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336 Pages·2006·2.41 MB·English
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BODILY CITATIONS GENDER, THEORY, AND RELIGION GENDER, THEORY, AND RELIGION Amy Hollywood, Editor The Gender, Theory, and Religion series provides a forum for interdisciplinary scholarship at the intersection of the study of gender, sexuality, and religion. Martyrdom and Memory: Early Christian Culture Making elizabeth a. castelli When Heroes Love: The Ambiguity of Eros in the Stories of Gilgamesh and David susan ackerman Abandoned to Lust: Sexual Slander and Ancient Christianity jennifer wright knust Women, Men, and Spiritual Power: Female Saints and Their Male Collaborators john coakley BODILY CITATIONS RELIGION AND JUDITH BUTLER Edited by Ellen T. Armour and Susan M. St. Ville COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS NEW YORK COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS Publishers Since 1893 New York, Chichester, West Sussex Copyright © 2006 Columbia University Press All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bodily Citations : religion and Judith Butler / edited by Ellen T. Armour and Susan M. St. Ville. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 0-231-13406-1 (cloth : alk. paper) — isbn 0-231-13407-x (pbk. : alk. paper) — isbn 0-231-50864-6 1. Religions. 2. Butler, Judith. 3. Feminist theory. 4. Sex role—Religious aspects. 5. Gender identity. I. Armour, Ellen T., 1959– II. St. Ville, Susan M., 1963– bl410.b63 2006 202.082--dc22 2005034516 Casebound editions of Columbia University Press books are printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper. Printed in the United States of America c 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 p 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 CONTENTS Preface and Acknowledgments vii Introduction xiii Judith Butler—in Theory 1 ellen t. armour and susan m. st. ville TEXTUAL BODIES 1. Materializations of Virtue: Buddhist Discourses on Bodies 15 susanne mrozik 2. The Garden of Eden and the Heterosexual Contract 48 ken stone 3. The Annoying Woman: Biblical Scholarship After Judith Butler 71 teresa j. hornsby EMBODYING IDENTITIES 4. Disturbingly Catholic: Thinking the Inordinate Body 93 karen trimble alliaume VI CONTENTS 5. Unconforming Becomings: The Significance of Whitehead’s Novelty and Butler’s Subversion for the Repetitions of Lesbian Identity and the Expansion of the Future 120 christina k. hutchins 6. Turning On/To Ethics 157 claudia schippert 7. Agency, Performativity, and the Feminist Subject 177 saba mahmood THEORIZING BODIES 8. “Judith Butler” in My Hands 225 rebecca schneider 9. Performativity, Citationality, Ritualization 252 amy hollywood Afterword 276 judith butler Selected Bibliography 293 List of Contributors 297 Index 299 PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS THOUGH NOW CONSIDERABLY expanded, this volume originated from a set of sessions sponsored by the Feminist Theory and Religious Reflection Group at the 1997 national meeting of the American Academy of Religion in San Francisco. The group took advantage of the meeting’s location to invite feminist and queer theorist Judith Butler, pro- fessor of rhetoric and comparative literature at the University of California in Berkeley, to respond to a set of papers by scholars of religion in various fields using her work. Professor Butler graciously agreed, and two dynamic sessions with a combined audience of several hundred took place. The response to those sessions and the important place that Professor Butler’s work contin- ues to occupy in women’s studies, queer theory, and disciplines that engage those fields (including religion) inspired us to produce this anthology.1 While we expect this book will find an audience among scholars in religion who are already interested in Butler, we also hope to attract scholars of religion who are not familiar with—or may even be skeptical about—her work. In addition, we hope that the book will appeal to scholars of feminist and queer theory who may be unaware of—or even skeptical about—religious studies. A word or two, then, to entice both kinds of readers into the volume. VIII PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS THE TROUBLE WITH GENDER (AND BEYOND) Though not her first book, the publication of Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity in 1990 brought Judith Butler to prominence.2 Gender Trouble broke new ground in feminist theory and became a found- ing text in the emerging field of queer theory with its assertion that gender produces sex. Masculinity and femininity, Butler argued, are bodily perfor- mances based on the demands of our heterosexual and phallocentric econ- omy, not expressions of the body’s inner nature. In monographs that fol- lowed, Bodies That Matter (1993), Excitable Speech (1997), and The Psychic Life of Power (1997), Butler refined and expanded upon Gender Trouble by developing more detailed accounts of the mechanisms through which iden- tities are produced and resisted while attending to the political contexts in which they function.3 In recent years Butler has turned her attention to kin- ship structures (Antigone’s Claim: Kinship Between Life and Death, 2000) and international politics (Contingency, Hegemony, Universality, 2000, co-written with Slavoj Žižek and Ernesto Laclau), including America’s responses to Sep- tember 11 (in Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence, 2004).4 Her latest book, Undoing Gender (2004), returns once again to the fraught terrain of sexuality and gender nearly twenty-five years after Gender Trouble.5 Her investigations into all these arenas continue to explore and expose the interplay of psychic, linguistic, and political forces. The essays in Bodily Citations focus on Judith Butler’s performative the- ory of gender, the aspect of her work that continues to exercise the greatest influence on academia. We have provided in “Judith Butler—in Theory” an account of the contours of this theory and its significance for the study of religion; what follows here positions this volume in relation to critical ques- tions raised about Butler’s theory. Even those who have never read a word of Gender Trouble may be aware of the brief firestorms of controversy that have erupted around Butler in the public press in recent years. A review of Butler’s major works written by Martha Nussbaum for the New Republic (February 22, 1999) is a case in point.6 Although in our judgment Nussbaum’s review has been rightly critiqued as unnecessarily vicious and irresponsible, it seems to us important to address.7 Doing so provides a useful entrée into critical questions about Butler’s work that are raised and, in some cases, addressed in Bodily Citations. Nussbaum accuses Butler (as have others before) of substituting the doing of supposedly subversive things with words for genuine feminist political engagement. Elevating language to center stage distorts reality and troubles structures foundational to political activism, she argues. Stable identities (including that of being a woman) and the ability to act freely—both notions challenged by Butler’s work—seem to be basic requirements for any kind of politics, feminist or otherwise. Engaging with PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS IX Butler, Nussbaum claims, results inevitably in a paralyzing quietism that eviscerates feminist politics. The questions Nussbaum raises echo what seem to be lingering—if uninformed—suspicions about not only Butler’s work but certain kinds of theory on which it depends. What does theory of the type Butler engages (psychoanalytic, deconstructive, poststructuralist) offer those who struggle with hardscrabble political realities? Butler, like the theorists on whom she draws, has been accused of resorting to jargon-laden prose that some deride as camouflage for weak ideas. Are the insights to be gained from submerg- ing oneself in what is purported to be, at least, inscrutable prose and con- voluted ideas (or convoluted prose about inscrutable ideas) worth the intel- lectual labor? The introduction to Butler’s work that follows will, we trust, effectively put to rest suspicions based on misunderstanding or misreading of this theo- rist. Many of the essays will shed new light on those questions that need serious consideration. Indeed, examining the uses to which religionists put Butler’s work strikes us as an excellent location for responding to these ques- tions and suspicions. Though itself frequently subject to oversimplification in the popular media and the secular imagination (the religious imagination, too, for that matter), religion is an aspect of culture that has its moments of high theory and its hardscrabble realities. Those of us who have taken it up as an academic pursuit are perhaps especially attuned to the complexities of religious ideas and their materializations in religious texts and practices of various sorts engaged in by perfectly ordinary people to ordinary and extraor- dinary effect. Even those who go about their lives paying little or no attention to religious matters cannot avoid their effects. For good and for ill, religious traces persist even within the West’s putatively secular culture—overtly as a source of conflict (as in the so-called culture wars) but also covertly (as the unacknowledged root of certain cultural traditions). Religion, like gender and sexuality (and often with them), is a site where language, materiality, theory, and politics all come together in complex ways. PUTTING BUTLER TO WORK In addition to deepening and broadening our understanding of the import of Butler’s work, Bodily Citations offers a distinctive approach to the study of religion by applying a common theoretical lens to a set of issues that emerge from diverse religious sites. The introduction to this volume describes the essays in more detail. We take a moment here to provide readers who are unfamiliar with the academic study of religion with a map that situates each essay in relationship to that field.

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In such works as Gender Trouble and Bodies That Matter Judith Butler broke new ground in understanding the construction and performance of identities. While Butler's writings have been crucial and often controversial in the development of feminist and queer theory, Bodily Citations is the first anth
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