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A good bit of my current research involves
sifting through womens print ephemera from the last seventy years or
so, in order to determine as best I can the kinds of collaborative labor that
went into their making. Even the most individualistic punk fanzines, founded
on a do-it-yourself ethic that often seems to exclude the possibility of group
effort, tend to include all sorts of found materials - clippings,
drawings, stickers -- that point toward an ideal of communal or collective
authorship. At the other end of the distribution scale, trade books and glossy
magazines manage to be at once obviously and invisibly the products of many
hands and minds. Part of what Ive been trying to accomplish with this
research is to make that sort of labor as visible as Im able to.
In recent years, as such, something that has struck me as particularly silly
and contemptable has been the genre of the Martha Stewart-style editors
note, written at the last minute by someone who clearly has had very
little to do with the making of the text, but who drops in quickly, late in
the process, in order to imprint it with his or her signature. Stewarts
nostalgic, widely parodied musings on the household rituals of her youth are
contained in the Remembering column that caps each months
edition of Martha Stewart Living magazine. These are probably the best-known
contemporary examples of the long tradition of the editors note,
which to my mind serves chiefly in order to obscure the skill-intensive and
low-prestige work often performed by women staffers entailed
in the making and distribution, not to mention the writing, of any published
text. And Stewarts example is hardly the most egregious I can think
of: at least we know that Martha works hard! With her homemade ketchup, her
handmade shadow-portraits, and her twenty-hour days, shes a leading
post-punk proponent of doing it oneself, even if we can be reasonably certain
that shes not the one who is busy each month sowing flowers in the gardens
of her several gracious homes.
More often, the editors note brings to my mind Kay Thompsons
fashion-editor character from the 1957 film Funny Face, who sweeps through
the offices of Quality magazine wielding an enormous pair of scissors, scattering
staffers in all directions, uttering strange, oracular imperatives (think
pink!) that because of her position are treated with a seriousness utterly
unrelated to their content. Still, Quality magazine is a huge success in the
fictional world of Funny Face, mostly because said staffers manage to gather
together in her wake in order to accomplish some real thinking, to get some
brain-work done. So, keeping all of this in mind, I hope you will understand
that it is with some trepidation that I offer you this, the first of two directors
letters that I have been asked to contribute to the CFR newsletter during
my year as acting director of the Center!
I introduce myself to you in this roundabout way largely in order to highlight
the enormity of the task performed each semester by Nikki Senecal, the Centers
Assistant Director, for whom the production of this newsletter is just one
from among a daunting range of tasks that she performs with great sensitivity,
imagination, and feminist wit. I have watched with interest the transformation
of the newsletter over time, and have admired its increasingly dynamic mix
of detailed local information and broad-based scholarly debate. Under Senecals
editorship, the newsletter has maintained its long tradition of keeping CFR
members informed about activities sponsored by the Center itself. Over the
last two years, however, Senecal has also turned the newsletter into a flexible,
informal venue where local gender studies scholars and culture-workers can
take their ideas out in public for the first time, in the context of interviews,
travel reports, research diaries, editorials, and the like. Thanks to Senecal,
feminist researchers at USC have found a periodic meeting place, when we are
more commonly accustomed to being scattered across the campuses in a whole
range of schools, departments, and programs.
With the remainder of this letter, I will try to follow Senecals example
in a couple of ways: first, by mixing local, institutional concerns with broader
scholarly speculation, and second, by shifting slightly away from CFR tradition
while maintaining continuity with its past. In this present issue, as such,
I will depart from certain key emphases of the directors letters
of the last two years, in that I will not spend the bulk of my time defending
feminism or feminist research against their many detractors.
That task has been performed with courage and clarity in these pages by my
predecessors, who have made elegant, eloquent arguments about the continuing
utility (indeed, the real necessity) of these intertwined scholarly and political
projects, arguments with which I concur in all their most important aspects.
However, when feminist scholarship gets pitted against its various opponents
and these range from media commentators on the right to broader national
trends towards academic-institutional downsizing what tends to receive
less focussed attention is the long history of productive internal conflict,
diversity, and self-critique that has been so crucial to the development of
feminist scholarly and political work in the United States and elsewhere.
In order briefly to underscore this, I want to touch on a small cluster of
key issues that have arisen in the recent history of U.S. feminist scholarship.
You never really know about these things, but I dont actually think
I had Stewarts Remembering column on the brain several years
ago when I wrote an essay called Remembering Womens Studies,
an essay in which I was concerned, most of all, to demonstrate how certain
embedded ways of thinking about the historical development of feminist literary
theory had made it appear, quite erroneously, that African-American women
intellectuals were relative newcomers to U.S.-based debates about gender and
representation, only entering the conversation belatedly, during the early
1980s, in order to address the unexamined, monolithic whiteness of the figure
of woman which had purportedly been so central to second-wave
feminism. In that context I was writing about very local, discipline-bound
preoccupations of historians of literary theory, but what I hoped to show
more broadly was that for many prior decades, women intellectuals of color
had been working to complicate U.S. debates about gender, representation,
and social justice in ways that white women were frequently aware of but seldom
acknowledged explicitly, for reasons variously enforced or voluntary. I felt
that neither side of the seductive black/white polarity had been treated quite
adequately, and tried to disclose in each one complexities that tended at
times to be overlooked. I was able to make this argument, Im happy to
say, because over the course of the last decade, far more careful attention
had been paid by scholars than before to the intersectional histories
of varieties of feminist thought, and as a result the historical record had
been considerably complicated. We now have available to us documents from
and accounts of an overlapping and energetic range of feminisms easily
eclipsing the white, heterosexual, middle-class norm so often assigned to
the late 1960s -- that stretches well back to the banner years of the Second
Wave, and beyond.
What remains challenging, however, is figuring out how to make room for this
same kind of overlap and internal variation within an academic context in
which fields like post-colonial studies, feminist studies,
queer studies, critical race theory, American
studies, and others, tend to be institutionally divided from each other.
I think that these sorts of divisions serve many valuable purposes; as I noted
before, for example, I think it matters a great deal that specific space be
reserved in the university for feminist scholarship, and I feel the same way
about other, contiguous areas of inquiry. At the same time, however, it is
rare indeed to find a scholar in any one of the aforementioned fields whose
work does not contain within itself profound engagement among many, if not
all, of them. Add to this the fact that scholars working in these areas tend
to face large administrative burdens and teaching and advising demands, and
it becomes clear that we will need to be extraordinarily creative as we attempt
to devise methods with which to encourage interaction, exchange, mutual interrogation,
and self-reflexivity. My primary commitment during my year at CFR is to foster
this sort of dialogue.
In the preceding paragraph, I did not say anything that hasnt been said
before, and often, by a broad range of committed intellectuals and culture-workers,
in many, diverse contexts. I do think it matters, however, that these things
be said here, in a venue most commonly devoted to the defense of feminist
scholarship as a project deserving of its own, particular space. Spaces of
overlap, I believe, are every bit as important as dedicated home turf. I probably
wont be turning to Martha Stewarts example in order to hone my
homekeeping skills (as she puts it); I have neither the time,
the talent, nor the budget to match Marthas enviable hostessing achievements,
and at any rate Gloria Orensteins more fluid, flexible, and open-ended
model of the salon as a meeting-place for ever-shifting collectives
is much more appealing to me. But I invite you in nonetheless, in order to
contribute your ideas and to communicate your wants and needs to me, and I
will work hard while Im here to make you feel welcome.
--Alice Gambrell
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