Jennifer C. Nash,
"On Difficulty: Intersectionality as Feminist Labor"
(page 2 of 4)
On Difficulty
Why is intersectionality considered so challenging? Part of
intersectionality's difficulty emerges from the fact that it has myriad
meanings across the disciplines. While there is general agreement that
it describes how structures of domination intersect to produce
experiences of oppression and to shape identities, there remains little
consensus around whether intersectionality is a theory, a method, and/or
a politics.
Many scholars treat intersectionality as a kind of theoretical
innovation, even as there is widespread dissent over what it is a theory
of. Much of the work on intersectionality has focused on how
structure shapes identity, analyzing how racism and sexism (among
others) collude to shape the lived experiences of all subjects, but
particularly multiply-marginalized subjects.
As of late, many scholars have bemoaned intersectionality's
preoccupation with the structural, suggesting that it "tells us little
about the fiscal, emotional, psychological, and other conditions nor the
subjectivity of those caught in the trajectories of intersecting
categories."[7]
To that end, many have advocated bringing the concept of
subjectivity back to intersectionality to avoid suggesting that subjects
are "determined by social systems."[8]
This new turn toward restoring
subjectivity to intersectionality highlights the need to understand the
interaction between structure and identity, and to capture how
structures of domination mediate and enable identity formation.
Other scholars advocate transforming intersectionality from a theory
into a methodology, an approach for formulating research questions.
Ange-Marie Hancock, for example, suggests uncoupling intersectionality
and "women of color studies" so that intersectionality can be used to
"better conceive research designs and data collection through its
attention to causal complexity."[9]
Treating intersectionality as a
methodological approach transforms it from a study of
multiply-marginalized subjects' experiences into a broader tool to
understand power, social structure, and technologies of domination.
Debates over intersectionality as theory or method are underpinned by
other challenges. Some attribute intersectionality's laboriousness to
its requirement that scholars analyze the intimate connections between
race, gender, class, and sexuality, while also attending to the
distinctiveness of each form of domination. As scholars study how, for
example, race and gender bolster each other, they also examine how race
and gender are structures that use distinctive technologies of
domination and how they enforce their hegemony through differing
strategies.
While scholars study structures of domination to capture how they
shape subjects' lived experiences, they also attempt to disrupt and
destabilize these categories, revealing their constructed nature. The
dance between the constructed and the material is always a challenging
one as "it is not clear how to break down the boundaries of reified
categories to show how multiple inequalities are simultaneously
reproduced."[10]
Intersectional scholars at once deploy categories—like race and
gender—to study how they interact, and then disrupt
those categories, revealing precisely how socially and historically
embedded they are.
Finally, some scholars suggest that intersectionality's difficulty
emerges from a personal challenge: speaking honestly about the "politics
of location."[11]
Julia Jordan Zachery notes, "Beyond the struggles of
confronting difficulties when the personal becomes your research, I also
confront the challenge of doing intersectionality. Particularly, I am
challenged by how to honestly tell the story of marginalized black
women."[12]
The struggle to "honestly" convey how marginalization
affects lived experience renders intersectional work difficult,
particularly for scholars who view intersectionality as a political
strategy to remedy the injuries of racism and sexism.
While nearly every scholarly article praises intersectionality's
"complexity," all of this complexity can, at times, feel a bit too
challenging. Gill Valentine argues, "the complexity of
intersectionality means that it is hard to include analysis of its full
implications in a single article. The result of this limitation is that
work on intersectionality often collapses back to a focus on the
experiences of nonprivileged groups rather than on how privileged or
powerful identities are 'done' and 'undone.'"[13]
Scholars concede that
intersectionality's immense complexity means that any particular
scholarly intervention is necessarily limited in its scope, and that any
intersectional analysis is always partial and incomplete. And yet all
of this complexity seems to be precisely what has made it so valuable.
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