stormdog: (floyd)
There's a meme about how no cis person ever daydreams about being another gender. A lot of non-cis folks I know feel happy and affirmed by this meme. I do not, for a couple reasons.

First is, I think, a sort of impostor syndrome reaction. Maybe I'm different. Maybe this doesn't apply to me despite any evidence to the contrary. That reaction is irrational.

Second, I disagree with the basic expression being stated. I know people, including some people I am or have been very close to, who are quite confident in their cisgender nature who have daydreamed about being another gender. Maybe we need to figure out what is meant by daydreaming in this context?

On a broader topic, my partner Miriam feels invalidated by things that suggest her own gender identity is invalid. This includes expressions that gender doesn't exist, or that it doesn't matter, or that impose external restrictions on what does or does not determine someone's gender. This meme falls into that category by making a universal statement about who can and cannot be cisgender. I'm struck by seeing this failure occur in two kinds of memes that both seem intended to affirm people in gender minority groups. There are memes that say gender is arbitrary and non-existent, and memes like this one that draw a solid, exclusive box around cisgenderness. Both of those things aim to affirm people in gender minorities, but in fact they both invalidate various gender identities, including minority identities.

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My immediate response to many statements, and *every* universal statement, is critical analysis.

I don't engage in critical analysis because it's a fun hobby or something. I do it because the way I live my life is based on an understanding of the world around me. I don't incorporate things into my viewpoint until they've passed a certain level of critical analysis.

It's also important to me that things that are hurtful to other people are not unchallenged. Universal statements about people very often fit into that category. I have a lot of personal experience in being an edge case that seemingly simple laws or statements do not cover. I don't want other people to experience that and to feel like they are not seen. In that sense, posts like my last one about the gender meme feel important to me in that they help people who feel excluded by that meme feel seen and understood, and not othered or disenfranchised.

I don't really know how to react to these things any differently than I do.
stormdog: a woman with light skin and long brown hair that cascades over one shoulder. On her other side, she is holding a large plush shark against herself. She has pink fingernails and pink cat eye glasses (Default)
Stuff of mine I found while looking through Livejournal for my graduation date. Thinking analytically about this kind of stuff is painful and feels futile these days.
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Seeing Like a State; economics and anarchy
I've been reading James Scott's "Seeing Like a State", partly on the suggestion of my undergrad advisor. It, or at least the first two chapters of it, are an overview of how modernist principles of control (largely in the interests of efficient extraction of value, whether from productive resources like forests or from citizenry in the form of monetary value) are applied by the state.
Scott's discussion of the creation of maps as a way to exert control, while not new to me by any means, is interesting to contextualize with my experience with maps while working at the archives at UW-Parkside. There are occasional irregularities in those maps; farms that existed before the original cadastral survey by Hathaway in the late 1830s, or entries in 19th century tax rolls that listed parcel owners as "unknown", yet still showed paid taxes. I see these as hiccups resulting from the early stages of the implementation of this new form of land-tenure. In North America though, it was much easier since the creators of the system were in a position of power that let them simply ignore, and in fact, negate, existing local understandings of land use. ("Clearly this land belongs to us by right of development; the locals [who were in fact managing the land in complex ways] aren't doing anything with it."
Reading Scott has also helped me be more conscious of the idea of maps as analogous to varying theoretical perspectives. Maps, like perspectives, are created to address a particular issue, to form a particular kind of understanding, or to advance a particular agenda. They are useful for understanding a particular set of things for a particular purpose, or even for creating a particular reality. But they are only one approach; multiple approaches much be synthesized to move toward something like a full understanding of an issue. I'm so glad that GIS makes this so much easier than it once was! Still, maps are only as good as the data being analyzed and the creativity of the cartographer. I think you have to be careful not to fall into the trap of thinking that the data you're working with is all of the data. It never is. If you're careful, it can be enough to be useful, and that's about the best you can hope for.
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Looking at the steps taken by nation-states to impose order makes me think of the same kind of actions taken on both large, international scales, and on small scales such as on the factory floor. Using a language of 'legibility,' Scott argues that the state needs to make its entire territory equally legible. That is, the state must impose a common 'language' of policy and procedure on systems like land tenure, resource valuation, taxation, weights and measures, and so on. Otherwise, the state is unable to extract value from its populace in the most efficient way. Relatedly, 'illegible' systems -local land use practices, local variances in measuring units, confusing systems of non-rectilinear streets- have been a source of resistance to state power.
On a small scale, this takes the form of high modernist attempts to scientifically regulate the practice of workers. Each worker must do the same job in exactly the same way to make the best use of company time. Workers are dehumanized, made into pieces of machinery. This increases production of course, but at the cost of significant quality of life. I would argue that productivity is high enough that this kind of regulation is not ethical; it is not justifiable.
Does that observation extend to the state level? Is it ethical to impose a universal system of land tenure, as has been done to Native Americans or First Nations people in North America, or to the people of formerly colonial nations in Africa or Southeast Asia? What about to a state's own people, as Scott explains was done in France and other European nations during the Enlightenment? And if it is not ethical, how would it be reversed? In the modern era, we've entered a multi-national scale that all states are essentially being forced into participating in. Can a nation remain a viable entity without imposing external standards onto its people? The US has managed to do so with it's tenacious grip on the imperial system, but nearly every other country on Earth has fallen into line with metric.
That's largely a good thing, isn't it? It's a reasonable system that makes trade more efficient and prevents disastrous errors like the Hubble telescope lens. Have we lost anything due to this global standardization? Is it anything like what we lose as languages become extinct? Does it result in less capacity for resistance to externally imposed control like the practices engaged in by the World Bank or the IMF? Certainly abolition of local land-use systems in favor of Western-style ownership of land parcels has resulted in significant land alienation for many people who are victimized by these internationally-legible practices that, to people familiar with local practice, are completely unintelligible.
Though he hasn't discussed this directly in the first one and a half chapters, Scott's writing is making me think about arguments for and against this kind of modernist standardization. I think there's an argument to be made on the scale of a factory that increasingly highly articulated structures of control result in increasing dehumanization of workers. People deserve a certain level of autonomy over their time. Time to take a short break, or chat with a co-worker for instance. The system needs to provide an area that, perhaps paradoxically, exists outside the system. Can this be done on a national or international scale? Are nations locked into a system of control that they can't get out of? And if so, would it even be beneficial to get out of it? Beneficial for whom?
I talked with Danae about those concepts in the kind of wonderful conversation I'm really going to miss having with her on a regular basis. I said that I see an anarchist argument proceeding from these observations. Increasingly articulated control structures become increasingly oppressive. She countered with the idea that a socialist state would still want to have generally the same kind of deep information that Scott is discussing, and that modern capitalist states are compiling. They would just use it differently.
That makes sense to me. But socialist states can be just as dangerous and dehumanizing as capitalist ones; we have a few examples of that to look at. Economically, I believe capitalism is a critically flawed system in terms of our obligation to pursue quality of life for all people. I think much more socialist economic policy would begin to address some of the problems that exist. But aside from capitalism versus socialism, there's another axis here I think, of highly articulated forms of control versus a more laissez-faire approach that allows regional and local autonomy. On that front, I don't really know where a good balance is.
stormdog: (floyd)
There's a screencap going around lately that makes me grin. Someone is saying that calling the concentration camps at the borders of the US 'concentration camps' is too charged a phrase and runs afoul of Godwin's law. In response, Mike Godwin, the law's formulator, says, basically, 'no, these really are concentration camps.'

It's funny because it suggests the the original poster has no leg to stand on when using Godwin's Law as a basis for criticism. However....

I don't think that's actually true. A concept, an axiom, a hypothesis, once created, has an existence of its own. This makes me think of a discussion I was having with Danae when she was reading a lot of literature on the topic of the public sphere as formulated by Habermas. Talking about changing ideas about the public sphere, she said that "even Habermas doesn't agree with the public sphere as originally formulated by Habermas!"

I couldn't help but abstract that thought out to other realms. Once an idea has been put forth, it needs to stand on its own merits. Thinking about that idea and arguing for or against its applicability in certain contexts is a legitimate area of disagreement. Just because Habermas created this idea of the public sphere and how it operates doesn't mean that that idea is perfect as it is, nor does it mean that he is an absolute authority on how it exists and operates. People change too. If Godwin has different ideas now about what constitutes a Godwin's law issue than he did when the concept was first popularized, which is valid?

The answer to that, I think, is that, in the end, these are very fuzzy concepts that simply cannot be fully and cleanly described. I do not feel that the questions of whether or not these camps are concentration camps, or whether someone who calls them that has lost the argument by bringing up Nazis, can be unquestionably decided by Godwin or anyone else.

That said, give me a damn break. These things are concentration camps. They're horrific. Godwin is right, here.
stormdog: a woman with light skin and long brown hair that cascades over one shoulder. On her other side, she is holding a large plush shark against herself. She has pink fingernails and pink cat eye glasses (Default)
In Stewart Brand's "How Buildings Learn," he criticizes architecture focused on static appearance in the present moment with no regard to use over time. One of the targets of his criticism is I. M. Pei specifically and many Brutalist works in general. There's a lot of well-considered and well-justified criticism of some of my favorite architecture; enough to make me consider how architectural photography can glorify commodity-value over use-value, promote form over function, and encourage the production of buildings that fail to meet the needs of their users.

Reading critical theory about stuff you care about is really hard.

And I started my current bunch of reading just wanting to know how they're built.
stormdog: (floyd)
More gender commentary from me. I'm sure you're surprised.

This is, in fact, how I see the way society produces gendered people. It really disturbs me.

An article from Everyday Feminism Magazine, called Here’s What It Would Look Like If We Treated Our Sons How We Treat Our Daughters, From Birth through College.

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stormdog: a woman with light skin and long brown hair that cascades over one shoulder. On her other side, she is holding a large plush shark against herself. She has pink fingernails and pink cat eye glasses (Default)
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