nettime's long winded digestion on Tue, 17 Oct 2006 21:34:02 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> Recent Gender Things on Nettyme digest [3x] |
Table of Contents: gender thing Jonathan Marshall <Jonathan.Marshall@uts.edu.au> Re: <nettime> pope-on-a-rope digest [x5: butt, tal, pentecost, miller, baldwin ( John Hopkins <jhopkins@commspeed.net> Recent Events on Nettyme "Charles Baldwin" <Charles.Baldwin@mail.wvu.edu> ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 13:27:58 +1000 From: Jonathan Marshall <Jonathan.Marshall@uts.edu.au> Subject: gender thing Hello everyone. Given that I am indirectly responsible for the recent squabble about gender on Nettime, I thought it might be useful to say something about the recent events even though I am not on the List, and I hope peole will excuse me. I am currently editing a special issue of an ejournal which is about gender on the mailing List Cybermind, and the experiences of its members. I'm probably the main contributor. The idea was to try and overcome the problem of writing about gender from one person's perspective, and to have multiple presentations of views, disagreements, discussion and so on. I aimed at enabling a multi-voiced ethnography, hence the rather controlled focus; even though it will spread elsewhere because of people's interests. Submissions were to be either refereed or non-refereed. Alan, on my request, decided to submit to the non-refereed section. The point of this section was to encourage people, especially people outside the academy or students, to give their reflections, accounts of their experience, quick analyses and so on, without them having to risk being heavily trodden on by academics. In other words I wanted to attract into an academic environment, those people whose voices might not otherwise be heard, and who, if we to listened carefully might have something interesting to say. Especially, I wanted males to risk talking about their experiences of gender online rather than to have it analysed for them. As you might expect, other than myself, most of the academic contributors are female. Now perhaps it was a mistake for Alan to post an early draft of his piece to Nettime, but nevertheless I am hoping that his experience has not put too many people on Cybermind off contributing, and that it has not lead to the silencing of too many voices, and the undoing of some academic discussion of gender. This is not to deny that some of the general points raised by people on Nettime are not interesting or that I would not agree with them. However most of the points do not seem to me, to have been made in a way which would open up discussion. Some Nettimers also seem to have felt the same way. To some extent, as the 'debate' went on, some of the comments seemed to move into 'unreal' territory. This kind of reinforcement of identity, intensification of positions, and taking things in strange ways is, as you all know, very common online and it is always interesting, if painful to observe it, and especially to note that 'we' are not immune to it. I do it myself - hence the 'we' here. Thus, as a mild example, someone describes Alan's reflections as research findings, which is clearly not the case. For one it does not have the coding, or the references. Someone else seems to claim that Alan ignorantly insists on authorial intention and the lack of indeterminacy in the text, while at the same time the critic proclaims that (they as critic) know exactly what is text is really about. Another person seems to have read Alan as relying on the Holocaust as an excuse (for 'his' sexism?), when what he seemed to do was ask whether his Jewishness precluded him from writing about anything else than being a Jew. Someone else seems to have accused Alan, or people like him, of having particular power and privilege - something which to me, suggests a bizarre social theory at the least. This whole debate seems to show how online, or maybe everywhere, we react not to a particular text, but we react strongly to other texts and positions we have met elsewhere - we already seem to know what someone is saying, and don't actually put effort into reading, or questioning each other, at all. Certainly we don't have to reflect on how our words might be affect another or undo mutual presence and reflection. Maybe that is taken as good by some people? Those people who can't stand the heat, should leave, shut up etc... It's a standard net-libertarian position, after all. Anyway, in 'reality', as most of you possibly know, Alan is not only leading a precarious existence trying to do his work, but cannot be described as mainstream or representative of anything much other than the difficulty of trying to make a living nowadays if you want to think, or approach material, in truly different ways. The ongoing result, of his work over the last 12 or so years is the 'internet text' - some of which I think is quite brilliant, some of which I disagree strongly with and some of which I quite frankly do not get at all. But, this is beside the point, it is a brave and persistent attempt to deal with many difficult problems in text, film and music, produced at great cost to himself. Disagree with it by all means, disagree with anyone who has almost no position - it does not sanctify them - but perhaps we do need to have a sense of perspective and think about the possible effects elsewhere in the world. Maybe this is impossible. Perhaps to some, the study of, and sensing of humans, is superseded by posthumanism, but at the moment they are nearly all we have that's talking to us. Online, especially with ambiguous offline reference, we write each other into being, part of alan's point, so it may be that our writing/reading needs more care than it does offline; if not, we let others, or other symbols, we may not even be aware of write us and keep us from listening. jon ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2006 20:43:25 -0700 From: John Hopkins <jhopkins@commspeed.net> Subject: Re: <nettime> pope-on-a-rope digest [x5: butt, tal, pentecost, miller, baldwin (sondheim by proxy)] >That's all i have time for now but couldn't resist jumping in, since >i have been trying to sort these things out for myself. > >oh and if you are allergic to the words patriarchy or white >supremacy, pffff, it's a fact. > >thanks to the listening energy of nettime, nice post, Claire, I'm listening. I guess what bothers me most, but might just be the limited forum in which this is being enacted in, is the leap to a praxis. While I literally understand the rhetorics, I am having trouble imagining the consequent actions which should follow. It seems like the problem is framed in the point-counterpoint as absolute, unsolveable, and relying on text-based discourse. I'm thinking, while yes, there have been some changes in the last 40 years -- (I note that my undergraduate engineering department at a hard core conservative school which was 8% female 25 years ago, is now 65% female) -- Kali's framing of the near-complete lack of real progress would suggest changes in strategic praxis is due. I mean, 40 years. That is (I think) technically more than a generation. While the depravities and needs of human behavior surely have temporal roots deeper than a single generation, I would suggest that real change occurs in an individual lifetime and between two people who have decided that change must occur. Another words, if I cannot initiate some kind of personal evolution in my lifetime, I have a hard time understanding WHY I should remain here in this incarnation. There would be no point. Really, I'm not the kind of person who would throw away my own lifetime in order to serve some (for example) grandly framed nationalist mission/ideology. What is to be done NOW? Reading and otherwise consuming second-hand information takes (life)time away from some kind of action f-2-f... (I'm still listening!) cheers John ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 00:22:24 -0400 From: "Charles Baldwin" <Charles.Baldwin@mail.wvu.edu> Subject: Recent Events on Nettyme I was asked to forward this by Alan Sondheim. > Recent Events on Nettyme The Sun clouds o'er, the Golden Hour - All Men love a Golden Shower - The Female Pope sits in her Bower - But never fear - I won't eat Kali's Flower. # 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