234 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
234 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Anarchy: a journal of desire armed. #37, Summer 1993
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COLUMNS
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-includes "The Old World is everywhere and rotten" by (d)anger; "We
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All Live in Waco" by John Zerzan; "Domestication News" by John
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Zerzan; and "Vagit-Prop" by Annie Le Brun.
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The Old World is everywhere and rotten.
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Once again power has celebrated itself with another inauguration
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where more of the same was divined and insured. And this time the
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changing of the guard received quite an applause from many of the
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prisoners themselves: a sigh of relief from those who would rather
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be stabbed in the back than shot in the face. The enthralled have
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shown faith in a change in the weather while the meteorologists
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continued to forecast clear skies for slavery. Domination has
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completed itself once more by flaunting its flexibility as a cover-
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up for both its nightmarish reality and its real vulnerability. But
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a prettier shade of thanatoxic society satisfies the palate only of
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those who have lost their appetite for life, and while the blind
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congratulate the myopic on their lack of vision, those of us who
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have not forgotten the sweetness of indescribable freedoms will
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continue our crazy war against death's expanding rationality. We
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will follow our wakeful dreams and drink from our simplest desires.
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We will create festivals in the system's cracks and celebrate
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nothing but the adventure of our own lives. -
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(d)anger (POB 203, Portland, OR. 97207)
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We All Live In Waco
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THE QUEST FOR AUTHENTICITY AND COMMUNITY, completely denied and
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rendered desperate, finds its home in Jonestown and Waco. The sense
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of truly being alive and of belonging has almost nowhere to go in
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the society whose two fastest growing classes are the homeless and
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prisoners. Daily existence is increasingly that of despair,
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depression, and derangement, punctuated by news of the latest
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serial murder spree or global eco-disaster, consumed as horrible
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entertainments in the emptiness.
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DEBORD expressed the situation accurately: ``It should be known
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that servitude henceforth truly wants to be loved for itself, and
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no longer because it would bring some extrinsic advantage.
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Previously, it could pass for a protection; but it no longer
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protects anything.'' Even the apparatus of oppression concedes
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virtually the same point: Forbes, organ of finance capital, com-
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memorated its 75th anniversary with a cover-story theme of ``Why We
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Feel so Bad when We Have it so Good.'' In the Psychological Society
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at large, in which the only reality is the personal, its hallmark
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denial and delusion are challenged, almost ironically, by the
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definitely impoverished realm of the personal. More and more
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clearly, the choice is between craven servitude or a qualitative
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break with the entire force-field of alienation.
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IN A CULT everything that an individual has is invested, the only
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guarantee against the total refusal of that cult. How else, for
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example, could it be endured that wives and children were offered
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up to David Koresh and blind submission obtained rather than
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revolt? Evidently autonomy and self-respect can be freely given
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over when the world so thoroughly devalues them.
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NONE OF US is immune from the horrors, commonplace and
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spectacular; the immune system itself, in fact, seems to be giving
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way, and this is not confined to AIDS or TB. The stress of work,
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according to a March report on the UN's International Labor
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Organization, is advancing to the point of a ``worldwide
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epidemic.'' The overall situation is gravely worse than when
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Nietzsche observed that ``most people think that nothing but this
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wearying reality of ours is possible.''
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CURRENT reality has become impossible and continues to lose
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credibility. We must be outsiders, never represented, investing
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nothing in the death march we are expected to help reproduce. The
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ultimate pleasure lies in destroying that which is destroying us,
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in the spirit of the Situationists, who, when asked how they were
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going to destroy the dominant culture, replied, ``In two ways:
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gradually at first, then suddenly.'' -John Zerzan
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Domestication News
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WORTH NOTING IS A CONCISE ARTICLE IN THE March 4 issue the British
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journal Nature. Almost 4,000 years of agriculture in central Mexico
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yield a dramatic picture to the research efforts of archaeologists
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O'Hara, Street-Perrot, and Burt. Conclusively debunked is the
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notion that traditional farming methods were more benign than more
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modern methods.
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SEVERE soil erosion and other forms of environmental degradation
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commenced, in fact, with agriculture itself. By the time of the
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Spanish conquest (1521 A.D.), contrary to widespread belief,
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Mesoamerica presented anything but a pristine landscape. ``Erosion
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caused by the Spanish introduction of plough agriculture,'' the
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authors observe from exhaustive soil samples, ``was apparently no
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more severe than that associated with traditional agricultural
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methods.'' As they explain later in the article, ``it is hard to
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distinguish any specific impact of the introduction of plough
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agriculture and draught animals by the Spanish after A.D. 1521.
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THE POINT is plain: domestication is domestication, and embodies
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a qualitatively negative logic for the natural world. Agriculture
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per se brings a ruinous, unidirectional impact, despite the wishful
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thinking of those who envision a coexistence with domestication,
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consisting of benign, `green' methods that would reverse the global
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destruction of the land.
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THE DEVASTATION exists on a much more basic level, whose reality
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must be faced. As the article concludes, ``There is a move by many
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environmental agencies both in Mexico and elsewhere for a return to
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traditional forms of agriculture, as they are considered to be
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better for the environment. As our findings indicate that
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traditional farming techniques cause significant erosion, it is
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unlikely that a return to prehistoric farming methods would solve
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the problem of environmental degradation.'' -John Zerzan
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Vagit-Prop
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By Annie Le Brun
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If any naive women still cherished illusions about the revolu-
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tionary character of the neo-feminist hullabaloo of the last few
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years, turning the Second Sex into televised images will have the
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undeniable merit of finally disillusioning them.
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After repeated interventions by the French Ministry of Culture and
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the Ministry for Women's Rights, here we have the monument to State
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Feminism which the worst enemies of women never dared to dream of.
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Here we have none but right-thinking and upstart ladies - women
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cabinet members, cabinet members' wives, authoresses and all sorts
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of officials - who set out under the watchful eye of the Great
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Mamamouchi de Beauvoir to draw us an unsparing picture of the
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feminine condition.
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For her gaze must appear to disclose to us irrefutable facts with
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a dreadful objectivity. For example, incest with little girls is
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practiced ``very often with the approval of the mother, because she
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prefers that sperm and money not be spent outside the family; so
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she encourages it.'' Also, most men prefer to cohabit with women in
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couples for the sole reason that it's cheaper than going to a
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brothel: ``There are some such ulterior motives...which are more or
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less in the heads of many men.''
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I will not compile a list of revelations of this ilk; it would be
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too long. But it is still interesting to note how such basic truths
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are inserted amidst the evocation of real aspects of feminine
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misery: clitoridectomy, rape, polygamy, incest..., in order to ba-
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nalize the real dramas of the lives of many women and to dramatize
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the banality of the feminine condition in general.
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Because it is not so much a matter of working to reduce the misery
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of many women as it is to exploit it as an irresistible
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justification for the exercise of a power with is now no longer
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merely ideological. There is nothing new in this. It is, of course,
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according to the same casuistry that the various Marxist-Leninist
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bureaucracies founded their power. Otherwise why lay the blame on
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men rather than on the Catholic religion with its untenable
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position on contraception, whose dogmas doctors still put forward
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in refusing to practice IVG or perform abortions? Otherwise why lay
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the blame on men rather than on religion for the enslavement of
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women in the Muslim world, in Africa, in Pakistan, in India? And,
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on this subject, one could wish that the Indian, African and North
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American women who gave assistance to the mini-series had been a
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bit more careful about the role allotted to them and had been aware
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of this constant recourse to the atrocities from elsewhere in order
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to legitimate speeches and maneuvers here. This is a detestable
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manifestation of an all-purpose Third Worldism which justifies
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everything and which will surely not have been one of the glories
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of the left of these last twenty years.
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But it all hangs together very well when the moralism which
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animates these latest philanthropic ladies finds its favorite land
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in Maoist China with its undeniable successes (we're still waiting
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to hear what they are) in ``revalorizing the image of the woman.''
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How happy one is to hear this from the mouth of a sort of female
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screw or matron, an official in charge of education in this
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dreamland. That the rights of woman are magnified in a country
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where the most elementary rights of man are constantly and
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systematically flouted does not seem to bother our champions of
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feminine liberty.
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Let's note that, after having been on the wrong track regarding
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the freedom of women in the Soviet Union for the last 35 years,
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Simone de Beauvoir does not hesitate for a moment to relapse with
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China. Even if, here and there, she thought it was well to point
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out feebly that today she has doubts about the existence of a
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Socialist State, and that ``women must take matters into their own
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hands.'' This does not prevent the Stalinist press (L'Humanit=82,
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L'Humanit=82-Demanche and even R=82volution) waxing the most enthu-
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siastic about these TV shows which inaugurate, in the history of
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ideological propaganda, what will have to be called `Vagit-Prop'.
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You cannot retrieve your losses. These programs may someday
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provide the most complete example of a Feminist Realism which, in
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its exaltation of miserablism, its Jesuitic argumentation and its
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conventionalism, has little to envy in the worst Socialist Realist
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productions. And this in two stages (the first the clearing of
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womankind up to absolute purity), then three movements: (1) the
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intensive accumulation of the most horrible examples of female dis-
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tress; (2) their systematic generalization, atrocity-mongering,
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till it is quite natural to conclude by ``believing that Indian
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women's vocation is to be burnt,'' and (3) to indulge in the ste-
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reotyped ridicule of women degraded by beauty treatment: ornaments,
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despairingly alienated by masculine concupiscence.
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And this is the case insofar as, for men, ``buttocks and breasts
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remain privileged objects...It is because they are useless, that
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there is no project which animates them,'' and that ``this is what
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man looks for in a woman, it is passivity, it is immanence, it is
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the non-object, it is contingency, the naked presence, the fact of
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being there without anything else.'' One would at least like to see
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those concerned with stating their opinions. They might have a
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different point of view than this Areopagus of State cub scout-
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mistresses. Maybe they would even risk speaking of love, which has
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been simply passed over in silence, no doubt as a category deemed
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existentially useless.
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So it seems to me that, 35 years after this founding event of neo-
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feminism, women have in this ideological offering nothing to be
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very proud of. It is nothing but theoretical fake stuff, sewn with
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threads soaked in blood, which power would like to force them to
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accept.
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But where can you be Th=82roigne de M=82ricourt, Louise Michel,
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Virginia Woolf?
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This review of The Second Sex television series presented in
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France in 1986 has been revised and abridged. It will appear in
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similar form in the enlarged Rants anthology currently in the
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works, edited by Adam Parfrey and Bob Black.
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