1.The term “queer” has been reclaimed as sexualized; for it doesn’t
necessarily have sexual connotations. Concrete traces in “deviance”, or
“perversion” flesh out an understanding. It is evident that if the
State-apparatus, here or there, accepts a gay future alongside a
heteronormative future (Schotten 2015), it is only one that isn’t queer in the
sense of destabilizing the regular flows of capitalism. In so far as it does
disturb, the orbit of queer is anti-social, and this negative position, defined
as such by the political apparatus, is perceived as transgressive by
conservatives and liberals alike.
This
paper will assess the degree to which queer theory in its negative mode; in its
mode that affirms an oppressive pejorative, is thereby made to be a threat. Of course, labelling X as danger, is surely in
part a mechanism to lure that named kind away from that which is outside and
threatening, into that which is inside and acceptable. But there is an opening
here, outside of the intended line that draws back into the fold, that is
revolutionary for queer theory. And this position permits an opportunity to get
clear on what we mean by a just society without
exclusion. The argument then is of a species of deliberative rhetoric; I wish
to argue what is independent of the Symbolic drive to impose identity, is
better than Oedipal configurations.
2. Society is addressed as
heteronormative and reproductive by Edelman’s queer theory (2004); and in this
gesture, it would seem possible that social theory might conceive of a
consistent class critique. The Marxist story of appropriating the means of
production for the purposes of the dictatorship of the proletariat was espied
by Bakunin to be insufficient with respect to utopic vision because there was
no reason that a newly established hierarchy, however temporary, would
relinquish command of the new society. In short, anarchists didn’t believe that
the state would “simply wither away.” Along these lines it was theorized after
the events of May ’68 that our own libidinal desires had to be “desublimated”
to use Marcuse’s term, or “deterritorialized” to use the parlance of Deleuze
and Guatarri because they were already captured under identity with its
predictions and permissibilities. If we spill our desire onto ourselves rather
than onto the future, proclaiming no future instead, we rob the bourgeoisie and
its doubles of its protection within the Symbolic.
To
follow Lee Edelman and affirm the properly homophobic assertion that queers
ought to be destructive of the political apparatus, or, more precisely, to
affirm its own destructive (death) drive,
which the Symbolic continuously occludes through its forward-looking
possibilities embodied in the Child (4), is to transvalue the antisocial and
shore up the Symbolic as a sham (7-8). The Symbolic calls us to be forward
looking, forever deferring our perversions for the sake of a future that we do
not know, but which, we are promised, will be glorious; but for Edelman,
seizing desire now, on our own terms
(jouissance), however meaningless for
others, however counter-productive for others, is within our grasp. The vision
of queers going wild, in myriad ways, makes it impossible for a state (and its
subjects) to be singular in desire, which, to be clear, is the post-structuralist meaning of fascism (Bersani 1995, 171).
If
the Symbolic is forward-looking, fetishizing the White Child, there is no place
in its imaginary for queers that do not submit their desires for repression. For
us, surely somewhat queer heteros, we might say that we refuse to reproduce identities
because we refuse to sacrifice our lives
to the future and to the creation of a better world for everyone to come,
which, even if not a blatant lie, seems to always exclude us (Edelman, 30). On
the other hand, we wager that the death drive of the Symbolic, the capitalist
nightmare, is in its death throes, which, we insist, cannot, and ought not, be
resuscitated by our children. The capitalist class extracts surplus labour from
the working class of tomorrow; but if there is no working class of tomorrow,
society will be hard pressed to reproduce itself. Rather than deferring the
responsibility of “seizing the means of production” to the future child, if it
is even still within any imaginary, perhaps we might commit to leaving unborn
children out of the capitalist mess, and watch as our appropriation of its
meaninglessness demonstrates the catastrophe of the Symbolic.
The
beauty of claiming queer as a mask is that in doing so one is not obligated to
exist in an identifiable and so, predictable way. Failing to be predictable is
the betrayal caught up in the text below. But, importantly, this doesn’t mean
that we always “out” our political nihilism; sometimes we play along, wearing a
mask; sometimes we play a different game too; our couplings might be very queer
because when you are already out of bounds, there is nothing else out of
bounds.
3. Jean Genet follows this negative
line of thinking. He wishes to reclaim evil, but in a way that doesn’t fall
necessarily into the difference of social order. Rather, his position is
outside; for it is a betrayal or “dépassement of the field of transgressive
possibility itself” (Bersani 1994, 10). According to Leo Bersani’s reading of
Genet, in the properly figured act of homosexuality itself, the bodies reject the idea of reproduction because they
mythically emphasize “the sterility of a relation from which the woman’s body
is excluded” (1994, 10). Inside the anus, positioned from behind, bodies are not in a face to face exchange that
produces intimacy; these bodies are “cruising”, pleasure seeking machines. The
difference then is doubly transgressive: the betraying act gestures in a pure
form as an affront to the human world that defines (sexual) desire as
reproductive purpose; and positionally, these bodies, with respect to each
other, deny intimacy. It is not impossible to say that for Genet, the inhuman
act of pleasure seeking is the betrayal of everyone,
and that such a gesture ultimately leads to the possibility of betraying anyone.
For Genet, the value of reclaiming the negative, is to
point at a world that may not be oppressive. In the final analysis, for
Bersani, this is possible only if we will the death of our desires for ordering
other people, to destroy the desire to become new masters for potential slaves.
No future! For Genet, profaning the social and betraying it by individual
gesture, which we might call radical homosexuality, allows the birth of the new
after the destruction of Oedipal desire. Pure stimulation, pure affectuality, with
utter disregard for what’s proper and socially reproductive, allows for the
possibility of life without prediction (Bersani 1994, 17). And it is unpredictability as a prior category,
that turns mere evil within the
Oedipal apparatus into a chaos prior to Oedipal politicization. In the best
possible light, one might very well support the ultra-left revolution, right up until the moment comes where it no
longer serves ones’ interest, say, because the revolutionary moment has
been lost and Oppression has reorganized with its variety of compatible reforms
(Bottig, 410). And, on the other, one might find pleasure in supporting a fascist cause merely because it undermines social order. And so on. For Genet,
only creative unpredictability can save us from repetitions within Oedipus. In
the place of unpredictability; in the privacy behind the mask; one has remained
a letter, and denied the possibility of being captured and signified by the
Symbolic. One is here, perhaps, only
for the cause of pleasure, which doesn’t necessarily exclude pleasure in death.
4. One might object here
saying: isn’t pleasure always desired? What then of suicide? Metaphorical
suicide, of course, seems odd because it denies the self; but we said above
that this doesn’t preclude a new
birth in a solitary, unpredictable self, behind the mask. On the other hand, if
we think that pleasure as a value includes its permanent arrival to sense, we
fail to understand that there are degrees. A life of moderate pleasure, or even
minimal, might not be worth living;
and so, the rush of suicide or an erotic physical death, might be better on the
whole. As Epicurus articulated: death means nothing to us; for one would not be
around to lament the loss. In general, the choice of pursuing oneself unto
death, creates an indifference towards everyone else, that also happens to
translate into a rejection of unborn babies, which we can spin as positive and
caring.
In the view that has been put forward in this paper so
far, Identity is something that we are socialized into; we are nurtured as
women and men; and if we are discovered to not fit with the desires of being as
such, sexually or otherwise, that is, to fit with the heterosexual future, we
are named queer. But rejecting identity and how it constructs us, opens the
possibility of forever queering. Being in opposition to the reproductive future
for the immediate now of desire is not, then, the explicit privilege of Queers.
It seems to me that resistance to Identity is the beginning of an unravelling
that queer theory holds for denying class and social investments. But if we are
to go all the way, queering everything, we need to be open, too, to betraying
the Oppressors on both sides of the political spectrum, which may mean finding
ourselves at once in opposition to the left and the right, or fighting
alongside either project because such provides the conditions for an immediate jouissance. In the words of the authors of Baeden:
“Queerness marks the space which is outside and against political logic” (22).
5. Marxists of many stripes
have taken issue with individualism for being petit bourgeoisie, the privilege
of white males; and they have not resisted making similar remarks about queers,
to find themselves ashamed, at least by those queers willing to play along with
their social justice project. The queer that affirms the death drive, however, lusting after jouissance, doesn’t fit
into the futuristic thinking of Marxists; and it is from this tension, between
being free from responsibility and also wanting to demolish the entire
apparatus, that the Marxist doesn’t know what to do with the space of jouissance and whomever might occupy it
with masks or genuine intentions. However, it should be unequivocally clear,
that the death drive is a problem for
social Marxists, specifically because it is the production of the upper class
against the poor; and it is from that reason that their scandalous claim fits
the queer individualist. But the argument we have followed above notes that fascism
requires the organization of classes,
which structures by identity, and that the subjects of each class behave according to reproductive futurism.
Thus, queers that fall outside of the destiny of the left and its future reproductive
drive, queers who reject the claim that their sexuality just isn’t figured into
an identity yet, note the fascistic tonality of politics (Identity) and aim to be apolitical or anti-political.
Given this telos, if individuals affirm the death drive as their own, if they
appropriate the meaningless logic of the Symbolic in their own jouissance, the only question is whether
they are individually passive or active in their nihilism. That is: are they
decadent, or dangerous? To get the idea here, we ask: have we been, all along, just talking about circuit parties and gay
narcissistic cruising? Edelman himself is a gay university professor—hardly the
sort that would carry out social war. The articulation, then, in this critique,
is that queer negation must be of a different order than a plain gesture at the
destruction of society in terms of its ontological decadence. Destruction falls
outside of the social order, and remains outside; decadence is perfectly compatible.
The criticism from the authors of Baeden against Edelman
is, at least in part, that his jouissance
is repetition, and therefore fits too neatly into the Identity of being-gay.
Negation as something outside the social order requires more. Following jouissance to our death pulls at our
sense of ourselves. It is therefore beyond individual control in the sense that
one is given to the drive, one gives,
come what may, whatever might come.
Thus, it is not conservative; it is not
‘come’ as predicted in the repetition of the same. Thus, simply being gay might
have its consequences in Afghanistan; but not in San Francisco. Queer negation
means actually being outside the social order, relative to the order.
This
is generally the tension between apolitical
passivity, and anti-political
activity; but problems arise on both sides. Apolitical passivity falls
easily into the order, as a kind, however invisible; whereas anti-political
activity, too, falls into a kind. The problem is that if you don’t commit to
the revolution, at any point, others will affirm that you are passive. But it
is not clear how activity doesn’t fit into yet one more identity by which you
might invest or divest, and therefore, how this isn’t just one more operation
of the potential Symbolic to “suture ones’ empty subjectivity to some
abstraction outside of oneself in an attempt to find some meaning” (Baeden,
23). We have implied that Genet’s betrayal cuts across both lines, brokering no
commitments. Genet calls for the death of repetition, along with the death of
Symbolic order in favor of the unimaginable queerness of appropriating the
death drive. And this is why we have suggested a form of straddling; where we
pass willingly back and forth between activity and apoliticity, the former only
to escape the latter, and vice versa.
6. In the context of prefiguring
a new world to live within, after the state has been made to wither away, queer negation posits a world that isn’t well ordered. And yet, if the
state is made to stay away because people
no longer find it necessary to order other people, because jouissance flourishes, we have the beginning of an ethical vision
that resists exclusion. People would
simply be people, queer to every imaginable degree, and not valid because of
structural permissibility, sublimated according to appropriate desire. Presumably
in such a world there would be no centralizing force that sublimates
permissible desire. Individuals might take it upon themselves to be
unrelational, of course; but the sense of Oedipal, or Symbolic, deviance would
be lost.
What I am not
saying is that in this world everything is good and permissible. What I am
saying is that a world in which desire is desublimated, or unhinged, or no
longer repressed, is a queer world that the question of queer forces us upon us,
and that this question addresses the question around making sense of “the state
withering away”. Without a centralized Phallus administering law, we wouldn’t
have the capacity to lock away criminals for failing to fit; we would be forced
to live with criminals. It’s a queer proposal, surely; but perhaps we can find room to grow.
From the idea of
queer non-identity, it is not impossible for social workers to see that the
reformist, leftist, inclusive vision that encodes capitalist survival in the
out of control experiment that is civilization, even if given rhetorical appeal
by labels such as “radical” and gestures at liberatory Marxism, is liberatory only
for a repressed Identity. What gender fluidity, or identity nihilism, permits
us to see is that identity is in
trouble in this post-structural age of anti-essentialist desire.
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