In response to a striking and memorable moment during one session, I wrote a short paper, which I never published. Now that I am preparing to videotaped a series of lectures on the subject of Ideological Critique, based on that course, I thought this might be a good time to post the paper here, for your consideration.
One word of explanation, especially to the young. In the 1990's, some people still used the early word-processing program called WordStar. Now, of course, I use WORD.
Macros and PC's:
A Last-Ditch Attempt to
Salvage Ideological CritiqueI am one of those dinosaurs who still use Wordstar as a word processing program. In the Wordstar program there is a utility that permits a user to define a macro - that is to say, a series of characters associated with a single one or two stroke command. When I have finished writing a letter, for example, I simply press "Escape-C." On the screen appears "tab, tab, tab, Sincerely yours, comma, return, return, return, tab, tab, tab, Robert Paul Wolff." Another macro command prints out "tab, tab, tab, Professor of Afro-American Studies and Philosophy," and yet a third produces "tab, tab, tab, University of Massachusetts, Amherst." This Macro utility is a great convenience to me. It permits me to produce a standardized bit of text without mistakes and without much thought. I have ten or twelve such macros stored somewhere in the Wordstar program.
I
often think that George Orwell would have been quite delighted by the
phenomenon of the macro, had he lived long enough to see it. In his great
essay, "Politics and the English Language," written in 1946, Orwell,
you will recall, talks about the corruption of political thought and language
that is manifested in the mindless repetition of standardized phrases. He gives
lots of examples, such as "a consideration which we should do well to bear
in mind," and "bloodstained tyranny," and "achieve a
radical transformation," and "leaves much to be desired." Had he
written the essay only a few years later, he could have added "the free
world," and "communist dictatorship," and perhaps "tax and
spend liberal." He would have enjoyed the idea of politicians - or their
speech writers - programming these and other phrases into their computers as
macros, so that they could be produced by a single keystroke or two with no
thought whatsoever. We Kant scholars have some rather specialist cant phrases
for which macros might be appropriate - my favorite is "conditions of the
possibility of experience in general."
These
reflections were prompted, several semesters ago, by an incident in a seminar I
was teaching on ideological critique. The participants were a group of
extremely intelligent and widely read graduate students - all impeccably
radical. Despite my heroic efforts to focus their attention on particular,
concrete examples, such as the controversy that has developed among ethnographers
of the northern Kalahari desert, the students persisted in speaking and writing
in the most suffocatingly abstract and stereotypical fashion. Things finally
blew up when one member of the class, making a class presentation, referred in passing
to "racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia." The phrase rolled off
his tongue as though the individual words were simply syllables of one great
polysyllable - stuck together by some sort of syntactical glue. Everyone in the
class was quite comfortable with the phrase. It seemed to me that they found it
reassuring, rather in the way little children snuggle down in bed when they
hear "Once upon a time." All except a rather abrasive German student
who interrupted to protest that she, for one, had nothing against classism. Indeed, she said, she regularly judged people
according to their economic class, and thought it quite the right way to go
about things. The class came to a dead
halt, and no one knew what to say. None of the students had ever heard anyone
question the appropriateness of the phrase "racism, sexism, classism, and
homophobia," used as a term of opprobrium. It was as though, in the middle
of a class preparing little Catholic boys and girls for First Communion, a
smart-mouthed trouble maker had piped up and said, "I can take the Father
and the Son, but you can keep the Holy Ghost."
I pounced on the intervention - as
the French have taught us to call it when a student says
something in class - and did everything I could to make it the occasion for a
searching examination
of unacknowledged ideological presuppositions. That was, after all, the subject matter
of the course. But it was a total flop. I simply couldn't get the students to
see how mind-numbingly banal, how drained of all genuine thought, that phrase
had become. I could not even get them to attune their ears to the ugliness of
it as language. Freud says somewhere,
talking about the dynamics of psychoanalytic therapy, that if there is a single
topic that it is not permitted to examine in an analysis, sooner or later the entire
analysis comes to be about that topic. I have always found this a profound
insight into what happens in the classroom as well. A classroom in which it is socially or
pedagogically unacceptable to question the appropriateness of the phrase
"racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia" is a classroom in which
neither real teaching nor real learning can take place. It is like a classroom
at a Catholic university in which teachers are free to explore every
conceivable subject - except the legitimacy of abortion. It is like the huge
introduction to neo-classical economics at Harvard, presided over by former
Chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisors Martin Feldstein, who
announced, when he returned from his duties in Washington, that the purpose of
the course was to teach that the market works - not how it
works, mind you, but that it works.
There are a number of ways in which
an orthodoxy can be imposed on a classroom.
The most obvious, and hence the least dangerous, is by administrative
fiat. Considerably more dangerous, because harder to spot and to confront, is
the quiet, tacit social pressure that enshrines certain ways of thinking as
correct, stigmatizing deviations as morally reprehensible and unworthy of
serious consideration. I have come to think of this as macro-thinking. By one
of the ironies of modern discourse, this pre-programming of thought masquerades
as ideological critique, when in fact it is the precise opposite.
Ideological critique is the
demonstration that a putatively value-neutral and objective description of the
world actually conceals a thoroughly interested distortion of reality in the
service of some powerful social or economic group. As Karl Mannheim shows us in
Ideology and Utopia, the critique of a text as ideological is a
hostile and aggressive attempt not merely to refute the thesis advanced by the
text but also to discredit the author of the text as dishonest, disingenuous,
covertly exploitative and manipulative. In the polite world of intellectual
combat, where ink rather than blood is spilled, the accusation of ideology is the
verbal equivalent of a shotgun blast. Deployed by the weak against the strong,
it can be an equalizer, righting somewhat the force imbalance that characterizes
unjust societies.
Ever
since Karl Marx introduced it in his early essay, "On The Jewish
Question," ideological critique has been the rhetorical weapon of choice
of the left. Marx himself went on, in his mature writings, to expose the covert
interests at the heart of classical economic theory, managing, in Capital, to
discover ideological bias even in the mathematics of Smith, Ricardo, Nassau
Senior, and their fellow rationalizers of capitalism. When I was young, I was
awed by the depth with which left critics could penetrate the surface of social
and economic relations to expose the exploitation, inequality, privilege, and
self-justification that lay beneath. By comparison, even the most superficially
quick-witted and mathematically adept apologists for capitalism were shallow,
one dimensional, and utterly lacking in self-awareness.
Now, to my dismay, I find that those
with whom I am allied on the left all too often exhibit
precisely these defects of intellect, insight, self-understanding, and
language. In high school Biology, we
studied the autonomic nervous system by means of a particularly brutal bit of
by-play with frogs. It seems that if you stick a sharp pointed object into a
frog's eye and grind it around until the frog's brain is utterly destroyed,
certain of its reflex responses continue to function. This is called
"pithing" a frog. After the frog has been pithed, you can produce a
contraction of the frog's leg by dropping a bit of acid on it. The response
shows that the contraction of the leg is governed by the autonomic nervous system,
centered, as I recall, in the spinal column somewhere, rather than in the
brain. When I listen to speakers putatively on the left these days, I sometimes
think they have been pithed, and that their speech is actually a function of
their autonomic nervous system.
I hope no one will be so foolish as
to suppose that these remarks constitute a brief for right-wing discourse.
Anyone who listens for even a short while to the mindless repetition of
incantations to free markets, democracy, and the dangers of political extremism
- by which is meant anything even slightly to the left of Bill Clinton - will
know that ideological rationalizations of the established order are alive,
well, and awaiting a devastating ideological critique.
But that critique cannot possibly be mounted by those who have lost all
sensitivity to
the ritual and unreflective character of their own discourse. One of the lessons Marx teaches us in Capital
is that when we wish to anatomize some practice or social formation with
which we are confronted, it is invaluable to remind ourselves of its history.
In an effort to understand, and thereby perhaps to counteract, the triviality
and shallowness of so much contemporary left discourse, I shall try in a very
few words to recapitulate the sequence of steps by which, like the powerful
wizard Saruman in The Lord of the Rings, Marx has been reduced from a
world-shattering necromancer to a sideshow conjuror doing cheap dialectical
tricks to scare intellectual children.
The central fact of social life is
the appropriation, by a ruling class, of a surplus of goods they have not
produced, both for their own enjoyment and in order to reinforce their ability
to continue the appropriation. This appropriation takes many institutional
forms - kingship, slavery, conquest, taxation, serfdom - but always it is
backed by force, and always it consists in the taking by one group of men and
women of the food, clothing, shelter, and other goods that the labor of another
group of men and women has produced. In a capitalist economy, appropriation
takes the specific form of the exploitation of legally free wage labor by
capital. The unequal allocation of the
social product is immediately obvious to anyone with eyes to see: some people
live in hovels, others in castles, or condominiums. Some people eat rice and
beans, others eat meat and fish. Some die unattended of diseases that medicine can
cure, others are ushered out of this life as comfortably as armies of doctors and
nurses can manage.
Contrary to the mythology of
celebratory historiography, those whose labor is being appropriated
almost always know perfectly well what is happening to them, even in that most
mystified of all social formations, capitalism. But the rationalizations by
which rulers justify their appropriations do, nevertheless, play some role in
sustaining the structure of inequality. The task of ideological critique is to
expose the self-interest that lurks below the surface of those rationalizations,
and in that way to cripple the rationalizers. So it is that Marx devoted
endless pages to attacks on the major and minor theorists of classical
political economy, even though he believed that the assault on the central keep
of the capitalist fortress would be led by organized workers, not their allies
from the left intelligentsia. In the early part of this century, it was still
possible to hope that the working class of the industrialized world would
replace capitalist irrationality and injustice with the rationality and justice
of socialism, but three world-historical events - the First World War, the Bolshevik
Revolution, and the Great Depression - put paid to that happy optimism. The willingness
of the several national components of the international working class to take
up arms against one another, the appearance of a pre-capitalist dictatorship
masquerading as socialism, and the success of capitalism in surviving the great
crash that Marx had predicted, together sank the hopes that had buoyed the early
revolutionary movement.
In response to these reverses and
disappointments, radical intellectuals elaborated ever more subtle theories of
hegemony, ideology, mass communication, and the mysteries of discourse, all in a desperate attempt to
explain why their generous offers of leadership elicited so few followers. Eventually, the discourse of radicals lost
all relation to the material base of social theory,
to the fundamental facts of exploitation, appropriation, and inequality, so
that we were left with an empty rhetoric of rebellion and revolution into which
literary and aesthetic concerns could be poured. In the wonderful phrase of
Alexander Pope, referring in the Dunciad to
his rivals among the Augustan poets, the discourses of our contemporary radicals
have become "shit to airy fineness spun."
With no conception of the material
basis of exploitation and inequality, with no way of making that fundamental
distinction between appearance and reality on which all true ideological
critique rests, the invocation of such phrases as "racism, sexism,
classism, and homophobia" is little more than a shibboleth, a test of
politically correct pronunciation, passage of which admits one to a clique of
uncritically one-dimensional flatlanders. The subject of these remarks is power
and discourse - not how to control the power of discourse, or undermine the
power of discourse, or apologize for the power of discourse, but how to recover
the power of radical discourse, to make such discourse once again a weapon in
the struggle against inequality and exploitation.
The prerequisite to that recovery, I
suggest, is a refusal to invoke the macros of speech without thought.
"Racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia" is to the 1990's what "running
dogs of imperialism" and "capitalist lackeys" were to the
1930's. Now, there really were, in the 30's, nasty, unprincipled underlings who
did the dirty work of the imperial capitalist nations, just as there are today.
When first coined, the metaphors "running dogs" and
"lackeys" captured rather vividly both the function and the moral
degradation of those despicable people [assuming, for the moment, that one
accepts the rather unjustifiably negative view of the dog.] But after endless,
and eventually mindless, repetition, they lost their capacity to enlighten, and
instead became obstacles to thought.
In like manner, racism is an
integral component of American society, sexism is a structural feature of
almost all societies, disdain for the poor [which, I assume, is what is 'meant
by "classism"] has been endemic among the wealthy and privileged of
European and American society for centuries, and homophobia is manifestly a
widespread pathology. But "racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia,"
like so many other unreflective utterances of the putatively progressive, is an
impediment to thought, not a tool of ideological critique. It is as devoid of
critical content as that right-wing oxymoron, "the free market."
Perhaps this is merely the crotchety
complaint of a sixty-year old radical who finds that, as usual, the young are
listening to a different music and singing a different song. But I am convinced
that we have never had a greater need for the destructive unmasking of
entrenched and
rationalized interests, for ideological critique as Marx first conceived and practiced
it. Perhaps the next generation of PC's will come with a resident program that responds
to stereotyped, one-dimensional language with the error message, "Warning:
words without meaning; please pause and reflect."
8 comments:
I've tried to say something along these lines here.
" But "racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia," like so many other unreflective utterances of the putatively progressive, is an impediment to thought, not a tool of ideological critique."
I'm rather taken by this thought, although I do want to push back on it. On the one hand it is certainly clear that the knee-jerk shibboleth of the left does little more to produce critical thinking than that produced by the right (even though I'm inclined to agree with its presuppositions). On the other hand, jargon can be useful for transmitting knowledge quickly and efficiently (as you note). Obviously, I'm not aware of all of the context for the original utterance, but I wonder if "racism, sexism, classism, and homophobia" isn't just an unwieldy attempt to give name to the collocation of oppressions that exist in the world. If so, I'm not entirely unsympathetic with it, as naming a thing is often a powerful way to begin to deal with it. However, you seem to think something more pernicious--or maybe just lazy--is going on, but I wonder how easy it is to tell the two apart.
Anyway, thanks for the interesting paper. I look forward to the upcoming lectures!
Michael, I think the problem begins when what starts as a compendious way to refer to an array of social disabilities and hatreds morphs into a catchphrase that resists analysis or thought. After all, as I noted, "running dog of imperialism" was at first a striking and powerful description, but eventually it was reduced to a cliche uttered without thought. It is not the words that are the problem but the mindset of the people repeating the words. Confronted with a challenge to the phrase. my students were unable to respond thoughtfully and forcefully because they had long since stopped thinking about what the phrase meant.
Many thanks to Professor Wolff for continuing to speak truth to power.
In response to Michael, 3:27pm: even your compendious expression 'collocation of oppressions' needs a lot of Wolff-style work before it should be allowed to pass in the classroom, never mind in scholarly work. To use it without risk of mere sloganising, we need to be able to explain what an oppression is and what is supposed to be wrong with it. We need some idea of whether, and why, it is worse to be oppressed than to be, say, depressed or sick or exploited or terrorised. We also need to know whether all oppressed persons and peoples, so understood, are oppressed by the same oppressors, by the same techniques, in the same dimension, and to similar extents, and hence whether we should think of them as being, in any interesting respect, 'collocated' in their oppression.
Great post. I often think about what the engine driving this phenomenon is--what it is that converts a living, breathing thought into a catchphrase.
These catchphrases function much as religious rituals do--they have a referent, but largely function to help reaffirm (to yourself and others) your connection to a meaning- and identity-bestowing worldview and community. "This is how we do it and say it."
It's intriguing that the process of forming an identity and sense of meaning so often get in the way of critical thought. It seems a primary opponent of good philosophy.
I have to admit John Gardner's criticism of my phrase misses the point somewhat. Never mind that all I was trying to do was describe--charitably--what Professor Wolff's students were trying to do and nothing more. Gardner's suggestion that "We also need to know whether all oppressed persons and peoples, so understood, are oppressed by the same oppressors, by the same techniques, in the same dimension, and to similar extents" suggests a sort of Zeno's paradox for even talking about any sort of oppression that it suggests nothing more than inertia. To be clear, I do not think that there is anything wrong with studies that seek to understand different forms of oppression (and have learned a lot from such works as Pateman's The Sexual Contract and Mills' The Racial Contract). However the suggestion that to suggest that racism and sexism (to use just two examples) cannot intersect (to use Kimerble Crenshaw's phrase) does not mean that they must affect oppressed peoples in the same way and by the same oppressors. These types of oppression are too vast and diffuse to be understood as unidirectional--which is perhaps a point that Professor Wolff's students perhaps failed to make--and it seems to me wrong to assume that different types of oppression can overlap. This, in any case, something that has been argued in more detail by Black Feminist thinkers like Angela Davis, Patricia Hills Collins, and Crenshaw.
Finally, I don't think Professor Wolff (although he can speak for himself) means to say that any jargon is wrong or unhelpful--indeed the phrase "ideological critique" would be meaningless without it. What I take from his paper is that we must not rest on our laurels or the work of others when we use such phrases, just as we shouldn't simply cite authorities to prove an argument (which admittedly I may seem to do here, although I mention them more to provide a reference for my own thinking than anything else). Yet it also seems silly to me that we must prove that oppression is bad before analyzing types of oppression, when any sensible definition and understanding of the phrase requires that we see it as a negative act (even in such cases where it is arguably necessary, it is seen as harmful).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Jensen
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Levin
To respond to the students you need to explain why Arthur Jenson and Michael Levin were never fired from their jobs.
Thank you for your post. Certainty is intoxicating and these macro-concepts provide the thrill of intellectual control. The problem is not just among the students however. The dominance of theory in the humanities bolstered this way of thinking, reinforcing a tendency that always plagues the intellectual class. I remember my own undergraduate and graduate studies -- the whole purpose of literary criticism was to reveal the implicit power structures of every text and then demystify or deconstruct them. This method, while valuable as a tool, reinforces a moralistic view of history and provides a ready-made identity to the critic as the arbiter of the ideological patterns found in each text. If professors can't express themselves in other paradigms (and many of them can't), then such thinking wins by default. If all the metaphysical and artistic efforts and dilemmas of the past are subsumed into this point of view, moreover, we aren't going to see any change. Little surprise then that students pride themselves on their moralistic stance against statues of Woodrow Wilson on Princeton campus or lament the appropriation of other cultures when the sushi they eat isn't authentic. They are aping a powerful tendency in the humanities and, while many professors express alarm over the chilling of discourse, many are unwilling to admit their own complicity in this state of affairs.
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