Blogstuff

Since WordPress enabled contact forms (which I saw right after getting a comment complaining that I didn’t have any visible contact details), I made one and put it up, so that anyone who wants to send me email can do so via the form. I tested it, and it works fine.

Also, WordPress seems to handle the spam queue oddly — it’ll tell me it’s removed so many comments, but not show them until there are about a dozen. So if you’ve made a comment and I haven’t approved it, it might’ve got stuck in the invisible spam queue. Sorry about that. :-/ I’ll approve them as soon as they’re visible!

The sex of street and stage

For a long time I’ve wondered why I keep getting approached in public by South Asian men, being asked where I’m from, what I study, where I live, etc. Nobody else seems to do it, and street harassment from non-South Asian men tends to be of a less conversational nature, so I always assumed it was about me looking Indian and them being lonely (and assuming that I, as a woman, am gonna be more accommodating than the other South Asian men in the vicinity).

The number of South Asian migrants to Australia is increasing as a proportion of the total immigration intake. Partly, this is fuelled by changes in South Asia (I know that it’s becoming easier for Indians to travel, work, and repatriate money from overseas), partly by changes to the workforce in Australia that have increased the number of short-term immigrants who come to Australia to work. The majority of these immigrants are male.

The area I live in has a large South Asian population. The proximity to the city and availability of decent units are a drawcard. And if the conversation of these South Asian newcomers is anything to go by, there are a fair few newer migrants moving in.

But until I read Annie’s post in Known Turf about being harassed in Delhi by a man claiming to be from Melbourne, I didn’t connect the behaviour of these men to norms within South Asia. The salient quality to me was their desire to find some shred of familiarity with their homeland, which, as a migrant myself, I do understand and have sympathy with. But I’ve always been vaguely baffled by their choice to approach me rather than anyone else, and so kept my irritation with their sense of entitlement to myself.

Knowing the age and background of these men, I can imagine that they’ve absorbed the same norms as men in South Asia who engage in “eve-teasing”. Which isn’t to make some kind of special case out of the sexism of South Asian men — because, like I said, I get harassed by non-South Asian men too — but to point out that it has distinctive characteristics arising from its social circumstances, and that it manifests itself in different ways to other types of sexual harassment.

So, right after reading Annie’s post, I switched over to Sepia Mutiny and read Ennis’ disingenuous dismissal of Richard Gere’s sexual harassment of Shilpa Shetty.

My problem with it isn’t his attack on the prudish morality of the court case being brought against them; my problem is the focus on the overblown sexual morality of the Indian response to the case and the minimising of the sexual harassment involved.

Ennis wrote:

An embrace and a smooch on the cheek is tame compared to stuff in Bollywood lately.[...]

Why not say, I’m sorry you all are offended, I’ll ask him not to do it again, but really it was just a kiss on the cheek. It wasn’t on my lips, and there was no tongue involved. None. Now if you’re done with the lawsuits, I have to get prepared for my sexy Bollywood movie …
[emphasis mine]

So according to Ennis, the non-consensuality and force in the incident are less problematic than the conservative response to it? And it’s okay to paint Shetty as a hypocrite because she makes money from sexually suggestive films?

By removing the issue of consent, Ennis has just played a rhetorical trick that equates sexual harassment with consensual “kissing” — removing the issue of female agency altogether. Male agency defines and constitutes what is sexual, while women’s agency is a non-issue.

Gere and Shetty didn’t “kiss”. Gere manhandled her. She did not consent to it. In fact, she was very uncomfortable during the entire incident.

So defending the incident in a climate where conservative Hindu moralists have made it into an either-or issue (EITHER stand up for Indian autonomy by condemning both Shetty and Gere for their licentiousness OR allow foreign men to plunder “our” women at will), invoking a patriarchal nationalism that has superficial anti-imperialistic connotations, is a bit tough. That’s hardly an excuse.

Buying into this logic means ignoring the sexism of the incident as well as the moralistic response to it. Both responses involve ignoring the fact that a woman’s bodily integrity was violated to produce this “obscene” display.

A comment from an article I read the other day has stuck in my mind all week, and I think it applies here:

culture is structured according to the circulation of women among men according to historically and culturally specific patterns. Feminist critics have highlighted the ways that such “trafficking in women,” to use Gayle Rubin’s term, establishes and institutionalizes the oppression of women.
[...]
In addition to a sex-gender economy that organizes men into social groups through the distribution of women, there is an economy regulating the distribution of women so as to construct and perpetuate racial groupings.
- Gwen Bergner, ‘Who Is That Masked Woman? Or, the Role of Gender in Fanon’s Black Skin, White Masks‘, in PMLA, Vol. 110, No. 1, Jan. 1995.

The two issues — street harassment and public harassment by celebrities — both tie into this issue, I think. The use of women by men according to logics of capital, race, empire, and “culture”.

Both sides of the dichotomy that have been created by the comments of Judge Gupta are about what kind of sexual economy women are ‘circulated’ within. Evaluation of women’s behaviour in terms of obscenity versus chastity opposes two different systems of sexual ‘circulation’ — one based on patriarchal familial bonds that extend and reproduce the patriarchal family, or one based on male-dominated capitalism in which women’s sexuality is commodified. There’s a certain amount of agency that women have in either system, depending on a variety of things (including their freedom of movement between the two systems), but overall these overlapping systems dominate women.

In the case of street harassment by recent South Asian immigrant men, it’s that they’re treating me, and women like me, as repositories of both exciting sexuality and familiar culture — as inhabiting both the white public world of the labour market, academia, and politics, as well as the private world of hearth and home (in the immigrant context where “culture” is rendered part of the private sphere).

It’s kinda depressing that women going about their business — whether walking home from the train station or addressing a gathering to combat AIDS — are doing that business in spaces overdetermined by patriarchal domination (as well as other kinds of domination). When will our actions, words, thoughts, feelings and bodies be our own?

Snoop Dogg barred from Australia

Just as I was lamenting the irrelevance of my blog to my mostly-American audience…

Immigration minister Kevin Andrews denied Snoop Dogg a travel visa to enter the country to perform at the MTV Awards ceremony. While I’m no fan of the guy and I’ve sheltered myself so successfuly from the vicissitudes of pop culture that I couldn’t even name a song of his, I still think this has to do with race.

In a situation where we have the American military coming into Australia for training exercises in less than a month’s time, and Bush himself coming to town later this year (while the whole goddamn city is being shut down for him, BTW), I think some “drug and gun offences” look pretty fucking trivial.

It’s this whole drive to individualise moral culpability and evade the issue of power that’s really outrageous about this. While a high-profile black American rapper whose audience is mostly white, whose wealth is built upon a skewed portrayal of black men, which again benefits wealthy white Americans (and was indeed constructed to do so) is made out to be personally degenerate for embodying elements of a culture that has both been socially engineered and lambasted, the whole fucking country is getting ready to hold an orgy in celebration of war and capitalism.

I know who I’d rather bar from the country and it’s not the rapper.

EDIT: Now the PM is comparing his behaviour to Holocaust denial and making comments about his “background”.

USA and Australia to exchange refugees

from the Guardian Unlimited:

Australia and the United States have signed an agreement to exchange a few hundred refugees held at island detention camps in an effort by both governments to discourage future asylum seekers, Australian officials said Wednesday.

from The Age, Melbourne:

Refugee advocates have expressed outrage at a plan to swap asylum seekers intercepted en route to Australia with those detained while trying to enter the United States, describing the scheme as a “dark and murky” political fix.

Under the new refugee exchange scheme announced by Immigration Minister Kevin Andrews, asylum seekers detained on Nauru would be taken to the US and Cuban refugees held at Guantanamo Bay would be resettled in Australia.

While commentators and politicians debate over whether this will “deter” or “attract” more refugees (as if refugees are rats in mazes), the bigger picture — of how this is about the Australian nation-state — is being lost. As many indigenous Australians have pointed out, debates within white Australia about who’s “allowed” into the country actually have the effect of undermining indigenous sovereignty. They’re about consolidating the rule of an elite by skewing the terms of engagement over these issues into ones of paternalistic responsibility, or realpolitik.

The actual political costs and benefits to be wrung from these peoples’ lives aren’t being measured by the numerous editorials and opinions floating around. It’s not just about the upcoming election; it’s about white Australia’s entitlement to steal peoples’ sovereignty, both within the Australian territory and in the Pacific. It’s about the nation-state constituting itself as a deputy sheriff in the Pacific, getting power by tacking itself onto the USA. It’s about state power making itself more important than people.

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RSL opposes indigenous soldiers’ ANZAC Day march

from the Sydney Morning Herald

WHEN David Williams’s uncle returned from the Korean War - exhausted and recovering from a gunshot wound - the family took him to Greenslopes Repatriation Hospital in Brisbane. The door was closed in their faces.”They basically said, ‘Just another black coon’,” Mr Williams said. “They didn’t want to know us. The fact that he fought for his country - nearly died for his country - didn’t mean anything to them.

“They left him to look after himself and he ended up hitting the booze and just slowly deteriorating.”

This was not an isolated experience. About 500 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders fought in World War I and as many as 5000 took part in World War II, according to Australian War Memorial records.

But while they fought alongside other Australians in the trenches, on the battlefields of Europe and in the jungles of Asia, those who made it back often received little or no recognition of their efforts and continued to face racism at home.

Next Wednesday, despite criticism from the RSL, their unique experiences and contribution will be recognised when hundreds of indigenous veterans and their descendants march through Redfern in Sydney’s first Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Anzac Day parade.

The RSL is an extremely conservative organisation. They’ve taken many anti-queer stances in the past. It’s hardly surprising that they’re opposing this effort to recognise indigenous soldiers (and subtly undo the image of white masculinity that’s celebrated as quintessentially “Australian” on ANZAC Day). Because of course, so long as white Australians get recognised, everyone else is unimportant!

Our Own Imus

Why isn’t Alan Jones being lambasted like Don Imus?

Dom Knight, of the Sydney Morning Herald blog thinks he knows why.

Honestly, I’m not impressed with his analysis.

These two stories about multi-millionaire white broadcasters exercising appalling judgement when talking about minorities, though, say a great deal about each society.America is hypersensitive on the subject of race. I guess a legacy of slavery will do that to you – although a legacy of genocide doesn’t seem to have achieved the same result in Australia.

Um, what about the American legacy of genocide?

I think it was the work of black activists who’ve worked consistently over decades to push an anti-racist agenda, not the harried conscience of white broadcasting authorities or ad execs.

We haven’t had a movement with the kind of momentum of the anti-racist movement in the USA because we’re a much smaller country and the indigenous rights movements have focused around legal reform, suffrage, land rights, health, housing, etc.

By contrast, anti-racist movements by people of colour have been few and small. Although the post-invasion history of Australia does feature non-indigenous people of colour, those people were deliberately kept outside formal politics and weren’t numerous enough to force anti-racism onto the political agenda.

Since multiculturalism became the official policy, however, most ‘leadership’ in ‘ethnic communities’ is heavily mediated by the state. State funding and agencies underwrite most political activity by community groups, and they are made accountable to state agencies for that funding.

So what we’ve seen is a polarisation and depoliticisation of the terms of debate around race, with right wing media personalities and politicians talking about “getting tough” and having no time for “political correctness”, while left wing activists are left with this soft-centred discourse of “culture” and “tolerance” that doesn’t address the inequalities and injustices that underpin racism.

It’s really difficult for coalitions to form around these issues too, because communities are so besieged.

That’s why the response to Jones was to reassert the racist norm rather than “go[ing] completely overboard, American-style” and ousting the fucker. We don’t have the cultural or political tools to make that happen.

And that’s why Knight’s complacency and white-centrism will only usher in more of Jones-style hate speech.

Australia may ban HIV-positive immigrants

tionFrom the Sydney Morning Herald:

Ban HIV-positive migrants: PM

HIV-positive people should be denied entry to Australia as migrants or refugees, Prime Minister John Howard says.While saying he would like “more counsel” on the issue, Mr Howard said HIV positive people should not be allowed to migrate to Australia.

“My initial reaction is no (they should not be allowed in),” he told Southern Cross Broadcasting.

“There may be some humanitarian considerations that could temper that in certain cases but prima facie - no.”

More coverage:

Given that HIV infection is spreading fastest in the third world, isn’t this just another way for the first world to keep out people of colour?

Thinking Blogger Award!

Wow, Brownfemipower of the excellent Women of color blog tagged me with a Thinking Blogger Award! What an honour!

Here are the rules of the meme:

Should you choose to participate, please make sure you pass this list of rules to the blogs you are tagging. I thought it would be appropriate to include them with the meme.
The participation rules are simple:
1. If, and only if, you get tagged, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think,
2. Link to this post so that people can easily find the exact origin of the meme,
3. Optional: Proudly display the ‘Thinking Blogger Award’ with a link to the post that you wrote (here is an alternative silver version if gold doesn’t fit your blog).

These are my picks. These are blogs that have pushed my mental boundaries in one way or another that really stuck in my mind. Since I’m new to the blogosphere and the meme, I’m gonna mix up recent and older posts, because there sure is some solid gold buried in archives.

1. Angry Brown Butch: I found Jack’s blog when it was linked by someone in an anti-racist LiveJournal community. The issue was gentrification. This post transformed my ideas about what’s going on in the Redfern community. Although I’d been told that gentrification has already happened in Sydney, I knew from a research project I did for an undergrad class that displacement and neoliberalism are affecting people of colour on the very doorstep of our university. Linking capitalism to indigenous dispossession (and subsequent indigenous housing issues) through Jack’s words on gentrification and race blew my mind. While the communities Jack is talking about aren’t necessarily indigenous, the way Jack talks about race, space, and class just really hit the right mental nodes.

2. Diaries of an eccentric nerd athaba hijibiji: Zooey’s posts on postcolonialism and radical women of colour feminism do a lot for me. They make me think, they make me feel implicated/included in the struggles of people of colour around the world, but at the same time they challenge me about the privilege I have in relation to those struggles. Zooey strikes a balance between reflection and responsibility; theory and practice. I’m especially grateful for her post Women of Color Feminisms, Chela Sandoval etc. which encompasses so many excellent thoughts.

3. Women of Color blog: BFP manages to push my mind in new directions with pretty much every post. The “thinkiest” for me so far has been her post on pornography, which is a wonderful example of her amazing mind! BFP is a crucible of synthesis, because she combines these insights with posts about activism in the arenas of labour, anti-violence, media, anti-racism, peace, queer rights… as well as occasional posts about literature, academia, and theory. How can all this fit inside one woman? This question inspires me to push myself to understand and engage more and in new ways.
I know BFP tagged me with this meme (meaning she got the award before tagging me with it), but I’m so in awe of her blog that I have to name her here.

4. Having Read the Fine Print……: I’ve just recently started reading this blog, but the link in Donna’s blog to BlackAmazon’s post on “Sofia Coppola feminism” really got me thinking about how to deconstruct the feminist category of “woman” (despite the naysayers who herald the death of justice by such a move), and made it abundantly clear why we need to keep doing that.

5. Queer Dewd Formerly Known As (): QD/Bitch|Lab has, in the past, got me thinking really deeply about feminism and about the implications of our own political stances. Posts about sex wars and feminist positioning reignited my interest in feminism, which had very much taken a back seat to my politics until recently.

According to the rules, I’m only allowed to tag five people, but I should share the love with every blog I read. My time is precious and I spend it on these for a reason — your blogs are good, people! I don’t think there’s a blogger who doesn’t make me think. But these have influenced my thinking in particularly noticeable ways, and I wanna acknowledge that. I have no doubt that all of you will get the acknowledgement you deserve from the blogosphere, because you are brilliant.

Goodnight!

Racist V ad

I have a bajillion things to blog about, but this is something I can do quickly, in between everything else (non-bloggy) I need to do.

Racist V ad

Has anyone else seen these ads around? They’re for V, apparently to release a new flavour.

APPARENTLY IT’S FUNNY TO MAKE JOKES ABOUT MYTHS THAT LED TO GENOCIDE NOW. FFS!!!!

THERE ARE NO WORDS.

I posted a message to the V message board, but who knows if they’ll even notice it. It’s not like I was a customer, just a passerby put off by the offensive visual pollution.

EDIT: I sent this message to them via the contact form.

To whom it may concern,

I am writing to express outrage over the new poster advertisements I have seen around Sydney.

They are offensively racist. They rely on a disgusting stereotype of people of colour as cannibals, and valorise white peoples’ “exploration” of remote regions. These are stereotypes which have been used to justify genocide and exploitation on a hideous scale. See for example Michael Taussig’s work on the use of this myth by brutal colonial regimes to inflict horrendous violence upon indigenous peoples.

Your rendering of this myth as a humorous anthropomorphism of energy drink cans is a joke at the expense of people against whom genocide was committed in the name of this myth. This both exploits the pain of these people and renders their suffering invisible and ridiculous. It is inhumane.

I would suggest you withdraw the poster.

Who knows if it’ll achieve anything, but at least it’s not addressed to the marketing exercise message board.

Alan Jones called out on racist remarks on radio

So the Australian Communications and Media Authority have finally (a year and a half later!) condescended to determining that Alan Jones* made remarks before the Cronulla riot that encouraged violence against “Middle Eastern” Australians (well, there were Bangladeshi, Thai, and Greek people assaulted that day too, but nobody cares about that, do they?). Does the fact that David Marr wrote about it days after the riot happened make any difference to anyone?

What the fuck do these people think they’re playing at?!?

* Prominent right-wing talkback radio personality in Sydney. He’s been brought up on several fraud and hate speech charges but still manages to connive his way out.

EDIT: Jones is on the defensive, with the backing of the Prime Minister. “Permission to hate” indeed. Ugh.

Lake Cowal activists arrested

from the Sydney Morning Herald:

Eighteen anti-gold mine activists have been charged following a protest in central NSW, which concluded with a man allegedly ransacking the protesters’ campsite while armed with a knife.The activists, who included members of the Wiradjuri people, Friends of the Earth and the Australian Student Environment Network [ASEN], were arrested about 1.30pm yesterday after allegedly breaching the perimeter of the Lake Cowal gold mine, which is run by the world’s largest gold producer, Barrick.

They claim the mine’s operations are environmentally damaging.

“Barrick … is stripping NSW of its precious water resources, internationally significant wetlands and destroying Wiradjuri history and culture,” ASEN’s national convenor, Nicola Ison, said in a statement released by Friends of the Earth yesterday.

“Barrick is transporting over 6000 tonnes of cyanide annually from Gladstone, Queensland, to Lake Cowal, New South Wales, creating risk of spill and lethal contamination of waterways along the 1600 km transport route,” Ms Ison said.

The activists were each charged with entering enclosed lands. They were granted conditional bail and are due to appear in West Wyalong Local Court on April 26.

Police said a 32-year-old man was arrested yesterday evening after allegedly driving into the protesters’ campsite and damaging vehicles and tents.

He was charged with malicious damage, failing to undergo a breath analysis, stalking/intimidation, carry a knife in a public place, as well as driving offences.

He is expected to appear in Griffith Local Court this morning.

Life on the run, with added news!

I’ve been lax with my blogging over the past few days because Real Life intervened. I wrote about 3000 words of thesis in 2 days and then family from India came to town.

I’ve been busy busy busy busy and no signs of life slowing down are emerging.

Wiradjuri campaigners at Lake Cowal have also been busy. Along with a Corroboree to celebrate Easter, campaigners are occupying the offices of Barrick Gold to protest the illegal and dangerous gold mine on Wiradjuri lands.

There are also refugees in Villawood immigration detention centre on a hunger strike to protest against a new wave of deportations.

About 60 prisoners at one of Australia’s notorious immigration detention centres launched a hunger strike on March 28 to protest against a new wave of refugee deportations

In the face of massive, life-threatening issues like deportation and cyanide poisoning of indigenous waters, I feel a bit intimidated in expressing the doubts and difficulties of trying to start up an anti-racism collective at my university.
But we have to start somewhere. Hopefully we can start tackling issues around the Block once we kick things off.

I have to organise a reading group to get it all started, but I’m not sure what’s a good starting point. If anyone has any suggestions for a reading (preferably a self-contained chapter from a book, or an article, bonus if it’s available as a PDF), I’d really appreciate it. I want to discuss anti-racist activism broadly, as well as delve into the political/psychic/ontological/material/historical/social dimensions of race.

Another tsunami in the Pacific

from the Sydney Morning Herald:

At least 12 people have been killed and more are missing after a tsunami smashed through the Solomon Islands in the wake of a major earthquake today.Amid fears the toll could rapidly rise, with reports of villages being completely destroyed, witnesses spoke of the devastation and of the “strangely frightening” behaviour of the sea as it was sucked from the shoreline, exposing reefs and fish.

With memories of the devastating 2004 Boxing Day tsunami still fresh, the Pacific, from Australia to Hawaii, went on high alert for several hours before officials cancelled the region-wide tsunami alert.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre in Hawaii placed the quake’s centre 350 kilometres north-west of Honiara when it struck at 7.40am local time (6.40am AEST).

The death toll rose to 15 when I checked the news this morning:

RESCUERS fear a dramatic rise in the death toll after a tsunami flattened villages, submerged islands, tossed boats as if they were corks onto roads, and left thousands missing in remote parts of the Solomon Islands yesterday.A 12-year-old girl was among the 15 confirmed dead last night. The toll is expected to rise in the coming days as reports trickle in from remote islands cut off from communications and electricity.

“The wave was up to 10 metres high in some villages,” said a spokesman for the Solomon Islands Government, Alfred Maesulia. “Some villages have been entirely washed away.”

The tsunami, generated by a huge undersea earthquake measuring 8.1 on the Richter scale, created shockwaves across the Pacific, closing beaches along the east coast of Australia and stopping ferry services in Sydney, even sending a 10-centimetre wave into Port Kembla.

Amid confusion and claims of overreaction in Australia, the Queensland Premier, Peter Beattie, said he had been frustrated at a lack of information. “This was frightening in a sense that we were warned there could’ve been a tsunami, we were trying to work out the magnitude of it but we were shooting blind, and I don’t believe this is good enough.”

The tsunami came at 7.40am local time, an hour after the quake. Waves hit the western part of the archipelago, about 350 kilometres north-west of the capital, Honiara. The island of Choiseul and islands in Western Province were among the worst affected.

…Methinks it’s time for a blog about how the reconstruction effort is going in the wake of the 2004 tsunami, to refresh memories and to better understand the Solomons situation.

Apologist Academics Fuck Off!

I just read a paper presented at a conference (not published on the site) which goes into anal detail, fetishising whiteness and being all dismissive of “the left”. As if it were a homogeneous entity. As if “the right” represents the views of PoC equally, instead of trampling all over them (literally and figuratively).

I’m sick to death of (white) academics from the so-called “left” apologising for racist violence. I’m sick of hyper-detailed ethnomethodology being used to erase the power differentials between people of colour and white people. I’m sick of self-absorbed academic relativism that refuses to see the bigger picture.

Ugh. Ugh. Ugh.

I can’t believe I have to share the stage with this shit. Or even keep to polite, middle-class ways of critiquing it, rather than tear it to shreds like I really want to.

Instead, I’m gonna repost something I wrote for a different community, but which I’d like to share here. The sentiments are all the same, but I’ve thought more about it since then. As usual for me, stuff I wrote a few months ago now seems really naive. I’ve added emphasis to the things I’ve been thinking about.

________________________________________________________________________________________

What follows is an email I wrote to a well-known Sydney community activist, after she made a presentation at an academic conference about racism. I’ll add some footnotes to contextualise everything for any non-Australian readers.

—————————————————————–
I heard your paper yesterday at the conference.
I made the comment that the response to gang rapes in
Sydney by young Lebanese men[1] wasn’t really feminist.

First of all, I want to apologise, because I ended up making a
statement that used your presentation as a soapbox, rather than
engaging with it. But I’ve been thinking about it more, and I think
there’s a lot more to be said for feminism around this issue, even
if white feminists have been lacking in a critical voice.

First of all, I just want to elaborate on my comment about the
threat of rape, and the positioning of the rapists in popular
media. This kind of sexualised racism is nothing new; bell hooks
talks about the same thing with regard to black men in the USA
being demonised through their sexuality. But what she also says is
that this was done not just to control white women’s sexuality, but
also to prevent miscegenation. And she defines miscegenation not so
much as interbreeding (even though for biological racists, that’s
what it was; and it created difficult issues for slave owners as
well) as relationships that mix race and produce unmanageable
political loyalties.

At the same time, it made white women complicit in white
imperialist patriarchy. By positioning them as objects of its
extension, and their bodies literally as national territory, rather
than animated by independent political wills, it fostered a
separation between white and black on sexual and affective grounds.
The same thing is happening in Australia: with the Sheehans[2] of the
world talking about gang rape as if the racial dimension of the
crime override the gendered dimensions of the crime, they’ve
re-made the gang rapes into crimes against the (white) nation, not
crimes against women’s bodies. They’ve made them into treason and
sedition, not rape.

I think white feminists have fed very neatly into this in ways I
find positively creepy. [...]

I’m not saying that the race relations of the USA map perfectly to
the situation in Australia; not nearly. But that non-white
feminists have something to say about racialised sexism, and have
been saying these things for a long time. [...]

But, going back to the point Ghassan Hage made[3] yesterday, about
comparing patriarchies, I don’t think it’s so simple a case of
different, discrete, and independent patriarchies as he made it out
to be. Because gender relations in the Arab and Muslim world have
for many years been formed and re-formed by imperialism. It’s
mind-boggling that feminists can forget that the forces that became
the Taliban were sponsored by the USA! Not to mention the entire
history of Western imperialism in the Middle East.

The fact is that it’s not about comparing patriarchies. It’s about
critiquing imperialism as a mode of patriarchy, and critiquing the
ways in which white imperialist patriarchy uses non-Western
patriarchy to its own ends
, and has done so for a long time.

At the same time as patriarchy was formed and re-formed by
imperialism in the Arab/Muslim world, so too has feminism. Some
(white) friends of mine were talking about whether white feminists
should engage in “missionary” work to spread feminism to non-Western
countries. Well, it’s already happened, and the non-white feminists
it made are already talking back to those white feminisms/ists.
What’s going on is a strategic amnesia/deafness about those
critiques and movements, as white people dither over whether or not
there’s a White (Pseudo-)Feminist’s Burden.
At the same time, the same thing is going on within Australia. The
other week Leslie Cannold, a very prominent (white) Australian
feminist scholar, wrote an article in the SMH saying that women
from traditional ethnic and religious backgrounds should be treated
as if they are victims of domestic violence, and given “refuge” if
they want to “escape” their traditional families[4]. She didn’t quote
a single “ethnic” or religious woman.

So, what I want to ask is whether there’s a place for those
anti-imperialist feminist critiques in the community/activist
response to contemporary Islamophobia? If so, what might that place
be, and how might these insights be used to form strategies,
alliances, activities in the community sector as it deals with the
new racism?
Although there have been many analyses of Muslim women under the
Howard regime, I don’t think enough of them have been explicitly
feminist, or have drawn on the broad array of postcolonial,
non-white feminist critique. There’s a deeply incisive body of
thought on issues of race and gender already around in global
circles, which isn’t finding its way into Australia, or so I see.
But feminists in other countries are using it to combat the forms
of racism in their societies, and I think it has a big place in
combating Islamophobia.

Can we decouple white feminism from the positioning of white
femininity under white imperialist patriarchy? If so, how?
Because I definitely think that colonial patriarchy had a guiding
hand in forming and re-forming Western patriarchy in the imperial
centres, and white feminists have swallowed the platitudes of white
patriarchy and ignored that.
—————————————————————–

[1] In 2001 a series of gang rapes were committed in Western Sydney by young men (aged from as young as 14 to their early 20s). Most of these young men were either first or second-generation Lebanese migrants (I think I remember one or two of them described as Egyptian, but I can’t think which case it was). The victims of the rapes were young white teenage women. What followed was a moral panic about Arab masculinity/sexuality and misogyny.

[2] Paul Sheehan is a prominent right-wing journalist. About 2 months ago he released a book titled Girls Like You about the gang rapes. In it he argues that basically Islamic culture is misogynistic and encourages rape, amongst other things. The thing is, this is what the defence lawyers of the rapists also argued in their trials.

[3] Ghassan Hage is a prominent Lebanese-born Australian anthropologist. He’s the chair of Anthropology at the University of Sydney, and he was the convenor of the conference last week.
The point he made was that feminism is an inherently progressive philosophy, because it compares the past and present, and feminist activism tries to make the future better than the present and past. If we can compare patriarchies historically, then why can’t we compare them cross-culturally?
(I do think he understood the limitations of this line of questioning. I think he was more interested in inviting a clear and comprehensive answer to this question than in playing devil’s advocate.)

[4] http://www.smh.com.au/news/opinion/caught-between-right-and-right/2006/10/08/1160246008793.html — the Sydney Morning Herald is one of the major daily newspapers in Sydney.

Recently the Mufti of Australia, Sheikh Taj el-Dinh al Hilaily, in his Ramadan sermon, made comments to the effect that women are to blame for rape. He compared uncovered (female) flesh to cat meat, and said that if women stayed at home in their hijabs there wouldn’t have been any problem.

There’s been a similar backlash around his comments in the press and by public figures. Paul Sheehan pretty much sums it up in his article: Sheik’s views show up the wider problem with Muslim men (27/10/2006)

I think we need a similarly comprehensive critique of this issue as with “cross-cultural patriarchy”.

The Mufti is actually supported by the government. He was hand-picked about a year and a half ago, after the London Metro bombings, to be part of the government’s Muslim Community Reference Group. In this policy, there’s an explicit assumption that ethnicity is the cause of terrorism and other social problems. The MCRG is also made up of conservative, middle-aged, middle-class men, most of whom don’t speak English very well, and doesn’t represent the breadth of diversity in the Australian Muslim and Arab community.

Again we can see how the logic of “client patriarchies” is applicable here. While the voices of Muslim women are silenced and co-opted because they’re “too oppressed” to speak for themselves (patently untrue), the government is sponsoring conservative community leaders to speak on behalf of it, to aid their demonisation campaign.

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It pisses me off that white academics are playing with this economy of race, and trading on white femininity to demonise men of colour. Making out like the “revenge attacks” were equivalent to the riot itself (and minimising the racism that has fed into Islamophobia with some glib, dismissive asides), and using some ambiguous one-sided statements to support sexualised racism.

HOW THE FUCK IS IT “FEMINIST” TO TRADE ON WHITENESS IN ORDER TO BE TREATED AS A HUMAN BEING??? TO STEP ON OTHER WOMEN JUST TO GET RESPECT???

The people who lose out when white women trade on their whiteness to demonise men of colour and make themselves look good are women of colour. Does it matter to these theorists that thousands of Muslim women are afraid to leave their homes because the Good White Patriarchy has eradicated the “threat” to “their women”?

Co-operating with this macho crap makes white women complicit, not “anti-racist”. It’s White Woman Syndrome — trading on victim femininity for white privilege — NOT feminism.

Moreover, these academics appear to not know their shit. After working so hard to familiarise myself with the world of critical race theory, radical women of color, and critical whiteness studies, that really pisses me off. These people are given audience and publishing space for their hedging and apologism, without even referring to the major theorists who’ve worked before them and opened up so much critical space. It’s not just dodgy politics, it’s dodgy work.

I guess Ruth Frankenberg was right when she said that studying whiteness can just reinforce its centrality, I’d just never seen it played out so appallingly.

I guess I’m exaggerating over a few articles here, but it really is the thin edge of the wedge.

Aboriginal health care a ’scandal’

from ABC News Australia:

A new report has found Australia lags badly behind other wealthy nations in addressing the health and wellbeing of its Aboriginal population.

The report was commissioned by Oxfam and the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation and examined a range of key health indicators.

It found Australia was ranked at the bottom of a league table of wealthy nations such as New Zealand, Canada and the United States.

Oxfam executive director Andrew Hewett labelled the situation a “scandal”.

“If you’re an Indigenous Australian you’re going to die 20 years younger than most other Australians,” he said.

“That compares to similar countries where the gap is only about seven years.

Mr Hewett says governments should stop ignoring the issue.

“What’s lacking in Australia is the political will from governments of all parties at all levels and that’s what we need, we need to set a national target to close the gap between between health outcomes for Indigenous Australians and non-Indigenous Australians,” he said.

Here’s the full report from Oxfam.