2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
Jindal Global Law Review
23
Volume 4, Issue 2, November 2013
Homonationalism As Assemblage:
Viral Travels, Affective Sexualities
Jasbir K. Puar*
In this article I aim to contextualise the rise of gay and lesbian movements within the
purview of debates about rights discourses and the rights-based subject, arguably the
most potent aphrodisiac of liberalism. I examine how sexuality has become a crucial
formation in the articulation of proper citizens across registers like gender, class, and
race, both nationally and transnationally. The essay clarifies homonationalism as an
analytic category necessary for understanding and historicising why a nation’s status as
“gay-friendly” has become desirable in the first place. Like modernity, homonationalism
can be resisted and resignified, but not opted out of: we are all conditioned by it
and through it. The article proceeds in three sections. I begin with an overview of
the project of Terrorist Assemblages, with specific attention to the circulation of the
term ‘homonationalism’. Second, I will elaborate on homonationalism in the context
of Palestine/Israel to demonstrate the relevance of sexual rights discourses and the
narrative of ‘pinkwashing’ to the occupation. I will conclude with some rumination
about the potential of thinking sexuality not as an identity, but as assemblages of
sensations, affects, and forces. This virality of sexuality productively destabilises
humanist notions of the subjects of sexuality but also the political organising seeking
to resist legal discourses that attempt to name and control these subjects of sexuality.
I
I.
Introduction
n this article I aim to contextualise the rise of gay and lesbian
movements within the purview of debates about rights discourses
and the rights-based subject, arguably the most potent aphrodisiac of
liberalism.1 The targets and success of gay and lesbian political organising
have increasingly come to be defined and measured through the prism
of legalisation, leading to a palpable romance with the decriminalisation
of sodomy in many national contexts. While the discourse of law can
serve, and serve well, to redress social injustices and subjects of legal
discourse are savvy and capable of negotiating legal systems even as they
are subject to their disciplinary forces, my interest here is to destabilise
*
1.
Associate Professor, Department of Women’s and Gender Studies, Rutgers University, USA
. This paper was originally delivered as the keynote lecture at the
‘Human Rights Beyond the Law: Politics, Practices, Performances of Protest’ workshop at
Jindal Global Law School in September 2011.
The characterisation of human rights as liberalism’s most potent aphrodisiac is drawn from
the ‘Human Rights Beyond the Law’ workshop’s call for papers, available at http://www.hnet.org/announce/show.cgi?ID=182227.
ISSN 0975-2498
© O.P. Jindal Global University
24
JGLR / Vol. 4, Issue 2
the measuring of social change and of ‘progress’ in terms of legalisation.
‘The law’ is limited in what it can convey and create; the limits with
which we must concern ourselves are not legal instruments per se, but
rather the law’s reliance on performative language that produces that
which it simply claims to regulate, including the ascription of a subject
of that law.2 While these limitations may not mean abandoning rightsbased legal interventions, they do highlight the need to attend to the unprogressive consequences of progressive legislation as well as the modes
of bodily comportment that defy identity parameters.
I begin with an overview of the project of Terrorist Assemblages, with
specific attention to the circulation of the term ‘homonationalism’.
Second, I will elaborate on homonationalism in the context of Palestine/
Israel to demonstrate the relevance of sexual rights discourses and the
narrative of ‘pinkwashing’ to the occupation. I will conclude with some
rumination about the potential of thinking sexuality not as an identity,
but as assemblages of sensations, affects, and forces. This virality of
sexuality productively destabilises humanist notions of the subjects of
sexuality but also the political organising seeking to resist legal discourses
that attempt to name and control these subjects of sexuality.
II.
Homonationalism and its Discontents
In my 2007 monograph Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in
Queer Times3 (hereinafter TA), I develop the conceptual framework
of ‘homonationalism’, by which I mean the use of ‘acceptance’ and
‘tolerance’ for gay and lesbian subjects as the barometer by which
the legitimacy of, and capacity for national sovereignty is evaluated.
Beginning in the 1990s, I became increasingly concerned with the
standard refrain of transnational feminist discourse as well as queer
theories that vociferated that the nation is heteronormative and that the
queer is inherently an outlaw to the nation-state.
While the project arose within the post-9/11 political era of the United
States, my intent in TA was not only to demonstrate simply a relationality
of the instrumentalisation of queer bodies by the U.S. state or only the
embracing of nationalist and often xenophobic and imperialist interests
of the U. S. by queer communities. Rather, building on the important
work of Lisa Duggan on “homonormativity” – her theorisation of the
imbrication of privatisation of neoliberal economies and the growth
2.
3.
Human rights discourses reiterate a “biopolitical anthropocentrism” that mandates a
reproduction of human exceptionalism; Julie Livingston & Jasbir Puar, Introduction:
Interspecies, 29 (106) Soc. Text 3-14 (2011).
Jasbir K. Puar, Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in Queer Times (2005).
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
25
of domestic acceptance of queer communities4 – homonationalism is
fundamentally a critique of how lesbian and gay liberal rights discourses
produce narratives of progress and modernity that continue to accord
some populations access to cultural and legal forms of citizenship at
the expense of the partial and full expulsion from those rights of other
populations.
Simply stated, homonationalism is the concomitant rise in the legal,
consumer and representative recognition of LGBTQ subjects and the
curtailing of welfare provisions, immigrant rights and the expansion of
state power to engage in surveillance, detention and deportation. The
narrative of progress for gay rights is thus built on the backs of racialised
and sexualised others, for whom such progress was either once achieved but
is now backsliding or has yet to arrive. This process relies on the shoring up
of the respectability of homosexual subjects in relation to the performative
reiteration of the pathologised perverse (homo- and hetero-) sexuality of
racial others, specifically Muslim others, upon whom Orientalist and neoOrientalist projections are cast. Homonationalism is thus not simply a
synonym for gay racism or another way to critique the ‘conservatisation’
of gay and lesbian identities, but instead an analytic for apprehending the
consequences of the successes of LGBT liberal rights movements.
I will add here, and elaborate on this later, that I do not think of
homonationalism as an identity nor a position – it is not another
marker meant to cleave a ‘good’ (progressive/transgressive/politically
left) queer from a ‘bad’ (sold out/ conservative/ politically bankrupt)
queer. Rather, I have theorised homonationalism as an assemblage
of de- and re-territorialising forces, affects, energies, and movements.
Assemblages do not accrete in linear time or within discrete histories,
fields, or discourses. In naming a movement in contemporary U.S.
queer politics, homonationalism is only useful in how it offers a way to
track historical shifts in the term of modernity, even as it has become
mobilised within the very shifts it was produced to name. We can debate
the pros and cons of instrumentalisation of sexual identity by human
rights frames, but we cannot elide what I would argue is the crux of
the problem: the insistence of or default to the notion of identity itself.
Through Deleuzian assemblage – in French originally termed agencement
which loosely means patterning of arrangements – homonationalism is
re-articulated as a field of power rather than an activity or property of
any one nation-state, organisation, or individual.5
4.
5.
Lisa Duggan, The Twilight of Equality: Neoliberalism, Cultural Politics, and the Attack on
Democracy (2002).
For further explication on assemblage theory, see Jasbir K. Puar, I’d rather be a cyborg than
a goddess, 2 (1) PhiloSOPHIA: A J. Continental Fem. 49-66 (2012).
26
JGLR / Vol. 4, Issue 2
Homonationalism is also a process, not an event or an attribute.
It names a historical shift in the production of nation-states from
the insistence on heteronormativity to the increasing inclusion of
homonormativity. This process coheres not through 9/11 as a solitary
temporal moment: ‘this’ did not begin with 9/11. I have concerns
about how 9/11 seems to function as an originary trigger, fostering a
dangerous historical reification (what is sometimes cynically referred to
in the US as the ‘9/11 industry’).6 Looking back from 9/11, my interest
was in the 40-year span of the era of post civil rights that, through
the politics of liberal inclusion, continues to produce the sexual other
as white and the racial other as straight. And while forms of virulent
explicit Islamophobia and the growing sense of the failure of President
Obama’s ‘post-racial’ moment has given license to more explicit racist
expression, nevertheless those conservative modalities can be directly
challenged better than before. I remain more convinced than ever that
addressing the insidious collusions between racism and liberalism are
the core critique of homonationalism. This convergence of racism and
progressive liberal instrumentalisation of once-outlawed sexual identities
has led to commonsensical liberal positions, such as the following: Of
course we oppose the war on terror, but what about the homophobia of
Muslims? Of course we oppose the U.S. occupation of the Middle East,
but the Iranians keep hanging innocent gay men. Of course we support
the revolution in Egypt and the Arab Spring, but the sexual assaults
of women proves that the Egyptians are beasts. These kinds of binary
productions between enlightened liberal secularists and those Others,
those racialised religious fanatics, are not only intellectually reductive
and politically naive, they are simply unacceptable.7
6.
7.
Of interest here are different periodisations of Islamophobia. Certainly we can point to rising
forms of global Islamophobia that coincided with the era of decolonisation, the 1978-79
Iranian Revolution and the end of the Cold War. My own research (Terrorist Assemblages,
chapter one) on the production of Terrorist Studies in the U.S. unearths a consolidation of the
figure of the Muslim terrorist during the Cold War.
I am also reminded by Janet Jakobsen and Ann Pellegrini that what passes as secularism
in the ‘West’ is inherently informed by Christian ideological conditionings. That is, what is
defined as secular is indebted to the absorption of Christian norms as the secular, starting
from the way time is marked to the consumerist economy of holidays to the implicit theological
underpinnings of sexual morality. What Jakobsen and Pellegrini insinuate, then, is that there
is no pure secular position at least in the U.S., secularism is already contraindicated by the
religious orientation it seeks to disavow. I would add to that, that the claims to such a pure
position, at this particular political moment, seem most disturbingly applied in relation
to public expressions of Islamic belief. Which should lead one to ask: is it secular, or is it
racist? Where and when are the terms of secularism taken up and activated as a covert form
of cultural racism? See Janet Jakobsen & Ann Pellegrini, Love the Sin: Sexual Regulation and
The Limits of Religious Tolerance (2003).
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
27
I would argue that they have nevertheless been given increasing license
in gay, lesbian, feminist and left circles in the United States and Europe.8
The one liberal positioning that is enduring and to which I will return
through my discussion of pinkwashing is: Of course we support the
Palestinians in their quest for self-determination, but what about how
sexist and homophobic they are? However, in TA, I look not only at the
proliferation of queerness as a white, Christian, secular norm but also at
the proliferation of homonationalism in Arab Muslim and South Asian
queer communities in the U.S., so this is not simply a critique of the
racial exclusions and whiteness of mainstream LGBT communities.10
Two most recent examples of homonationalism in the U.S. are
painfully illustrative of the uneven violences of rights discourses. The
ban on homosexuals in the U.S. military – the ‘Don’t Ask Don’t Tell’
policy – was repealed on December 18, 2010, the same day that the
U.S. Senate put a halt to the DREAM Act (Development, Relief, and
Education for Alien Minors), a piece of legislation that would have
legalised millions of undocumented students and allowed them to pursue
higher education and, ironically enough, military enlistment. In the fall
of 2009, the Mathew Shepard James Byrd Hate Crimes Prevention
Act – the first federal legislation criminalising hate crimes against gays,
lesbians, and trans people – was passed, ironically, in large part because
it was attached to a military appropriations bill.11 So much for queer
progress that does not support the war on terror.
But even before it was known that the bill was being manipulated to
reinforce militaristic ends, queer people-of-colour organisations such as
the ‘Audre Lorde Project’ and several convivial cohort members such
as ‘Queers for Economic Justice’ released a statement taking a stand
against the purportedly ‘historic’ passage of the hate crimes bill, arguing
that legal intervention would be so detrimental it would be better not
9
See Lilian Faderman & Roz Rothstein, A New State for Homophobia, The Advocate, Oct.
12, 2011, available at http://www.advocate.com/politics/commentary/2011/10/12/op-ednew-state-homophobia; Palestine: Lillian Faderman Responds to Alex Blaze, The Bilerico
Project (Oct. 12, 2011), http://www.bilerico.com/2011/10/palestine_lillian_faderman_
responds_to_alex_blaze.php.
9 This is where Hindu secularism and Indian nationalism virulently converge.
10. My interest in the biopolitical intertwining of queerness and nationalism started with my
dissertation research in Trinidad in the 1990s where I examined the tensions between Afroand Indo-Trinidadians in the gay and lesbian movement and continued with my research
on gay and lesbian tourism, understanding the production of the difference between
‘gay-friendly’ and ‘not gay-friendly’ nations as endemic to neoliberal integration of queer
consumers.
11. SRLP On Hate Crime Laws, Sylvia Rivera Law Project, http://srlp.org/our-strategy/policyadvocacy/hate-crimes/ (last visited May 15, 2013) (“This particular bill was attached to a
$680-billion measure for the Pentagon’s budget, which includes $130 billion for ongoing
military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan”).
8.
28
JGLR / Vol. 4, Issue 2
to criminalise these specific hate crimes.12 These organisations posited
that the hate crime legislation would allocate greater resources for the
‘militarisation’ of police forces and the administrative surveillance and
harassment of people-of-colour (especially youth of colour, a priori
designated as more homophobic than their white counterparts), in
particular Latinos and African Americans, whose disproportionate
incarceration in the U.S. is a known fact.13
Historically in the U.S. these populations have not been able to depend
on protection from the state and the police from violence, but have
rather been the targets of violence from these purportedly protective
services. Further, new populations cohere through the gathering
of statistical, demographic, financial, and personal information to
move those understood as targets of hate crimes into the purview of
knowledge production to become the ‘objects’ of state surveillance under
the purported guise of being the ‘subjects’ of state protection. These
cautionary concerns about the limited efficacy of legal intervention
were completely dismissed by mainstream national gay and lesbian
organisations; nor did these organisations critique or comment upon the
legislation regarding the severe compromises made in order to enable its
passage.14
As TA was not intended as a corrective but rather an incitement to
generative and constructive debate, it has been humbling and inspiring
to see how ‘homonationalism’ as a concept has been deployed, adapted,
re-articulated and critiqued in various national, activist, and academic
contexts in North America, Europe, the Middle East, and India. A Parisbased group called ‘No to Homonationalism’ (Non a l’homonationalisme)
is contesting the representational campaign proposed for Gay Pride in
Paris using the national symbol of the white rooster.15 A conference on
Sexual Democracy in Rome took issue with the placement of World
Pride in the most migrant area of the city and staked a claim to a secular
queer politics that challenges the Vatican as well as the homonationalism
of European organising entities.16 In April 2013, a two-day international
12. See A Compilation of Critiques on Hate Crimes Legislation, Blackandpink.org, http://www.
blackandpink.org/revolt/a-compilation-of-critiques-on-hate-crimes-legislation (last visited
Sept. 15, 2013).
13. See Ruthie Wilson Gilmore, The Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis, and Opposition in
Globalizing California (2007).
14. For a full reading of the legislative negotiations made and the details of the bill, see Chandan
Reddy, Freedom With Violence: Race, Sexuality and the US State (2011).
15. Liberation of Homosexual Muslims of France, Beyond Islamophobia and anti-Semitism,
Homonationalism, http://www.homosexuels-musulmans.org/__HOMONATIONALISM__
Liberation-of-homosexual-Muslims-of-France-beyond-Islamophobia-and-anti-Semitism.
html (last visited Sept. 15, 2013).
16. In and Out of Sexual Democracies, Facciamo Breccia, (March 23, 2011), http://www.
facciamobreccia.org/content/view/516/ (for details of the conference).
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
29
conference on ‘Homonationalism and Pinkwashing’ was hosted by the
Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies (CLAGS) at the CUNY Graduate
Center.17
While I work predominantly on the U.S., in TA I did draw from
examples in Britain and the Netherlands to demonstrate the work of
liberal progress narratives, examples that reach beyond the right-wing
gay anti-migration political figures that are gaining increasing currency
in various European states. In Europe, these tensions between liberal
rights discourses and organisations and queer groups of colour, antiracist organisations, and queer scholars of colour continue to proliferate.
In June 2010, Judith Butler refused the Civil Courage Award given to
her by the Christopher Street Day Parade in Berlin because of the
organisation’s history of anti-migrant sentiment.18 The controversial
incident brought to light the inability of liberal queer organisations
to challenge their practices of racial profiling and entrenched beliefs
about the white secular norms of homosexuality. It also highlighted the
widespread tendency to ‘cite up’, rather than ‘cite down’ or expansively,
laterally, eclectically, as Butler’s celebrity status was of more interest than
the anti-racist queer groups that she highlighted in her public refusal
and the scholars that supported her critique.19 There have already been
two (somewhat successful) attempts by Britain’s self-proclaimed premier
gay and lesbian human rights activist Peter Tatchell of the queer group
‘OutRage!’ to stifle legitimate criticism of his work and politics. The
articles “Gay Imperialism” by Jin Haritaworn, Tamsila Tauqir and
Esra Erdem20 and “Unbearable Witness” by Scott Long,21 formerly
of Human Rights Watch, were withdrawn and retracted in response
to implicit and explicit legal threats by Tatchell, who is unfortunately
protected by Britain’s archaic libel laws in which the accused is presumed
guilty unless shown otherwise.22
17. Homonationalism and Pinkwashing Conference, The Centre for Lesbian and Gay Studies
(April 10-11, 2013), http://homonationalism.org/
18. Jasbir Puar, Celebrating Refusal: The Complexities of Saying No, Bully Bloggers, http://
bullybloggers.wordpress.com/2010/06/23/celebrating-refusal-the-complexities-of-sayingno/#comments (last visited Jun. 23, 2010).
19. See id. (I would also point to the ‘No Homonationalisms’ website (nohomonationalism.org)
for more detailed explication of the appropriation and exploitation of scholars of colour
in academic citational practices. I will add that Butler’s decision to refuse the award was
seemingly scorned by many who might otherwise have been thought of as ‘natural allies’. In
other words, mainstream queer organisations were dismissive of her critiques.)
20. Jin Haritaworn et. al., Gay Imperialism: Gender and Sexuality Discourse in the ‘War on
Terror’, in Out of Place: Interrogating Silences in Queerness/Raciality 9-33 (Adi Kuntsman &
Esperanza Miyake eds., 2008) (the apology to Peter Tatchell can be accessed at http://www.
rawnervebooks.co.uk/outofplace.html); See also Sara Ahmed, Problematic Proximities: Or
Why Critiques of Gay Imperialism Matter, 19 (2) Fem. Legal Stud. 119-32 (2011).
21. Scott Long, Unbearable Witness: How Western Activists (mis)recognize Sexuality in Iran,
15 (1) Contemp. Pol. 119-36 (2009).
22. These practices of citational violence and of censoring dissenting or ‘unpleasant’ analyses
30
JGLR / Vol. 4, Issue 2
Shortly before coming to India, I had the opportunity of seeing I Am,
a beautiful documentary film set in New Delhi and making the rounds
of the global gay and lesbian film festival circuit.23 The organising
concept of I Am is simultaneously deeply personal and political.
Film-maker Sonali Gulati (from New Delhi, now residing in the U.S.)
grieves the passing of her mother, to whom she never had the opportunity
to ‘come out’ regarding her desire to ‘marry a woman’. The film ends
with scenes from the celebrations in Delhi post-the-reading-down of
Section 377. So already the film is bookended by the two most centralised
issues of what is known in the U.S. as the ‘gay equality agenda’ – the
decriminalisation of sodomy and gay marriage. The narrative drive
animating the story is codified through the trope of ‘coming out’ which
remains a stable and un-ironic desire, despite having been thoroughly
critiqued for its western episteme by South Asian queer theorists and
activists alike.24 The film primarily foregrounds several lesbian women
who are perceived as masculine, many of whom would constitute part
of a ‘transnational activist class’ of labourers embedded in the struggle
for gay and lesbian rights. Gulati documents the conflicts that arise in
the search for familial acceptance. In the end, most Indian parents turn
out to be good, liberal tolerant supporters of their homosexual children.
I Am is now being used by the South Asian Lesbian and Gay
Association (SALGA) in New York to promote tolerance and acceptance
are so incredibly damaging to the kinds of affirmative, life building, intellectual, social and
political communities that we are all seeking to sustain. Not only do we risk reproducing
a defensively white (queer) canon, but more proactively, citational practices can be a form
of redistribution of resources that can challenge neoliberal logics of compartmentalisation
and hierarchy, and disciplinarity because they redirect our attention elsewhere. But more
violently, these practices continue to reiterate the uncomplicated binary of white secular
– and again Christian secular – queers, feminist, and other liberals, who continue to act
with impunity in regards to the liberal forms of racism they sanction, while at the same
time demanding accountability from those racial and religious Others for the homophobia
and sexism deemed rampant in their home communities. Binaries are thus never about
a relationship between two equal players, one might remember. Should a ‘citing down’
(as a way to expose hierarchical realities) or even ‘citing lateral,’ i.e. citing expansively be
practiced more fully in our work, one might realise that the work of addressing homophobia
in religious and racial communities continues unabated. It would be really nice to get beyond
this question to actually hear more about how this work is done, because otherwise we
never move past a call and response mode. What happens is simply — as I witnessed at the
‘Sexual Nationalisms’ conference in Amsterdam — a recentering of white secular queernesses
and their anxieties about Racial Others, most of whom were only there in absentia. This
infinite self-referentiality of post-structuralist critique is what Rey Chow refers to as “poststructuralist significatory incarceration.” Rey Chow, The Age of the World Target: SelfReferentiality in War, Theory, and Comparative Work 53 (2006).
23. I Am, Sonali Film, http://www.sonalifilm.com/I-AM.html (last visited Sept. 15, 2013).
24. See, e.g., A Lotus of Another Color: An Unfolding of the South Asian Gay and Lesbian
Experience (Rakesh Ratti ed., 1993); Nayan Shah, Sexuality, Identity, and History, in Q&A:
Queer in Asian America (David L. Eng & Alice Y. Hom eds., 1998); Jasbir Puar, Transnational
Sexualities: South ASian (Trans)nation(alism)s and Queer Diasporas, in Q&A: Queer in Asian
America (David L. Eng & Alice Y. Hom eds., 1998) (on South Asian queer transnationalisms).
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
31
of homosexual children by South Asian parents. No doubt, part of the
uptake of I Am in the U.S. as a model for familial acceptance was spurred
by the spate of ‘gay youth suicides’ that occurred in the fall of 2010.25
But if we are to promote a truly non-national queer agenda, we must
not only be critical of familial homophobia but also of the model of
family itself – even queer family. The notion of queer family – “families
we choose”26 – may well invite new and validate different objects into the
discourse of family, but the directionality of familial affect and psychic
reproduction may well be the same. That is to say, the objects and
subjects of family might alter, but the problems with heteronormative
reproduction – and in these cases, homonormative reproduction – don’t
simply dissipate with a switch in object choice, as we have seen time and
again with the limits of gay equality agendas.
As with the U.S., is gay marriage next on the gay equality agenda in
India? For whom does a gay rights equality agenda centring marriage
benefit? Is there any relationship between the reading down of Sec.
377-signalling an increasingly visible middle-class LGBT movement in
India - and the nature and visibility of sexual assaults on women, for
example the recent gang-rape and murder that occurred in New Delhi
in December 2012? Are women who transgress their scripted positions
within the gender binary being punished through a backlash against the
striving for sexual liberation?
Regarding Sec. 377, Oishik Sircar writes:
The decriminalisation of same-sex relationships is clearly an outcome
of the gradually increasing cultural acceptance of diverse sexualities
that has taken place as a result of liberalisation and globalisation, as
is evident from the court’s constant allusions to international human
rights law and case law, and precedents primarily from the United
States. These references made apparent the cultural logic behind the
court’s judgment: India needs to live up to the progressive developments
in other parts of the (Western) world by decriminalising sodomy. As
Anjali Gopalan, founder of petitioner Naz Foundation, said after the
judgment was delivered, “Oh my God, we’ve finally stepped into the 21st
century.” This exclamatory declaration seems to be a history-vanishing
moment, where the ostensibly progressive present contributes to queer
emancipation at the cost of blinding us to a historicised understanding
of the cruelly liberal genealogies of present-day India.27
25. See Jasbir K. Puar, The Cost of Getting Better: Suicide, Sensation, Switchpoints, 18 (1) GLQ:
J. of Lesbian & Gay Stud. 149-58 (2012).
26. See Kath Weston, Families We Choose: Lesbians, Gays, Kinship (1997)
27. Oishik Sircar, Spectacles of Emancipation: Reading Rights Differently in India’s Legal
Discourse, 49 (3) Osgoode Hall L. J. 563 (2012).
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Rather than suggesting that these aspirations to join the 21st century,
proclaimed by Gopalan,28 are simply versions of homonationalism as
applied to the Indian case, it seems more prudent to note the divergences
and differences that create multiple kinds of homonationalisms. What
is crucial to an/the on-going political struggle in multiple locations is
not to critique a long-awaited community-oriented film or the efforts
of gay and lesbian activists in any national location, but to insist on an
awareness of homonationalism as an uneven and unpredicatable process.
How do the history of British colonialism, the specific periodisation of
liberalisation in India, and the uptake of neoliberal class stratification
that produces privileged transnational networks shape homonationalism
as an assemblage?
III.
Israeli ‘Pinkwashing’ in an increasingly
Homonationalist World
In keeping with the movement of homonationalism-as-assemblage in
its questioning of periodisation and progress, this section discusses what
has become known as pinkwashing, or the practice of covering over or
distracting from a nation’s policies of discrimination of some populations
through a noisy touting of its gay rights for a limited few.29 I focus on
Palestine/Israel here for two reasons: one, because after the U.S., Israel
is, in my estimation, the greatest benefactor of homonationalism, for
reasons in part because of its entwinement with the U.S., but not only;
and two, because Israel has been accused of ‘pinkwashing’ in a manner
that apparently no other nation-state does, and I have been unconvinced
that pinkwashing is a practice singular to the Israeli state. Quite simply,
pinkwashing has been defined as the Israeli state’s use of its stellar
LGBT rights record to deflect attention from, and in some instances
to justify or legitimate, its occupation of Palestine. Resonating within a
receptive field of globalised Islamophobia significantly amplified since
9/11 and reliant on a civilisational narrative about the modernity of the
Israelis juxtaposed with the backward homophobia of the Palestinians,
pinkwashing has become a commonly used tag for the cynical promotion
28. Elizabeth Flock, The Law Breaker, Forbes India, Dec. 26, 2009, available at http://business.
in.com/printcontent/8082.
29. On 11 January 2011, Tel Aviv was voted the “world’s best gay city” of the year by a
gaycities.com survey, beating London, Toronto, and New York, among other cosmopolitan
locales. That same day our LGBTIQ solidarity delegation to Palestine – the first ever of its
kind – was meeting with several Israeli anti-Occupation activist organisations, including
Boycott from Within, Anarchists Against the Wall, and Zocheot, a Nakba remembrance
project. One of our speakers demonstrated the complexities of doing anti-Occupation and
Boycott Divestment and Sanctions work in the belly of the beast that is Israel when he
quipped: “So now Tel Aviv is the best gay city. It is also the least Arab city you might ever find.
It is incredibly rare to hear Arabic spoken on the streets of Tel Aviv.”
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
33
of LGBT bodies as representative of Israeli democracy. As such, it
functions as a form of discursive pre-emptive securitisation.
Why is pinkwashing legible and persuasive as a political discourse?
First of all, a neoliberal accommodationist economic structure engenders
the niche marketing of various ethnic and minoritised groups and has
normalised the production of a gay and lesbian tourism industry built
on the discursive distinction between gay-friendly and not-gay-friendly
destinations. Most nations that aspire to forms of western or European
modernity now have gay and lesbian tourism marketing campaigns.
In that sense, Israel is doing what other states do and what is solicited
by the gay and lesbian tourism industry – promoting itself. We can of
course notice that the effects of this promotion are deeply detrimental
in the case of the occupation. But we might want to pose questions
about the specifics of the ‘Brand Israel Campaign,’ which has been
located as the well-spring of Israel’s pinkwashing. How does the Brand
Israel Campaign differ from a conventional state-sponsored advertising
campaign targeting gay and lesbian tourists?30
Additionally, in some senses Israel is a pioneer of homonationalism as
its particular position at the crosshairs of settler colonialism, occupation,
and neoliberalist accommodationism creates the perfect storm for
the normalisation of homosexuality. The homonationalist history of
Israel – the rise of LGBT rights in Israel and increased mobility for
gays and lesbians – parallels the concomitant increased segregation and
decreased mobility of Palestinian populations, especially post-Oslo.31
I have detailed this point at greater length elsewhere, but to quickly
summarise: the advent of gay rights in Israel begins around the same
time as the first Intifada, with the 1990s known as Israel’s ‘gay decade’
brought on by the legalisation of homosexuality in the Israeli Defence
Forces, workplace anti-discrimination provisions, and numerous other
legislative changes.32
Pinkwashing operates through an erasure of the spatial logics of
control of the Occupation and the intricate and even intimate system
of apartheid replete with a dizzying array of locational obstacles to
Palestinian mobility. That queer Palestinian activists in Ramallah
cannot travel to Haifa, Jersusalem, or Gaza to meet fellow Palestinian
30. See Sarah Schulman, A Documentary Guide to Pinkwashing, Prettyqueer, http://www.
prettyqueer.com/2011/11/29/a-documentary-guide-to-pinkwashing-sarah-schulman-newyork-times-oped/ (last visited Sept. 15, 2013) (for her detailing of Brand Israel).
31. See Rebecca Luna Stein, Explosive: Scenes from Israeli Queer Occupation, 16 (4) GLQ: J.
Lesbian & Gay Stud. 517-36 (2010).
32. See Jasbir K. Puar, Citation and Censorship: The Politics of Talking About the Sexual Politics
of Israel, 19 (2) Fem. Legal Stud. 133-42 (2011).
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activists seems to be one of the most obvious ways the Israeli occupation
delimits – prohibits, in fact – the possibilities for the flourishing of queer
communities and organising that Israelis have enjoyed without hassle.
Instead of understanding access to mobility and congregation
as constitutive of queer identity and community, pinkwashing reinforces
ideologies of the clash of cultures and the ‘cultural difference’ of
Palestinian homophobia rather than recognising the constraining and
suffocating spatial and economic effects of apartheid. Questions about
the treatment of homosexuals in the West Bank or the Gaza Strip fail to
take into account the constant and omnipresent restrictions on mobility,
contact, and organising necessary to build any kind of queer presence
and politics. What becomes clear is that the purported concern for the
status of homosexuals in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip is being used
to shield the Occupation from direct culpability in suppressing, indeed
endangering, those very homosexuals. Further, the LGBT rights project
itself relies on the impossibility/ absence/ non-recognition of a proper
Palestinian queer subject, except within the purview of the Israeli state
itself. It presents the ‘gay haven’ of Tel Aviv33 as representative of the
entire country and unexamined in terms of its Arab cleansing, while
also maintaining Jerusalem as the religious safeguard.
As its shorthand use proliferates in anti-occupation organising
forums internationally, pinkwashing must be situated within its wider
homonationalising geopolitical context. That is to say, if pinkwashing is
effective, it is not because of some outstandingly egregious activity on
the part of the Israeli government, but because both history and global
international relations matter. So while it is crucial to challenge the Israeli
state, it must be done in a manner which acknowledges that the assemblage
of homonationalism going beyond the explicit activities of any one nationstate, even Israel. Building on theoretical points first articulated in TA, I
contend that it is crucial to keep in mind that pinkwashing appears to be
an effective strategy not necessarily because of any exceptional activities
on the part of the Israeli state but because of the history of settler colonial
violence, the international LGBT tourism industry, the gay and lesbian
human rights industry, and finally, the role of the U.S.
Pinkwashing is only one more justification for imperial/racial/
national violence that has a long history preceding it. How has ‘the
homosexual question’ come to supplement ‘the woman question’ of the
colonial era to modulate arbitration between modernity and tradition,
citizen and terrorist, homonational and queer? As elaborated by Partha
Chatterjee, this question arose with some force in the decolonisation
33. Ben Hartman, Tel Aviv named ‘world’s best gay city’ for 2011, Jerusalem Post, Nov. 1, 2011,
available at http://www.jpost.com/LifeStyle/Article.aspx?id=253121.
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
35
movements in South Asia and elsewhere, whereby the capacity for
an emerging postcolonial government to protect native women from
oppressive patriarchal cultural practices, marked as tradition, became the
barometer by which colonial rule arbitrated political concessions made
to the colonised.34 In other words, we rehearse here Gayatri Spivak’s
famous dictum “white men saving brown women from brown men.”35
This particular triangulation has thus set the stage for an enduring
drama between feminists protesting colonial and neocolonial regimes
and nationalists who discount the presence and politics of these feminists
in their own quests for decolonisation. We can also say that, while the
woman question has hardly disappeared, it is now accompanied by
what we could call the homosexual question, indeed yet another variant
or operation of homonationalism. The terms of the woman question
have been re-dictated, as feminist scholars have now become arbiters of
other women’s modernities, or the modernities of The Other Woman.
To reinvoke Spivak for the 21st century: white queer (men) saving brown
homosexuals from brown heterosexuals.
We can see how this moves from the woman question to the
homosexual question, and it remains to be contextualised in the various
locations as to which of these trajectories make more or less sense. First,
the supplementing of homosexuality to women results from the merging
of two processes: the post-colonial state shoring up respectability and
legitimacy to prove its right to sovereignty to the colonial father36 and
the folding in or acknowledging of homosexual subjects into legal and
consumer legitimacy via neoliberal economies, such that homosexuals
once on the side of death (AIDS) are now on the side of life or are
productive for nation-building. Second, the homosexual question is in fact
a reiteration of the woman question, insofar as it reproduces a demand
for gender exceptionalism and relies on the continual reproduction of
the gender binary. The homosexuals seen as being treated properly by
the nation-state are not ‘gender queer’. They are rather the ones recreating gendered norms through, rather than despite, homosexual
identity. Obscured by pinkwashing is how trans and gender nonconforming queers are not welcome in this new version of the proper
‘homonationalist’ Israeli citizen.37
34. Partha Chatterjee, The Nationalist Resolution of the Women’s Question in Recasting Women:
Essays in Colonial History 233-253 (Kumkum Sangari and Sudesh Vaid eds., 1990).
35. G.C. Spivak, Can the Subaltern Speak? in Marxism and the Intepretation of Culture 271-313
(Lawrence Gossberg and Cary Nelson eds., 1988).
36. See M. Jacqui Alexander, Not Just (Any) Body Can Be a Citizen: The Politics of Law,
Sexuality and Postcoloniality in Trinidad and Tobago and the Bahamas, 48 Fem. Rev. 5-23
(Autumn 1994).
37. See Alisa Solomon, Viva la Diva Citizenship: Post-Zionism and Gay Rights, in Queer Theory
and the Jewish Question, 149-65 (Daniel Boyarin et. al. eds., 2003).
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Also obscured by pinkwashing is the persistent downplaying of the
woman question in relation to the homosexual question when it is
attached to primarily first-world, white, male bodies, as it is in the case of
Israel (for example, debates about gender segregation in ultra-Orthodox
communities in Israel are still active). As another example of how the
homosexual question forefends the woman question: On 11th January,
2011, the same day as Tel Aviv’s dubious honour as the ‘world’s best
gay city’ was announced, an amendment to Israel’s citizenship laws that
prohibits the unification of West Bank Palestinians with their spouses in
Israel was upheld by the High Court of Justice.38 Add to this the passage
of “social suitability” laws,39 attempts at regulating sexual activities
between foreign labourers and Israeli Jews, vigilante groups and social
organisations that monitor and agitate against sexual liaisons between
Israeli Jewish women and Palestinian men, and it becomes patently clear
that LGBT liberation also works to distract attention from intense forms
of (hetero)sexual regulation, regulation that seeks to constrict the sexual,
reproductive, and familial activities of all bodies not deemed suitable
for the Israeli body politic. Pinkwashing thus works not only through an
active portrayal of the Palestinian population as either homophobic or
anti-homophobic, as the biopolitical target is arguably even more the
control of heterosexual reproduction, especially between Palestinians
and Israeli Jews.40
Palestinian queer organisers assert that it is irrelevant whether
Palestinian society is homophobic or not and that the question of
homophobia within Palestinian society has nothing to do with the fact
that the Occupation must end. For the thriving political platform of the
‘Palestinian Queers for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions’ (hereafter
PQBDS) and ‘Al-Qaws for Sexual and Gender Diversity in Palestinian
Society’ (hereafter Al-Qaws) queer organising is anti-occupation
organising; likewise, anti-occupation work is queer organising. Palestinian
38. Jasbir K. Puar, The Golden Handcuffs of Gay Rights: How Pinkwashing Distorts Both
LGBT and Anti-Occupation Activism, Fem. Wire (Jan. 30, 2012), http://thefeministwire.
com/2012/01/the-golden-handcuffs-of-gay-rights-how-pinkwashing-distorts-both-lgbtiqand-anti-occupation-activism/; Ben Hartman, supra note 33; Dan Izenberg & Rebecca
Anna Stoil, High Court rejects petition against citizenship law, Jerusalem Post, http://www.
jpost.
com/Diplomacy-and-Politics/High-Court-rejects-petition-against-citizenship-law
(last updated Nov. 1, 2012).
39. Edmund Sanders, New Israeli Laws will increase discrimination against Arabs, critics say,
L.A. Times, Mar. 24, 2011, available at http://articles.latimes.com/2011/mar/24/world/lafg-israel-arab-laws-20110324; ‘Social Suitability’ nears OK as Israeli Housing Criterion,
Israel Religious Action Center, http://www.irac.org/NewsDetailes.aspx?ID=846 (last visited
Sep. 15, 2013).
40. Jasbir Puar, Affective Politics: States of Debility and Capacity (forthcoming 2014) (this line
of argumentation prefaces a chapter on sex, reproductive rights, and disability in Palestine/
Israel in my forthcoming monograph).
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
37
Queers for BDS is not a liberal project that is demanding acceptance,
tolerance, or inclusion within a ‘nationalist’ movement. Rather, through
foregrounding the occupation as its primary site of struggle, PQBDS is
slowly, strategically and carefully insisting upon and creating systemic
and thorough changes in the terms of Palestinian society itself. Al-Qaws
claims that its primary work is about ending the occupation, not about
reifying a homosexual identity that mirrors an ‘Israeli’ or ‘Western’ selfserving form of sexual freedom.41
This is an important tactic within the context of a gay and lesbian
human rights industry that proliferates Euro-U.S. constructs of identity
(not to mention the assumption of a universal attachment to sexual
identity itself), that privilege identity politics, ‘coming out’, public
visibility, legislative measures as the dominant barometers of social
progress, and a flat invocation of ‘homophobia’ as an automatic,
unifying, experiential frame. In this sense, while one may disagree with
Joseph Massad’s damning critique of the “Gay International,” we would
do well to ask exactly how the “Queer International” proposed by Sarah
Schulman is an alternative or antidote to the Gay International.42 Is it
the case that simply by virtue of being articulated through ‘queer’ rather
than ‘gay’, and through a global solidarity movement, that the pitfalls
of the gay international are really avoided? How is such a positioning
of queer, one that purports to be transgressive, morally and politically
untainted, and outside of power?
Pinkwashing is thus what Michel Foucault called an “incitement to
discourse,”43 an impelling form of confessionalism which inaugurates
a call and response circuit that hails the very identity accused of being
impossible. Refusing the liberal response to this incitement to discourse
– a contemporary version of ‘We’re here, We’re queer, get used to
it’ – suggests that one might not want to respond to pinkwashing as
(primarily or only) queers, since such a response reinforces the singleaxis identity logic of pinkwashing that isolates ‘queer’ from other
identities. Nor is pinkwashing a queer issue per se or even one that
uses queers specifically to further state ends. Pinkwashing is not about
sexual identity at all in this regard but rather a powerful manifestation
of the regulation of identity in an increasingly homonationalist world
41. See, e.g., http://www.alqaws.org/q/en/content/signposts-al-qaws-decade-building-queerpalestinian-discourse.
42. Interview by Félix Boggio Éwanjé-Épée & Stella Magliani-Belkacem with Joseph Massad,
Associate Professor, Columbia University, available at http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/
index/10461/the-empire-of-sexuality_an-interview-with-Joseph; Sarah Schulman, Israel/
Palestine and the Queer International (2012).
43. Michel Foucault, The Will to Knowledge: History of Sexuality vol 1 (Robert Hurley trans.,
1998).
38
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– a world that evaluates nationhood on the basis of the treatment of
its homosexuals. The challenge, then, is to not allow the liberal or
establishment gays in Euro-America (who are the primary targets of
pinkwashing) to redirect the script of anti-pinkwashing activism away
from the radical non-liberal approach of PQBDS and Al-Qaws. Failing
this, as Maya Mikdashi has so brilliantly articulated, the re-writing of
a radical Palestinian queer politics by a liberal Euro-American queer
politics would indeed be a further entrenchment of homonationalism.44
Organising against pinkwashing through a ‘queer international’ platform
can potentially unwittingly produce an affirmation of the terms within
which the discourse of pinkwashing articulates its claims, namely, that
queer identity emboldened through rights is the predominant manner
through which sexual subjectivities should be lived.
Ultimately, the financial, military, affective, and ideological entwinement
of U.S. and Israeli settler colonialisms, and the role of the U.S. more
generally, should not be forgotten when evaluating why pinkwashing
appears to be an effective discursive strategy. The U.S. and Israel are, I
would argue, the largest beneficiaries of homonationalism in the current
global geopolitical order, as it produces exceptionalisms on the scalar
registers of the internal, territorial, and the global. Moreover, pinkwashing
is to a large extent directed towards the U.S. – Israel’s greatest financial
supporter internationally – and more generally to Euro-U.S. gays who have
the political capital and financial resources to invest in Israel. The claims of
pinkwashing are often seen as plausible when rendered through an LGBT
rights discourse that resonates within North America and Europe as a
dominant measurement of teleological progress. It makes far less sense in
the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, for example, where there
is a healthy scepticism about LGBT rights discourses and where knowledge
of the complexities of sexualities in the region is far more nuanced. Thus
pinkwashing’s appeal to U.S. gays is produced unconsciously through the
erasure of U.S. settler colonialism enacted in the tacit endorsement of
Israeli occupation of Palestine.
IV.
Sexuality, Affect, Virality
This last section is tentative and speculative. In it I want to suggest
the importance of moving away from the call-and-response process that
continues to rely on opposing a ‘mainstream/global queer’ against a
‘queer-of-colour/ non-western queer’. So far I have discussed the travels
of the concept of homonationalism and how it has been taken up as, and
44. Maya Mikdashi, Gay Rights as Human Rights: Pinkwashing Homonationalism, Jadaliyya,
(Dec. 16, 2011), http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3560/gay-rights-as-human-rights_
pinkwashing-homonationa.
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
39
in some ways reduced to, an activist organising platform akin to a political
critique of racism and nationalism in queer communities. I have also tried
to lay out the stakes of understanding homonationalism-as-assemblage:
as a structure of modernity, a convergence of geopolitical and historical
forces, neoliberal interests in capitalist accumulation both cultural and
material, biopolitical state practices of population control and affective
investments in discourses of freedom, liberation, and rights. I have also
attempted to provisionally sketch how homonationalism-as-assemblage
creates a global field within which the discourse of pinkwashing as
regards Israel/Palestine takes hold. The point is not merely to position
Israel as a homonationalist state against which anti-pinkwashers must
resist, but further to demonstrate the complex global and historical
apparatus that creates the appearance of the activities of the Israeli state
as legitimate and progressive. In this final section, I elaborate sexuality as
affect, as sensation, and as part of an assemblage of biopolitical control
that evades any neat application of homonationalism as a concept.
Sexuality as an affective network entails an axis of signification and an
axis of forces that do not align with the so-called material configurations
of the region, configurations that produce monoliths such as ‘The
Israeli (and his/ her modernist sexuality)’ and ‘The Palestinian (and his/
her pathological sexuality)’ as supplements of a liberal and yet brutal
humanism. Thinking of both homonationalism and sexuality through
assemblages opens up a different trajectory or plane of territorialisation.
Even as the staidness of the politics of recognition gets mobilised by
Israel and global gay discourses through pinkwashing, the materiality of
sexual practice and sexuality itself is so much more complex, mediated
and contingent than the stagnating politics of control and resistance
allow them to be.
This understanding of sexuality entails theorising not only specific
disciplinary sites but also broader techniques of social control, given that
‘feminism’ and ‘queer’ and the deaths or lively potentials of their subjects
have already been made to be productive for governance. The debate
about discipline and control marks a shift in terms from the regulation
of normativity (the internalisation of self/other subject formation) to
what Foucault calls the regularisation of bodies. Many relations between
discipline (exclusion and inclusion) and control (modulation, tweaking)
have been proffered: as various overlapping yet progressive stages of market
capitalism and governmentality; as co-existing models and exercises of
power; as an effect of disciplinary apparatuses – control as the epitome of
a disciplinary society par excellence (in that disciplinary forms of power
exceed their sites to reproduce everywhere); and finally, discipline as a
form of control and as a response to the proliferation of control.
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In this oscillation between disciplinary societies and control societies,
sexuality is not only contained within bodies but also dispersed across
spaces. Sexuality as an affective modality is thus by definition nonrepresentationalist, a distinct version of what Davide Panagia calls “the
ways in which sensation interrupts common sense.”45 Following Michel
Foucault’s “security regimes” and Gilles Deleuze’s “control society,”46
the tensions have been mapped out as a shift from normal/ abnormal
(homo-hetero binary) to variegation, modulation and tweaking
(sexuality as sensation); from discrete sites of punishment (the prison,
the mental hospital, the school, and in Palestine the checkpoints which
rotate and appear randomly, and the ‘security’ wall which seems mostly
to prevent Palestinians from getting to their villages, their farmland,
and other Palestinians) to pre-emptive regimes of securitisation (we
can see pinkwashing as one form of this pre-emptive securitisation);
from inclusion/ exclusion to everyone is included, but how? (Contrary
to claims that insist that the Israeli state project is solely about ethnic
cleansing and dispossession of land, there are subtle yet insistent ‘forms
of folding in’ and inclusion at work here: just as one example, there are
at least 100 different types of ID cards that a Palestinian might have,
each delineating micro-variation from each other, performing what
Helga Tawil-Souri describes as “low-tech, visible, tactile means of power
that simultaneously include and exclude Palestinians from the Israeli
state.”47); from self/ other subject/object construction to micro-states of
differentiation; from the policing of profile to patrolling of affect.
This last point about affect is crucial because while discipline works at
the level of identity, control works at the level of affective intensification.
Here I am prompted by Amit Rai’s reformulation of sexuality as
‘ecologies of sensation’ – as affective energies rather than identity – that
transcends the humanist designations of straight and gay, queer and
non-queer, modern and pathological. On this sexuality, Rai writes:
ecologies of sensation modulate and potentialize the body’s pleasures
and distribute them as contagions across segmented populations not as
45. Davide Panagia, The Political Life of Sensation 2 (2009).
46. Michel Foucault, Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the Collège de France 19771978 (Graham Burchell trans., 2009); Gilles Deleuze, Negotiations 1972-1990 (1997).
47. Helga Tawil-Souri, Colored Identity: The Politics and Materiality of ID Cards in Palestine/
Israel, 107 Soc. Text 68-9 (2011) (Suri writes: “…the Israeli state is accused of trying to
eradicate Palestinians, and yet the state institutes an impressive infrastructure of control
based on Palestinians’ continued presence in Palestine/Israel. Against the background of
transfer, fragmentation, and erasure exists a bureaucratic system of keeping Palestinians
where they are: subjects of sustained, if changing, forms of colonialism, occupation, and
oppression…there may very well be a practice of fragmenting, isolating, transferring, and
erasing Palestinians, but they need to be counted, documented, monitored, and controlled
first.”)
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
41
master scripts that normalize but as self-organising modes that modulate
and tinker.48
We can think of (sexual) identity, and our attachments to identity, as a
process involving an intensification of habituation. That is to say, identity
is the intensification of bodily habit, a ‘returning forward’ of the body’s
quotidian affective sensorial rhythms and vibrations to a disciplinary
model of the subject, whereby sexuality is just one form of bodily
capacity being harnessed by neoliberal capital. Similarly, the Brand
Israel campaign now being inaccurately equated with pinkwashing is
only one form of an array of ‘washing’ that composes this campaign.
This habituation of affective intensity to the frame of identity – a relation
of discipline to control, or in actuality, disciplining control – entails a
certain stoppage of where the body once was to reconcile where the
body must go. It is also a habituation that demands certain politics and
forecloses an inhabitation of others.
Sensations are thus always under duress, to use Panagia’s terms, to
‘make sense’ to submit to these master scripts either as a backformation
responding to multiplicity or as a demand to subsume it to the
master script and foreclose that multiplicity. These different modes
of sexuality are reflected in two strands of queer theory. The first is
deconstructive in emphasis and focused on the social construction of
sexual difference for which language dominates the political realm
through an insistence on the endless deferral of meaning.49 The
other way of understanding sexuality can loosely be defined as the
multiplication and proliferation of difference, of making difference
and proliferating creative differentiation: the becoming otherwise
of difference. In this case, the ‘place’ of language itself is being resignified; language not only has matter, it is matter.50 Deconstructions
of sexuality move to think against and through binaries in hopes
of undermining and dissolving them, while the second, affirmative
becomings, proposes to read and foster endless differentiation and
multiplicity in hopes of overwhelming those binaries. The durational
temporal capacities of each strategy are distinct and dispersed across
different scales. The first might focus on making sense or making
different sense of a representational format or forum; the second
solicits sense, the creation of potentialities of emergence, less so a
reinvestment of form. It is instead more attuned to the perpetual
48. Amit Rai, Untimely Bollywood: Globalization and India’s New Media Assemblage 9 (2009).
49. See Queering the Non/Human 1-12 (Norren Giffney & Myra. J. Hird eds., 2008) (for an
explanation of these two strands).
50. See Vicki Kirby, Quantum Anthropologies: Life at Large (2011); Mel Chen, Animacies:
Biopolitics, Racial Mattering, and Queer Affect (2012).
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differentiation of variation to variation and the multiplicity of
affirmative becomings.51
Taking up further this second strand of sexuality as assemblage and
not identity, a strand invested in thinking about assemblages and viral
replication rather than reproductive futurism, this strand might stress
the import of moving away from the aforementioned call and response
relay that continues to dominate the ‘mainstream/ global queer’ versus
‘queer-of-colour/non-western queer’ logic of argumentation, a relay that
often fails to interrogate the complex social field within which ‘queer’ is
being produced as a privileged signifier across these boundaries.
One reason for this import could indeed be found in the ‘viral’ travels
of the concept of homonationalism as it has been taken up in North
America, various European states, Palestine/Israel and India. In this
reproductive application, homonationalism has often been reduced to
an accusatory activist organising platform and as an applied analytic
to assess the level or quality of the ‘homonationalist’ state, which then
reifies the state as the dominating and often sole actant. To reiterate,
instead of theorising homonationalism as an identity positioning or as
an adjective that denounces a state or other entity, I have been thinking
about homonationalism as an analytic to apprehend state formation as a
structure of modernity. With this understanding of homonationalism-asassemblage, what it means for homonationalism-as-concept to go viral,
as it were, is quite distinct from its reproductive application. Following
this second strand of queer theory, then, we might be interested in how
homonationalism-as-concept has already become embedded in and part
of the assemblage that is homonationalism, in so far as the discursive
‘travels’ of the concept virally replicate and thus mutate the assemblage.
Homonationalism as viral and as it is taken up into control society is
no longer a mirror of itself, no longer a holistic concept that reproduces
only itself. Virality most often is invoked in contemporary parlance to
point to the intensified speed and reach of information transit, especially
in relation to the internet. It also refers to indiscriminant exchanges,
often linked with notions of bodily contamination, uncontainability,
unwelcome transgression of border and boundaries while pointing
more positively to the porosity, indeed the conviviality, of what has been
treated as opposed. 52
51. See, e.g., Claire Colebrook, Deleuze and the Meaning of Life (2010) (her work is emblematic
of this second approach).
52. For discussions of the Viral, see Patricia Clough & Jasbir K. Puar, Introduction, 40 (1&2)
Women’s Stud. Q. 9-12 (Spring/ Summer 2012).
2013 / Homonationalism As Assemblage
43
In closing, then, how could one think differently about the virality
of homonationalism, given its intractability with modernity? What does
it mean to say that homonationalism has truly gone viral - a virality
of mutation and replication rather than the banal reproduction of its
analytic frame across different national contexts, as has been the case
with some of its identitarian usages? The beauty of virality, of course, is
that it produces its own critique, mutating the call-and-response circuit
of Foucault’s incitement to discourse. But unlike this circuit, which is
always about making an accusation that one takes up the position outside
of, the critique of a viral form is already enfolded from its incipience. It
makes it harder to place blame on the original purportedly offensive
product, since it engendered its own criticism, and is thus altered through
that encounter.
Viral reproduction is not about excess or supplements; it is instead
a post-human capacity; what is reproduced is not the human subject,
identity, or body, but affective tendencies, ecologies of sensation,
and different ontologies that create new epistemologies of affect.
When we say that something has gone viral, it’s another way of
acknowledging everything that is opposed to the virus, or the viral, can
be circumnavigated. Viral theory, then, as a post humanist intervention,
also begins before the species-like divide of the activism versus theory
binary, an opposition that is foundational to the production within the
fields of Women’s Studies and Gay and Lesbian studies. Viral theory is
immune to such divides and divisions. Virality indicates not so much the
portability of a concept but a measure of its resonance. Thus virality
might also be a way of differently thinking geopolitical transversality that
is not insistently routed through or against the nation-state, providing
an alternative to notions of transnationalism, and complicating the
application of the concept of homonationalism to national contexts.
Certainly homonationalism-as-assemblage is an alternative to the homediaspora reactive-dialectic that informs the project of the movie I Am or
endless call-and-response relay of ‘the west and the rest’ paradigm.
~
MARTIN F. MANALANSAN IV
In the Shadows ofStonewall:
Examining Gay Transnational Politics and
the Diasporic Dilemma
In a world of collapsing borders, gay ideologies, practices, and images
are tracing modernity's trajectories. Within this context, the globalization of the gay "movement" has proven to be problematic. This essay
was written on the heels of and in the "heat" of the celebration of
the twenty-fifth anniversary in June 1994 of the Stonewall Rebellion.
While this event is decisive in figuring certain globalizing ideas and
practices, an increasingly globalized view of Stonewall and of the
gay and lesbian political movement have been prevalent for the past
two decades. Media and popular consciousness have long taken for
granted that gay and lesbian culture and politics have spread worldwide. Consider the following events or representations from the Stonewall anniversary:
- The "official" Stonewall '25 march held on June 26, 1994, started not in
Greenwich Village or more specifically in the bar where it all started, the
Stonewall Bar, but at the United Nations building. Initially, the organizing
committee proposed two starting points for the march, the Stonewall site or
the UN building in midtown Manhattan. When the city government would
only give a permit for one starting site, the committee chose the UN because
of its "global symbolism."
- Souvenirs and artifacts being sold to commemorate the Stonewall festivities
included T-shirts with the name Stonewall set against a globe and a pink pin
with the words "Come Out UN."
- The brochure for the Stonewall march included a preamble similar to the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In this document, there is a call for
the UN as an international governing body to promulgate the rights and
well-being of gay, lesbian, and transgender peoples.
In this paper, I examine the conditions for cultural production, circulation, and reception of the "international" gay and lesbian movement. I problematize this inquiry by juxtaposing descriptions, readings,
and analyses of this "internationalism" against texts and narratives by
Filipino "gay" men living in the Philippines and in New York City. I am
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interested in the movement and travel of bodies and ideas within a
circuit of exchange as well as the criss-crossing chains of disjunctions
and syncretic engagements that are experienced and transformed by
Filipino gay men. I focus on the various configurations of "Stonewall"
as a moment of universal gay and lesbian liberation and as a construction of "liberation" itself.
In the first section, I examine the rhetoric of transnational 1 gay and
lesbian politics by looking not only at the Stonewall march and its
attendant cultural activities, but at the recent International Lesbian and
Gay Association conference. A review of current scholarship on transnational processes and gay and lesbian studies suggests how contemporary "transnational" flows of gay and lesbian "culture" and politics
raise the following questions:
- Who bestows legitimacy on the narration of Stonewall as the origin of gay
and lesbian development? What does this narrative of origins engender?
What practices and locations are subordinated by a privileging of Stonewall
as origin?
- Does the search for "authentic" native or primordial "gay and lesbian" phenomena in the nonmetropolitan periphery impose a Eurocentric universalism on the variety of sexual practices that exist worldwide?
- What political idioms and maneuvers are deployed to establish, execute, and
justify international credos of egalitarianism?
- What strategies exist to resist such appropriations and subordinations?
My essay begins from the premise that the globalization of gay and
lesbian oppression obfuscates hierarchical relations between metropolitan centers and sub-urban peripheries. By privileging Western definitions of same-sex sexual practices, non-Western practices are marginalized and cast as "premodern" or unliberated. Practices that do not
conform with Western narratives of the development of individual political subjects are dismissed as unliberated or coded as "homophobic."
I suggest, in contrast, that we must conceive of "gay" practices as a
broad category of analysis,2 and as multiply determined by national
culture, history, religion, class, and region, in and across various cultural and political locations and even within a single group. In this
regard, Filipino gay men, whether immigrants to the United States or
residents of the Philippines, offer examples of practices that invoke and
strategically deploy multiple formations as they declare affinities and
differences in response to global gay and lesbian agendas.
The second and third sections of the paper examine the configuration, translation, affirmation, and negation of the rhetoric of gay and
lesbian oppression by Filipino gay men living in the Philippines and in
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New York City. Drawing upon recent writings of Filipino gay writers
and activists as well as reflections on a two-year ethnographic study of
Filipino gay men in New York City, the second section specifically
situates the notion of "gay liberation" within the existing cultural,
political, and economic conditions of the Philippines today. The third
section consists of excerpts from interviews with Filipino gay men living in New York City regarding Stonewall: the first narrative is by a
Filipino gay man who was present at the actual rebellion and was
arrested in the process; the second is taken from a conversation between two informants after the 1994 Stonewall celebrations. The final
section is a reading of the themes and issues that have been presented.
WHOSE REBELLION? THE FABLE OF STONEWALL AND
THE RHETORIC OF GLOBAL OPPRESSION AND LIBERATION
OF GAYS AND LESBIANS
The official guide to the Stonewall festivities noted: "People will celebrate the rebellion that transformed the existing Homophile Movement into our contemporary, global, Lesbian, Gay and Transgender
Rights Movement. Our goal is to mobilize the largest human rights
march and rally the world has ever seen. We have victories to be proud
of and injustices to protest. With pride, we celebrate our courage and
accomplishments from around the world. We will hear how the struggle for human rights is being waged in different lands and cultures. We
will recall/learn and teach our history. We see that we are fighting back
and winning victories."3 From this declaration, we may observe that
the discourse about Stonewall has changed from localized descriptions
of a series of police raids in a downtown Manhattan gay bar in 1969
into a revolutionary moment that originates liberation for gays and
lesbians everywhere. These transformations have repercussions for defining and shaping the category gay.
Gay within this view of Stonewall is defined within a temporalized
understanding of both sexuality and society. That is, gay gains meaning
according to a developmental narrative that begins with an unliberated, "prepolitical" homosexual practice and that culminates in a liberated, "out," politicized, "modern," "gay" subjectivity. Such temporalized narratives about gayness are widespread and accepted by
many "queer" publications as wel1. 4 For example, in an anthology of
international gay and lesbian writing, Stephen Likosky discusses gay
writing after Stonewall and describes Stonewall as an event where
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"gays, many of them Third World transvestites, took to the streets of
New York to battle the police, who had raided the Stonewall Inn, a
neighborhood bar."5 In marking the periods before and after Stonewall, Likosky employs Barry Adam's distinctions between anthropological or historical homosexuality and "modern" homosexuality.6 Anthropological/historical homosexuality is "characteristic of societies
where homosexuality is obligatory and universally practiced such as
those where sexual relations between old and younger males are part of
the socialization process into manhood (e.g. in Melanesia, central Africa, Amazonia and western Egypt ... )."7 Modern homosexuality, on
the other hand, is defined as follows:
- Homosexual relations have been able to escape the structure of the dominant
heterosexual kinship system.
- Exclusive homosexuality, now possible for both partners, has become an
alternative path to conventional family forms.
- Same-sex bonds have developed new forms without being structured around
particular age or gender categories.
- People have come to discover each other and form large-scale social networks not only because of existing social relationships but also because of
their homosexual interests.
- Homosexuality has come to be a social formation unto itself, characterized
by self-awareness and group identity.
Gay in this instance, then, is meaningful within the context of the
emergence of bourgeois civil society and the formation of the individual subject that really only occurs with capitalist and Western expansion. Categories of same-sex phenomena are placed within a Westerncentered developmental teleology, with "gay" as its culminating stage.
Other "nongay" forms or categories are constructed metaleptically,
rendered "anterior," and transformed into archaeological artifacts that
need only be reckoned with when excavating the roots of pan-cultural/
pan-global homosexuality. In other words, the "internationalizing"
transnational gay and lesbian movement does not as yet contain a
critique of its own universalizing categories; without an interrogation
of its Eurocentric and bourgeois assumptions, this globalizing discourse risks duplicating an imperial gaze in relation to non-Western
nonmetropolitan sexual practices and collectivities.
The Pink Book, a regular publication of the International Lesbian
and Gay Association (ILGA), contains many similar rhetorics and assumptions. 8 The ILGA, based in Belgium with strong chapters in the
United States, was formed to provide the organizational and (sometimes) financial resources to monitor, react to, and understand the po488
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litical and social conditions of gays and lesbians worldwide. The Pink
Book is a kind of status report of the "global picture," with in-depth
essays detailing the issues and problems of particular nations and an
abbreviated survey of the social and legal positions of gays and lesbians
in various countries.
In the latest edition of this book, an essay by Tielman and Hammelburg "investigates" 202 countries, gathering data on 178 of them.
In this survey the focus was on "( I) official attitudes and the law regarding homosexuality, (2) social attitudes to homosexuality, and (3) the
gay and/or lesbian movements all over the world." Investigators found
that the overall social and legal situations were "worst in Africa and
best in Europe." The following entry on the Philippines is somewhat
typical of many for other countries:
Philippines
Official Attitudes and the Law
Homosexual behavior between consenting adults is not mentioned in the law as
being a criminal offense. Laws referring to "public morality" are used against
gays and lesbians. The Philippines' immigration [authorities] has declared a
"war against pedophiles," particularly in Manila. Foreigners are expected to
be the first targets of the campaign. The government has banned the radical
women's group, "Gabriela" on November 7, 1988, as part of the government
counterinsurgency program, "for having possible ties to some underground
leftists."
Society
Closeted homosexuality is tolerated, but "sex tourism" has a negative impact
on the social position of homosexual men. A minority of the population is in
favor of gay and lesbian rights.
The Gay and/or Lesbian Movement
A group exists called the Movement for Social Equality and Recognition of
Homosexuals. In the AIDS Center, "The Library," many open gays are active.
The entries regularly employ words like closet, homophobia, gay, and
lesbian without interrogating the Western assumptions embedded in
each term, as if they were natural, given concepts that did not need to
be contextualized within specific national histories. Apart from the
light and caricaturish descriptions of social norms and attitudes, the
survey boldly asserts a normative "gay" subject who is not dissimilar to
the Euro-American modern political subject. Like the "straight" modern political subject, the "gay" subject moves from the "immature"
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concealment of his or her sexuality to the "mature" visibility of political participation in the public sphere. The assumption that practices
that are not organized around visibility are "closeted" and the interpretation that lack of explicitly gay-identified people in the public
arena signifies that a "homophobic" attitude is prevalent in the culture
are not interrogated.
While there is some perfunctory discussion of cultural diversity, the
tendency to deploy monolithic and universalist constructions of gayness and gay liberation in popular and scholarly literature is quite
widespread and observable. For example, at one of the ILGA preconference sessions held in Manhattan after the Stonewall celebrations,
where "people of color" issues were to be discussed, potential participants were limited to "people of color only." A number of delegates
were puzzled about how they would categorize themselves. Although
there may be some understanding among this group that gender and
sexuality are socially constructed, it seems a difficult task to persuade
the same people of the constructedness of race and nationality, and the
imbrication of gender and sexuality within race and nationality. Efforts
such as these to confront marginality within the "gay and lesbian world
community" by fixing and reifying racial difference have led ILGA to
create boundaries that actually promote more marginalization.
The time and place of the ILGA conference in New York City provided a kind of symbolic flag for the view that Stonewall is "ground
zero" for all gay and lesbian efforts. Holding the conference in the
United States also presented problems for potential participants, which
the ILGA did not take into account. A number of delegates (including
some twenty from the Philippines) were unable to attend because of
financial or legal constraints; conference registration cost $ 300, and
Filipino delegates were denied visitor visas by the u.S. embassy in
Manila.
The ILGA, while attempting to host regional meetings in different
parts of the world, has at the same time insisted on a universalized
vision of how the politics and the future of all gay and lesbian political
and cultural efforts should look. In the introduction to The Pink Book,
the secretaries-general of I LGA write, "the increased visibility of lesbians, gay men and bisexuals, supported by a strong movement, has
proved to be a successful formula for confronting and fighting homophobic tendencies in all types of society. Well organized groups in many
countries have succeeded in at least partially improving our human
rights."9 The specular economy that measures political value in terms
of visibility, profoundly rooted in epistemologies of revelation rooted
in the European Enlightenment, is nowhere interrogated.
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Within the context of transnational cultural, economic, and political
exchanges, monolithic construction and prescriptions are, at the very
least, doomed to failure. What do we really mean when we say gay in a
world where hybridity and syncretism provide the grist for cultural
production, distribution, and consumption? To what creative forms of
engagement do people who live outside the gay-idyllic world of Europe
resort in order to interrogate the discourses of "rights" and social
acceptance? The next section is an attempt to respond to such questions
by looking at the writings of three Filipino gay men living in the
Philippines.
"GAY" LIBERATION: PHILIPPINE STYLE(S)
Homosexuality in the Philippines has long been seen by popular media
and by many Filipinos to be a "nonissue." However, in recent years,
with the ascendance of gay and lesbian studies in the West as well as the
growth of the AI D S pandemic, cultural production around "gay" issues
has increased tremendously in the Philippines. In this section, I consider the works of three Filipino writers, Tony Perez, Jomar Fleras, and
J. Neil C. Garcia. They are the most vibrant writers about gay political
issues in the Philippines today, and they also present various modes of
engagement with the issues of "gay" identity and politics (qua liberation). Before I analyze these three writers' works, it is necessary to
contextualize their ideas within Filipino tradition around the bakla.
The Bakla
Bakla is a Tagalog term used for particular types of men who engage in
practices that encompass effeminacy, transvestism, and homosexuality.
The bakla is conceptualized in terms of epicene characteristics. 10 On
one hand, the bakla is stereotypically seen to exist in the vulgar public
spaces of the carnival (baklang karnabal), the beauty parlor (parlorista), and the market place (baklang palengke). On the other, the bakla
is also seen as the cross-dressing man with the female heart (pusong
babae), searching for the real man and trying hard not to slip into
vulgarity or dismal ugliness. These images form part of everyday discourse and sometimes find their way into the works of Filipino gay
writers and activists.
Bakla as a form of selfhood is popularly seen as a lower-class phenomenon even among scholars. For example, Michael Tan equated
bakla and "gay" with real class divisions. Creating a tripartite grouping
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of the subcultures of "men who have sex with men" or MSM,11 he
argues that the parlorista (signifying the stereotypical occupation of the
male homosexual, which is that of a beautician or beauty parlor employee) or the stereotypical homosexual, is primarily found in lowincome groups such as domestic servants, small market vendors, and
waiters. The other two groups that compose this MSM constellation
include the callboys or male sex workers (who are from the urban and
rural poor), who oftentimes identify as "straight," and the "gays" who
are from the higher-income groups.
Although Tan attempts to specify the bakla through terms like parlorista, it is unclear from his formulation how and if the complexity of
practices that comprise the bakla, as selfhood, can exist across class
lines. By lumping the bakla with the MSM population, he conflates the
dynamics of self-fashioning not only in terms of sex object choice, but
also with the act of same-sex physical encounters. While he recognizes
the gender dimensions of the bakla, Tan's rigidly assigned class status to
the bakla is itself a stereotypical view from a specific class position. I assume that he derives his categories from privileging the vantage point of
educated, upper-class men who attended safe sex workshops in Manila.
In the next section, it will be clear that I do not correlate directly or
consistently the identification of either bakla or gay with specific class
positions. Rather, my data suggest that class is inflected with race,
immigration status, and a range of other factors. Furthermore, I suggest that the bakla is an extravagant and complicated figure whose
practices go beyond the strictures of transvestism, same-sex encounters, gossip, and vanity. Fenella Cannell's ethnographic study of a small
Filipino rural community provides illuminating views on this point. 12
She suggests that the bakla is a master of transformation and mimicry.
Focusing on the performative aspects of identity and self formation,
Cannell emphasizes the mercurial aspects of the bakla. For example,
the bakla from the rural poor is able to negotiate with "high-class"
culture such as Hollywood icons and music through participation in
beauty pageants and amateur shows, and may attempt to emulate the
dress, visage, and manner of glamorous Tagalog and Hollywood female celebrities. In doing so, these men are able not only to negotiate
with another culture or class, but, more importantly, they are able to
make this culture - through successful imitation - their own. Significantly, Cannell asserts that the bakla is always careful not to slip into
vulgarity. Therefore, class position and sexual and gender identities are
more complicated than Michael Tan's static taxonomy of men who
have sex with men.
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Three Filipino Gay Writers
Tony Perez's collection of short stories and poetry, Cubao I980 is subtitled The First Cry of the Gay Liberation Movement in the Philippines
(my translation from Tagalog).13 The ideas in the book are crystallized
in one of its poems, "Manipesto" (Manifesto), which is an injunction to
transform the bakla into the "gay" man. In the poem, Perez provides a
kind of call-to-arms to eradicate the stereotype of the bakla as a gossip,
an unambitious, bitchy, and effeminate queen. He declares that unless
the "illusion" is destroyed and the "mistake" corrected, there can never
be any attainment of rights. Writing from a self-conscious "gay liberationist" perspective, Perez views bakla salvation as conditional and
contingent upon an unquestioned set of modern Western values and
qualities that Nicanor Tiongson, a Filipino cultural historian, emphasizes in the book's foreword:
The bakla needs to accept:
I.
2.
That he was born biologically male and that he should stop feminizing his
features or behavior
That "gay" [men] are not some cheap impersonator(s) in some carnival
but are honorable laborers, soldiers, priests, professors, businessmen, and
athletes
3. That the right partner for the bakla is another bakla, otherwise the relationship would be unequal
4. That the gay relationship will never be the same as a heterosexual relationship that has the blessings of church and society
5. That being bakla is not an illness that one can become cured of or that
should be cured. 14
Jomar Fleras's essay, "Reclaiming Our Historic Rights: Gays and
Lesbians in the Philippines," extends Perez's argument into the "gay"
history. Writing in the latest edition of the ILGA Pink Book, Fleras finds
the rationale for gay and lesbian rights in male pre-Spanish religious
shamans called babaylan who cross-dressed and reputedly indulged in
same-sex practices. Significantly, babaylan occupied honored positions
in the community. Fleras deploys the symbol of the once-dormant volcano, Mt. Pinatubo, figuring gay activism as an eruptive awakening
from historical slumber and invisibility.
Fleras is not alone in this view (a gay group at the University of the
Philippines is called Babaylan). While he links gays and the historically
prior cross-dressing shamans in order to naturalize modern gay practice, Fleras also echoes Perez's views by disparaging the cross-dressing
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practices and transgender behavior of some Filipino gay men, and asserting that these practices and behaviors are historical remnants or
residues of a former "premodern" past: "While the Stonewall riots gave
birth to gay liberation in the U.S., in the Philippines, homosexual men
and women were still perpetuating the feudal stereotypes. Gay men
portrayed themselves in the media as 'screaming queens' who did
nothing but gossip, act silly and lust after men.... To legitimize their
existence, homosexual men and women came out with the concept of
gender dysporia [sic]: the gay man thought of himself as a woman
trapped in a man's body while the lesbian envisioned herself with a
trapped male soul that phallicized her."15
Fleras pathologizes the bakla and foretells the destruction of this
"false" image. By asserting that gay liberation is gay men and lesbians
"deconstructing and breaking away from the feudal stereotypes imposed upon them by society,"16 he casts the bakla as "feudal," underdeveloped, and temporally prior to the "modern" gay. According to
Fleras, with modernization, the future of the gay liberation movement
in the Philippines is extremely bright. He notes, "Plans are even under
way for a Gay Pride week, which will feature an international lesbian
and gay film festival, a theater festival, mardi gras, and a symposium.
Soon there will be a gay press. Gay men are now banding together to
battle the spread of AIDS . • . . Gay and lesbian activism [in the Philippines] is in practical terms just starting. . . . Gay men and lesbian
women will assert their personhood. They will fight and eventually win
their historic rights as leaders and as healers."17
Fleras's nativist attempts to historicize the fight for gay and lesbian
rights in the Philippines fall apart when he unconditionally takes the
Western model of sexual object choice as characteristic of gay identity
and repudiates the gender-based model of the bakla. Fleras falls into a
kind of conceptual trap even as he tries to reveal the particularities of
the Philippine experience of gays and lesbians. He does not interrogate
the notion of visibility/invisibility and instead portrays the fight for
rights in terms of public cultural practices such as parades, films, and
books. He constructs a polarized dichotomy in which the bakla identity
of the Philippine traditions is feudal and pathologically underdeveloped, while the gay identity of the international cultural network is
"modern" and liberated. Like the ILGA constituency for which he
writes, Fleras unwittingly prioritizes a Eurocentric model of liberation.
Of the three, Garcia is the only one who reflects on the exigencies of
bakla culture vis-a-vis the emerging politicized gay culture. His essay
appears in an anthology called Ladlad (Unfurling), which he coedited.
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dres, Hangang Dito na Lamang at Maraming Salamat (Up to this point
and thank you very much), Garcia focuses on the two main characters,
the seemingly masculine, respectable Fidel, and Julie, the screaming
vulgar queen - the stereotypical bakla. He points out that the author
has Fidel identify with Julie, and he demonstrates the startling realization that it is Julie who rises up from the chaotic world he lives in.
Garcia writes, "Nadres then depicts the political and strategic desirability of using Julie for the gay movement, when he makes Julie emerge
from the floor of Fidel's childish rage and frustration, in tatters yet
brimming with pride. For this short and noble moment ... [the play] is
finally a celebration of gay resistance and pride, pure and simple. "18
Garcia articulates the need to look beyond one monolithic construction of a "gay" community. He writes, "The urgency of forming a
community that embraces all kinds of homosexuals - be they the selectively out Fidel or the unabashedly and uncompromisingly out Julieis clear in Ladlad, where themes on kabaklaan [being bakla] intersect
if not merge with the homoerotic self-avowals of those 'other gays'
whose primary anguish concerns their desire and the difficulty of pursuing it to fulfillment."19 Garcia's multivocal conception of a "gay"
community is an attempt to nuance the types of practices that emerge
from sites characterized by hybridity, sites in which local traditions,
attitudes, and practices are historically fused with "outside" influences
owing to colonialism and foreign capital. Instead of uncritically "transferring or buying the technology" of gay and lesbian politics from the
outside, Garcia proposes a syncretic move: a notion of a multiply determined subject and a possibility of coalitions between different identities
and political agendas.
However, what is missing is a critical examination of notions such as
coming out, visibility, and the closet. What kind of conceptual space is
the closet, such that it confines people who seem neither highly politicized nor self-reflexively "gay"? In the next section, I juxtapose the
words of three Filipino gay immigrants living in the United States and
examine how their resistance to the highly spectacular images of mainstream U.S. gay culture, particularly the story of Stonewall, represents
a different kind of engagement from that of Perez, Fleras, and Garcia.
OPPOSITIONS AT THE SIDELINES:
THE WORDS/WORLDS OF DIASPORIC FILIPINO GAY MEN
The two extracts that follow are from ethnographic fieldwork on Filipino gay men in New York that I have been conducting for three years.
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The first is from a life narrative interview with Mama Rene,20 who
participated in the riots at the Stonewall Inn. The other is from a conversation between two Filipino gay men, Rodel and Ron. In both texts,
the meaning of Stonewall is translated and configured by the life narratives of these men.
I met Mama Rene in the summer of 1992, when I was told by my
other Filipino gay men informants that he was one of the few remaining
Filipinos who took part in the Stonewall Rebellion. As one of my informants told me, Mama Rene is one of the "pioneers" among Filipino gay
men in New York. Mama Rene is an affable man of about fifty to sixty
years (he refused to state his age). He emigrated to the United States in
the mid-1960s to study at New York University. We talked for about
two hours before he even mentioned being arrested in 1969. When I
asked him to narrate that moment, Mama Rene nonchalantly said:
It was one of those nights. It was so hot. I was wearing white slacks - dungarees, I think you call them - and I was really sweating. I knew that there had
been a police raid several nights before, but I didn't want to be cooped up in my
apartment so I went there - to the Stonewall Bar. Anyway, I was standing
there - trying to look masculine - it was the thing then. All of a sudden the
lights went on and the police barged in. They told us that they were arresting
everybody there - I don't know why - I guess I forgot why they were doing
that. Of course it was harassment, but anyway. So ... we were led out of the
building to the streets. And you know what? There were lights, huge spotlights,
and all these gay men clapping. I felt like a celebrity. The police took us in,
booked us, and then we were released. We were supposed to appear a week
later, I think to be arraigned or tried, but the charges were dropped.
When I asked him how he felt about being part of that historic event,
Mama Rene just shrugged and said, "They say it is a historic event, I
just thought it was funny. Do I feel like I made history? People always
ask me that. I say no. I am a quiet man, just like how my mom raised me
in the Philippines. With dignity."
Mama Rene rarely goes out to watch gay pride parades. He said,
"Too many people and quite chaotic." He insisted that he was not an
"activist" like most of the white gay men he knew. He had nothing to
say to the public, nor was he particularly interested in doing so.
In their disengagement from the originary event of Stonewall, Ron's
and Rodel's attitudes are not dissimilar from those of Mama Rene.
Both Ron and Rodel emigrated in the early 1980s and are now in their
thirties. We were comparing our plans for the following several weeks
when the conversation turned to the Stonewall anniversary celebrations and took a curious turn. I moved to the backseat, a listener. The
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following is a transcription of what transpired. (I have translated the
Tagalog words and phrases; the interchange was conducted in both
English and Tagalog.)
Rodel: The march is onJune 23- Are you going to watch or maybe join a float in
drag?
Ron: Oh please, why would I do that? Besides, why do people do it? What do
they [these gay men] have to prove?
Rodel: Yes, that is true. It is too much. All these drag queens in floats and macho
muscle men wearing almost nothing. It is like the carnival.
Ron: Every year we have these celebrations -won't it stop?
Rodel: Hey, aren't you the one who likes to go around in drag?
Ron: It isn't the drag part that is awful, it is the spectacle. It is a different thing if
I go to clubs and cruise in drag, but it is another thing to parade on Fifth
Avenue in high heels - you lose your mystique, your mystery.
Rodel: That is so true. It would seem like you are a baklang karnabal [bakla of
the carnival].
For some Filipino gay men, public spaces such as the "streets" (as in
the Stonewall slogan, "Out of the bars and into the street") are not
spaces of pride, but, to the contrary, are potential arenas of shame and
degradation. These informants' views are not the result of homophobia,
but are racialized and classed readings of the gay world. The kinds of
exclusions and boundaries involved in the immigrant experience form
the parameters for these ideas. The term baklang karnabal carries over
meanings from Filipino traditions that illustrate the differences these
three Filipino gay men perceive between American gays and themselves.
For these men and some other Filipino gay men I have interviewed,
American gay men practice the kind of spectacular and scandalous
cross-dressing of the bakla in the carnival sideshows, unlike their own
mode that attempts verisimilitude. In other words, these informants
apprehend this public display of identity to be inappropriate, reminiscent of the kind of carnivalesque vulgarity of a particular type of bakla.
While class elements partially underlie these attitudes toward Stonewall, further conversation with these three informants indicate that...
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