MLK Day 2016
Recently,
much of the medieval interwebs have been having discussions on Facebook and Twitter
(#femfog) about the implications of a particular senior Anglo-Saxonist
medievalist’s toxic misogynist
blog.
Many have created
compelling responses, including Peter
Buchanan; Lavinia
Collins; and The
Syllabub. Several scholars have responded today on the ITM blog as well,
including JJ.
Cohen.
In addition, a
group of senior Anglo-Saxonists made a strong statement:
Old English Literature and Anglo-Saxon StudiesBy far the majority of contemporary scholars in the field of Anglo-Saxon Studies and especially Old English strive to be professional, respectful, generous, equitable and welcoming to all others, irrespective of identity, including but not limited to, gender, sexuality, race, or age. The field does not belong to any one scholar, or to any one approach, or to any single authority. It is the duty of every generation of scholars in Old English to promote our subject and make the field a better, kinder and more desirable place in which to work for all succeeding generations.
In
this way, the response to the identification of MRA scholars in the midst of
medieval studies has been vocal, community building, and has mobilized scholars
in the field.
I
am writing this post today as a way to meditate on intersectional feminism and
the difficulties that Medieval Studies seems to have with dealing with both
gender and race. I have been thinking a lot about this because I am writing a
book called Digital Whiteness and
Medieval Studies for ArcPress and one of the chapters addresses the issue
of medieval scholars and white supremacy. I am sad to report: it’s become a
literal cakewalk to write this chapter. The examples are just so numerous.
Recently,
I got another example from Twitter via Jeffrey Cohen who pointed me to a blog
post titled “3
Cheers for White Men.” It was written by Rachel Fulton Brown, a tenured
medieval historian at the University of Chicago who also blogs at
fencingbearatprayer. The post in question—while not her only problematic post—valorizes
the supposed whiteness of the Middle Ages. Her post states:
1. When white women (see Marie de France and Eleanor of Aquitaine) invented chivalry and courtly love, white men agreed that it was better for knights to spend their time protecting women rather than raping them, and even agreed to write songs for them rather than expecting them to want to have sex with them without being forced.
2. When white men who were celibate (see the canon lawyers and theologians of the twelfth century and thereafter) argued that marriage was a sacrament valid only if both the man and the woman consented, white men exerted themselves to become good husbands rather than expecting women to live as their slaves.
3. When white women (see Christine de Pizan, Mary Wollstonecraft, and the suffragettes) invented feminism, white men supported them (see John Stuart Mill) and even went so far as to vote (because only men could vote at the time) to let them vote, not to mention hiring them as workers and supporting their education.
And before you start telling me about all the terrible things that white men have done, take a moment to reflect that it was white men who voted in favor of the First Amendment to protect your right to disagree with me in the public sphere, including on matters of heated political discourse.
So, three cheers for white men! Hug a white man today!”
The ensuing discussion on the SMFS Facebook
group has been interesting in many ways—with Rachel Fulton Brown stopping by to
defend herself.
Here,
I want to concentrate on how this post is a #WhiteLivesMatter for the Middle
Ages with all the political dimensions that the hashtag denotes. On my original
post that accompanied my link to this blog I wrote the following statement:
I
believe that one should always support good feminist work in the world,
however, I am not OK w/ supporting white feminist work. I am sorry, this is an
example. This goes beyond just #solidarityisforwhitewomen, it's starting to teeter into a whole other zone
particularly in relation to race/religion as well as the consistent upholding
of whiteness as a category. And can I discuss how much medievalism and
apparently Tolkien is used as a crutch to uphold that whiteness. I wrote this
at a roundtable for Homonationalisms at Kalamazoo last year, and can I say, I
am dismayed that it has become so EASY for me to write the book Digital Whiteness and Medieval Studies,
so easy, the examples of medievalists upholding white supremacy just continue
to proliferate...
"There
is no way we can hermetically seal the past in our current moment. The medieval
past is already queer time; medieval time has become part of our queer now.
Homonationalism now means medieval scholars must address how our historical
fields are being used to uphold white supremacy and military machines. This is
not the time to scold the public for not being medieval historians; rather,
this is the time to educate the public about the medieval past. If medievalists
think that they can escape this fact or imagine that their work is not
political and/or not going to be used in contemporary war machines, then
medievalists must consider what privilege they have to dodge this? The idea
that this can be separated away from the current now is a privilege of
whiteness, a privilege of heteropatriarchy.
Homonationalism now means that
medieval studies is and always will be political. Flavia Dzodan wrote the oft
repeated phrase that “my feminism will be intersectional or it will be
bullshit.” I would like to end this by saying that this should be repeated in
our field—“my medieval studies will be intersectional or it will be bullshit.”
After
the thread on the SMFS page had more or less died down, several things have
struck me especially in comparison with what is going on with Frantzen’s
identification as a believer in MRA activism (down to blue pill/red pill).
Brown’s defense in the Facebook discussion thread amounted to a stance that
included the following: 1. the blog is performance art; 2. it’s written by her persona the bear, not
her; 3. she was being ironic by saying “white, white, white”; and 4. she’s
still working out the tone of her public writing (though she’s been writing
this blog for years); 5. I have been reading too much into the color of her
bear (rather than reading her blog post and her statements). I find these
responses perplexing.
First
off, performance art or aesthetics will not save you from antifeminism or
racism-- as so many people know from looking at recent controversies related to
contemporary poetry (http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2015/04/the-gold-star-awards-a-message-from-the-mongrel-coalition-against-gringpo/) or the Whitney Biennial (http://thenewinquiry.com/essays/the-whitney-biennial-for-angry-women/). Similarly, the persona,
“the bear” is espousing statements that entangle one’s scholarly world with
one’s personal/political views along with a dash of medievalism for good
measure. This cannot escape critical view, especially posting things like “3
Cheers for White Men.” I believe, from the discussion, this was a reaction to
Chicago #blacklivesmatter protests. If so, we should meditate exactly on what
it means to do a #whitelivesmatter for medieval history in response the current
political and social justice terrain.
In
this post (as well as others), Brown uses a fantasy “white male” version of the
Middle Ages as a way to respond to current conversations about race and uphold
white supremacy as a structure. Implicit in her “Three Cheers For White Men”
and her explanations of the Middle Ages is the “other”— if it is white men who
are to be credited with everything she considers valuable, where does everyone
else fit? (Blacks, Jews, non-Christians, non-white women?) As for saying
“white, white, white” as a form of irony, I have already pointed out in the
discussion thread, there are critical discussions online and in academic
circles about hipster racism and irony (http://jezebel.com/5905291/a-complete-guide-to-hipster-racism). As for her defense that
she is still evolving a tone for public writing, the blog has been up for many
years. Likewise, as a tenured scholar who has written and published scholarly
books, I don’t think this is nor can one use the defense of “new to writing” as
a deflection for the content of this and other posts. And no, I am not reading
too much into the color of her bear—I am reading her statements about
valorizing the benevolence of white men and the importance of whiteness in the
legacy of the Middle Ages.
Another
rhetorical move I find especially striking is the combination of white
fragility+benevolent sexism. The latter parallels what several of the blogs
have made clear, that men have been so generous in giving women permission to
have rights, create rules for their consent, etc. We responded to AJ Frantzen’s MRA post
because it was a form of hostile sexism. However, when medievalists, even the
ones who identify as feminist, encounter benevolent sexism, the reaction is
quite different:
“[Benevolent sexism is] a subjectively positive
orientation of protection, idealization, and affection directed toward women
that, like hostile sexism, serves to justify women’s subordinate status to men
(Glick et al., 2000, p. 763).
Yes,
there’s actually an official name for all of those comments and stereotypes
that can somehow feel both nice and wrong at the same time, like the belief
that women are “delicate flowers” who need to be protected by men, or the
notion that women have the special gift of being “more kind and caring” than
their male counterparts. It might sound like a compliment, but it still counts
as sexism.” http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/psysociety/benevolent-sexism/
If
one couples this with white fragility and particular female white fragility, it
makes for an interesting cocktail, particularly when it’s the rhetorical stance
being used by the female writer in response to her writing. White fragility and
female white tears has been explicitly discussed in both scholarly circles and
also in the wider public. The terminology (like white supremacy,
heteropatriarchy, cisgendered, white privilege, etc.) can be easily found on
google searches. What I mean by white fragility, white feminist tears, etc. can
be summed up in the following articles:
http://everydayfeminism.com/2015/11/poc-cant-cater-white-guilt/; http://everydayfeminism.com/2016/01/white-fragility-is-violence/; http://www.alternet.org/culture/why-white-people-freak-out-when-theyre-called-out-about-race;
http://everydayfeminism.com/2015/08/white-america-responsibility/.
As someone on
the SMFS thread pointed out, it’s not about intention, it’s about the effects.
And I am happy that there were people pointing out this problem as well as some
of the complicated dynamics related to white fragility and antiracism work. So
this is what I saw on the SMFS thread, the bandying of “civility” and
“niceness” on the thread in relation to defending RF Brown’s intentions or tone
or apologizing to RF Brown was an interesting slice of all these various
identified structures that I have just discussed. And the discussion of her
being “ganged up” on by the woman of color making a critique of her
antifeminist, white supremacist blog also fits these structural dynamics.
People have written about these patterns extensively. Sara Ahmed’s work is one
I go to frequently and this particularly passage resonates with me at this
moment. I have often in my public writing made it clear that I identify as a
feminist killjoy. And in particular, this statement:
“When black women and women of colour spoke of
racism in feminism we were heard, we are heard, as angry, mean and spiteful, as
hurting white women’s feelings. The angry woman of colour is not only a
feminist killjoy she is often a killer of feminist joy. She gets in the way of
how white women occupy feminism.” There are power dynamics at play in
whose affective pain has more priority and what roles certain bodies are cast
as in these situations.
In relation to
power structures, as a woman of color, I do not have the privilege of white
fragility especially in academic discussions. There are entire books written
about this in relation to women of color in academia (http://www.amazon.com/Presumed-Incompetent-Intersections-Class-Academia/dp/0874219221/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1453113309&sr=8-1&keywords=Presumed+Incompetent) or this very useful article
(http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ899418.pdf). Or as this post explains so
succinctly about the uses of white tears or white emotion in relation to discussions
of race (http://everydayfeminism.com/2015/11/poc-cant-cater-white-guilt/) :
“1. Having Emotions Validated Is a Direct Example of Privilege…
“1. Having Emotions Validated Is a Direct Example of Privilege…
In
this example and countless others since, I’ve learned that white folks usually
receive affirmation or comfort when their problematic behavior has been called
out, especially in mostly white spaces…The simple ability to publicly display
emotions and have those emotions validated – is a direct example of white
privilege.”
So
I found it fascinating that a discussion that was a critique about benevolent
sexism and benevolent racism (which consistently wants emphasizes the goodness
of white culture, which is then implicitly pointing to the lack of goodness of
non-white culture), ended up mostly in a whole series of examples of these
kinds of behaviors. How so very different from the discussions regarding AJ
Frantzen. Somehow we cannot address benevolent sexism intermingled with racism
in any sustained or systematic way even in a closed Facebook group for medieval
feminists. So literally my point about the intersectionality as central to
medieval studies vanished, rather got whitewashed, in the whole thread since it
became an ongoing conversation that continually centered whiteness again and
again. Or in another way, if I posted the exact same thing in the Facebook
Group for a Research Cluster on Women of Color, I am absolutely positive that
discussion thread would have been completely different. So maybe this is my
challenge to the field, how can we make Medieval Studies reach the benchmark
that happens in groups like the Research Cluster on Women of Color?
This
is the heuristic: why is it so hard to let go of whiteness and white supremacy
in medieval studies? Why is it difficult to acknowledge our spectrum of various
privilege and try to do the labor and work of dismantling white supremacist
ableist heteropatriarchy? Why is it hard, even in a Facebook group for
medievalist feminists, to model or even understand intersectional feminism? Why
are there not attempts to read, research, learn, and decolonize our historical
pasts and reframe medieval futures? Why is it so difficult to read critical
race theory and the work of historians of race?
It
is both heartbreaking and often exhausting to realize how easy it has become to
write this chapter on Digital Whiteness
and Medieval Studies. So I appreciate Karl Steel’s post about the issues of
the Vikings and the ongoing discussion of imagining a white medieval past and
the inherent dangers in this vision (http://www.inthemedievalmiddle.com/2016/01/not-back-then-they-werent-still-more-on.html).
This summer, I am scheduled to present at New Chaucer Society on a panel
discussing why Medieval Studies is still so pale. I can give you an early
glimpse at my answer. Look around—consider the white supremacist and
patriarchal things being written by medievalists in Medieval Studies. Imagine
what that classroom feels and looks like to an undergraduate or graduate
student of color. What exactly are students of color supposed to do with a post
like “Three Cheers for White Men”? Though the student demographics continue to
shift to the extent that soon, it will eventually be majority non-white
campuses across the country, what does our professoriate look like? It’s still
over 75% white and predominantly white and male. The statistics in academic
circles are just as bad as the Silicon Valley tech circles. And what does
Medieval Studies currently center? Are we decolonizing our fields of study, our
curriculum, our graduate training? What are programs doing to increase the
number of faculty of color in the field? This is not just a pressing concern
for North American campuses as we have seen a wave of protests and demands from
students across the country to have more inclusive curriculum and more faculty
of color on campus. This is also something recently discussed in the UK with
the campaign that asked “Why Is My
Curriculum White?” Jonathan Hsy recently posted steps to move forward on
ITM, “#FemFog
Medievalism: Lessons Learned+Proactive Steps.” I urge people to read and
think about how they can include these suggestions in their academic lives.
So
yes, is your Medieval Studies intersectional? If it’s not, it is bullshit.
3 comments:
Thanks Dorothy.
This is fantastic. Thanks for your thinking, the links, and your care.
I read this back in January and wanted to share that it has been in my thoughts ever since. And changing the way I think about and "do" medieval studies. Thank you.
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