Svati P. Shah,
"Sexuality and 'The Left': Thoughts on Intersections and Visceral Others"
(page 3 of 7)
However, taken together, the strategies that sexuality-based and
leftist social movements in the U.S. have recently been pursuing to
achieve their aims raise the problem that Wendy Brown articulates
between freedom and identity, keeping in mind that sexuality and
identity, or identity politics, have been folded into one another since
the end of the explicitly leftist gay liberation movement in the early
1970s.
"It would thus appear that it is freedom's relationship
to identity—its promise to address a social injury or marking that is
itself constitutive of identity—that yields the paradox in which the
first imaginings of freedom are always constrained by and potentially
even require the very structure of oppression that freedom emerges to
oppose . . . not only a patently Foucauldian point but is contained as well
in Marx's argument that 'political emancipation' within liberalism
conceived formal political indifference to civil particularity as
liberation because political privilege according to civil particularity
appeared as the immediate nature of the domination perpetrated by feudal
and Christian monarchy."[9]
The effects of structuring social inequality, such as that based on
sexuality, and the demands for its redress through identity, then, are
profound, because:
"Western leftists have largely forsaken analyses of the
liberal state and capitalism as sites of domination and have
focused instead on their implication in political and economic
inequalities. At the same time, progressives have implicitly
assumed the relatively unproblematic instrumental value of the state and
capitalism in redressing such inequalities."[10]
This critique of the effects of seeking legal redress for injury from
the liberal state through the rubric of equality is particularly salient
for sexuality-based movements in the U.S. that have increasingly
presented legal changes, such as hate crimes legislation or marriage
laws, as social change. Left entities in the U.S.—such as the surviving
communist political parties in the U.S., and the left press—have
endorsed this approach to the politics of sexuality through their
silence on the issue, or through their written support, the relatively
consistent articles in the left press supporting gay marriage being a
case in point. By the same token, if mainstream aspects of
sexuality-based movements in the U.S. have been concerned with class and
the uneven distribution of wealth, they have demonstrated this concern
by reducing the Marxian concept of class consciousness to the
representational ideal of including working-class people in their
campaigns. In other words, in some instances sexuality-based
organizations take the inclusion of working-class people as a goal
rather than a means.
Leftist endorsements of strategies that emphasize redress from legal
injury by advocating greater state-sponsored protections have had
serious consequences for debates on sex work as well, because the
majority of left organizations that have taken a position on sex work
have done so by supporting feminist anti-trafficking initiatives that
derive from anti-prostitution abolitionism. Because of the fundamental
opposition within this framework against claiming prostitution as work,
and because feminist anti-prostitution abolitionism was articulated
within a Marxist feminist framework, the left has embraced a set of
positions on prostitution which, by and large, have remanded it to
advocating a politics of rescue and rehabilitation that largely relies
on police and the prison system, rather than framing prostitution, and
its abuses, within the politics of labor and political and economic
power.
There are, of course, many spaces where sex work and leftist
approaches to the problems of power productively and crucially
intersect; my argument does not intend to disavow or disappear these
complexities, but, rather, to describe a dominant set of problematics
within these discourses. For example, at this writing, sex worker unions
have been formed in the U.S., Germany, Argentina and India, at least,
and an affiliate of the South African national trade union federation
COSATU has resolved to help South African sex workers
unionize.[11]
However, these initiatives have yet to take up the kind of discursive
space that the abolitionist anti-trafficking movement has been able to
muster thus far in discursively conflating trafficking and prostitution,
and in gaining the support of states seeking to close off "porous"
borders. In the sections that follow, I elaborate on both of these sets
of examples, gay marriage and sex work, and conclude by returning to the
left itself.
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