THOUGHTS ON “OPPRESSION”
Adam Blatner
August
25, 2006 (See also another
view of this topic more recently re-visited elsewhere on this website.)
Oppression is a
term about which I am ambivalent. On the positive side, it refers to a
dynamic in society in which we collectively repress and avoid
addressing certain issues, social norms, ethical conundrums, economic,
religious and political arrangements, and so forth. For me, oppression
is a group analog of the individual dynamic of repression. The value of
this concept is that it calls for a process of making the implicit
explicit, bringing out from the subconscious soup issues that deserve
to be identified, analyzed, and re-evaluated. Some examples will be
mentioned further on.
On the negative
side, oppression is a term that has what I consider to be misleading
semantic associations–namely, the implication that there must be a
villain, someone who oppresses, and a victim, the relatively innocent
oppressed. In some cases this is relatively true, in some cases rather
untrue, and worse, it supports a number of trends in our culture that
promote a set of ideas about victimhood, such as the general sense that
blame should be placed and that the victim is entitled to recompense of
some kind. Victimization also implies a relief of responsibility for
one’s situation in life. Again, in some cases, this is relatively true,
and in some cases rather untrue.
The problem here
requires an insistence on semantic analysis and fine discrimination,
thinking, however bothersome that activity may seem. The tendency in
language is to use generalizations and abstractions not only as a
useful tool–which these are sometimes–but also as the servant of a lazy
mind, a way of coping by thinking in overly simplistic ways. This is a
regression to childishness, thinking either-or, because for young
children who are just beginning to get the names of things correctly,
simple contrasts are an initial step. The idea of there being shades of
grey, or multiple alternatives is too complex for their little minds,
and, alas, it seems to stretch the mentality of all too many adults.
A related
problem comes with the compensating mechanism of self-deception, in
this case, the assumption that both we and our audience knows what we
are talking about. Alas, in subtle ways, the actual situation is more
like the words of Humpty Dumpty in Lewis Carroll’s children’s classic,
Alice’s Adventures Through the Looking Glass, when he says, “When I use
a word, it means whatever I want it to mean, no more, no less.”
Although the book on one level presented a somewhat nonsensical world
of a little girl’s dream, there were many sharp insights embedded in
these pages. One of them is that while most people may not be so
conscious of the semantic twists they add to their own use of
language–“spin doctors,” professional advertisers, directors of
propaganda, and academic professors of semantics or rhetoric excepted,
perhaps–, in fact people do misuse words and yet believe that they and
others understand perfectly what is meant.
An astute
satirical saying I encountered in the 1960s illustrates this: “I know
you believe you understand what you think I said, but I am not sure
that what you heard is what I meant.” When I hear people talk
about “God,” “freedom,” “aggression,” “truth,” “moral values,” and many
other abstractions, I have learned enough to realize that I have very
little idea what they in fact mean by these words. I might find myself
surprised and dismayed that, for instance, one person’s idea of freedom
may be blind to certain aspects of what others might consider freedom.
Returning to the
concept of oppression, then. One benefit of this term is that it
invites us to sharply analyze any system that might be called
oppressive. Is it? If so, in what ways? Generally, I find the common
element to be that certain thoughts or ideas are neglected, actively
avoided, passively ignored, or perhaps simply haven’t ever occurred to
many of the people involved. There were times in history when certain
situations were just the way life is, as natural and inevitable as the
seasons: Of course women were pretty much just property, and the idea
of voting itself was unheard of. When that idea glimmered in the minds
of men, the idea that women might also vote seemed literally
nonsensical, out of the question. Democracy was also pretty far out as
an idea, and religious heresy was an occasion for deeply felt righteous
indignation, as if someone were seriously threatening the civil order.
Slavery was an accepted fact of life, as was the inferiority of not
just the “savage” peoples of the world, but to a lesser yet not
insignificant degree, anyone outside the circle of one’s own
identification, religion, nation, ethnic group, etc.
As we move into
a more mobile world, inter-cultural mixing is inevitable, and
artificial barriers to optimal adaptation need to be identified and
clarified. Some of the role shifts are still in process, as causes
dealing with women’s rights, anti-slavery, anti-prostitution (and the
ambiguity of forced prostitution), the status of homosexuals, abortion,
and the like are still very much in flux. There are many who sincerely
believe that we must not change the status quo.
The language of
oppression has arisen most often as part of the political and social
bias that views the plight of the poor as a result of an intrinsically
unfairly-biased socio-economic and class / status system. It has some
roots in Marxism, a sense that inequalities–especially gross
inequalities–in income are not intrinsically fair. We’re talking about
a world where it’s not just a matter of rewarding hard work and talent
by granting some people 20% or 200% or even 2000 times more money than
those “less deserving,” but where gradients go beyond those limits!
Suggestions that the divide between the haves and have-nots may have
become too extreme tend to be discounted as mere class warfare, and
serious thoughts about the overlap of ethics and economics are avoided.
Whatever the outcome of the occasional (and all too infrequent) debates
about the issue may be, my point is that we should not be afraid to at
least engage our thinking. The concept of oppression serves to
establish a category for questioning trends, established norms, and
other collective arrangements.
Here are some
other themes that may or may not be considered forms of oppression:
– women’s
fashions that render them unusually cold, immodest, exposed,
uncomfortable (i.e., high-heeled shoes, constricting undergarments),
and so forth
– men’s
fashions that similarly render them uncomfortable
– fashions
that require an unusual expenditure of money and time to maintain,
regarding clothes, cosmetics, hair styles, etc.
–
corporal punishment of children
– smoking
and especially having second-hand smoke invade one’s personal space
– a
casual attitude to drinking and driving, only recently, with a
concerted effort by Mothers Against Drunk Drivers, beginning to change.
In many regions, DWI (driving while intoxicated), if imposed on a “good
ol’ boy,” results in just a figurative “slap on the wrist” rather than
a socially sanctioned serious consequence
–
sexual harassment of women, bullying of the weak or of homosexuals,
racial slurs, overt prejudice
–
artificial barriers and unrealistic negative expectations and/or
limitations on the differently abled
–
denial of the differently abled, expecting and demanding their
performing along with the mainstream
–
standards of “cool” that lead to addictions–especially regarding
tobacco, now becoming a worldwide health threat– or sexual
activity–ditto with AIDS– and so forth.
–
the ease and intensity of “junk food” and the power of “the market”
to generate short term profits in the midst of an epidemic of obesity
and diabetes, not to mention other more subtle health effects
–
the popularity of loud music and threats to hearing, noise pollution,
light pollution, and other fashions
–
the mind-numbing or overly-specialized mind-activating power of not
only drugs, but television, video games, and other highly-addictive
stimuli
Should these be
considered forms of oppression? Even that question is debatable. (My
bias is “yes,” based on my definition of oppression as a sort of
collective avoidance of evaluative thinking.)
My point in
noting these, and recognizing that many others also might be brought to
mind, is that there is not always an obvious exploiting class. There do
tend to be those who benefit more and those who suffer more within
oppressive systems, but often those who benefit, the privileged, are by
no means the main forces in maintaining these systems!
Taboo
I consider
oppression to be a more system-wide, more secularized form of the
sociological and anthropological concept of “taboo,” a term used around
the Eighteenth Century by (I think) Captain Cook, in taking some terms
from some islanders around Tahiti to describe certain categories of
physical items or social behaviors that were ritually dangerous. In the
Jewish religion, the Bible laid out a variety of foods and practices
that were “unclean,” and questions of ritual purity also became
incorporated into Christian and Islamic culture.
For a time,
charging interest–usury–was considered religiously unacceptable in
Christian cultures, and it was left to the Jews to be the “unclean”
money-lenders. Around the time of the Renaissance, though, these
standards shifted–it became clear that financing various capitalist
adventures was too important to be stigmatized: Usury became part of
Western capitalism, and now is being practiced by major corporations at
rates that were a few generations ago only associated with crime
racketeers! Where is the outrage?
So what is
oppression, what is taboo? Perhaps it is time to actively engage in
addressing these questions, recognizing that the tendency to take
things off the table derives from subconscious forces of laziness,
greed, and other “deadly sins.” The effort to make the unconscious more
conscious so we can think more clearly not only carries forward one of
the underlying themes of psychoanalysis, but also brings forward the
dictum of Socrates, the ancient Greek philosopher: “Know
thyself.” This refers not only to introspection, as if who we are
lies within the vault of our separate craniums, but also to a
collective introspection, a recognition that who we are also includes a
holistic assessment of all our social, cultural, economic, political,
legal, educational, and even linguistic arrangements!
Your comments on
the above will be appreciated. Perhaps I can deepen and extend this
paper. Email to me: adam@blatner.com