Most of my margin's notes for this week's readings ran along a continuum of "determined" versus "free" action/identity. Many of the authors touched on this subject in one way or another: how much of our identity is created, and how much is imagined, simply a manifestation of what our society tells us is "true?" Even the one created piece in the bunch, "Jazzercise," seemed to focus on finding a place within this linear scale (if we want to accept the notion of linear): Mary Louise Pratt makes an argument against convention forms of "excercise" (running, etc) and "dance" (ballet, etc) and combines them into what she deems its hybrid equivilent: dance-excerize or Jazzercise. Not too painful or taxing physically, yet not leaning too far over on the scale of aesthetic perfectionism. Just right--for some. And I suppose my question as I continued to read (actually, Pratt's was the first essay I read, and ironically, I read it while doing an exercise routine on the elliptical machine titled "Weight Loss"--I suppose people can guess where that might rest on the line between the two extremes), consistently came back to this notion of individual choice: how much of our personality and choices in the everyday do we assume we possess, and how much of it is just a collective "hand-me-down" from what our societies have instilled in us? Most authors appeared to weigh in more heavily toward the latter option, which made me consider, Is this perhaps why Guhu argues that the insurgent's voice is never heard in history? At what point does change begin to occur, do we begin to see the scale of societal norm shift? Salhins sets this paradox up nicely, I think, in his essay "La Pensee Bourgeoise:" This determination of use-values, of a particular type of house as a particular type of home, represents a continuous process of social life in which men reciprocally define objects in terms of themselves and themselves in terms of objects" (169). I'm wondering if in class we might find it useful to flesh out this concept of shift: from societal influence to "individual change" (as I believe is a very popular if, according to some of our authors, useless happenstance) and revolution on a timeline according to the times and beliefs of the day which our authors were writing...?
--Julie Lauterbach-Colby
Friday, February 13, 2009
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