Tuesday, 30 November 2010

Icarus and patriarchy


Patriarchal psycho-dynamics divide the human psyche into half so that all its godly attributes seem to belong to men and all of its contemptible attributes seem to belong to women. Although males hope to win by this sleight of hand, they actual lose, for they become divided in half. There are still some areas in battle, where women are sometimes viewed as having mystical, sacred powers due to their sexuality, but generally intellect, knowledge, will and courage are deemed to be "male". Women are deemed to have precisely the opposite qualities.

When anyone is in the grip of patriarchal ideology, they feel like it's the boost they need to reach the sun, if not the stars. You simply cannot tell a person, who is intoxicated in this way, that the result will be that they are shattered. For, nobody can efficiently go through life and face unpredictable challenges whilst they remain committed to being, effectively, only half a person.

Monday, 29 November 2010

Patriarchy makes society undeveloped

Patriarchy perpetuates itself by undermining the logic of those who are oppressed -- women. It says, "Surely you are imagining it that men are actually oppressing you? You must be insane! We care for you, deeply."

The result of this kind of brainwashing is that women underestimate the accuracy of their own perceptions and start to believe that they are incapable of logic.

It is easy to see why patriarchal societies are less developed, because the ideology of patriarchy is based on infantile projection. That is, if I am male and I do not like anything about myself, I can feel justified and encouraged by the system as it is to project these nefarious aspects onto women close by. Patriarchal societies keep their members in a state of infancy by encouraging this sort of behaviour as a way to excuse oneself. Rather than embracing patriarchy, people should be taught to observe their actions and introspect and analyse why they do the things they do. That would allow them to behave in a more mature fashion.

I perceive that infantile projection is absolutely essential for giving the impression that there are "natural" hierarchies, whereby men dominate women because men are intrinsically more noble than women happen to be. Louis Althusser recognises a difference between forms of repressive state apparatus and ideological state apparatus.In terms of sheer power, we could recognise that men dominate in various institutions of power. Why they dominate and how they manage to get into a position of domination are other questions.

We have the media, the church and to some degree various educational institutions perpetuating the idea that there is something noble, logical and "transcendent of emotional states" in the quality of being male. Men learn through social conditioning that they can easily project their unwanted emotional states onto women so as to conform to the masculine ideal.

Friday, 26 November 2010

identity categories

People expect you to play a role that is defined how they see your identity to be. So, for instance, when I migrated from Zimbabwe to Australia, I was expected to self-consciously "distance" myself from white, colonial racism. I didn't do that, because I didn't know that this was how "the game" had to be played. I genuinely had no idea about the necessity to play any game.

Similarly, one is expected to maintain an internal consistency of behaviour in relation to how others happen to judge you (i.e. what category they have subconsciously put you into). If you appear to be a particular category of person, but then do not act according to the principles that would define that category of existence, many people become upset. They believe you have "deceived" them -- when really they have simply made a mistake about who you are, and then changed their minds, and then blamed you for the discrepancy between their two perceptions.

Monday, 22 November 2010

Obama, identity politics and why that didn't work out

Identity politics goes well with a consumerist approach to life, since one can rather passively "choose" one's product (often in a way that is seen to enhance one's self-image or 'lifestyle choices). Then one sits back and expects the 'product' to perform. It's all quite superficial. The idea that Obama must necessarily perform acts in solidarity with oppressed people because of his skin color is false. People need to get over the idea that 'identity' is a transparent and obvious signal of motivation. It isn't.

This discomfort one experiences must be substantial, otherwise humans have a tendency to be conservative and to try to "adapt" to the circumstances they are in, rather than try to change them. This approach seems to be ingrained in us at something like a biological level. Part of the problem seems to be in the way our biological hardware enables us to adapt to our cultural and environmental circumstances at an early age. So, if we grow up in a system of capitalism, we will find that capitalism also comes to define our emotional determinants. We learn a capitalist subjectivity, which can be so hard to change that it seems to us like "human nature".

It may have something to do with this neurological mechanism:

I will suggest that in addition to being a neural repository for innate forms of behavior, the striatal complex constitutes part of a storage mechanism for parroting learned forms of emotional and intellective behavior acquired through the participation of limbic and neocortical systems."
CEREBRAL EVOLUTION AND EMOTIONAL PROCESSES:NEW FINDINGS ON THE STRIATAL COMPLEXPaul D. MacLeanLaboratory of Brain Evolution and Behavior

Clearly people have been on the wrong path with their forms of moral leftisms and identity politics. Identity politics dominates the left when what is needed is a more considered and critical approach.

The need for a more substantial basis for action other than identity is made palpable by the fact that identity has become a repository for ideas of moral goodness and evil. Because of this, we do not see the human being and his or her capacity for thought and for action. Instead, we see an "identity" with a powerful code attached suggesting either "good" or "evil".

Although there is a historical basis for seeing certain groups of people as oppressed or as oppressors, contemporary ways of treating identity go way beyond this recognition to the point that psychological forces within society as a whole are directed towards assuring that identities remain fixed on the basis of our inner needs to have a sense of moral certainty about our worlds. We learn to project our sense of "good" into certain types of identity, and the parts of ourselves that we would disown as "evil" into other identities. This seems to be the case with both the left and the right.

Thus, "identities", although originally historically created and developed, become psychological fictions to amuse ourselves by. These have next to nothing to do with serious politics, but disguise actual political processes.

Saturday, 20 November 2010

"Projecting" -- and how this applies to gender

It strikes me that many people do not know what "projection" is, or how that psychological dynamic is used in the construction of gender. Generally, "projection" is viewed as something anomalous, eccentric, and the product of rare individuals who express themselves in pathological ways.

In actual fact, projection is the means by which societies maintain inequalities between people. It is indispensable for creating hierarchies of class and gender. Without projection, we would not be persuaded to the belief that people have certain unchanging and essential qualities that mark them, independently from the social context, as being either "inferior" or "superior".

Projection, however, facilitates this sense we often have that society is structured by people expressing their "essential natures" as it were. If more women than men find themselves at the bottom of their societies, with few economic resources, this is because of their essential natures. Likewise, a male has power because he is essentially powerful. A change of social context, therefore, ought not to change the degree of power he has over others. He retains that power, independent of his context, just because he is "a man".

Clearly, this way of reasoning is fallacious -- a fact that men's rights groups expose whenever they point out that "men, too, are discriminated against." Suddenly, a social basis for organisation comes to light when men feel that they are being made into victims. Otherwise, such organisation remains deliberately obscured and unnoticed. Such is the ubiquitous and self-serving view that society is generally just made up of individuals (except when women are behaving nefariously and in a "socialistic" fashion, by making males feel that "social forces" actually exist).

Projection, however, continues to reinforce social hierarchies, whilst rendering them invisible. The way in which projection "works" is through the culturally engendered trope of "reading between the lines". This way of handling others from a different class or different gender from one's own places an impermeable membrane between you to prevent communication.

How much do you "read between the lines"? (The answer to this question may answer : 'How much do you "project"?')

If I tell you that society has been harmful to me because of patriarchal practices, do you read me as saying something completely different; something I hadn't thought to say, at all?

Perhaps, (you think), what I am really saying is that I feel I am one of the weaker members of society. Perhaps you think I out to conquer the world by "making excuses" for all sorts of things. (With what motivation? To what end? Why now?)

It has never ceased to astonish me how mentally secure most patriarchal men become, as they set to work to undermine my speech with all sorts of bizarre interpretations of their own. They become busy securing their positions in society as superior to me, but their projections are outlandish; their ears tone deaf. They have absolutely no idea what I am actually saying.

Friday, 12 November 2010

I see this, don't you?

What I see is that any form of contemporary capitalism can appear to be largely justified by means of deflection of guilt away from present day capitalists to the 'colonials' of yore. It is THEY who are deemed to be truly evil, with values and motivations that are 300 percent reprehensible. By contrast, capitalism markets itself as belonging to a 'West' whose values have been completely regenerated, though condemning and distancing itself from 'colonialism'. Capitalist raping and plundering is now morally pure, according to this understanding. That is because all of the evil belongs to the past, when people didn't know any better and were 'colonials'.

Cultural barriers to objectivity