alternarrative


The Jews of Egypt: The History Aciman Forgot to Mention
June 12, 2009, 11:28 pm
Filed under: Critique, Judaica, Política | Tags:

Today at the bookstore, I came across a copy of André Aciman’s memoir, Out of Egypt, which reminded me that I should write up my critique of Aciman’s much-circulated recent op-ed in the New York Times: “The Exodus Obama Forgot to Mention.” When I first read the piece, I was quite surprised that a scholar of his standing would write something so unhistorical. But before I go on to explain my reaction, let me note that I do agree with his main message. It is indeed a shame that few of us know this history, that most young Egyptians today have no idea about the vibrant Jewish community that lived among them less than a century ago.

What Aciman forgot to mention is why or how, and under what historical circumstances most of the Middle East’s Jews fled their homelands or were (unjustly) expelled from there by the governments. Aciman writes: “Mr. Obama never said anything about those Jews whose ancestors had been living in Arab lands long before the advent of Islam but were its first victims once rampant nationalism swept over the Arab world.” This is a downright dishonest and inaccurate picture, if only because of the glaring absence of the one big word you would expect to see here: “Israel.” (more…)



Us vs. Them, the Regimes who Stone Women
June 7, 2009, 11:30 pm
Filed under: Critique, Feminism | Tags: ,

Obama’s Cairo speech has obviously been the most talked about thing this past week. While I have been surveying the many varied praises and critiques out there, I was drawn to a set of responses on one particular aspect of the speech: the section on women’s rights. Fatemeh Fakhraie has shared her thoughtful observations here, mainly in response to other feminists who have found more to diss than to like in the speech.

A complaint by a certain Anne Applebaum caught my attention. She writes, in an otherwise positive take on the speech: “he could have spared us the comment about the ’struggle for womens’ equality in America,’ as if we were all in this together, us and the regimes who stone women for adultery.” This is a very interesting remark, because it objects to precisely one of the reasons why many of us might actually appreciate Obama’s speech, for his intelligent acknowledgment of nuance and complexity when it comes to such an issue. As Fatemeh notes, “Obama took care not to merely point fingers.” By recognizing problems within America while discussing those of “the Muslim world,” he made a very basic ethical gesture, one that I think is often crucial to resolving problems.

Applebaum’s perspective, however, is quite different. For her, the logic of differences between us and them reigns supreme. (more…)



The Event as Televised Spectacle
March 15, 2009, 2:31 pm
Filed under: Critique | Tags: , ,

While I’m reading a bunch of dead white men debate on the nature of the historical event, thought I’d take a minute off to blog on the following interesting insight:

Television, by abolishing delay and placing the action before our eyes while its outcome is still uncertain, has at last robbed events of their historical character and projected them into the everyday life of large numbers of people. (Pierre Nora, “Le retour de l’Événement,” 1974)

The author cites the landing on the moon as the archetypal modern event. For us, of course, a more recent and striking example would be 9/11. Pierre Nora continues: “Now, moreover, events are transformed into spectacles. Is theatricality an inherent quality of so many of the conemporary events that become objects of pubic consumption, or is it live broadcasting that bestows an element of theatricality upon them?” The question is more than pertinent to the event of 9/11.



Dinesh D’Suck on Michelle Obama
July 4, 2008, 1:56 am
Filed under: Critique, Feminism, Política

Of course, we were only waiting for the attacks on Michelle to begin. Dinesh D’Souza has taken his turn. In a typically horrible piece of writing, Mr. D’Souza–the Indian immigrant turned crazy right-wing American, and a homophobe who also blames the cultural left for causing 9/11 (!)–vilifies Michelle Obama and identifies her as the “real problem” of Senator Obama. But we all know that for sexist misogynists, the real problems somehow always have something to do with women!

D’Souza, characterizes Michelle as an “above-average but far-from-stellar performer” who never deserved to have gone to Princeton. And then, you knew it, he quotes from her already much-quoted college senior thesis! For a man who doesn’t have a real job other than getting paid for spewing forth bullshit like this, D’Souza comes across as exactly the kind of person who would bother spending hours going through a 21 year old’s paper until he finds a “typical” sentence with a couple of grammar mistakes. And voila! Mr. D’Souza declares his triumphalism as he proves once and for all the lack of intelligence of an inherently inferior being. Of course, what were we thinking? Did we forget, black people are not supposed to know good English! And we have Mr. BA-in-English to remind us of that.

But D’Souza’s main contention is that Obama should be married to a strong woman like her, “a woman who clearly influences him and who stands to have public influence in her own right.” The assertion, it seems, is that Obama can’t control his wife. And a man who can’t control his wife is the real horror in the eyes of misogynists.



Sex and the Movie
June 1, 2008, 10:15 pm
Filed under: Cinemático, Critique | Tags:

The release this weekend of Sex and the City, the movie, has been the buzz across country, and anyone who has recently opened the news (on-line or off-) could not have avoided hearing about it. And so partly out of curiosity, when a couple of friends asked about going to the theater last night, I agreed to accompany without reservations.

A buyer on Craigslist offers $6,0000 each for tickets to the Sex and the City premiere in NYC

Now, I’m not inherently averse to that less-than-serious genre of romantic comedy, not to say anything of the stuff known as “chick flix.” But Sex and the City was an awful film. If it weren’t based on a wildly popular TV show that ran for six seasons (I’ve only seen a few episodes occasionally), the movie would’ve certainly been a poor-quality no-name romantic comedy and not the box office hit that it has become–grossing over $55m this opening weekend. As you may have heard, for the premiere in NYC last week, there were last-minute posts on craigslist seeking tickets and willing to pay as much as $6,000. And of course there’s the woman who spent $19,000 on eBay for what turned out to be a fraud. That kind of spending is perhaps condoned by the culture that produced, and is depicted in, Sex and the City–even as many women claim that SATC is merely fantasy, and not a reflection of their real desires to spend all the money they could on designer items. But more on that later. (more…)



Sérgio and Power
May 29, 2008, 2:25 pm
Filed under: Bookish, Critique, Política

This week’s Nation is carrying an interesting review of the new book by Samantha Power (who is perhaps now best known for her Hilary-Clinton-is-a-monster-gaffe). Chasing the Flame is a portrait of Sérgio Vieira de Mello, the UN diplomat who was killed by the 2003 car bomb at Baghdad’s UN headquarters. Michael Massing’s book review tries to understand Power’s fascination with this man, whose life can best be described as sketchy. Incidentally, I learned, Vieira de Mello’s UN field career began in Bangladesh!

Unable to find a teaching job, Vieira de Mello landed a position with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). In 1971, at age 23, he was sent into the field for the first time, to Dhaka, Bangladesh, to help Bengalis displaced from Pakistan. Feeding and sheltering refugees, Vieira de Mello realized that he was meant to be a man of action, and his career path was set.

Even as my familiarity with Power is limited to talks at conferences in DC and Cambridge, I think Massing’s effort to locate the book in the context of her intellectual development makes sense–or, at least, make for interesting food for thought, especially for those of us angry youth who sneer at cooptation by power (Which makes me wonder, what will happen of Obama the Prophet? *shudder*):

Just as Vieira de Mello made the journey from student revolutionary to senior diplomat, so has Samantha Power gone from being an independent critic working outside the system to being a high-profile figure operating within it. Her book’s odd shifts in tone and frustrating gaps in analysis reflect, I think, the ambivalence she feels about making that transition. In grappling with the many compromises Vieira de Mello made in the course of his career, Power may be unconsciously wrestling with the accommodations she’s been forced to make as she’s traveled the perilous path from obscurity to celebrity, from being an outside analyst assessing those in power to being one of the powerful herself.

Read the full article here.



Structural Racism vs. Racial Individualism
May 10, 2008, 7:02 pm
Filed under: Critique

I have often complained, along with my friends in college who were engaged in critical activism, about the pervasive tendency in our culture to treat racism as if it’s merely an issue of attitudes and personal prejudices. It was therefore refreshing to read a great article by Thomas Sugrue in The Nation, in which he presents a nuanced review of this and related issues. A pertinent excerpt:

The story of inequality is one of the maldistribution of power and resources. Racial inequality has persisted in American life not just because whites harbor bad thoughts about blacks but because the advantages that redound to whites through racial segregation, especially in housing and education, have yet to be dismantled. But structural explanations of racial inequality have never fared well in a culture that attributes success to individual merit and pluck. White Americans who live in privileged suburbs pride themselves on their colorblindness but resist efforts to construct affordable housing lest it interfere with property values. They rebel against the misuse of their tax dollars to support the indolent and efforts to shore up failing urban schools. Structural explanations are taboo because they puncture our treasured myths of upward mobility and self-reinvention. Anyone can make it if they try hard enough, if they break free from the chains of dependency, if they get up in the morning and say, “Yes, I can!”

If that last phrase sounds familiar, that’s probably because it’s deliberately so. The four books reviewed by Sugrue include one that was co-authored by Bill Cosby, and he also raises some interesting questions about notions like “sellout” or “race traitor.” Read the full piece here.



Court as Theater
June 15, 2007, 3:14 pm
Filed under: Critique

I really like reading Patricia Williams’s column, Diary of a Mad Law Professor. She writes with amazing vibrance and clarity, and a critical perspective that I share with great conviction. Last week, she had some interesting remarks on the performative aspect of law in the following paragraph, which I’m obviously taking out of context:

Both science and law have their meta-worlds–the lab, the courtroom–and each sets up controls against the influence of extraneous matter, as in the sterilization of equipment or rules that exclude hearsay. If science is rooted in empiricism, the trial is to some extent a theatrical enterprise. Philosopher Susan Haack has likened proof in the courtroom to a quasi-religious proceeding, historically traceable to the dunking of suspected witches to see if God would save them before they drowned; law professor Jessie Allen has analogized it to the kind of sequential rituals of mask and incantation that give certain traditions of magic their social power. We dress judges in robes, we raise our hands, we swear on a Bible. Then comes the peculiar process of evaluating “demeanor”: studying the bodies of parties and participants–their faces, their fidgety fingers–for outward signs of lying, for any shiftiness that will reveal the certain discomfort God and conscience will manifest in them if they are knowingly breaking an oath taken in the name of the divinity. ["Divining Demeanor," The Nation]



The Infidels in Economics
June 6, 2007, 4:31 pm
Filed under: Academia, Critique

Christopher Hayes had an interesting article on economics entitled “Hip Heterodoxy” in last week’s Nation, reviewing the state of the disclipline and the situation of those who depart from the ‘orthodoxy’ of neoclassical economic theory. It made for good reading, particularly as I myself am quite the non-economist. On a broader, thematic level, the basic issue is really the dialectic between establishment and dissidence.

The term “heterodox”–like, say, “infidel”–is necessarily imprecise; it categorizes people by what they don’t believe rather than what they do. In the case of heterodox economists, what they don’t believe is the neoclassical model that anchors the economics profession…

The problem, then, that heterodox economists face is that they are economists who don’t “think like economists.” Many point out that humans aren’t rational, or not nearly as rational as the theory would have them be (and, further, that in the aggregate this creates market failures). Others point out that humans are social creatures, not individual agents, and their preferences and behaviors are forged by social structures: institutions, habits, social mores and culture all mediate and drive economic behavior. Others say that price and value aren’t interchangeable and that prices don’t arise from the simple intersection of supply and demand curves, while some argue that unequal power between different sectors of society affects how markets operate. Dissent from the mainstream of economics is not new; indeed, it’s nearly as old as the profession itself.

Real the whole piece here.



The Death of Du’a
May 18, 2007, 5:32 pm
Filed under: Critique, Feminism, Newsworthy

Katha Pollit’s column in The Nation this past week considers the state of women’s rigths in Iraq, in the context of the US invasion. She opens with a reference to Du’a Khalil Aswad, the 17 year old Kurdish girl who was stoned to death in a public spectacle for falling in love with a Muslim boy. I don’t know how I missed the story, but it is utterly horrendous:

The video, originally posted on jebar.info, a Kurdish website, is now plastered all over the Internet: a young girl in a red track-suit jacket and black underpants, beaten, kicked and stoned to death by a mob of excited, shouting men. It’s a gruesome marriage of twenty-first-century technology and medieval barbarity. At one point, bloody and dazed, the girl tries to protect herself, whereupon a man drops a big rock or lump of concrete on her face, killing her. Her crime? As an Agence France-Presse story explains, Doaa Khalil Aswad, a 17-year-old member of the Kurdish Yazidi religious minority, a non-Muslim sect, had fallen in love with a Sunni boy and possibly converted to Islam. For this “crime” against family and community, Doaa was murdered in the small village of Beshika, near Mosul, in a collective act of woman hatred, led by her brothers and uncles. In the video you can see local policemen watching and one man recording the killing on his cellphone.

Unfortunately, the superficial tendencies of our perspectives detract us from recognizing key structural problems beyond and underneath the cultural specificities of such social behavior (Which would explain, for instance, why the incident is being cited on most anti-Islamic blogs and websites, even while they recognize that this was not carried out by Muslim — but as if there is something intrinsically ‘Islamic’ about stoning a woman to death.) I am not critically mature enough to really understand some of the deeper issues that I refer to, but I sort of feel where these issues lie. The fact of Du’a being female, of course, is fundamental to this whole case – precisely why Pollit brings this up in her column. But there are other important aspects of the case to be examined: the theater of the punishment, i.e. the stoning as public spectacle; the identit(y/ies) of the individual versus the communal; the question of the body as the site of social conflict, as well as retribution; the question of shame; and, the meaning(s) of crime.

As a human being, however, the first question that necessarily springs to my mind is this: what about compassion? And emotion? What is it about the behavior of those men, shouting and cheering over a bloodied body, that I simply cannot fathom?

It’s a shame, really. The soul of humanity was crushed that day with the body of that girl. I am at the prospect of becoming physically ill on re-enacting that scene in my mind — which, honestly, may be worse than watching the video, as unbelievably horrible as that is. In face of helplessness, I invoke an invocation in memory of Du’a – whose name, in Arabic, means invocation. Alas, God’s Invocation herself was not safe from human cruelty.