week 11-b feminine subjectivity. i. butler, judith. ii. braidotti, rosi

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Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivi ty

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Page 1: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Week 11-BFeminine

Subjectivity

Page 2: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

•I. Butler, Judith. •II. Braidotti, Rosi.

Page 3: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

•Butler, Judith. “Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity.” Feminist Literary Theory. 2nd ed. Ed. Mary Eagleton. Oxford, UK: Blackwell, 1996. 367-73.

Page 4: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

http://www.theory.org.uk/ctr-butl.htm

Page 5: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Central Question:

•Should feminist politics do without a “subject” in the category of women? (367)

Page 6: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Foundationalist view•An identity must first be in place in order for political interests to be elaborated and, subsequently, political action to be taken. (367)

Page 7: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Problem• Identity → “I” → to be intelligible • → subject to binary opposition• → pitted against an “Other”• → generated and restricted by “rules . . . of

gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality”

• → via signification, which is a “regulated process of repetition”

• → gender difference reinforced and fixed (369)

Page 8: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

•The internal paradox of this foundationalism is that it presumes, fixes, and constrains the very “subjects” that it hopes to represent and liberate. (372-73)

Page 9: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Butler’s Argument•There need not be a “doer behind the deed”; the “doer” is variably constructed in and through the deed. (367)

Page 10: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

• As the effects of a subtle and politically enforced performativity, gender is an “act,” as it were, that is open to splittings, self-parody, self-criticism, and those hyperbolic exhibitions of “the natural” that, in their very exaggeration, reveal its fundamentally phantasmatic status. (371)

Page 11: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

• The critical task is, rather, to locate strategies of subversive repetition enabled by those constructions, to affirm the local possibilities of intervention through participating in precisely those practices of repetition that constitute identity and, therefore, present the immanent possibility of contesting them. (371)

Page 12: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

•Butler argues that rather than being a fixed attribute in a person, gender should be seen as a fluid variable which shifts and changes in different contexts and at different times.

• http://www.theory.org.uk/ctr-butl.htm

Page 13: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

•Butler argues that we all put on a gender performance, whether traditional or not, anyway, and so it is not a question of whether to do a gender performance, but what form that performance will take.

• http://www.theory.org.uk/ctr-butl.htm

Page 14: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

• Butler suggests that certain cultural configurations of gender have seized a hegemonic hold (i.e. they have come to seem natural . . .) – but . . . it doesn't have to be that way. . . .Butler calls for subversive action in the present: 'gender trouble' -- the mobilization, subversive confusion, and proliferation of genders -- and therefore identity.

• http://www.theory.org.uk/ctr-butl.htm

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•Braidotti, Rosi. “Nomadic Subjects: Embodiment and Sexual Difference in Contemporary Feminist Theory.” Feminist Literary Theory. 2nd ed. Ed. Mary Eagleton. Oxford, UK: Blackwell, 1996. 411-420.

Page 22: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

•Three phases of feminist nomadism:–Difference between men and

women–Differences among women–Differences within each wom

an

Page 23: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Subjectivity as Woman as

-Phallogocentric-Universal notion of the subject-coinciding with consciousness-self-regulating-rational agency-entitled to rationality-capable of transcendence-denying corporal origins or objectifying the body

-the lack/excess/”other-than”/subject-devalorized difference-Non consciousness-Uncontrolled-Irrational-In excess of rationality-Confined to immanence-Identified with the body—corporality that is both exploited and reduced to silence

I. Difference between Men and Women

Page 24: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Central Issues:•How to define woman as

other than a non-man?•How to argue both for the

loss of the classical paradigm of subjectivity and for the specificity of an alternative female subject? (413-14)

Page 25: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Women = the Other

versus Real-life Women

-as institution and representation(See level 1)

Critical hiatus between them—feminist subjectivity

-positivity of sexual difference as political project--female feminist genealogies, or countermemory-Politics of location and resistance-dissymmetry between the sexes

-experience-embodiment-situated knowledges-women-based knowledges-empowerment-multiplicity of differences (race, age, class, etc.) or diversity

II. Differences among Women

Page 26: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Central Issues:•How to create, legitimate, and represent a multiplicity of alternative forms of feminist subjectivity without falling into relativism? (415)

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Each Real-Life Woman orFemale Feminist Subject is

-a multiplicity in herself: slit, fractured-a network of Levels of experience (as outlined on levels II and I)-a living memory and embodied genealogy-Not one conscious subject, but also the subject of her unconscious: identity as identifications-in an imaginary relationship to variables like class, race, age, sexual choices

III. Differences within Each Woman

Page 28: Week 11-B Feminine Subjectivity. I. Butler, Judith. II. Braidotti, Rosi

Central Issue:

• How to avoid the repetition of exclusions in the process of legitimating an alternative feminist subject?

• How to avoid hegemonic recodification of the female subject?

• How to keep an open-ended view of subjectivity, while asserting the political and theoretical presence of another view of subjectivity? (418)

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•The End