When Katie asked me if I would like to "blog" (is it a verb?) on this
site for a while, I wasn't sure what I would have to say or what kind
of conversation the blogging context called for. I don't actually
read blogs and when I do, they tend to annoy me - they often seem to
be the boring ramblings of people who lack other platforms for their
opinions! But, after reading some interactions in this blog space, I
did find myself more interested. What better place for a screed
against that Mansfield book or a quick comment on the state of
academia or a short review of She's The Man! Well, I haven't read
Mansfield nor have I yet seen "She's The Man" but don't worry, that
won't prevent me from commenting!
But first, let me say how much I have enjoyed being at Harvard for
the semester. Harvard is truly a great place to teach not because of
its libraries or its resources or its faculty, but because the
students, at least the few whom I have met, are eclectic, energetic,
active and surprising. I know there are many other students out there
on campus who are boring, over-educated, overly concerned with their
future political careers, conservative and elitist but then this IS
Harvard.
I am teaching for Women and Gender Studies and so I presume I am
exposed to a very particular group of Harvard students, but needless
to say, they are the ones I wanted to meet. At the various events to
which I have been invited and in which I have participated on campus,
I have enjoyed some fairly intense conversations about gay marriage
(who cares...), the role of the intellectual in contemporary US
culture, transgender politics, queer subcultures, the future of
gender studies, masculinity (and, sadly, manliness) and Spongebob,
naturally. I have lots to say on all of these issues and can give a
few sound bites here and then settle in to field some comments,
questions or whatever.
In terms of some of the "kick off" questions I received, here are a
few responses:
1. The current state of gender studies and queer theory: well, I
think both fields are thriving with or, as is usally the case,
without institutional support. As you see here at Harvard, Gender
Studies is generally not taken as seriously as say Government or
Economics even though it may even cover some of the same ground. I am
of the opinion that Gender Studies will actually survive what will
surely be a reorganization of the university in coming years. ANd
while some traditional disciplines like English may find themselves
becoming less and less relevant to student interests, studies in
gender and sexuality, because it is a diverse and interdisciplinary
field, should do very well.
2. There was a question that began "in a world where academia is so
peripheral to people's everday lives..." Hmmm, let me stop you there!
Many things are peripheral to people's everyday lives - in fact the
everyday is not the best location for judging what is important!
Engineering and bio-chemistry labs can be "peripheral to people's
everyday lives" and yet they are never considered unimportant on that
account. But the question went on to ask what my "most important,
paradigm shifting contribution" may have been. I guess the
implication is that no matter how amazing that paradigm shift may be,
it will still be peripheral to people's everyday lives! No
matter....by the way I have noticed that Harvard students are quite
preoccupied with 'fame" here - the "fame" of the professor, for
example, but they often won't really know why the professor is
famous...anyway, my fame is a small one, my contribution has been to
shift both feminism and other thinking on gender towards the topic of
masculinity and female masculinity in particular. I noted that much
energy has been spend on deconstructing femininity and the
relationship between woman and femininity but less time was dedicated
to deconstructing masculinity and de-essentializing the relationship
between men and masculinity.
3. Finally, there was a question about activism and academia - I
personally don't like to emphasize the massive gaps between the two
but instead I look for continuity. Many academics are activists and
vice versa. This semester, for example, Harvard offered a class on
"Transgenderism and the Law" team taught by Janet Halley in the Law
School and Dean Spade, a trans lawyer activist. Academia can
sometimes be the location for very creative couplings between
activism and academia. I try to combine the two in my speaking
engagements by always talking to off-campus groups when i go to do a
talk somewhere. In fact, I was in Montreal two weeks ago where I gave
a talk at McGill and then participated on a round table at a local
gallery where art activists had created a show about archiving queer
cultural production. It was fabulous, there were beautiful posters on
the wall, zines and the whole event showed how much care and art goes
into making queer space. The local queer band, Lesbians on Ecstasy
played an acoustic set and those divisions between academics,
activists and artists were nowhere to be found!
--Judith
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