PAUL GILROY, Against Race: Imagining Political Culture Beyond the Color Line
director's cut, the Village Voice, May 2 2000.
by Simon Reynolds
It
was Randall Jarrell, I think, who took the entire oevure of Yeats, did
the pre-computer age equivalent of a word-search, and discovered the
matrix of forty or so favorite (that's to say, over-used) words and
tropes that encapsulated the poet's aesthetic. You could do something
similar to Against Race, the new book by Paul Gilroy, the black
British cultural studies maven and Yale Professor of Sociology and
African American studies. On one side, there'd be the list words that
make Gilroy frown: purism, essentialism, roots, unanimism,
primordialism, homeland. On the other, the words that make Gilroy
smile: hybrid, syncretic, cosmopolitan, transcultural, creole,
heteroculture, and, especially, diaspora.
Against Race's
contentious contention is that even in their "weak" cultural forms
("mild ethnocentrisms," identity politics, discourses of racial pride),
the first frowned-upon cluster of words are philosophically on the path
that leads to a bunch of even nastier words: ultranationalism,
fraternalism, militarism, fascism, ethnic cleansing.
Against Race
is going to upset a lot of people. With admirable courage and
forthrightness, Gilroy dismisses race as a quasi-biological
mystification, a toxic concept that, even when turned around into
black-is-beautiful pride or made the basis of resistance, has basically
fucked up our thought. Railing against the "cheap pseudo-solidarities"
offered by ethnic loyalty on the grounds that they effectively
terminate politics (in the sense of coalition, mediation, negotiation,
alliance), Gilroy aims to discredit what he calls "race-thinking" or
"raciology". He aims to analyse the history of race as a concept in
the same way that Michel Foucault interrogated "sexuality" as discourse
and discipline. Gilroy traces the way the near-simultaneous birth of
"rationality" and "nationality" at the start of the modern era led to
pseudo-scientific mergers of superstition and logic such as eugenics and
theories of racial decline through miscegenation. Imperialism,
Darwinism and the emergence of ecology, and the growing importance of
what Gilroy calls (after Foucault) "biopolitics," created the context
for ideas of the people or volk as a quasi-biological organism rooted in
specific territory. This in turn led to the Nazis's demand for
lebensraum and the literalisation of their slogan "blood and
soil"--where the soil is soaked in the blood of the original but now
exterminated inhabitants of the conquered territory.
What
is going to offend a lot of people is the way that Gilroy shows that
fascism is not the special genius of the German people, or even the
white race. He reveals not just alarming parallels but strange alliances
and mutual respect pacts between black separatist groups and white
supremacists. The British National Party actually demonstrated in
support of a Bermudan Rastafarian who wanted the UK government to fund
his "return" to Ghana. That sounds bizarre, but if you listen to the
Seventies roots reggae of groups like The Congos and Israel Vibration,
you will hear the word "repatriation" being sung with disconcerting
yearning and anticipation. Even more startling is the story of how
Marcus Garvey met with the Ku Klux Klan in 1922 and concluded that they
shared similar ideals of purifying and standarizing the race. Gilroy
dubs this syndrome "fraternalist mirroring"--blood-brotherhoods who are
enemies but who respect each other as honest representatives of their
race, and actually even admire each other's brutality. Garvey's United
Negro Improvement Assocation anticipated the European fascists with
their use of uniform and drill. In 1937, Garvey boasted "we were the
first Fascists... Mussolini copied fascism from me. " Long after the
defeat of the great dictactors, his son Marcus Garvey Jnr called in
1974 for "African lebensraum" and talked about "African National
Socialism." What connects these depressing examples is a fundamental
nation-building narrative, argues Gilroy, that goes back to Moses and
underpins the careers of Hitler, Farrakhan, and Milosevic to name just a
few: the shepherding of a weak, scattered, decadent but "chosen"
people, by a messiah-like leader, towards its manifest destiny and/or
promised land.
Against all these different
manifestations of "ethnic absolutism", with their tendencies towards
authoritarianism, militarism, and pageants of primordial kinship, Gilroy
marshalls the concept of diaspora. As developed in The Black Atlantic
(his book about the cultural traffic connecting West Africa, the
Caribbean, the Southern USA and the U.K), diasporic identity has
nothing to do with chosen exile or mere migration; Gilroy stresses the
crucial dimension added by the forced nature of the dispersal. It might
seem odd to valorize such cataclysmic traumas as the scattering of the
Jews or slavery, but Gilroy--himself a child of the Black
Atlantic--values the end result: a kind of subject-in-process, neither
totally assimilated to the new culture nor able to preserve the old
folkways. In turn, diasporic peoples unavoidably transform the cultures
they pass through; they unsettle as they settle. London, whose popular
culture is a mish-mash of Jamaican, Indian and imported Black American
music and style, is one example; the entirety of Brazilian culture is
another, where the ideal of mesticagem (mixing) was enshrined as state policy only a few decades after slavery was abolished in the late Nineteenth Century.
Unfortunately the weakest parts of Against Race
are those concerned with the play of hybridities and essentialisms in
modern pop culture. While you've got to admire his guts in dissing
current rap as mere "pseudo-rebellion" and appreciate his chutzpah in
using Luther "2 Live Crew'" Campbell's professed debt to lecherous Brit
comedian Benny Hill as proof that hip hop is not a purely black artform,
Gilroy's analyses of contemporary rap and R&B are riddled with
strained over-interpretations, non-sequiturs, and arguments that trail
off frustratingly. There's also a fogey-ish slant to his repetitious
complaints about the video age and its privileging of image over sound,
or his misinformed identification of sampling and programmed rhythm with
musical de-skilling (no, Paul, it's just a new form of
digital-not-manual virtuosity). Despite his nostalgia for the
bespectacled seriousness of Curtis Mayfield and the fluent fingers of
bassist Marcus Miller, he does acknowledge that it's precisely in the
domain of computerized dance music that the praxis of "multiculture" is
at its most vital--clubs, raves, pirate radio, are the real Rock Against
Racism, he argues. Indeed, rave's implicity anti-fascist bodypolitics
can be traced all the back to the secret parties in Nazi Germany where
"niggerjew" jazz was played on gramophones rather than by live bands.
The sound-not-visuals oriented hybridity of underground dance contrasts
with the "specular" orientation of "corporate sponsored multiculture",
where imagery of blackness as vitality, health, beauty and physical
potency circulate in music videos, sports, fashion, and advertising, and
negritude has been transformed "from a badge of insult into an
increasingly powerful but still very limited signifier of prestige".
As
Gilroy concedes, some of the race-thought eradication he wants to see
is already being implemented by globalisation. But he doesn't really
take on the quite powerful notion that ideas of local tradition and
ethnic identity might be useful resources for resistance, if only in the
mechanical sense of a drag or recalcitrant counterweight to
capitalism's tendency to dissolve all forms of solidarity and
difference. This in turns opens up another set of problems that Gilroy
acknowledges but doesn't attempt to resolve: how to avoid the kind of
homogenisation caused by globalisation without being insular, Luddite,
nativist; how to avoid the weak and banal forms of rootless
cosmpolitanism in which "everything becomes... blended into an
impossibly even consistency" . The problem is that Nietzche was right:
a fierce sense of identity and an us-versus-them worldview creates a
certain kind of will, vehemence, and certainty that people find
attractive and energizing. Which is why, as the old ethnic, regional and
religious tribalisms fade, new ones keep emerging around culture and
consumption--new volks like death-metal fans, snowboarders, Abercrombie
and Fitch wearers. Maybe, for all Gilroy's hopes, there's actually an
innate and almost pre-cultural instinct towards tribalism--look at the
way children instinctively form gangs and show hostility towards the
non-same. Humanism and tolerance have to be learned, they're part of the
civilising process (which is why Nietzche was against civilisation and
regarded the "will to stupidity" as an evolutionary advantage). Fascism
and ethnocentrism can also draw upon all the irrational romance of the
archaic and mythological--the seductive sagas of decline and rebirth,
the resurrection of lost imperial powers and the inauguration of new
eras. In response, Gilroy imagines abandoning the mythopoeic allure of
antiquity and instead relocating utopia in the future: a
"heterocultural, postanthropological and cosmopolitan yet-to-come".
In the end, the grand problem at the heart of Against Race
is how to reinvent "that perilous pronoun "we" without lapsing into the
inclusion/exclusion effect, into us/them psychology with all its
consolations and intoxications. Gilroy's answer is to wield a bigger
"We" that will hopefully subsume the smaller, squabbling "we's"--a
species-level "strategic universalism" that repairs the shattering
damage caused by raciology to the notion of the human. Following his
hero Franz Fanon, the great anti-colonialist thinker, he wants to renew
Europe's humanist project and simultaneously "purge and redeem" the
Enlightement of its darkside (imperialism, racism, the coupling of
reason and superstition that culminated in the scientific slaughter of
the concentration camps). It's a noble but somewhat woolly ideal, and
it's ironic that Gilroy takes heart from the way white and black unite
to fight malevolent extra-terrrestials in movies like Independence Day and Men In Black, without realising that this is just racism on the cosmic scale, war against monstrous Others that truly are alien.
Weirdly, Against Race
feels both overlong and sketchy. Passages of amazing lucidity and
original insight alternate with garbled meanders where Gilroy seems
perpetually on the verge of actually saying something. He also has an
annoying habit of ending sections with long series of questions that
propose fruitful areas of further enquiry, which only serves to
frustrate the reader by making you think 'well, why didn't you
enquire further?' Gilroy's prose demeanour can also be off-putting--a
controlled simmer of indignation beneath the cool Sidney Poitier-like
surface of elegant professionalism, revealed in odd verbal tics of
squeamishness like his use of phrases like "unwholesome ideology" and
"unsavory political phenomena" to describe things he disapproves of,
like the Afrikaaner Voortrekkers. Other rhetorical gestures have the
flavor of the lectern--lots of "I want to ask" or "I want to argue" ,
constant admonishments not to overlook or pass over too quickly the role
of X in Y, calls for vigilance and diligence, soundings of notes of
caution. Schoolmarmy tone and what Gilroy himself calls "my own
wilfully dislocated argument" aside, Against Race is a brave and compelling book.
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