Dan Wang on Thu, 12 Dec 2002 05:46:01 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> re wark's crit of CAE |
> > Last week, I was made privy to a grievance brought forth by a renowned > anatomist who had been the victim of a defamation campaign by the molecular > biologists in charge of his department who had denied him recognition and > proper benefits for over a decade and mis-characterized his work . And just a day or two ago many of us in the US were made aware of the naming of a Rhodes Scholar whose natural parents happen to be imprisoned former Weather Underground radicals. They named their son, this newly minted Rhodes Scholar, Chesa--as widely reported in the papers, that's Swahili for 'dancing feet.' The parents are white. And the boy (now young man)? From the Chicago Sun-Times: '[Chesa] Boudin, 22, said he had advantages most other children of prisoners lack: a stable, loving home, money for tutors, counseling and the private University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, plus "the fact that I had white skin."' This bit of headline news is worth noting because it reminds us that there are in fact many white North Americans--probably more than ever, numerically speaking--who are very aware of their racial privilege. And that this awareness has a history, embodied in the personal histories of Chesa Boudin and his parents. In the Sixties many young white radicals identified strongly with the burgeoning Third World movements--a term which then often included internally colonized populations like the black Americans. Even accounting for the posturing and insincerities, the fact remains that lots of young white people put their own well-being at risk in performing various acts of solidarity. In anycase, way more white people demonstrated this solidarity than one might have expected from such a conservative society. In fact, for an entire generation of white activists, the struggle for basic human rights for black Americans became inseparably linked to all other political analyses. And to this day, if asked, someone like former Weather Underground radical Bernardine Dohrn (Boudin's adoptive mother) will sum up the difference between the price paid by white and black radicals this way: "I'm still alive." They see themselves as the living proof of there being concrete gradations of privilege, and far from forgetting this, frequently make it a point to verbalize this fact. So what does this have to do with tactical media? The short answer is, not enough. It seems to me that radicals of all color and stripe have had to recalculate their willingness to take risk. A very natural development considering the harsh penalties suffered by activists and radicals under the global counterstrike initiated by Reagan/Thatcher and continuing today, not to mention the earlier FBI and police state counterattacks. For black activists this change in calculus has resulted in an extreme political moderation, and for white activists this has meant disengaging from the riskiest kind of solidarity once available to a white person: throwing one's lot in with the black folks, as far as allowable. I'm with Coco--this isn't just paranoia. CAE themselves are very clear about having kept their writings fairly inaccessible as a defensive posture. They liken their textual tactics to the Frankfurt School, and follow the model of producing dense writing in order to keep their work from attracting too much attention from the reactionary society-at-large. Similarly, they talk about finding niches within institutions like museums and universities from which they can practice their work while drawing on institutional resources, including a measure of political cover. All well and good--very reasonable and smart, in fact. BUT, what then happens to one's work, or even better the field as a whole, when the institutions that allow for such tactical parasitism have been for their entire history to begin with white supremacist in nature and result? When there is only either silence or defensive critiques of postcolonial work in answer to this question, it is not far-fetched at all for the field of work now named tactical media to be characterized as racist when that term is used in light of the former and very real solidarities expressed and concrete risks assumed by an earlier generation of white activists. Okay, you might say, but the institutions themselves have begun to change, are undoing their decades and even centuries-long legacies of racist exclusion. To a degree, that's true. There are many scholars and academics of color working today who a generation ago would not even have made it past the outer gates of a given campus. But please recognize that this vaunted 'inclusion' remains at best provisional. So long as the 'diversity' behave themselves, they can stay. As soon as they get a little too down home, well, watch out. Recall that Harvard's president scolded Cornel West (whose scholarly writings go back more than 25 years) for making work in the hip hop idiom, while net.art digirati Barlow (whose academic credentials, for all his social contributions and weird experiences, pale by comparison) took up residence at the same institution after having made a minor career of penning bad songs for the Dead. One can only conclude that the culture of what rock critic Jim DeRogatis calls the 'white person wiggle' doesn't threaten in nearly the same way beats and rhymes do. Gee, I wonder why. In former days, there would have been a few white people ready to stand with the coloreds. Today, there are many, but not from the net.art world, and few from tactical media. This is sad because tactical media is, more than just about any previous political and cultural current, self-consciously writing its own history, through books, conferences, and lists like nettime. The unwillingness of many tactical media practitioners to prioritize solidarities with activists of color will be clearly documented for the people who come later. To use CAE's theory of the wager, in which every course of action is a gamble, I must say that to neglect avowed anti-racist work is, under the present conditions of universal racism, a sure bet with little payoff. Time for white tactical media practitioners--who up to the present moment have been so good at measuring their risks--to wager a whole lot more. Dan w. ----- End forwarded message ----- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net