June 03, 2007
Depravity Disguised
Purnima Mankekar in Ms. Magazine:
As women gain more seats in public office, why is the world not a safer place for women (or, for that matter, for children and men), Zillah Eisenstein asks in Sexual Decoys. She suggests this is because some of these women, as well as some people of color, are sexual and racial decoys: They mask the damage caused by sexism, racism and avaricious forms of capitalism while also contributing to it. Pointing to the (in)famous examples of Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell, she describes how the appointment of women and people of color to positions of power neither reflects a just social order nor results in one. Instead, as decoys, these individuals participate in the reinforcement or aggravation of the unequal and violent treatment of women and people of color.
Gender decoys, for instance, were central to the scandalous abuse of prisoners in Abu Ghraib. The different roles performed by women -- ranging from Lynndie England, an inmate-processing clerk, to Janis Karpinski, the brigadier general in charge of the prison -- raise complicated questions about culpability and accountability. Karpinski was one of the few senior officers punished for the abuses. And, as Eisenstein points out, England and some of the other low-ranking women who perpetrated the abuses were pawns who supported "disgusting practices that they should have refused to perform." As decoys, these women covered up the "misogyny of building empire, while also actually building it."
More here.
Posted by Azra Raza at 09:57 AM | Permalink






Comments
Hmm...I'm not totally convinced. Rice and Powell, the Abu Ghraib women perpetrators--they all seem like easy targets that don't represent the norm. But then, they do seem like decoys within the Republican party (as opposed to all of American culture) and the Abu Ghraib scandal, respectively.
Posted by: Akbi | Jun 3, 2007 10:27:19 AM
What a sexist statement which assumes that being female makes one socially just or generous or peaceful: "As women gain more seats in public office, why is the world not a safer place for women (or for that matter, for children and men.) Condolezza Rice is not a sexual decoy nor were the women at Abu Ghraib "General Karpinksi or in any other place of power through out history. General Powell was not chosen for his color he was the most powerful General on the face of the earth. And wealthy. They are just people with power--They belong to a class of the powerful. And it is class that trumps race and gender any time, any way, any place. By making this a gender or race issue--that these were decoys----is to first absolve these people of the crimes that they are party to wholeheartedly. Once these people are in the docket they immediately cling to race or gender to scream and plead mercy and discrimination. These people participated with an avaricious and solipsistic behavior which is deep in their characters--not in their skin nor their gender. They are not decoys they are part and parcel of the ruling class. To turn this into a gender or race issue is to avoid the main issue of access and power that is concentrated in the hands of a few.
Posted by: maniza | Jun 3, 2007 12:42:08 PM
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