Posts Tagged labeling

Getting back in the swing with Kenneth Burke

The last month or so has been crazy and chaotic to say the least. Thankfully, however, I am starting back up with regular attention paid to Comic Corrective and its readers without boring you with the details of why it’s been so long. Now, I’m writing from a classroom in Oglethorpe University’s Robinson hall, listening to Dr. Rosenthal lecture on the hierarchical nature of categorization of language as discussed by theorist Kenneth Burke, the father of the very concept that inspired this blog in the first place.

Hierarchy always creates tension between those who are up and those who are down (an inevitable fact within the nature of hierarchical organization), Burke calls these tensions guilt. We then use language as a tool to decrease that guilt, or “redeem” ourselves. As much as some would like to think this guilt-redemption cycle is some sort of theoretical and mystical thing that real people don’t really think about or deal with in a practical way, it is. It is a part of every instance of interpersonal communication.

In those communications, we create a sense of group identity or commuity by using Burke’s ideas of identification and division, focusing on ways someone (or a group) is the same or simmilar to the audience (or whomever you are communicating with). This strengthens relationships between ‘us’ can redeem out guilt by knowing that we are not ‘them.’ Otherizing is a way that, sometimes without even realizing it we scapegoat, even in the smallest of situations, if we can blame a ‘them’ from our problems, and then cut them out of the party, the event, the conversation…whatever it may be…we can breathe a sigh of relief as if we have gotten rid of “the problem,” whether that individual or group was really at fault at all.

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An out of work workaholic is the worst kind

I don’t see anything inherently bad about my self -described status as a “workaholic.” It is simply the way things are in my reality. I opt to take the maximum credits allowed every semester. I choose to do a complete overhaul and redesign of the college newspaper simply because I’m editor, and in some warped way feel it’s my duty. I am almost never online with less that four tabs open on my browser, because to do one thing at a time would be a waste when I can do so much more. Throughout the entirety of the school year, I watch my classmates and colleagues get away with doing minimal work, so I know it’s possible to be marginally successful on such a path, but for some reason, I just can’t allow myself to follow in their footsteps. Instead, I’m that kid who will go nights without sleep so that I can do every page of the reading, every review question and if I feel the need re-write my paper for the fifth or sixth time, when I know the first could have been a B.

So what does a person like me do during the summer when there is no homework to be done, no papers to write, no more newspaper chores to do, nothing to work on? What do I do when all the journal submissions and conference proposals have been sent off, and I am just waiting for responses, for requests for revision? Quite simply, I go crazy. Read the rest of this entry »

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The "F" Word: If only hypocracy began with an "F"

This is something that I have been thinking about and going back and forth on with a close friend of mine.

Here’s the deal: Feminism, or at least the Third Wave is supposedly all about telling stories, raising voices and finding a space of inclusion through deconstruction. Much of what is happening as a result of this ‘new feminist activism’, however, is more alienation and division than ever before. We are now living in a world where womanists, ecofeminists, liberal feminists, socialist feminists, radical feminists, post-colonial and third world feminists, french feminists, post-structural and post-modern feminists, multiracial feminists, libertarian feminists, and the list goes on and on, all claim to be true feminists, who have adopted the ideology that will free women and make for the best society, while attempting to silence all other “feminist” voices as not being as productive or meaningful as theirs.

The theoretical beginings of the feminist movement, and its third reincarnation, spout off idealistic rhetoric of a full standpoint, within which all aspects of an individual’s multitude of momentary and long-term idenities are brought into a senes of critical and optimal consciousness to deconstruct all power relations within the heirarchies and ideologies that intersect to construct societies. There are not many problems with standpoint theory its self that I would want to note, but instead wth the attitudinal practice that is using this theoretical approach to silence those who disagree with not only feminist mindsets and limited consciousness, but also with the dominant racist, capitalist patriarchy we like to call ‘the norm’. Read the rest of this entry »

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