Racial Fetishism - Det Fynske Kunstakademi
Transcription
Racial Fetishism - Det Fynske Kunstakademi
Notes I 2 J 4 -s 6 7 I 9 l0 1I Hanno Beck, 'The geographyof Alcxander von Humboldr', in Wolfgrng-Hagen Hein (e<1.1, Alexanderuon Htntboltlt: Life anti \\rork, rrans.John Cumnring (Ingelheimam Rhein, C. H. BoelrringerSohn, 1987) (Gernranoriginal 198-5),pp. ZZl, ZZ7. Oscar RodriguezOrriz (ed.),Iutigenestle Htniltoklt (Caracas,Monte Avila, l9g3), p. 10. Rohert van Dusen, 'The lirerary ambitions and achievernentsof Alexander von Hunrboldt', European lJnirersitl Pofers (Betn, Herbert Lang, l97I), p.45. Alexander von Hunboldt, Views of M?tlre, trans. E.C. Otte and Henry G. Bohn (London. Herry G. Bohn, 1850), p. .3. lbid., pp. 7-8. Quoted in Alexamlcr lon Hunrboltlt: Leltan rntl \L,arAcrr, ed. Volfgrng_HagerrHein ( l n g e l h e i uar m R h e i n ,C . H . B o c h r i n g eSr o h n , 1 9 8 5 ) ,t r a n s . . f o l r nC u r r r r n i n (g1 9 g 7 ) ,p . 56. Humlroldt. \/lcrs o/ Natrrrr, p. ix. lhid., p. 154. lhid.. p. ix. chrisroplrercoluurbus.Lerterof March 14, 1493. in Forr l/ortrgcsto thc Nctu \yorlti: Letters Luul SelectedDocturcnls, ed. arrd trans. R. H. lvtajor (Neu,york, Corinth B o o k s ,1 9 6 1 ) ,p p . 4 - 5 . Quored lry .lohn Brenknranin Crrlnrre ttntl Dontinatiot (lrhacr, Cornell Llniversity P r e s s1 , 9 8 8 ) ,p . 5 4 . racialfetishrsm: Reading of RobertMapplethorpe the photographs Kobena Mercer lmaging the black man's sex This chapter, publishedin originBlly 1986.astaken kom Kobena Mercer. Welconreto the ,ungie (London, Routledge,1994), pA 174-219 434 A L E X A N D E R V O N H U M B O T D T A I I D T H E R E I N V E N T I O NO T A M E R I C A [. . .l Mapplethorpe first made his name in the world of art photography witlr his portraits of patrons and protagonists in the post-\lgarhol New Y o r k a v a n t - g a r d em i l i e u o f t h e 1 9 7 0 s .I n t u r n h e h a s b e c o m e s o m e t h i n g o f a star himself, as tlre discourse of journalists. critics, ctlrators and collectot's has woven a mystique around his persona, creating a public image of the a r t i s t a s a u t h o r o f ' p r i n t s o f d a r k n e s s ' . rA s h e h a s e x t e n d e d h i s r e p e r t o i r e across flowers, bodies and faces, the conservatism of Mapplethorpe's aesthetic has become all too apparent: a reworking of the old modernist t a c t i c o f ' s h o c k t h e b o u r g e o i s i e ' ( a n dm a k e t h e m p a y ) , g i v e n a n e w a u r a b y his characteristic signature, the pursuit of perfection in photographic technique. The vaguely transgressivequality of his subiect matter - gay S / M r i t u a l , l a d y b o d y b u i l d e r s ,b l a c k m e n - i s g i v e n h e i g l r t e n e da l l u r e b y h i s e v i d e n t r n a s t e r yo f p h o t o g r a p h i c t e c h n o l o g y . I n a s m u c h a s t h e i m a g e - n r a k i n gt e c h n o l o g yo f t h e c a m e r a i s b a s e do n t h e m e c h a n i c a l r e p r o d u c t i o n o f u n i l i n e a r p e r s p e c t i v e ,p h o t o g r a p h s p r i 'look'. I t h e r e f o r ew a n t t o t a l k a b o u t M a p p l e t h o r p e ' s m a r l y r e p r e s e n ta B l a c h M a l e s n o t a s t h e p r o d u c t o f t h e p e r s o n a li n t e n t i n n s o f t h e i n d i v i d u a l b e h i n d t h e l e n s , b u t a s a c u l t u r a l a r t i f a c t t h a t s a y ss o m e t h i n g a b o u t c e r t a i n 'look' at black peopleand how. irr this wav of ways in which white people l o o k i n g , b l a c k m a l e s e x u a l i t y i s p e r c e i v e da s s o m e t h i n gd i f f e r e r r t ,e x c e s s i v e , Other.r Certainly this palticular work must be set in tlre context of M a p p l e t l ' r o r p e ' so e u v r e a s a w h o l e : t h r o u g h l t i s c o o l a n d d e a d l y g a z e e a c l - r found object -'flowers, S/M, blacks'-'- is brought trnder the clinical 435 p r e c i s i o r lo f h i s m a s t e rv i s i o n , h i s c o m p l e t e c o n t r o l o f p h o t o - t e c h n i q * e ,a n c l thus aestheticized to the abject statris of thinghood. However, on.. *. consider the author of theseimages as no ,nor.. than ,projection, the in ternls n'ore or less psychological, of our way of handling t.*ti',. tl.r.n Jl.,.t rs inrerestlng about work such as The Black Boo& is the way rhe text facilitatesrhe imagi'ary projectio. of certain racial and sexr.rai fanrasies a b o u t t h e b l a c k m a l e b o d y . w h a t e v e r h i s p e r s o n a lm o t i v a t i o n s or creative p r e t e n s i o n sM , a p p l e t h o r p e , sc a n r e r a - e y eo p e n s a n a p e l . t l l r e o n t o a s p e c t so f stereotypes - a 6xed way of seeing that freezes the flux of .*p.ri.,l.. _ which govern rhe circulation of irlages of black men across a range of s n r f a c e sf r o n r n e w s p a p e r s ,t e l e v i s i o ' a r d c i n e n r a t o a c l v e r t i s i ' g , ,pori.,r.l pomography. A p p r o r r c h e da s a t e x t n a l s y s t e n - rb, o t h B l a c k M a l e s ( 1 9 g 3 ) a n d Tbe B l a c k . B o o k . ( 1 9 8 6 ) c a t a l o g u ea s e r i e so f p e r s p e c t i v e s v, a n r a g e p o i n t s and 'takes' o' the black male body. The firsi thiirg to norice - so obvious it g o e s w i t h o ' t s a y r n g- i s r h a t a l l t h e m e n a r e n u d e . E a c h o f r h e camera,s por.rts of vrew lead to a unitary var-risrringpoinr: an erotic/aesthetic objectification of black niale bodies into the idearizecr for'r of a homogenous type thoroughly saturated with a torality of sex'al precricates. Vie rook t h r o u g h a s e q u e n c eo f i n d i v i d u a l , p e r s o n a l l y n a r n e d , A f r o _ A m e r i c a n men, b ' t w h a t w e s a e i s o n l y t h e i r s e x a s t h e e s s e n t i a ls . m t o t a l o f t h e meanings signified around blackness and maleness. It is as if, accorcling io Mappl.ethorpe's line of sigl-rt: Blacl< + Male = Erotic/Aestheric Ob'jecr. Regardless of the sexual preferences of the spectator, the connotation is ' that the 'essenceo f black male identity lies l. the clomain of sexuality. \(/hereas the photographs of gay male SiM rituals invoke a sLrbcultural sexnality that consisrs of tloi,g something, brack nlen are confinecl and de6ned in their very being as sexual and nothing but sexual, hence hype_rsexual.In picrures like .Man in a polyesrer iuit,, apart from his h a n d s , i t i s t h e p e n i s a n d t h e p e n i s a l o n e t h a t i d e n t i f i e st h e moclel in rhe pictr"lreas a black n.ran. This ontological reduction is accomplished through the specific visr.ral . codesbrought to bear on the constructionof pictorial space. S c u l p t e da n d shaped through the convenrions of the fine art nucle, the image of the black male body presents the spectator witrr a sou'ce of eiotic plea"sure in the act of looking. As a generic code establishecl across 6ne art traclitions in W e s t e r n . a r r h i s t o r y , r h e c o n v e n t i o n a l s r - r b j e cot f t h e n u d e is the (white) female body. Substituting the socially inferior black male subiec, M a p p l e t h o ' p e n e v e r t h e l e s sd r a w s o n t h e c o d e s o f t h e g e r . r r er o frame rris w a y o f s e e i n gL r l a c l < m a l e b o d i e s a s a b s t r a c , b e a u t i f u l t h i n g s , ( s e ef i g u r e s - 1 1 ' 1 ' . 1 1 . 3a n d 3 1 . 4 ) ' T h e a e s r h e t i c a , n d t l r r . r se ' o t i c , o b f e c t i 6 c a t i J ni s t o t a l i z i n g i n e f f e c t , a s a l l r e , f e r e n c e sr o a s o c i a l , h i s t o r . i c a l or political c o n r e x r a r e r u l e d o r . r to f r h e f r a r n e . T h i s v r s u a l c o d i 6 c a t i o n abstricts ancl e s s e n t i a l i z e st h e b l a c k m a n ' s b o d y i n t o t h e r e a l m o f a transcenclental a e s t h e t i ci d e a l . I ' t h i s s e n s e ,r h e t e x r r e v e a l sm o r e a b o ' t t h e c l e s i r e so f t l r e hidden and visible white male s'bject berrind rrie camer-a,ar.rcr what .rre, w a n t s - t o - s e et,h a n i t d o e s a b o u t t h e a n o u y m o u s b l a c k . r e ' w l . r o s e beautifLrl b o d i e s w e s e ed e p i c t e d . 436 R E A D I I , I GR A C I A L F E T I S H I S M V i t h i n t h e d o r n i n a n t t r a d i t i o n o f t h e f e r . n a l en u d e , p a t r i a r c h a l p o w e r r e l a t i o n s a r e s y r n b o l i z e db y t h e b i n a r y r e l a t i o n i n w h i c h , t o p u t i t c r u d e l y , m e n a s s u m et h e a c t i v e r o l e o f t h e l o o k i n g s u b j e c tl v h i l e w o m e n a r e p a s s i v e o b j e c t s t o b e l o o k e d a t . L a u r a M r - r l v e y ' sc o n t r i b u t i o n t o f e n r i n i s t f i h n t l r e o r y r e v e a l e d t h e n o n n a t i v e p o w e r a n d _p r i v i l e g e o f t l . r em a l e g a z e i n r he image of the female nude d o r n i n a n t s y s t e n - rosf v i s u a l r e p r e s e n t a t i o n . T c a n t h u s b e u n d e r s t o o d n o t s o m n c l r e s a r e p r e s e n t a t i o no f ( h e t e r o ) s e x u i r l d e s i r : e ,b u t a s a f o r m o f o b j e c t i f i c a t i o nw l t i c h a r t i c u l a t e s m a s c r . r l i n eh e g e r . r r o n ya n d d o r n i n a n c e o v e r t h e v e r y z r p p a r a t u so f l e p r e s e n t a t r o n i t s e l f . P a i n t i n g s a b o u r . r dw i t h s e l f - s e r v i n gs c e n a r i o so f p h a l l o c e n t r i c f a n t a s y i r . r w h i c h r n a l e a r : t i s t sp a i n t t h e m s e l v e sp a i n t i n g n a k e d w o m e r r , w h i c h , l i k e d e p i c t i o n o f f e m i n i n e n a r c i s s i s m ,c o n s t l u c t s a m i r r o r i m a g e o f w l r a t t h e m a l e s r , r b j e cw t a n t s - t o - s e e .T h e f e t i s h i s t i cl o g i c o f n r r m e r i c r e p r e s e n t a t i o n . w h i c h m a k e s p r e s e n tf o r t h e s r - r b j e cwt h a t i s a b s e n ti n t h e r e a l , c a n t h u s b e c h a r a c t e n z e d i n t e r m s o f a m a s c u l i n ef a n t a s y o f m a s t e r y a n d c o n t l o l o v e r t h e ' o b j e c t s ' d e p i c t e d a n d r e p r e s e n t e di n t h e v i s u a l f i e l d , t h e f a n t a s v o f a n o r n n i p o t e n t e y e l l w h o s e e sb u t w h o i s n e v e r s e e n . In Mapplethorpe's case, however, the fact that both subject and object of the gaze are male setsup a tension between the active role o[ l o o k i n g a n d t h e p a s s i v e r o l e o f b e i n g l o o k e d a t . T h i s f i s s o r ro f ( l r o n r o ) s e x n a l s a m e n e s st r a n s f e r se r o t i c i n v e s f m e n ti n t h e f a n t a s y o f m a s t e r y f r o m g e n d e r t o r a c i a l d i f f e r e n c e .T r a c e s o f t h i s m e t a p l - r o r i c arlr a n s f e r u n d e r l i n e t h e h i g h l y c h a r g e d l i b i d i n a l i n v e s t m e n to f M a p p l e t h o r p e ' s g a z e a s i t b e a r s d o w n o n t h e m o s t v i s i b l e s i g n i f i e r o f r a c i a l d i f f e r e n c e- b l a c k s k i n . I n h i s a n a l y s i s o f t h e m a l e p i n u p , R i c h a r d D y e r ( 1 9 8 2 ) s u g g e s t st h a t w h e n m a l e 'feminized' position of being looked at. the s r . r b j e c ta s s s l r m et h e p a s s i v e , t h r e a t o r r i s k t o t r a d i t i o n a l d e f i n i t i o n so f m a s c u l i n i t yi s c o u n t e r a c t e db y t h e r o l e o f c e r t a i n c o d e s a n d c o n v e n t i o n s ,s u c h a s t a u g h t , r i g i d o r s t r a i n i n g b o d i l y p o s t u r e , c h a r a c t e r t y p e s a n d n a r r a t i v i z e dp l o t s , a l l o f w h i c h a i r r t o stabilize the gender-based dichotomy of seeing/being seen.6 Here, M a p p l e t h o r p e a p p r o p r i a t e s e l e m e n t so f c o m m o n p l a c e r a c i a l s t e l ' e o t y p e s i n o r d e r t o r e g n l a t e ,o r g a n i z e ,p r o p u p a n d f r t h e p r o c e s so f e r o t i c / a e s t h e t i c o b i e c t i G c a t i o ni n w h i c h t h e b l a c k m a n ' s f l e s h b e c o m e sb u r d e n e d w i t l i t h e f a n t a s i e sa n d d e s i r e so f t h e w h i r e g a y task of symbolizingthe transgressive m a l e s u b j e c t . T h e g l o s s y , s h i n i n g , f e t i s l - r i z e ds u r f a c e o f b l a c k s k i n t h u s s e r v e sa n d s e r v i c e sa w h i t e m a l e d e s i r et o l o o k a n d t o e n j o y t h e f a n t a s y o f m a s t e r y p r e c i s e l yt h r o u g l i t h e s c o p i c i n t e n s i r yt l r a t t h e p i c t u r e s s o l i c i t . 'an important feature of colonial As Homi Bhabha has suggested. d i s c o u r s e i s i t s d e p e n d e n c e _ o nt h e c o n c e p t o f " f i x i t y " i n t h e i d e o l o g i c a l c o n s t l t l c t i o r l o f o t h e r n e s s ' . ' M a s s - n r e d i as t e l e o t y p e s o f b l a c k m e n - a s c r i m i n a l s . a t h l e t e s ,e n t e r t a i n e r s- b e a r w i t n e s s t o t h e c o n t e n r p o l a r ) ,r e p e t i t i o r r o f s u c h c o l o t t i a l f o t t t a s t , ,i r r t h a t t l . r e r i g i d a n d l i m i t e d g r i d o f r e p r e s e n t a t i o n st h r o u g l r w h i c h b l a c k n r a l e s u b j e c t s b e c o m e p u b l i c l y v i s i b l e cor.rtintresto reproduce certain iddes fres, ideological fictions rrnd psycliic 'otherness' it is fixations, about the nature of black sexuality and the c o n s t r u c t e d t o e m b o d y . A s a n a r t i s t , M a p p l e t h o r p e e n g i n e e r sa f a n t a s y o f a b s o l u t e a u t h o r i t y o v e r t h e i m a g e o f t h e b l a c l <m a l e b o d y b y a p p r o p r i a t i n g t h e f u n c t i o n o f t h e s t e r e o t y p et o s t a b i l i z et h e e r o t i c o b t e c t i f i c a t i o no f r a c i a l KOBEIIAMERCER otherness and thereby affirm lis own identiry as the sovereign I/eye e m p o w e . e d w r t h m a s r e r yo v e r r l l e a b l e c t t l r i n g h o o d of the otrrer,is if the plctures implied, Eye have the power ,o t,rin yo.,, base ancl worthless c r e a t u r e ,r n t o a w o r k o f a r t . L i k e M e d u s a ' s l o o k , e a c h c a n r e r aa n g l e a n c l phorog'aphic shor turns brack nrale flesh to sto'e, hxecr rror.'' ii ,p".. a u d t l n r e : e n s l a v e d a s a n i c o n r n t r r e r e p r e s e n t a t i o r a r"ncr space of the white n r a l e i n r a g i u a r y ,l r i s r o r : i c a l l ya t t h e c e n t r e o f c o l o n i a l fantasy. T h e r e a r e t w o i m p o r t a n t a s p e c t so f f e t i s h i z a t i o n at play here. The e r a s u r eo f a n y s o c i t r li n t e r f e r e n c ei n c h e s p e c t a t o r ' s erotic enloyure'r of the r r n a g en o r o n l y r e i f i e s b o d i e s b u t e f f a c e sr h e r l a t e r i a l p r o c e s si n v o l v e d i n the production of rhe i.rage, thus nrasking trie social r e r : r r i o r r so f r r r c i a l power enrailed by the rrnequal and potentially exploitative b e t w e e n .t h e w e l l - k n o w r r , i r r t r r o r - n a ' r e i a r t i s r a n c l gl t i r e u n k n o w"'*, . h i"rnt e l._ changeable.black nrodels. In the same way thar l a b o r . i s said to be 'alienated' i ' c o ^ r m o d i t y f e t i s h i s m ,s o , . r e t h i n gs i n r i r a r r s p . t lnto operatioll in the way tlrat the proper name of each dlack moclel is taken from a pelson and grven to a thing, as.thetitle or caption o f t h e p h o r o g r - . f f . , ,. n art obje* which rs properry of tlie artist, t1.,.o*n., a,.,clautiror oitlr. took. Arrd as itenrs of exchange-value, Mapplethorpe prints fetch exorbitant puces on the internationalnrarket in ar photoe.aDhv. The fantasn.raticemplra.siso,n nl^rrary also"underpins tlre specifically s e x u a l f e t i s h i z a t i o no f t h e o t h e r t h a t i s e v i d e n t i . the visual isoraiioneffect wl.rerebyit is o'ly evet one black man who appears in the 6eld of vision at As an irnprinr of a. narcissistic, ego-centred, sexualizirrg ::].-:.1.-,:iit: r a n r a s y 't h r s l s a c r u c i a l c o m p o . e n t i n t h e p r o c e s s oferotic objectiFcation] not only becauseit forecrosesthe possible iepresentation of a colrective oi c o n t e x r u a l i z e db l a c k m a l e b o d y , b u t b e c a u i e t h e solo frame is ,f* p*condition for a voyeuristic fa'tasy of r,rnmediated ancl 'nilateral conrrol over rhe other, which is the function it perfor:rns precisely in gay and straight por:nograpliy. Aestheticizrd as a rrap for'the gaze, pr"."iai"g which the appetite of the irnperiai eye nray fJed, each imagi -on tl|]'l'll t t r u s n o u n s h e s t h e r a c i a l i z e da n d s e x r . r a l i z e fda n r a s y of appropriating tiie Other's body as virgin rerritory to be perretrate.l on,l porr.rr.; b;a,i ;li_ p o r v e r f u l d e s i r . e , ' t op r o b e a n d e x p l o r e a n a l i e n body,. superinrposi.g two ways of seeing - the n'cle whrcrr eroticizes trle act . . o f l o o k i n g , a n d t h e s r e r e o t y p ew h i c h i m p o s e s 6 x i r y _ we see in Mapple_ t h o r p e ' s g a z e . . ar e i n s c r i p t i o r io f t h e f u n d a r n e . t a r a t n b i u a r e t t c eo f c o l o ' i a l ranrasy' oscrtarrng berween sexual idealization of the racial other an a n x i e t y i n d e f e n c eo f t h e i d e n t i r y o f t h e w h i t e male ego. Stuart Hall (19g2) has underli'ed this splitting irr trre 'imperiar eye' b]- s'ggesti'g trrat for every threarening inage of the black subyeci as a marauding native, m e n a c i n g s a v a g e o r r e b e l l i o u ss l a v e , t h e r e i s t h e comfortirg i".";";i,l; black as docile servant, amusing clow' ar.rclh"ppy enter"tai".;t 4",-';_ rre'ting on this bifurcation in racial..p..r.nr"tionr, H a i l c r e s c r i b e si r a s t h e e x p r e s s i o no f ' b o t h a n o s t a l g i a f o r a n i n n o c e n c e l o s t f o r e v e r .t o t h e civilized'and the tlireatofcivirization ['rei'g o v e r - r u . o r u n c l e r u r i ' e db y t r r e r e c u r r e n c eo f s a v a g e r y ,r , r h i c hr s a l w a y s l r u k i n g j u s t b e l o w t h e s u r f a c e ;o r . b ) ' a n . n r ' r o r e d s e x r a l i t y t h r e a t e n i n gt o , b r e a ' k ' o u t , . ' , , In Mapplethoipe, lve ma)' discern rhree discretecanreracodes rhr.ough which this furrtla_ nrental ambivale'ce is rei'scribed rrr'ouglr rhe process of a sexrral and r : a c i a lf a n t : r s yw h i c h a e s t h e t r c i z _tehse s t e r e o t y p ei n t o a work of ar.t. T h e f i r s t o f t ' e s e . w h i c h i s n r o s rs e r f - c o n s c i o u s rayc k r r o r v r e d g e c r . co.rcr be t h e s c u l p t u r a ! c o d e , a s i t i s a s n b s e to f t h e g e n e r i c 6 n e :1flg.d art .trcre. A s P h i l l i p . p ' e t e n d s t o t r r n tt l i e s r r o t , t h e i d e a l i z e c lp r i y s i q u e or ,, .rurrr.loi G r e e k n r a l e .s t a t u e i s s u p e r i m p o s e do ' t h a t n r o s t c o r n r l o ' p r a c e of stereotypes, the Lrlack nran as spofts hero, mythologically endowecl rvirh a 'naturally' n r n s c n l a rp h y s i q u e a n d a n _ e s s e n t i acla f a c i t y f o r . r . . n g t h . g,:".. a n d n r a c h i n e l i k ep e r f e c t i o . : . w e l l h a r d . A s m a 1 o , . p . [ r l i c a r . e n a , - s p o , _ ' ,n, , k e y s i r e o f w h i t e m a l e a ' r l r i v r r l e r c e , f e a r" a n . 1 f a , i t a s y . T h e s p e c t a c l eo f b l a c k b o d i e s t r i . . r p l r a n t i n r i r ' a r s o f m a s c u r i r r ec o r n p e t i t i o n r e i n f o r c e st h e f i x e d i d e a t l ' r a t b l a c l t . ] e n a r e ' a l l b r a r , , , na n c l n o b r a i n s ' , a ' c r y , e t .b e c a u s e the lvhite ntan is bearenat his own gante _ football, boxing, cricket, a t h l e t i c s- t h e O t h e r i s i d o l i z e d . t o t h e p o i n t o f e n v 1 , .T h i s s c h i s r r i i sp l a y e j o . t . d a i l y i n t h e p o p u l a r t a b r o i d p r e s s .o n t l r e f r o n t p a g e h e a c l r i n e st r r a c k nrales beconre highly visible as a threat to white society, as rrugsers, ' a p r s t s , t e r r o r i s t s a n d g i r e r r i l l a s :t h e i r b o d i e sb e c o n r et h e i'rago of. ,;;;g; a n d . u n s r o p p a . b l ec a p a c i t y f o r d e s t r u c t i o n a n c l v i o l e n c e . Birt turn to the back pages, the sports pages, a'cl the lrlack 'ran,s body rs lrerorzed rr.ci I i o n i z e d ;a n y h i n t o f a n t a g o n i s m i s c o ' t a i n e c rb y r h e p a t e r r . r a r i s t i c infantilization of Fra.k Bruno a'd Darey Tho.rpso'to the status of national m a s c o r sa n d a d o p t e d p e t s - t h e y ' r e r r o t O t l r e r , t h e y ' r e O I ( b e c a u s et h e y , r e 'our boys'. The national shame of Engra.ds'dernise ancr crefeat in Test cricket at the ha.ds of trre west rndies is accompanied by the slavisrr .West a d m i r a t i o n o f V i v R i c l r a r d s ' sa w e s o r n ep h y s i q u e _ ' t h e higli-spe..l I n d i a n b a t s m a n i s b o t h a t h r e a t a n d a r v i n n e r .T h e a m b i v a l i n . . .ut, d..p into the recessof tlre white r.'ale inraginary - recail trrose r.rewsreelim,rges o f H i t l e r ' s r e l u * a n t h a n d s h a k ew i t h J e s s eo r v e n s a r t h e 1 9 3 d o r y m p i c l . If Mapplethorpe'sgazeis .romentarily lost in admiration, it reasserts co'trol.by also'fe'rinizing'the black male body into passive, a decorative o b j e . td . ' a n . , \ / l t e n P h i l l i p i s p l a c e d o n a p e c l e s r ahi e l i t e r a l l y b..o_., puttf in the hands of tlie white nrale arrist - like others in t r r i s c o c l e ,h i , ! o i ; b e c o m e sr a w m a t e r i a l , n r e r e p l a s t i c n t a t t e r , t o b e r n o l d e c l , ,.r,lpt"d ^n.l s h a p e d i n t o t h e a e s t h e t i c i d e a l i s r no f i n e r t a b s t r a c t i o n , as we see in the p i c t u r e o f D e r r i k C r o s s ( s e ef i g u r e 1 3 . 3 ) : w i t h t h e r i l r of tlie pelvis, rhe black rlan's bunr becomes a Brancusi. conrme'ring on the criffe.ences between moving atrd motionless pictures, Christian Metz suggests an a s s o c i a r i o nl.i n k i n g , p h o t o g r a p h y , s i l e n c ea n d d e a t h , , p h o , o g r . p i r i inuok. a r e s i d u a l d e a t l r e f f e c t s ' c h t h a t , ' t h e p e r s _ ow n h o l r a s b e e n p r r . ' o t o g r a p h ei ds dead d e a d f o r l r a v i n g b e e n s e e n . ' l t U n d e r r h e i n r e r r s e, . . u i i n y of M a p p l e t h o r p e ' s c o o l , d e t a c l r e dg a z e i t i s i r s i f e a c r rl r r a c k m o c l e li s , r r . i e t o d i e , i f o n l y r o r e i n c a r n a r e t h e i r a r i e n a t e de s s e n c e a s i c r e a r i z - e care, s t h e t i c objects. we are not invited to inragine whar their lives, histories or e x p e r i e n c e sa r e - l i k e ,a s r h e y a r e s i l e n c e da s s u l r j e c t si n their.own right, ancl t n a s e r s e s a c r i f i c e do n t h e p e d e s t : ror f a n a e s t l r e t i ci d e a l in order to af6r.nr t l r e o n r n i p o t e n c eo f t h e n l a s t e r s r b i e c r , w l r o s eg a z e h a s t h e p o , u v e r . olfr g h r and death. A E A D I t . I GR A C I A L F E T I S H I S M I i O E E I J AM E R C E R In counterpoint there is a suppleurentaly code of portraiture which 'hunranizes' t h e h a r : d p h a l l i c l i n e s o f p u r e a b s t r a c t i o n a n d f o c u s e so n t l r e 'window face - the o f t l r e s o u l ' - t o r n t r o d u c e a n e l e m e n t o f r e a l i s r ni r r t o t b e s c e n e .B u t a n y c o n n o r a r i o n o f h u n r a n i s t e x p r e s s i o n i s d e n i e d b y t h e d i r e c t l o o k w h r c h d o e s n o t s o r n u c h a s s e r tt h e e x i s t e n c eo f a n a u t o n o m o u s s u b j e c t i v i t y , l r u t l a t h e r , l i k e t h e r e m o t e , a l o o f , e x p r e s s i o n so f f a s h i o r r models rn glossy magazines, emphasizes instead maximum distance between the spectatol and the nnattainable object of desire. Look, but d o n ' t r o u c h . T h e m o d e l s ' d i r e c t l o o k t o c a m e r a d o e s n o t c h a l l e n g et h e g a z e o f t l r e w h i t e m a l e a r t r s t , a l t h o u g h i t p l a y s o n t h e a c t i v e / p a s s i v et e n s i o n o f seeing/lrerng seen, because any porential dismption is conrained by tlie subtextnal work of the stereotype. Thus in one portrait the 'primitive' nature of the Negro is invoked by the pr:ofile: the face becomes an afterimage of a stereotypically 'African' tribal nrask, high cheekbones and nratted dreadlocks further connote wildness, danger, exotica. In another, the chiseled contorlrs of a shaved lread, honed by rivulets of sweat, snl-nnlon up the criminal mug shot from the forensic 6les of police photography. This also recalls the anthropomerric uses of photography in the colonial scene, measuring the craniun of the colonized so as to show, by the documentary evidence of photography, the inherent'inferiority' of the Other.r2 This is overlaid with deeper ambivalence in the portrait of Terrel, whose grotesque grimace calls up the happy/sad mask of the nigger rrinstrel: humanized by racial pathos, the Sambo stereotype haunts the scene, evoking the black man's supposedly ctrildlike dependency on ole Massa, which in turn fixes his social, legal and existential 'emasculation' at the hands of the white nrasrer. Finally, two codes together - of cropping and lighting - interpenetrate the flesh and mortify it into a racial sex fetish, a julu doll from the dark side of the white man's imaginary. The body-wlrole is fragmented i n t o m i c r o s c o p i c d e t a i l s - c l r e s t ,a r m s , t o r s o , b u r t o c k s , p e n i s - i n v i t i n g a scopophilic dissection of the parts that make Lrp the whole. Indeed, like a talismirn, each part is invested with dre power to evoke the 'mystique' of black nrale sexuality with more perfection than any empirically unified whole. The camera cuts away, like a knife, allowing the spectator to i n s p e c t t l ' r e ' g o o d s ' . I n s u c h f e t i s h i s t i ca t t e n t i o n t o d e t a i l , t i n y s c a r s a n d blemishes on the surface of black skin serve only to heighten the technical perfectionisrn of the photographic print. The cropping and fragmentarion of bodies - often decapitated, so to speak - is a salient feature of pornog r a p h y , a n d h a s b e e n s e e nf r o m c e r t a i n f e m i n i s t p o s i t i o n s a s a f o r m o f m a l e v i o l e n c e ,a l i t e r a l i n s c r i p t i o n o f a s a d i s t i ci m p u l s e i n t h e m a l e g a z e , w h o s e p l e a s u r e t h u s c o n s i s t so f c u t t i n g u p w o l n e n ' s b o d i e s i n t o v i s u a l l r i t s a n d pieces. Whether or not this view is tenable,ls tl-reeffect of the technique here is to suggestaggressionin the act of looking, lrut not as racial violence or racism-as-hate;on the contrary, aggression as tlle frustration of rhe ego w h o f i n d s t h e o b j e c t o f h i s d e s i r eo u t o I r e a c h , i r r a c c e s s i b l eT.h e c r o p p i n g i s analogous to striptease in t[-rissense, as the exposr.lte of successive body parts distances the erotogenic object, making it unrouchable so as ro t a n t a l i z e t h e d r i v e t o l o o k , w h i c h r e a c h e si t s a i n r i n t h e d e n o u e m e n r l r y 440 figure 31.1 Sobert Mapphthoryq Jmmy Freeman, t982 fihe Estateof Robert Mapplethorpe) tigure 31.2 fiooetI Mdtlplethorpe, RoedeiA4iddleton, F i g u r e3 1 . 3 Robert Mapplelllorpe, 1986(TheEstaieof Detrik Cross, 1983 Robert (The Estaieof Robeil Mapplethot)€) Mapplethorpe) (adroqlalddPn uaqog Jo alPlsl aql) 9861 'seLuoLll 'ailaqtaldden jlaqou t lE arn6tl which the woman's sex is unveiled.Except here the unveiling that reduces the woman from angelto whore is sr-rbsritr-rred by rhe unconcealingof rhe parts, penis private with the as the forbidden totem of colonial man's black fantasy. As each fragmentseducesthe eye into ever more intensefascination, we glimpsethe dilation of a libidinalway of looking rhat spreadsitselfacross the surfaceof black skin. Harsh contrastsof shadowand light draw the eye to focus and fix aftentionon rhe textureof the black man's skin. According to Bhabha, unlike the sexual fetish per se, whose meaningsare usually hidden as a hermeneuticsecret,skin color functionsas'the most uisibleof it is devalorizedin the signifyingchain of 'negrophobia' fetishes'.ra.Whether 'negrophilia',the fetish of or hypervalorizedas a desirableattribute in skin color in the codesof racial discourseconstitutesthe most visible elementin 'the ethnicsignifier'.1-s The shining the articulationof what StuartHall calls severalfr-rnctions in its representation: ir sLrggests surfaceof blackskin serves the physicalexertionof powerful bodies,as black boxersalwaysglistenlike bronzein the illuminatedsqlrareof the boxing ring; or, in pornography,it intensesexualactivity'just before'the photographwas taken, a slrggests metonymic stimulus to arolrsespectatorialparticipation in the imagined mise-en-scine.In Mapplethorpe'spicturesthe specularbrilliance of black skin is bound in a double articlrlationas a fixing agent for the fetishistic slippagebetweenrepresenter structlrreof the photographs.Thereis ir sr-rbtle polished, as the shiny, sheen of black skin becomes and represented, consubstantialwith the luxurious allure of the high-quality photographic print. As Victor Burgin has remarked,sexualfetishismdovetailswith commodity fetishismto inflare the economicvalue of the print in art photography as much as in fashionphotography,the 'glossies'.16 Here, black skin and print surfaceare bound rogetherto enhancethe pleasureof the white spectator as much as the profitability of these art-world commodities exchangedamong the artist and his dealers,collectorsand curators. In everydaydiscoursefetishismprobably connotesdeviant or 'kinky' sexuality,and calls up imagesof leatherand rubberwearas signsof sexual perversity. This is not a fortuitous example, as leather fashion harsa 'secondskin'. \fhen one considersthat such sensuousappealas a kind of clothes are invariably black, rather than any other color, such fashionfetishismsuggestsa desireto simulateor imitate black skin. On the other hand, Freud'stheorizationof fetishismas a clinical phenomenonof sexntrl pathology and perversionis problematic in many ways, br,rtthe central notion of the fetish as a metaphoricalsubstitutefor the absent phallus enabies understandingof the psychic structure of disavowal, and the splitting of levelsof consciousand unconsciousbelief, that is relevantto the ambiguousaxis upon which negrophiliaand negrophobiaintertwine. t...1 We have been looking at some pictures to talk about a cer[ain way in 'looking' at black people involves a racial fetishistn. which white peoples' The question of ambivalence underscored by Malpplethorpe's recuperi.rtion of commonplace stereotypeswithin a restagingof the classicalmale nude concerns the strange and r-rnchartedlandscrrpeof the Western imrrginrrry, 444 READING RACIAL FETISHISM - ,il rlnd more specifically, the political unconsciours of white masculinity. However, in the clrrrent context, where the interventions of black feminists hrrve prioritized issuesirf the interface of race, gender and sexuality, a ne,az wave of blurck cr"rlturalpractitioners are setting out to r,rntangleolrr own ambivillencesand to explore the diversity of sexual desiresand identiries within biack communities. Refusing to think of ourselves as Otl-rer, snch artists as Joan Riley and Jackie Kay in literature: Maureen Blackwood anci Martina Attille of Sankofa Collective in filmmaking; visu;,rlartists shown in Lr,rbainaHimid's Tbin Black Line exhrbition art the ICA in 1985, have all engagedquestionsof sex and race in representationin challenging ways.lT Yet these initiatives have so far found little critical and theoretical support in debatesabout sexual representation. In a conjuncture where progressive intellectual alliances among feminists, advocates of sexual politics, and critical theory in film and media str-rdieshave gained momentum in the academic world, the subject of r:rce is still a strlrctlrred absencefrom both public debate and course curricula. 'What worries me is the way a certain kind of psychoanalysis has come to 'malster discor"rrse'in this sitlrirtion, yet the ethnocentrism function as a of clzrssicalFreudian theory remains unquestioned. While the concept of fetishism is suggestive precisely becar-rseit connects the economic and sexual contraflow of ideological investments, it is also problematic, for its roots in Er,rropeanthought lie in the colonizing discourses of missionaries 'primitive religions'.18Moreover, the occh,rsionof and anthropologists on race in rhe 1970s theorization of sexual difference is by the sllme token the instance of its heterosexism as well as its Eurocentrism. The Greek tragedy 'castraof Oedipus, as the grand narrative upon which desire-as-lack or tion' is based, is culture-bound despite the universalistic claims staked out for it. Other cultures may be patriarchal, but does that mean they produce an Oedipal sexuality? The feminist appropriation of Lacanian psychoanalysis to theorize cultural struggles over the image has been profoundly enabling, but 'race' questions now being raised by cultural strugglesover the meaning of slrggest that universalist pretensions can be disenabling, for they preempt the development of pluralist perspectiveson the intersections of multiple dif{erences in popular culture. \fith regard to the psychoanalytic theory of 'it has helped me . . (but) I have also used fetishism, Metz confessesthat the theory of fetishism as a fetish.'1e If psychoanalysis continues to offer 'the insight into cultural practices such as photography because it is founding myth of our emotional modernity', then perhaps the unanswered questions of race may render visible some of the many blind spots that characterize ollr intellectual posrmodernity. [. . .] rl I Notes Dick Tr:rcings, Tinte Orrt, 3 November l9[]-1. Reierencestrre prirnzrrilyto Robert lr.{applethorpe,Black nrlalc-s(Amsterclam, Gallerie Jurkr, 198.3)(rvith:rn introdr.rcrionby Edurund White;; Robcrt N[applethorpe, lL)70- 446 READING RACIAL FETISHISM rascLrliniry. k feminists liry, a new e orlr own I identities )ther, such lwood and s shownin 5, have irll ng w,rys.lt :al sr,ipport res tlmong and medirr ect of race : curricula. 15 COme tO nocentrism concept of romic rrnd rtic, for its rissionaries :clusion of : token the :ek tragedy 'castritor staked out ey produce :o theorize .bling, br.rt ....^-' -l 5- \^{ /r r drL :y preempt rf multiple c theory of e also used Lesto offer 'the it is .nanswered spots that .3 4 5 5 7 8 9 10 ll 12 1.i 74 15 16 17 18 l9 19 8 3 ( L o n d o n , I n s t i t u t e o f C o n t e m p o r i r r - vA r t s , 1 9 8 3) ( i n t r o d u c t i o n b v A l l r r n H o l l i n g h u r s t ) ; r l n d R o b e r t M a p p l e t h o r p e ,T h c B l a c k B o o k ( N I u n i c h , S c h i r m e r / i v l o s e l , 1985). Hollinghurst. RoDart Nldpplethorpe, p. 13. 'What is irn rruthor?', LdnSudgc Corutter-nrentory', Practite, ed. lvlichel Foucrult, D o n a l d B o u c h a r d ( O x f o r d , B a s i l B l a c k w e l,l 1 9 7 7 J ,p . l Z 7 . ' V i s u t r l p l e a s u r ee n d n a r r r a t i v ec i n e m a ' , S c r e e t t ,1 6 , . 3 ( a u t u m n 1 9 7 5 ) Laurl lVlulvev I e x r r a c t e di n C h a p r e r 2 5 o f t h r s v o l t r m e ] . 'Don't , creen,23,3-4, Sept/Oct. l o o k n o r v - t h e m i r l e p i n - r . r p 'S Richard Dver (1982) also the art hisroricll perspective offered in Mlrglret Walters, The Nude NIale ( L o n d o n , P r d d i n g t o n P r e s s ,[ 9 7 8 ) . 'The Horni K. Bhabhl, o r h e r q u e s t i o n :t h e s t e r e o t v p ea n d c o l o n i a l d i s c o u r s e ' ,S c l e a r z , 2 4 , 4 ( 1 9 8 3 ) , p p . l 8 - - 3 5 [ e x t r a c t e di n C h a p t e r 2 4 o f t h i s v o l u m e ] . Edmund White, in lVlapplethorpe, Black Malcs, p. v. ' T h e w h i t e s o f t h e i r e y e s : r a c i s t i d e o l o g i e sr n d t h e r n e d i i r ' , i n G e o r g e Sruart Hell, Bridges :rnd Rosrlind Brunt (eds), Siluer L.inings: Sonr Strategies for the Eighties L o n d o n , L a w r e n c ea r r d W i s h a r t , 1 9 8 1 ) . Ibid., p. 41. C l r r i s t i a n M e t z , ' P h o t o g r a p h v r n d f e t i s h ' ,O c t o b e r , 3 4 ( f a l l 1 9 8 5 ) , p . 8 5 . 'Classified A n t h r o p o m e t r i c u s e s o f p h o t o g r a p h y a r e d i s c u s s e di n D a v i d G r e e n , 'Veins o f r e s e m b l a n c ee: u g e n i c sa n d p h o t o g r a p l - r y 'i,n strhjects'T , en.S, l4 (1984); rnd Photogrttpbl,/Politics: Truo, eds P. Holland,.f . Sperrceilnd S. Wrtney (London, Photog r r p h y W o r k s h o p / C o r l e d i a , 1 9 8 6 ) ;a n d w i t h r : e f e r e n cteo p h o t o g r e p h y a s s u r v e i l l a n c e , 'Power 'The and photography', d o r n a i n o f t h e s e x u : r l ' ,e n d J o h n T a g g , in Frank Mort, Screen Eductttir.ur,-12 (ar.rtumn1980). 'Sexual violence and sexuality', Fentinist Reuietu, l1 (sumrner Rosrlind Cownrd, 1982), pp. 17-22. ' T h e o t h e r q u e s t i o n ' ,p . i 0 . Bhabha, 'Pluralism, race and class in Caribbean socier.r,',in Race ,md Clttssin PostStuart Hall, Colonial Socrel1,(New York, UNESCO). 'Photography, f a n t a s y ,f r c t i o n ' ,S c r e e n , 2 1 , 1 ( s p r i n g 1 9 8 0 ) , p . 5 ' + . Victor Burgin, SeeJoan Rrley, The Unbelonging (London, The STomen'sPress, 1985); and poetry by Jackie Kay in Fentinist Reuietu, lS (1984), tnd A Dangerous Knotuing (London, Sheba F e m i n i s t P u b l i s h e r s ,1 9 8 5 ) . R e l a t e d i s s u e sa r e r a i s e d b y M a r t i n a A t i l l e a n d M a u r e e n Blackwood,'Black Wornen and representation', in Charlotte Brundson (ed.J, Filnts ior Wonten (London, British Film Institute,1986). 'Fetishism and ideology', For tt Critique of the Political Economy SeeJean Baudrillard, o f t h e S i g n ( S t L o u i s , T e l o s P r e s s ,1 9 8 1| 9 7 7 \ ) . A n i m p o r t a n t g e n e a l o g y o f t h e c o n c e p t 'The problem of the fetish', parts 1, 2 and .i, of fetishism is provided by I[illiam Pietz, ( in Res, 9 (spring 1985), pp. 5-17; 13 spring, 1987), pp. 23-45; and 16 (autumn 1988)p , p.105-123. ' P h o t o g r a p h ya n d f e t i s h ' ,p . 8 9 . Metz, clam, Gallerie horpa, 1970- 447 KOBENAMERCER ,.i.l.tti';, ii "r .:':;r 4J:;.:.: :...r!i'.' :rzY!,;i'