Targeting the
Targeted
10/23/2014
About a month ago, Lauren Goodlad contacted me to see if I
might be willing to participate tonight as a respondent. She felt that I could,
as a member of American Indian Studies, bring a valuable and compelling perspective
to the conversation, that my participation might help contextualize the
administration’s exhortations towards civility at that site where they encounter,
embrace, and cajole savagery. A month ago, I said yes; a month ago I had
volumes I still wanted to say into the world and to anyone who would listen about
what was happening on this campus, in this community, and especially to my home
unit of American Indian Studies in the aftermath of Chancellor Wise’s decision
to undo the work I had done on behalf of my colleagues in AIS to hire Steven
Salaita last year. Over the course of that month, many of us attended faculty
senate meetings, raised our voices alongside students and staff, and offered
teach-ins on the meaning of academic freedom in the face of the devaluation of
certain lives lived and lost at the harsh borders of territory, race, class,
gender, religion, and sexuality. Thirty days and we have heard from a cacophony
of voices—some insightful and others not so much, some passionate and fiery,
and others fearfully appealing for ways to bring some sense of normalcy back to
what was supposed to be just another dreary workaday end to just another Indian
summer. Each of those voices raised, regardless of their pitch and tenor,
sought to weigh in on the upper administration and Board of Trustees’ decision
to revoke Salaita’s tenure and summarily dismiss him from this campus before he
even set foot on it. A month ago, it still felt like saying something might actually
matter in this situation, that being heard, even if from the tiniest of
tin-can-strung-telephone-communiqués, might cast a line of clarity through the
noise and clamor and point a way out of the quagmire. A month ago, it seemed
like we still had a chance to shore up the damage, to salvage the reputation of
our campus, and to turn that cacophony into a polyphonic chorus demanding
justice for a number of disenfranchised constituencies across this campus if
not across this state, this nation, and this world.
Certainly the logics of speaking up
and acting out have deep genealogies within the communities of those of us who,
to borrow from Paula Gunn Allen, are like Indians and endure. Breaking silence,
giving voice, signifying, making oneself heard, and raging against have been
vital means to confront hatred, intolerance, abuse, condemnation, and despair
delivered by the hands of power in the name of protection, safety, and care. “What
are the words you do not have yet?,” Audre Lorde asks us to vocalize. “What do
you need to say? What are the tyrannies you swallow day by day and attempt to
make your own, until you will sicken and die of them, still in silence?” Your silence,
she warns, will not protect you. If you don’t have anything nice to say, my
mother told me, don’t say anything at all.
At last year’s DRIVE workshop (Diversity
Realized at Illinois through Visioning Excellence), the Chancellor gathered
faculty from across campus and asked us to reflect on why it has been so
difficult to recruit and successfully retain faculty and staff from underrepresented
minorities. American Indians are always the nadir in the metrics, and we
collectively spent the morning contemplating what might be the possible reasons
faculty from these groups might choose another campus if they have a choice to
make at all. In the hallway during one of the breaks, and in conversation with
an ally from one of the many diversity initiatives this campus sponsors, I was
told that the University’s mascot history was a non-starter in such discussions
and that the issues of diversity on this campus are older than Chief Illiniwek.
As a Chickasaw, I wondered how that could be possible. This university, after
all, is a land-grant institution made possible through the violently coerced
dispossession of the Miami, Peoria, Kaskaskia, Wea, Ho-Chunk, Potawatomie,
Chickasaw and Sac and Fox peoples who knew, cared for, and learned on these
lands and in their own institutions long before settlers arrived.
Of course these issues go beyond a
dancing headdress, but the fact that the Chief is now verboten, a conversation
killer, an incivil reminder of a community abuse that no one wants to admit
happened at all now that it has, for the most part anyway and aside from some
halftime music and t-shirts, stopped, illustrates the deep divide between
indigenous scholars and students on this campus and our colleagues. Steven
Salaita’s hire was part of a capacious vision for our unit as we strove to
emphasize the global implications of what that land grant obligation meant to us.
His work on the circulation of indigeneity as a concept across Israel,
Palestine, and the United States offered, we felt, a necessary intervention to
the current prominence of settler colonial studies within the discipline of
indigenous studies. In refusing false equivalencies, Salaita’s work challenged
indigeneity’s applicability to Israel and Palestine at the same time that he
asked us to consider the epistemic investments the colonizer and colonized both
have in making claims to being indigenous to a contested space and to the
histories of oppression that might entitle each to that space as reparation. Instead
of easy answers, Salaita asked us to reflect on the scale and scope of the work
we do in the spaces of the dispossessed.
Each of us are asked to make our
own the tyrannies of sexual harassment, homophobia, racism, anti-Semitism, and
the daily aggressions large and small as a matter of course in the name of
making this campus inclusive and in pursuit of those spaces and forums where we
might, momentarily, be heard. And meanwhile, power speaks back to us through
the same strategies of refusing to be silent. In the last thirty days, twitter
has seen a rise in misogyny, racism, and hatred in the name of defending a
small but threatened enclave of young, privileged and primarily white, men who
feel that their culture and identity are under attack by feminists critiquing
representations of women in videogames. Using death threats, doxxings, and a
daily barrage of noise under the hashtags #gamergate and #notyourshield, these gamers
have taken to twitter to raise their voices against what they feel is a tyranny
they have been asked to swallow. The logics of #gamergate are the logics of our
campus. In the name of ethics and civility, those with power accuse those
drawing attention to structural violences and inequities of being bullies, of
ruining something vital, of attacking something precious only power can fully
appreciate and truly protect. In the contest of voices, the win has always been
to make it seem as if both sides are equally matched in their opposition. There
are, after all, two sides to every story.
In thirty days, I have gone from
shaking with wanting to speak to now not knowing what would be useful to say—to
validate, on the one hand, the reality that some on this campus fear Salaita’s
voice and a raising tide of anti-Semitism around the world, and to remember on
the other hand that his voice was speaking into a barrage of missiles aimed at
a brutalized and entrapped people. In the fifty days between June 8 and August
26 this summer, the state of Israel was able to silence the voices of over 2200
Palestinians. If we are facing a neoliberal revolution in the form of a new red
scare that uses the ethics of speaking as a means to silence, then we are also
in a fraught clash over meaning, signification, and interpretation. The answer
may not be found in the speaking, but in the spaces of not speaking, of
inhalation, of pause. The last two nights have seen the annual peak activity
for the Orionid meteor showers and for Southeastern American Indians—of which
the Chickasaw are a part—the next thirty days are what’s left of this cycle’s
time for the souls of the dead to prepare for their journey through the door to
the afterlife. While everyone knows that this land once belonged to Indians who
were, alas, somehow and regrettably removed a long, long time ago, I would
invite you each to step out into the night air tonight and really think about
what the silence of those who cannot speak means to us now. What words might we
have yet to find through which to confront the ongoing implications of that
loss on this land and in this community?
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete