights are honored? It will not do to say that international law is the enemy of the Jewish people, since the Jewish people surely did not as a whole oppose the Nuremburg trials, or the development of human rights law. In fact, there have always been Jews working alongside non-Jews—not only to establish the courts and codes of international law, but in the struggle to dismantle colonial regimes, opposing any and all legal and military powers that seek systematically to undermine the conditions of political self-determination for any population.

Only if we accept the proposition that the state of Israel is the exclusive and legitimate representative of the Jewish people would a movement calling for divestment, sanctions and boycott against that state be understood as directed against the Jewish people as a whole. Israel would then be understood as co-extensive with the Jewish people.

There are two major problems with this view. First, the state of Israel does not represent all Jews, and not all Jews understand themselves as represented by the state of Israel. Secondly, the state of Israel should be representing all of its population equally, regardless of whether or not they are Jewish, regardless of race, religion or ethnicity.

So the first critical and normative claim that follows is that the state of Israel should be representing the diversity of its own population. Indeed, nearly 25 percent of Israel’s population is not Jewish, and most of those are Palestinian, although some of them are Bedouins and Druze. If Israel is to be considered a democracy, the non-Jewish population deserves equal rights under the law, as do the Mizrachim (Arab Jews) who represent over 30 percent of the population. Presently, there are at least twenty laws that privilege Jews over Arabs within the Israeli legal system. The 1950 Law of Return grants automatic citizenship rights to Jews from anywhere in the world upon request, while denying that same right to Palestinians who were forcibly dispossessed of their homes in 1948 or subsequently as the result of illegal settlements and redrawn borders. Human Rights Watch has compiled an extensive study of Israel’s policy of “separate, not equal” schools for Palestinian children. Moreover, as many as 100 Palestinian villages in Israel are still not recognized by the Israeli government, lacking basic services (water, electricity, sanitation, roads, etc.) from the government. Palestinians are barred from military service, and yet access to housing and education still largely depends on military status. Families are divided by the separation wall between the West Bank and Israel, with few forms of legal recourse to rights of visitation and reunification. The Knesset debates the “transfer” of the Palestinian population to the West Bank, and the new loyalty oath requires that anyone who wishes to become a citizen pledge allegiance to Israel as Jewish and democratic, thus eliding once again the non-Jewish population and binding the full population to a specific and controversial, if not contradictory, version of democracy.

The second point, to repeat, is that the Jewish people extend beyond the state of Israel and the ideology of political Zionism. The two cannot be equated. Honestly, what can really be said about “the Jewish people” as a whole? Is it not a lamentable sterotype to make large generalizations about all Jews, and to presume they all share the same political commitments? They—or, rather, we—occupy a vast spectrum of political views, some of which are unconditionally supportive of the state of Israel, some of which are conditionally supportive, some are skeptical, some are exceedingly critical, and an increasing number, if we are to believe the polls in this country, are indifferent. In my view, we have to remain critical of anyone who posits a single norm that decides rights of entry into the social or cultural category determining as well who will be excluded. Most categories of identity are fraught with conflicts and ambiguities; the effort to suppress the complexity of the category of “Jewish” is thus a political move that seeks to yoke a cultural identity to a specific Zionist position. If the Jew who struggles for justice for Palestine is considered to be anti-Semitic, if any number of internationals who have joined thus struggle from various parts of the world are also considered anti-Semitic and if Palestinians seeking rights of political self-determination are so accused as well, then it would appear that no oppositional move that can take place without risking the accusation of anti-Semitism. That accusation becomes a way of discrediting a bid for self-determination, at which point we have to ask what political purpose the radical mis-use of that accusation has assumed in the stifling of a movement for political self-determination.

When Zionism becomes co-extensive with Jewishness, Jewishness is pitted against the diversity that defines democracy, and if I may say so, betrays one of the most important ethical dimensions of the diasporic Jewish tradition, namely, the obligation of co-habitation with those different from ourselves. Indeed, such a conflation denies the Jewish role in broad alliances in the historical struggle for social and political justice in unions, political demands for free speech, in socialist communities, in the resistance movement in World War II, in peace activism, the Civil Rights movement and the struggle against apartheid in South Africa. It also demeans the important struggles in which Jews and Palestinians work together to stop the wall, to rebuild homes, to document indefinite detention, to oppose military harassment at the borders and to oppose the occupation and to imagine the plausible scenarios for the Palestinian right to return.

The point of the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement is to withdraw funds and support from major financial and cultural institutions that support the operations of the Israeli state and its military. The withdrawal of investments from companies that actively support the military or that build on occupied lands, the refusal to buy products that are made by companies on occupied lands, the withdrawal of funds from investment accounts that support any of these activities, a message that a growing number of people in the international community will not be complicit with the occupation. For this goal to be realized, it matters that there is a difference between those who carry Israeli passports and the state of Israel, since the boycott is directed only toward the latter. BDS focuses on state agencies and corporations that build machinery designed to destroy homes, that build military materiel that targets populations, that profit from the occupation, that are situated illegally on Palestinian lands, to name a few.

BDS does not discriminate against individuals on the basis of their national citizenship. I concede that not all versions of BDS have been consistent on this point in the past, but the present policy confirms this principle. I myself oppose any form of BDS that discriminates against individuals on the basis of their citizenship. Others may interpret the boycott differently, but I have no problem collaborating with Israeli scholars and artists as long as we do not participate in any Israeli institution or have Israeli state monies support our collaborative work. The reason, of course, is that the academic and cultural boycott seeks to put pressure on all those cultural institutions that have failed to oppose the occupation and struggle for equal rights and the rights of the dispossessed, all those cultural institutions that think it is not their place to criticize their government for these practices, all of them that understand themselves to be above or beyond this intractable political condition. In this sense, they do contribute to an unacceptable status quo. And those institutions should know why international artists and scholars refuse to come when they do, just as they also need to know the conditions under which people will come. When those cultural institutions (universities, art centers, festivals) were to take such a stand, that would be the beginning of the end of the boycott (let’s remember that the goal of any boycott, divestment and sanctions movement is to become obsolete and unnecessary; once conditions of equality and justice are achieved, the rationale for BDS falls away, and in this sense achieving the just conditions for the dissolution of the movement is its very aim).

In some ways, the argument between BDS and its opponents centers on the status of international law. Which international laws are to be honored, and how can they be enforced. International law cannot solve every political conflict, but political conflicts that fully disregard international law usually only get worse as a result. We know that the government of the state of Israel has voiced its skepticism about international law, repeatedly criticizing the United Nations as a biased institution, even bombing its offices in Gaza. Israel also became the first country to withhold cooperation from a UN review of its human rights practices scheduled last week in Geneva (New York Times, 1/29/13). I think it is fair to call this a boycott of the UN on the part of the state of Israel. Indeed, one hears criticism of the ineffectiveness of the UN on both sides, but is that a reason to give up on the global human rights process altogether? There are good reasons to criticize the human rights paradigm, to be sure, but for now, I am only seeking to make the case that BDS is not a destructive or hateful movement. It appeals to international law precisely under conditions in which the international community, the United Nations included, neighboring Arab states, human rights courts, the European Union, The United States and the UK, have all failed effectively to rectify the manifest injustices in Palestine. Boycott, divestment and the call for sanctions are popular demands that emerge precisely when the international community has failed to compel a state to abide by its own norms.

Let us consider, then, go back to the right of return, which constitutes the controversial third prong of the BDS platform. The law of return is extended to all of us who are Jewish who live in the diaspora, which means that were it not for my politics, I too would be eligible to become a citizen of that state. At the same time, Palestinians in need of the right of return are denied the same rights? If someone answers that “Jewish demographic advantage” must be maintained, one can query whether Jewish demographic advantage is policy that can ever be reconciled with democratic principles. If one responds to that with “the Jews will only be safe if they retain their majority status,” the response has to be that any state will surely engender an opposition movement when it seeks to maintain a permanent and disenfranchised minority within its borders, fails to offer reparation or return to a population driven from their lands and homes, keeps over four million people under occupation without rights of mobility, due process and political self-determination, and another 1.6 million under siege in Gaza, rationing of food, administering unemployment, blocking building materials to restore bombed homes and institutions, intensifying vulnerability to military bombardment resulting in widespread injury and death.

If we conclude that those who participate in such an opposition movement do so because they hate the Jews, we have surely failed to recognize that this is an opposition to oppression, to the multi-faceted dimensions of a militarized form of settler colonialism that has entailed subordination, occupation and dispossession. Any group would oppose that condition, and the state that maintains it, regardless of whether that state is identified as a Jewish state or any other kind. Resistance movements do not discriminate against oppressors, though sometimes the language of the movement can use discriminatory language, and that has to be opposed. However, it is surely cynical to claim that the only reason a group organizes to oppose its own oppression is that it bears an inexplicable prejudice or racist hatred against those who oppress them. We can see the torque of this argument and the absurd conclusions to which it leads: if the Palestinians did not hate the Jews, they would accept their oppression by the state of Israel! If they resist, it is a sign of anti-Semitism!

This kind of logic takes us to one of the traumatic and affective regions of this conflict. There are reasons why much of the global media and prevailing political discourses cannot accept that a legitimate opposition to inequality, occupation, and dispossession is very different from anti-Semitism. After all, we cannot rightly argue that if a state claiming to represent the Jewish people engages in these manifestly illegal activities, it is therefore justified on the grounds that the Jews have suffered atrociously and therefore have special needs to be exempt from international norms. Such illegal acts are never justified, no matter who is practicing them.

At the same time, one must object to some of the language used by Hamas to refer to the state of Israel, where very often the state of Israel is itself conflated with the Jews, and where the actions of the state reflect on the nature of the Jews. This is clearly anti-Semitism and must be opposed. But BDS is not the same as Hamas, and it is simply ignorant to argue that all Palestinian organizations are the same. In the same vein, those who wrote to me recently to say that BDS is the same as Hamas is the same as the Nazis are involved in fearful and aggressive forms of association that assume that any effort to make distinctions is naïve and foolish. And so we see how the conflations such as these lead to bitter and destructive consequences. What if we slowed down enough to think and to distinguish—what political possibilities might then open?

And it brings us to yet another outcry that we heard in advance of our discussion here this evening. That was BDS is the coming of a second holocaust. I believe we have to be very careful when anyone makes use of the Holocaust in this way and for this purpose, since if the term becomes a weapon by which we seek to stigmatize those with opposing political viewpoints, then we have first of all dishonored the slaughter of over 6 million Jewish people, and another 4 million gypsies, gay people, disabled, the communists and the physically and mentally ill. All of us, Jewish or not Jewish, must keep that historical memory intact and alive, and refuse forms of revisionism and political exploitation of that history. We may not exploit and re-ignite the traumatic dimension of Hitler’s atrocities for the purposes of accusing and silencing those with opposing political viewpoints, including legitimate criticisms of the state of Israel. Such a tactic not only demeans and instrumentalizes the memory of the Nazi genocide, but produces a general cynicism about both accusations of anti-Semitism and predictions of new genocidal possibilities. After all, if those terms are bandied about as so much artillery in a war, then they are used as blunt instruments for the purposes of censorship and self-legitimation, and they no longer name and describe the very hideous political realities to which they belong. The more such accusations and invocations are tactically deployed, the more skeptical and cynical the public becomes about their actual meaning and use. This is a violation of that history, an insult to the surviving generation, and a cynical and excited recirculation of traumatic material—a kind of sadistic spree, to put it bluntly—that seeks to defend and legitimate a very highly militarized and repressive state regime. Of the use of the Holocaust to legitimate Israeli military destructiveness, Primo Levi wrote in 1982, “I deny any validity to [the use of the Holocaust for] this defence.”

We have heard in recent days as well that BDS threatens the attempt to establish a two-state solution. Although many people who support BDS are in favor of a one-state solution, the BDS movement has not taken a stand on this explicitly, and includes signatories who differ from one another on this issue. In fact, the BDS committee, formed in 2005 with the support of over 170 organizations in Palestine, does not take any stand on the one state or two state solution. It describes itself as an “anti-normalization” politics that seeks to force a wide range of political institutions and states to stop compliance with the occupation, unequal treatment and dispossession. For the BDS National Committee, it is not the fundamental structure of the state of Israel that is called into question, but the occupation, its denial of basic human rights, its abrogation of international law (including its failure to honor the rights of refugees), and the brutality of its continuing conditions—harassment, humiliation, destruction and confiscation of property, bombardment, and killing. Indeed, one finds an array of opinions on one-state and two-state, especially now that one-state can turn into Greater Israel with separated Bantustans of Palestinian life. The two-state solution brings its own problems, given that the recent proposals tend to suspend the rights of refugees, accept curtailed borders and fail to show whether the establishment of an independent state will bring to an end the ongoing practices and institutions of occupation, or simply incorporate them into its structure. How can a state be built with so many settlements, all illegal, which are expected to bring the Israeli population in Palestine to nearly one million of its four million inhabitants. Many have argued that it is the rapidly increasing settler population in the West Bank, not BDS, that is forcing the one-state solution.

Some people accept divestment without sanctions, or divestment and sanctions without the boycott. There are an array of views. In my view, the reason to hold together all three terms is simply that it is not possible to restrict the problem of Palestinian subjugation to the occupation alone. It is significant in itself, since four million people are living without rights of mobility, sovereignty, control over their borders, trade and political self-determination, subjected to military raids, indefinite detention, extended imprisonment and harassment. However, if we fail to make the link between occupation, inequality and dispossession, we agree to forget the claims of 1948, bury the right to return. We overlook the structural link between the Israeli demand for demographic advantage and the multivalent forms of dispossession that affect Palestinians who have been forced to become diasporic, those who live with partial rights within the borders, and those who live under occupation in the West Bank or in the open air prison of Gaza (with high unemployment and rationed foods) or other refugee camps in the region.

Some people have said that they value co-existence over boycott, and wish to engage in smaller forms of binational cultural communities in which Israeli Jews and Palestinians live and work together. This is a view that holds to the promise that small organic communities have a way of expanding into ever widening circles of solidarity, modeling the conditions for peaceable co-existence. The only question is whether those small communities continue to accept the oppressive structure of the state, or whether in their small and effective way oppose the various dimensions of continuing subjugation and disenfranchisement. If they do the latter, they become solidarity struggles. So co-existence becomes solidarity when it joins the movement that seeks to undo the structural conditions of inequality, containment and dispossession. So perhaps the conditions of BDS solidarity are precisely what prefigure that form of living and working together that might one day become a just and peaceable form of co-existence.

One could be for the BDS movement as the only credible non-violent mode of resisting the injustices committed by the state of Israel without falling into the football lingo of being “pro” Palestine and “anti” Israel. This language is reductive, if not embarrassing. One might reasonably and passionately be concerned for all the inhabitants of that land, and simply maintain that the future for any peaceful, democratic solution for that region will become thinkable through the dismantling of the occupation, through enacting the equal rights of Palestinian minorities and finding just and plausible ways for the rights of refugees to be honored. If one holds out for these three aims in political life, then one is not simply living within the logic of the “pro” and the “anti”, but trying to fathom the conditions for a “we”, a plural existence grounded in equality. What does one do with one’s words but reach for a place beyond war, ask for a new constellation of political life in which the relations of colonial subjugation are brought to a halt. My wager, my hope, is that everyone’s chance to live with greater freedom from fear and aggression will be increased as those conditions of justice, freedom, and equality are realized. We can or, rather, must start with how we speak, and how we listen, with the right to education, and to dwell critically, fractiously, and freely in political discourse together. Perhaps the word “justice” will assume new meanings as we speak it, such that we can venture that what will be just for the Jews will also be just for the Palestinians, and for all the other people living there, since justice, when just, fails to discriminate, and we savor that failure.
Judith Butler
February 7, 2013