I’ve been thinking about representation, objectification, selling and selling out.
Objectification is viewing a person as an object and not a subject, and that, we understand, is a bad thing because we ourselves want to be seen as people, individual subjects and not sexual or cultural objects. However, it is clear to me (from the way they dress and from comments they make) that some people don’t mind being viewed as objects, at least some of the time. (You might say that that itself stems from internalized oppression, but that’s a discussion we won’t have right now.)
What is “selling out”? Usually it means doing something “just for the money” rather than for some purer, nobler purpose. It is often applied to those in creative pursuits like an avant-garde painter who becomes a “commercial artist” or a literary writer who writes a Hollywood hit, but it is not exclusive to the creative arts. A person who worked at the food co-op and quit to work for the corporate natural foods supermarket could be accused of “selling out” too. (Countercultural types who find themselves living mild bourgeois lives still bristle at the suggestion that they’ve “sold out”; it’s an implication that one isn’t being true to one’s values.)
Isn’t all economic activity a selling of ourselves, our talents and abilities? Why is it seedy and demeaning if a woman sells views of her body (in a magazine or as a stripper), but not if she sells her wit and charm (as a lawyer, for example)? What about selling her physical labor and subservience (waitressing, nursing, childcare, housekeeping, gardening)?
I’m interested in how this question relates to the issue of cultural sales. I remember feeling embarrassed, vaguely ashamed, upon seeing “traditional” dances performed at fancy hotels in the Solomons and Vanuatu (while also feeling a bit like, "Well good on 'em. They might as well make some money off the rich bastards coming to their islands.") However, when our students, neighbors and friends performed basically the same pan-pipe music and dances in the village where we lived, I loved it and never felt any twinges of discomfort. Was it simply because they weren’t doing it for money? What’s wrong with doing something for money?
Cultural tourism seems like an all-around winning combination. Indigenous people can retain and maintain traditions while sharing them with interested outsiders. Tourists can gain some knowledge of and appreciation for other ways of life, while feeling good that their money isn’t lining the pockets of people basically just like themselves only richer. Indigenous peoples in colonized lands who are engaged in cultural tourism or cultural artifact manufacture do not have to give up traditions to benefit from some of the fine things that the industrialized world has on offer to those with money (unfortunately, much of the not-so-fine things are often the most appealing, but that’s another track I won’t go down right now).
So why do I cringe at the sight of a didgeridoo-player at the markets in Darwin? Why did I cringe as dozens of flashbulbs went off when the Red Flag Dancers struck a pose? Why do I hesitate to go to a corroborree specially designed for tourists?
Performance is much more likely to trigger a gut-twinge in me than is artifact-making. Make stuff and sell it to the tourists and I feel no qualms. I may even buy some myself. Objects are already objects. There’s no shame in objectifying them. Performance, though, is about objectifying people and that, I think, is what makes me uncomfortable.
What about performance within my own cultural context? Clearly movie actors are willingly putting themselves in front of us to be objectified. All performance is about representation; performers in a performance are not individuals, but representations of ideas, feelings, experiences. Why does some performance make me feel queasy? I think of pole-dancing, acting in TV commercials, and kids playing the violin at farmers markets and I cringe a little.
What underlying values are at work here? Do others share my uneasiness? I’ll stop here and let you join the conversation. Someone who's read Foucault and Derida recently will surely have something to add. (If you’ve read this far, you might as well comment!)
Bittersweet
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Eyal and I always knew that it would be difficult building a family from
two different countries. It is just now, however, that we have to really
put that ...
13 years ago
4 comments:
Hi Catalin
What a great commentary. I share your feelings exactly.
Considering that we can't stop the rushing forces of cultures spreading (especially ours and the negative aspects of it in particular) I have been feeling that it is better for more people to see the culture of others, however simplified, than never to see it at all. Perhaps some good will come. Perhaps a greater appreciation of diversity. Othrtwise all they will know is what they see onTV in "reality" shows.
Trish
Catalin,
I have thought about this long and hard too. For some time I did not feel comfortable telling peolpe about my experiences living in Ngukurr because i felt it would either create or reinforce a stereo type that denies people some sort of meaningful interaction beyond classifying people according to their race or culture. I was scared of turning something meaningful into an anecdote to be thrown about among friends and people who enjoyed the drama or 'idea' of it but denied a bigger deeper context and the fact that it was an isolated incident related to real people who think and feel things.
I feel vary wary of any generalisations of events or anecdotes that reinforce such things as I think they distance humans from each other and develop 'they' and 'us' kind of mentality.
i think people really need to see each other as people, not as a bunch of characteristics that could represent a culture and could be judged good or bad.
Forest,
I want the rest of your comment!
Picking up where Forest got cut off, do millionaire athletes deserve our cringes too? They may be being exploited (think of the young men for whom football, boxing, etc. was seemingly their only ticket out of poverty), but the fact that they're so handsomely compensated for it relieves us of our concern (for the most part).
I think the amount of compensation has a lot to do with how I react. Think of the most desperate street walker and then think of the Heidi Fleiss-type celebrity party-girl hookers. They don't seem exploited in the same way, do they?
I think that's where the issue of agency comes up. Does a person have more agency when she/he has access to more resources? Does seeing the performer as having limited agency or being a victim necessarily mean he/she is naive or weak? I don't think being a victim always means being naive to the fact that you're being exploited or unaware of the forces limiting/hurting/controlling you.
How much resource-access do you need to be a free agent? Does it have to be material resources? "The noble poor" has been an archetype in many parts of the world: strong in pride and sense of identity, the noble poor do even the most degrading jobs with dignity. (In some versions, they never 'stoop' to beg or steal; in others they will beg, but not steal,in still others they will steal, but only from the exploitive rich). This is contrasted with the archetype of "the depraved poor": they sink to unspeakable and despicable actions due to their desperation and weakness of character that follow from their extreme poverty (or, in a particularly noxious version of the myth, it is their very weakness of character that has led to their dire straits).
How do these two myths of people with limited access to material resources fit with ideas of agency and free will?
I've lost my train of thought, so somebody else will have to pick up this thread (to mix my metaphors).
crikey, this is all too much for me to digest...
but i have some ideas rolling around in my head. they focus on the aspect of dancing and cringing... but i can't quite solidify my ideas...
the viewer/performer relationship is quite an intimate one, and dance is probably one of the more intimate artforms... surely this has some significance...
... another point... we are all trying hard to be PC and determined to view the person, not the stereotype, but seeing Aboriginal people dance their own dances gives you very little access to viewing the person (if you don't already know them)... all they are giving you is dances that are very old and very different from dances found in our own culture... are our cringes then stemming from a challenge to our PC-ness?...
... this whole thread seems to place some kind of prestige or wisdom in being able to 'cringe' (note the phrase... 'deserving of our cringes'). are we just being post-modern snobs by not just enjoying a good show?
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