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Re: [Urbanstudy] Re: Problematizing Definitions: msg#00079

culture.india.sarai.reader

Subject: Re: [Urbanstudy] Re: Problematizing Definitions

Let me - like Anant - stick my neck out in "the presence of a whole bunch of cultural studies folks".

Was just reading Gayathri Spivak's essay "Can The Subaltern Speak". Spivak examines philosophical production, such as Foucault, Deleuze and the Subaltern Studies Group, who seek to unmask the workings of power in order to reveal voices that are typically not heard. While such analyses often start from a critique of essentialism, they tend to posit other essences through the construction of monolithic and anonymous presences such as "the workers' struggle" or "the history of the subaltern". And because these essences are monolithic and anonymous, they involve the erasure of individual identity. Therefore any attempts to speak for the subaltern eventually construct representations that erase their identity. It does not matter whether this comes from the activist philosopher or from the organic intellectual who has risen from the subaltern ranks. The organic intellectual destroys his/her status as a subaltern by attempting to represent the subaltern.

Spivak draws a distinction between two forms of representation.
1. Proxy - the attempt to speak for, as in politics
2. Portrait - the attempt to speak of, as in philosophy
It is important to distinguish between these two forms. While proxy may appear to be more genuine since it demands engagement (speaking 'to' the subaltern, and not just speaking 'of'), it should be realised that the myths and beliefs constructed through portraiture affect the basis on which choices of proxy are made.

All this ties back to the point Anant made - when Zainab interacts with the woman and child some meaning is produced, but when she reports it to this discussion group the woman and child are excluded and we now are aware of two different languages operating, and immediately wonder which one is more authentic.

So returning to the question "what constitutes culture?" - we must first ask if the question is worthwhile. To ask the question at all implies a belief that it is answerable, which in turn involves an assumption that culture has already occurred in an observable fashion. This assumption immediately pushes culture into the past (it does not matter whether this is the immediate past of yesterday, or the remote past of history). And culture is most alive when it is in the present, when it is actually experienced.

So rather than asking 'what is culture' it is more worthwhile to ask:
1. What is the basis on which claims to define culture operate, intersect and compete?
2. What are the politics, myths, beliefs, genealogies and spatial practices that underpin the construction of such claims?
3. What are the traces we leave in space that eventually accrue into memories and symbols?
4. What are the conversations and intersections that take place between tacit experiences and explicit definitions of culture?
5. (Most important to us) What is the complicity of the intellectual in all of these processes?
6. How can we individually use such critique to construct our own ideology and ethics?

Prem



anant m wrote:
hm. i hope i am not making an ass of myself in the
presence of a whole bunch of cultural studies folks. i think it is better to think of a geneology of
culture rather than define it. to my reckoning, the
first loaded use of the word culture was made by
mathew arnold.
some time in the second half of the 19th century. this
was just before the time colonial anthropologists were
seriously beginning to wonder if they had it all
worked out. for arnold, culture was high culture all
that is 'beautiful and intelligent' and he was
strongly opposed to the plebian and the ordinary. and
you must read his dismissive references to the irish!
education therefore had to be in the hands of the
cultured and not democratized. later on a whole range of marxist critics led by
raymond williams turned it on its head and argued that
culture is really the ordinary. this was a way of
challenging the ways in which high culture reproduces
power relations.
raymond williams and his work notwithstanding, culture
remained largely the domain of anthropologists first
the structuralists strauss and then bodley and geertz
types whose primary means of getting at culture was
via ethnography where one places oneself firmly in the
lifeworlds of those whose culture is being studied and
then withdraws to the library to reflect on the
ensembles of meanings and practices that are not one's
own. hence ideas like primitives, savages and noble
savages and then the ultimate 'thick descriptionists
and so on. Here is the cross that the scholar bears: she/he at
the moment of the ethnographic encounter and actually
coproduces meaning with an interlocutor but when she
or he withdraws to write about it for a diffferent
audience, she or he produces the culture of the
'other' for the consumption of scholarly kin. thus in your interaction with the woman whose child
you thought was being treated cruelly (at least at
firsy anyway) she and you together coproduced
meaning.but when you report it to us, the woman
remains outside of this conversation and it is her
culture versus our culture that we end up talking
about. well, that was an attempt at a rough and ready
geneology of culture. i have no idea what culturality
means. others please add or delete. anant

--- zainab@xxxxxxxxx wrote:


I am still interested in understanding the 'general
meaning' of the term
culture? What constitutes culture? And what
constitutes acts of
culturality?
Cheers,
Zee






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