I stumbled across this text—notes for a talk at a graduate summer school organized by Yoke-Sum Wong at Lancaster University in June 2010—while trawling through old files on my computer looking for something else. As was common during my talks at that time and since, I worked from a Powerpoint slide presentation containing images and quotations (NOT bullet points) around which I ad libbed (and broke often for discussion), working with only skeletal notes, of which these are typical. The Powerpoint has long since disappeared, leaving me with this torso. I thought it nevertheless worth reproducing, as the ghost of a provocative article that never got written. I have provided as many hyperlinks to the images that likely would have been on the slides as I can manage—I have no permissions to reproduce the images themselves—as well as restoring some of the quotes I would have used on the slides.


Slide 1   Title

This talk is not an exposition of Foucault so much as a riff on themes emerging from his History of Sexuality, Part 1, centred also around the other two texts I asked you to read: the opening section of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Confessions, and the first two pages of Georges Bataille’s Story of the Eye.  

The image on the slide is from Toyen (Marie Čermínová), illustration for Sade, Justine (Prague 1933, 69 Editions, limited edition “for subscribers only”).

Slide 2   Warning

This is a warning—obligatory these days in academic contexts.  The show contains images many would deem offensive or obscene. You are not obliged to stay/watch.  The wording is that which precedes showing of True Blood on UK TV.  Some might think it an advertisement: we are promised fun, fun, fun “From the outset …”  Here goes … 


PART 1 PURITY AND DANGER

Slide 3   Sally Mann Immediate Familyintro

First section of the talk is built around the controversial images in Sally Mann’s Immediate Family (1992).  I’ve called it “purity and danger” (Mary Douglas) because it highlights the uneasiness of borderlines, in this case of sexuality and innocence.  Oxymoron of the sexualized child.

Mann is one of America’s most respected and renowned contemporary photographers, but these images caused great controversy at time of publication and even more since.  Why?  She sees them as natural, normal, family photos: a mother’s view of her kids as they grow <quote on slide, note sarcasm>

Slide 4   Immediate Family, examples

(Open for discussion).  Note:  1. Nudity (photos).  2.  Signifiers of adult sexiness (pearl necklace<candy> cigarettelaced-up boots/roller skates: think Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman).  3.  Body poses (come hither/look at me).  Or is it just “dressing up”: childhood mimicry of adult behaviour?  Close to the bone …

Slide 5   “Venus after School

(Open for discussion)  Note:  1. Pose of body on couch, gaze, positioning of hand on crotch.  2.  Background figure.   3.  Title (again the titillating oxymoron).

Does this remind you of anything?

Slide 6   Manet “Olympia

Why was Olympia so inflammatory?  Because Manet took a classical nude pose (after Titian) and used a famous contemporary courtesan (i.e. a prostitute) as his model.  Note directness of her gaze.  Also the black ribbon around the neck—not functional clothing, emphasizes nudity.

Key issue here resonances between Mann’s Venus and Manet’s Olympia, transferring the attributes of the hooker onto the pre-pubescent girl, sexualizing the adolescent body by association  (Derrida: the trace.  Issue here is not representation but signification—what do the visual elements of the image conjure up, signify, connote).

Slide 7  Kate Moss “Obsession”

A notorious—but not censored or withdrawn—Calvin Klein ad featuring an 18-year-old naked Kate Moss, shot by her then boyfriend Mario Sorrenti.  Plays on same oxymoronic borderlines.  Note the androgeny of the body (breasts hidden)—she could almost be a boy—the same direct gaze.  But also, in this case, the association of word and image: (1) the product being advertised, a perfume, is called Obsession (2) it is a perfume for men.  Is the implication that this is what men clandestinely obsess about?

We can debate the morality of such ads later, but the main point I want to establish now is that sexuality is irreducibly caught up in (and arguably constituted by) the field of language, verbal and visual—the play of signification—and language, conversely, is shot through with sexuality.  Which is why it is difficult to talk, appropriately, about today’s topic.  What language do we use that is not either complicit in the phenomenon we are studying (therefore obscene + pornographic) or does violence to the subject-matter by abstracting from precisely what makes the erotic what it is?


PART 2 UPENDING THE REPRESSION HYPOTHESIS

Slide 8   Diverted traffic

Photo shot (by me) in London 2002.  That pearl necklace again. I liked the juxtaposition of the nude, the phallic traffic light, and the sign “Diverted Traffic.”  But the notion of diverted traffic is central to the classical “repression hypothesis” that Foucault is attacking.  Central to his argument is a reversal: far from society’s taboos and prohibitions repressing/diverting primeval sexual drives that are always already there, it is they that constitute and differentiate human sexualities in the first place. 

Slide 9   Dangers of Pollution

Surrealists were major critics of what they saw as the “bourgeois” organization of sexuality, drawing on Freud as potential liberating force.  Max Ernst’s 1931 article “Danger de pollution” is attacking the detailed, almost bureaucratic, moral classification of the relative sinfulness of various sexual activities, orifices, etc. in medieval Catholic texts. 

“Thanks to the prescience of the Church doctors, the female body is now divided by horribly precise borders into decent and indecent areas.  Irresistible passion may sometimes cause these borders to disappear, but they continually return with nauseating sharpness―until the glorious day when a happy massacre will rid the earth of clerical pests forever.”

A Foucauldian response would be to say that it is precisely the zoning of the body and division of sexual activities into decent and indecent that eroticizes them in the first place, creating the pleasures and gradations of perversion.

Slides 10  + 11   Hooker postcards 

Which is well exemplified by the sex trade.  Hooker postcards in London telephone boxes (but also small ads, internet sites, etc.).  <Gloss photos>: fine-grained national/racial divisions (busty black lady, new Italian goddess, Asian spanking delights, French kissing); lexicon of activities—O and A levels, water sports, bubble bath, tie n’tease, 2-way spanking; details of “toys”­—strap and slipper, uniforms, sexy lingerie; and a galaxy of masquerades­—school girl, naughty nurse, French maid.

The lexicon of perverted pleasures is as detailed as in the notorious DSM—which in many ways it parodies.  I am reminded of Foucault’s Chinese encyclopedia in The Order of Things

To repeat my earlier point about language, this cornucopia of illicit delights depends in its very constitution upon an elaborate, if not always readily intelligible, system of classification.


PART 3 THE PLEASURES OF DISCIPLINE

Slide 12   The duplicity of the subject

Title is an allusion to the doubled nature­—the duplicity—of the Foucauldian subject (subject/agent, but also subjected).  Disciplines do not only repress, they constitute agents and agency: as PhD students should know!  They have their pleasures.  Extreme, almost parodic exemplification of this thesis in the field of human sexuality is masochism.

Slide 13    Man is born free …

Celebrated example of such a masochistic sexuality is Jean-Jacques Rousseau, author of Social ContractEmile, or Education, and Discourse on the Origins of Inequality.  Rousseau is the very embodiment of the Enlightenment.  Keystones of his philosophy include (a) innate goodness of Man and (b) his infinite perfectibility through the application of Reason to social organization.  Stands at the head of progressive political philosophies, influencing Marx among others.  A key icon of modernity (opposite of Catholic doctrines of the Fall and original sin).  But he had a dark and dirty secret, which saw the light of day at the beginning of his Confessions.  He harbored a lifelong longing to be put over a woman’s knee and spanked.

Slide 14   Dominatrix

Rousseau attributed his “bizarre taste” to a spanking he received at the hands of his adoptive mother, Mlle Rambercier, at the age of eight.

“Just as Mlle Lambercier had the affections of a mother for us,” he relates, “she also had the authority of one, and sometimes carried it to the point of inflicting children’s punishments on us, when we deserved it.” 

For a rather long time she confined herself to the threat, and this threat of a punishment that was completely new to me seemed very frightening; but after its execution, I found the experience of it less terrible than the expectation had been, and what is most bizarre in this is that this punishment increased my affection even more for the one who had inflicted it on me.

“It even required all the truth of that affection,” he goes on, “to keep me from seeking the repetition of the same treatment by deserving it: for I had found in the suffering, even in the shame, an admixture of sensuality which had left me with more desire than fear to experience it a second time from the same hand.”  

Elaborate on passage: what is so erotic?  Not just the physical sensation of pain.  The admixture of suffering, shame, and sensuality.

Comment on the dominatrix image on slide.  She doesn’t have to be dressed like that to administer a spanking.  Proximity of cane and buttocks­—intimation of what the sub is about to receive, transposed onto the female body.

Slide 15   Hello Kitty

Such masochism is not an exclusively male preserve. An episode recounted in Kenneth Tynan’s diaries:

The most unexpected thing I ever heard said: after a dinner party in the mid-fifties. The host desultorily asked the guests to name the three things they loved the most in the world. The answers ranged from the predictably serious (‘Schubert’s Quartets’) to the predictably skittish (‘onyx cufflinks’) until Kitty Freud shook her dark hair and said with trembling candour:

‘Travel, good food, and being spanked on my bottom with a hairbrush.’

Could/would a man have said this—or got away with it?  The (socially-constructed) feminine is—or was in Bohemian London in the 1950s—arguably a space in which masochism can be “play” in a way in which it is not for men, because it fundamentally subverts what defines masculinity (being on top).  For good or ill …

Slide 16   Secretary

Not just the 1950s. Would the film have been such a success—or the poster be so sexy—if the roles had been reversed? 

Possibly the erotic attraction of being spanked, especially for a man, lies precisely in the reversal itself.  Is submission (to irrational desire) the ultimate transgression of an order based upon the fantasy of (male, rational) domination?


PART 4 SEX AND THE SIGNIFIER

Slide 17   Language games

I want to return, at this point, to the question of the interface between language and the body, addressed at the beginning in connection with Sally Mann.  Dramatized by Hans Bellmer in his 1930s dolls (elaborate). 

“I tried to rearrange the sexual elements of a girl’s body like a sort of plastic anagram,” Bellmer told an interviewer in 1972. “I remember describing it thus: the body is like a sentence that invites us to rearrange it, so that its real nature becomes clear through a series of anagrams.” 

Frequently banned as obscene, Bellmer’s dolls are anathema to many feminists because of how they are seen to represent the female body.  But playing on the signification of dolls is not confined to surrealist sickos …

Slide 18   Pussycat dolls

The transvestite Thai Band Venus FlyTrap (Venus again: but in this case also a carnivorous plant) play (transgressively) on the visual signifiers of feminine sexiness illustrated by the Pussycat Dolls.  But the Pussycat Dolls themselves are no less inscribed in the field of language, playing on not only the whole repertoire of dollishness (Hello Dolly, Guys and Dolls, dollybirds, etc. etc.) which Bellmer perverts but also the connotations of pussy …  Which brings me to Georges Bataille.

Slide 19   The pleasures of the text

At the beginning of Bataille’s The Story of the Eye 15-year-old Simone asks: 

“milk is for the pussy, isn’t it? Do you dare me to sit in the saucer?” Then I lay down at her feet without her stirring and for the first time, I saw her ‘pink and dark flesh,’ cooling in the white milk.”

Why is Bataille’s text sexy?  Indeed powerfully erotic?  There is nothing intrinsically sexual, after all, about a saucer of milk for the cat.

English translation works because of pun on pussy.  The French chat has same double meaning (and the chapter title is “L’oeil du chat”—which is also where the book ends/climaxes).  The French works through a different pun (“Les assiettes, c’est fait pour s’asseoir, n’est-ce pas, me dit Simone.  Paries-tu?  Je m’assois dans l’assiette”).  Roland Barthes’ analysis: the eroticism lies in the play of signifiers.  

Bellmer’s photographic illustration of this scene, I suggest, would have been less powerful, less erotic, here, because it is too literal: a crude representation rather than a playful and productive signification.

Slide 20   Exchanging glances with a cat

So I will leave you with an image which—in the context of this talk, and juxtaposed with another image from Picasso—might lead us to a different reading of Levi-Strauss’s famous closing words to Tristes Tropiques

Farewell to savages, then, farewell to journeying! And instead, during the brief intervals in which humanity can bear to interrupt its hive-like labours, let us grasp the essence of what our species has been and still is, beyond thought and beneath society: an essence that may be vouchsafed to us in a mineral more beautiful than any work of Man; in the scent, more subtly evolved than our books, that lingers in the heart of a lily; or in the wink of an eye, heavy with patience, serenity, and mutual forgiveness, that sometimes, through an involuntary understanding, one can exchange with a cat.


I am afraid I have no memory whatsoever of what image I might have chosen to end the presentation with, though Gustave Courbet’s L’Origine du monde is a distinct possibility. In which case the Picasso would likely have been his Two Figures and a Cat (1903).

In 2024 I published a series of articles on the Israel–Hamas conflict for Canadian Dimension (CD), many of which were translated into Czech and republished by Britské listy (BL). Most have also been reposted to this website. They are as follows:

A clarifying moment.  Canada and the ICJ ruling on genocide in Gaza.  CD January 30.  French translation, Presse-toi à gauche, February 6.

Eyeless in Gaza.  Paratexts, Contexts, and the Weaponization of October 7.  CDFebruary 9.

Is the tide turning on Israel?  CD, February 21.

An extreme act of protest.  Aaron Bushnell, Jan Palach, and resisting the normalization of the unthinkable.  CD March 3/BL March 5.

A moral crossroads for the West. Is Benjamin Netanyahu about to cross his Rubicon?  CD March 14.

The threshold of intent.  Closing in on a ‘final solution’ in Gaza.  CD March 26.

Powerful stories.  Facts, fictions, and fabrications regarding Israel’s ‘Black Sabbath.’ CD April 2/BL April 3.

All the perfumes of Arabia.  Israel’s human targeting software and the banality of evil.  CD April 18.

First we take Manhattan.  The student protests and the Gaza genocide.  CD May 1/BL May 2.

The measure of our evil.  Observations on the deadliest attack on the Palestinian people since the Nakba.  CD August 5/BL August 7.

States of exception.  Is it ‘antisemitic’ to accuse Israel of genocide in Gaza?  CD August 28/BL August 30.

Our dead don’t seem to count the same way.  ‘Unwavering support’ versus ‘ironclad commitment’—a tale of two strategies.  CD October 1/BL October 3.

Is the West finally seeing sense on Gaza? The Blinken-Austin letter could be a game-changer, or just another electoral gimmick.  CD October 15/BL October 16.

Not even the main event.  As America votes, the genocide in Gaza goes on—and on and on.  CD November 4/BL November 5.

I’m speaking! (and you’re not). Nowhere was the suppression of Palestinian voices and erasure of the Gaza genocide more evident than in Harris’s campaign.  CD November 21/BL November 22.

One law for the West and another for the rest? A presidential pardon and the killing fields of Gaza.  CD December 10/BL December 30.

Don’t you know me, I’m your native son?

First published on Derek’s Substack on November 06, 2024, but it seems apt to archive this as we enter into season 2 of the Trump saga. Please do not forget what led up to it.


(with apologies to Steve Goodman)

There will be plentiful post mortems. I’ll keep this one short.

It’s awful. It’s also chickens coming home to roost. There are many reasons for Trump’s win, but it also has to be said, and forcefully, that the Democrats did much to bring this on themselves. Not just in the election campaign, but over the years.

I don’t think Gaza was in itself the decisive issue, except maybe in Michigan, where both Trump and Stein beat Harris in Dearborn, which Biden took with 88 percent of the vote in 2020, and the Dems managed to lose most every college town. 

But Harris’s “I’m speaking!,” the exclusion of Palestinian speakers from the DNC stage, and Bill Clinton’s condescending intervention were all symptomatic of a wider mindset that affects the Democrats’ approach to (or ignoring of) other issues too—the arrogant, cynical, contemptuous mindset of an entrenched, entitled political elite that has long lost touch with the American people, including the Democrats’ own party base.

Gaza was also important in another respect. If you campaign on “ironclad support” for Israel’s genocide and ethnic cleansing in Palestine, you are saying there are no moral limits on the means you use so long as the ends are worthy. Don’t be surprised if people then conclude it’s OK to vote for mass deportations, internment camps, jailing of political opponents, and using the military to quash dissent at home in support of THEIR (decent, Christian, patriotic) agenda. Sow the wind, reap the whirlwind.

In its contempt for the rule of law in international affairs, the Biden/Harris administration has helped prepare the ground for the coming Trump tyranny at home. Trump’s victory could be seen as Gaza’s revenge for the Democrats’ indifference to—not to say enabling of—Palestinian suffering. Now liberal America will suffer too.

So, unfortunately, will many others.

A presidential pardon and the killing fields of Gaza

First published in Canadian Dimension, December 10, 2024 / 20 min read

The scales of justice. Photo by James Cridland/Wikimedia Commons.

On December 1 Joe Biden, acting under the authority conferred upon presidents under the US Constitution, granted to his son Hunter Biden a “Full and Unconditional Pardon”:

For those offenses against the United States which he has committed or may have committed or taken part in during the period from January 1, 2014 through December 1, 2024, including but not limited to all offenses charged or prosecuted (including any that have resulted in convictions) …


Hunter Biden had already been charged and convicted of three federal gun and nine federal tax charges, for which he was due to be sentenced on December 12 and 16 respectively. He could have served up to 25 years in federal prison on the gun charges and 17 years on the tax charges, though the general expectation was of leniency.

Other US presidents, including George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Donald Trump, have also (ab)used this power to pardon associates, including friends and relatives. But the only precedentfor a pardon this open-ended (it covers all offenses that Hunter may have committed or taken part in over 11 years), is the pardon Gerald Ford granted to Richard Nixon following the latter’s resignation after the Watergate scandal.

Even if evidence surfaced proving that Hunter committed murder during this timeframe, he could not be prosecuted federally for it, because Dad has pardoned him in advance.

A loving father?

Biden appended a personal statement to the official announcement of Hunter’s pardon, explaining why, despite having promised on several occasions not to do so (“I abide by the jury decision. I will do that and I will not pardon him,” he said in June), he had taken so extraordinary a step.

He maintained that Hunter was treated differently than people who commit the same crimes typically are, and the reason for this was political vindictiveness by the GOP.

His statement concludes:

I believe in the justice system, but as I have wrestled with this, I also believe raw politics has infected this process and it led to a miscarriage of justice—and once I made this decision this weekend, there was no sense in delaying it further. I hope Americans will understand why a father and a President would come to this decision.


Biden’s action has sharply divided Americans. Most people understand why a father might wish to pardon his son in these circumstances. Fewer accept that paternal love justifies their president taking the law into his own hands to overrule the courts.

Republicans have predictably accused Biden of nepotism and hypocrisy, with MAGA attack dog Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton gleefully proclaiming: “Democrats can spare us the lectures about the rule of law when, say, President Trump nominates Pam Bondi and Kash Patel to clean up this corruption.”

That Senator Cotton can say this with a straight face, when a convicted (though never sentenced) felon who appointed his daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner to (very lucrative) positions in his first administration is about to re-enter the White House—a felon who avoided sentencingand escaped other trials for election interference and stealing confidential documents only because his hand-picked Supreme Court justices manufactured a new definition of presidential immunity—boggles the mind.

But it is also beside the point. The issue here is not Trump (of whom nothing better is to be expected) but Biden—who made a “sacred pledge” that “the defense, protection and preservation of American democracy would remain, as it has been, the central cause of my presidency.” A cornerstone of any democracy is the rule of law.

Democratic dilemmas

Hunter Biden’s pardon has split the Democrats, who are already reeling from Kamala Harris’s electoral defeat.

Some—many of them progressives—have cheered Biden’s decision on the realpolitik grounds that Trump has made it clear he will not play by the rulebook and will weaponize the Department of Justice to exact revenge on his political opponents, including Hunter Biden. Why should Joe abandon his son to the mercies of a judicial system the incoming administration has made clear it intends to pervert?

Biden is now reportedly facing calls to extend a similar preemptive pardon to others on the Trump hit list, including Adam Schiff, Liz Cheney, Anthony Fauci, special prosecutor Jack Smith, and former Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley.

Others—who are mostly, though not all, on the more “moderate” wing of the party—worry about the precedent Biden has set and erosion of respect for the law.

“I’m disappointed,” admitted Colorado representative Jason Crow. “He promised he would not do this. I think it will make it harder for us going forward when we talk about upholding democracy.” Biden’s “decision put personal interest ahead of duty and further erodes Americans’ faith that the justice system is fair and equal for all,” agreed Colorado senator Michael Bennet. Senator Gary Peters of Michigan said that “A president’s family and allies shouldn’t get special treatment … This was an improper use of power, it erodes trust in our government, and it emboldens others to bend justice to suit their interests.”

In a biting editorial, the New York Times editorial board agreed:

This was a significant misstep that could leave lasting damage. It will not only tarnish Mr. Biden’s own record as a defender of democratic norms, it will also be greedily embraced as justification for Donald Trump’s further abuses of pardon power and broader attacks on the integrity of the justice system.


Trump is already hinting at using Biden’s pardon of Hunter to justify pardoning at least some of those jailed for the January 6 insurrection (as he likely intended to do anyway).

Other critics have pointed out that there are many other miscarriages of justice in the American system, including inmates sitting on federal death row convicted on dubious evidence and thousands of mostly Black prisoners jailed for minor drug offences or non-violent crimes, who are at least as deserving of a presidential pardon as Hunter Biden. Trump has already promised a spree of executions should he regain the presidency.

What better way of signaling that there is one law for the rich and powerful and another for everyone else?

A basket of deplorables

On December 3, two days after Biden pardoned Hunter, the US—presumably on the president’s instructions, and certainly with his knowledge—voted against a UN General Assembly resolution titled “Peaceful settlement of the question of Palestine,” which was designed to reinforce the organization’s commitment to a two-state solution. Despite American opposition, the resolution was adopted with the overwhelming support of the international community—157 votes in favor, eight against, and seven abstentions.

The resolution was unambiguous. It also concerned the rule of law, in this case laws governing relations between states and the conduct of war:

By terms of that text, the 193‑member organ stressed the need to urgently commit to a Middle East peace process. Israel, the occupying Power, must comply with international law, including ceasing all settlement activities and evacuating settlers from the Occupied Palestinian Territory.


Apart from the US and Israel, the only states opposing the motion were far-right populist Javier Milei’s Argentina; Viktor Orban’s “illiberal democracy,” Hungary; and the US client states of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, and Papua New Guinea (which signed a defense pact with the US in May 2023). A basket of deplorables, one might say. The seven abstainers were Cameroon, the Czech Republic, Ecuador, Georgia, Paraguay, Ukraine—whose arms supply for its war with Russia relies on continuing American goodwill—and Uruguay.

All members of the G7 except the US supported the motion, as did all EU and/or NATO members except the US, Hungary, and the Czech Republic. Australia and New Zealand were on board. These countries—the so-called “Western democracies,” whatever their geographical location—have been among Israel’s strongest backers historically and throughout the fourteen months of its current assault on Gaza.

In supporting the motion, Canada was breaching its “years-long policy” of siding with Israel in all UN votes.

Whatever their past positions (or present evasions, including on enforcing ICC arrest warrants for Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant for war crimes should either set foot on their territory), the UK, France, Germany, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand’s votes calling for Israel to comply with international law put them on a collision course with the US.

If Donald Trump’s recent pronouncements and proposed appointments (Marco Rubio as secretary of state; Mike Waltz as national security advisor; Elise Stefanik as ambassador to the UN; Mike Huckabee as ambassador to Israel) are anything to go on, this rift will likely grow even wider under the incoming US administration.

For some unfathomable reason—though America’s habitual arrogance, insularity, and bottomless faith in its own exceptionality might have something to do with it—the Biden administration’s complicity in enabling Israel’s war crimes, crimes against humanity, and (“plausible”) genocide in Gaza and the other occupied Palestinian territories does not arouse the same outrage among US politicians and pundits as Hunter Biden’s pardon.

Indeed, these crimes are seldom seriously debated at all outside university campuses and fringe media, and any attempt to raise them is likely to be met with accusations of antisemitism and support for terrorism by Republican and Democratic politicians alike.

Yet the same legal, moral, and political questions of respect for democratic institutions and the rule of law arise in both instances.

The ICJ provisional measures

A number of judgments over the last year from the world’s two highest courts, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) set up by the UN in 1946, and the International Criminal Court (ICC) established by the Rome Statute in 2002, have put it beyond any doubt that both Israel’s continuing occupation of the Palestinian territories and the manner in which it has conducted its military campaign against Gaza since October 7, 2023, are contrary to international law.

On January 26, the ICJ delivered an interim ruling on South Africa’s case against Israel for genocide (which will likely take years to arrive at a final judgment).

The court imposed six “provisional measures” on Israel aimed at “preserving … the right of the Palestinians in Gaza to be protected from acts of genocide and related prohibited acts.” The judges ruled that this right to protection was “plausible” (§54) because there was “a real and imminent risk” (§74) that genocide could occur before the ICJ delivered its final judgment unless steps were actively taken to stop it happening.

The ICJ required Israel to:

take all measures within its power to prevent … (a) killing members of the group [Palestinians]; (b) causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; (c) deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; and (d) imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group (§78).


The court also instructed Israel “to take immediate and effective measures to enable the provision of urgently needed basic services and humanitarian assistance to address the adverse conditions of life faced by Palestinians in the Gaza Strip” (§80).

Benjamin Netanyahu protested that “the very claim that Israel is committing genocide against Palestinians is not just false, it is outrageous, and the court’s willingness to discuss it at all is a mark of disgrace that will not be erased for generations.”

Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant—who on 9 October 2023 ordered “a complete siege on the Gaza Strip” in which “There will be no electricity, no food, no fuel, everything is closed. We are fighting human animals and we are acting accordingly”—complained that “The ICJ in The Hague went above and beyond, when it granted South Africa’s antisemitic request to discuss the claim of genocide in Gaza, and now refuses to reject the petition outright.”

The US stood behind Israel, asserting that “We continue to believe that allegations of genocide are unfounded and note the court did not make a finding about genocide or call for a ceasefire in its ruling and that it called for the unconditional, immediate release of all hostages being held by Hamas.”

Further ICJ measures on Gaza

On further petitioning from South Africa, on March 28 the ICJ ordered Israel to:

(a) take all necessary and effective measures to ensure, without delay, in full co-operation with the United Nations, the unhindered provision at scale by all concerned of urgently needed basic services and humanitarian assistance … to Palestinians throughout Gaza, including by increasing the capacity and number of land crossing points and maintaining them open for as long as necessary; and (b) ensure with immediate effect that its military does not commit acts which constitute a violation of any of the rights of the Palestinians in Gaza … including by preventing, through any action, the delivery of urgently needed humanitarian assistance (§45).


Revisiting the case for a third time on May 24, the ICJ ordered that “Israel must immediately halt its military offensive, and any other action in the Rafah Governorate, which may inflict on the Palestinian group in Gaza conditions of life that could bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part”; “take effective measures to ensure the unimpeded access to the Gaza Strip of any commission of inquiry …mandated by competent organs of the United Nations to investigate allegations of genocide”; and “submit a report to the Court on all measures taken to give effect to this Order” (§57).

Remember Rafah? It was one of Joe Biden’s “red lines,” which did not stop the IDF expelling its population and reducing it to ruins. Joe caved, of course. His fatherly concern evidently does not extend to the 17,400 Palestinian children killed—mostly by US bombs—in Gaza, or the thousands more who have been maimed or orphaned.

Israel did not comply with any of the January, March or May ICJ orders. The Rafah offensive continued. So did massacres of civilians. This was followed by a renewed IDF seige of North Gaza, which even the onetime Likud Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon characterizes as an exercise in “ethnic cleansing.” In October and November the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza hit its lowest levels since the beginning of the war.

Instead of cooperating with the UN—let alone permitting it to conduct an inquiry into allegations of genocide—Israel has prohibited UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterras from entering the country and has conducted a vicious smear campaign to discredit the UN’s special rapporteur on the occupied Palestine territories, Francesca Albanese.

In an ultimate snub to the ICJ, on October 28 the Israeli parliament adopted two laws designating UNRWA—the principal channel for distributing humanitarian aid in Gaza—as a “terrorist organization,” banning it from operating in Israel or the occupied territories.

The US breaks its own laws for Israel

Once again the US fully supported Israel in its defiance of the court and continued to supply it with arms. Having suspended funding in January, the US banned all funding to UNRWA for a year on March 25, with substantial bipartisan support from Congress.

In late April, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken ignored both a US Agency for International Development (USAID) memo claiming that Israel was “subjecting US humanitarian aid destined for Gaza to ‘arbitrary denial, restriction and impediments,’” and misgivings within the State Department over whether Israel’s use of US-supplied weaponry in Gaza was “consistent with all applicable international and domestic law and policy,” and certified Israel’s own assurances as “credible and reliable.”

This was arguably contrary to both the Biden administration’s own National Security Memorandum (NSM) 20, a measure adopted on February 8 with the declared aim of ensuring accountability, and the Leahy Laws “prohibiting the US Government from using funds for assistance to units of foreign security forces where there is credible information implicating that unit in the commission of gross violations of human rights.”

This pattern repeated itself even after the US presidential election. In what was clearly in retrospect an electoral ploy, the US had put Israel on 30 days notice that if it did not show “a sustained commitment to implementing and maintaining” concrete measures “to reverse the downward humanitarian trajectory” in Gaza, there might be “implications for US policy under NSM-20 and relevant US law (weapons supply).”

On November 12—despite massive evidence to the contrary—the State Department announced it “has concluded that Israel is not currently impeding assistance to Gaza and therefore is not violating US law.” Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren co-sponsored a Senate motion of disapproval on the administration’s continuing to supply arms to Israel in these circumstances, which gained only 20 votes in the 100-member assembly.

President Joe Biden at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, Israel. Photo by Adam Schultz/White House/Flickr.

The ICJ advisory opinion on the occupation

In a development that is independent of South Africa’s genocide case, on July 19 the ICJ delivered a far-reaching advisory opinion on the “Legal Consequences Arising from the Policies and Practices of Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory” (including Gaza).

While ICJ advisory opinions are not binding, they “carry great legal weight and moral authority … [and] contribute to the elucidation and development of international law and thereby to the strengthening of peaceful relations between States.” To ignore the court’s advice is to undermine a central pillar of the post-war international legal order.

The judges concluded that “Israel’s continued presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory is unlawful,” and it must therefore “end its unlawful presence … as rapidly as possible”; ”cease immediately all new settlement activities, and … evacuate all settlers from the Occupied Palestinian Territory”; and “make reparation for the damage caused to all the natural or legal persons concerned in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.”

Importantly, the ICJ judgment also made it emphatically clear to Israel’s supporters that:

all States are under an obligation not to recognize as legal the situation arising from the unlawful presence of the State of Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and not to render aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by the continued presence of the State of Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.


Israeli reaction was furious. Foreign Minister Israel Katz damned the ICJ judgment as “fundamentally warped, one-sided, and wrong.” Israel Gantz, head of one of the largest settler councils, the Binyamin Regional Council, argued that it was “contrary to the Bible, morality and international law.” Benjamin Netanyahu posted to X:

The Jewish people are not occupiers in their own land, including in our eternal capital Jerusalem nor in Judea and Samaria (West Bank), our historical homeland. No absurd opinion in The Hague can deny this historical truth or the legal right of Israelis to live in their own communities in our ancestral home.


National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said the ICJ conclusions “prove for the thousandth time that this is a clearly political and anti-Semitic organization,” while his fellow far-right cabinet member, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, said the appropriate response to the ICJ’s decision is to “impose sovereignty (over the West Bank) now.”

As an original signatory of the statute that established the ICJ (though one that has since had a fractious relationship with the court, withdrawing from its compulsory jurisdiction in 1986), the US was more measured in its response—while making its disapproval of the ICJ’s unwanted interference in its plans for the Middle East clear.

Expressing “concern” that that “the breadth of the court’s opinion will complicate efforts to resolve the conflict,” the State Department said that the demand for Israel to withdraw as soon as possible from the occupied territories was “inconsistent with the established framework” for resolving the conflict—i.e., the “peace process” established by the Oslo Accords of 1993 and 1995, which Benjamin Netanyahu has proudly sabotaged—and warned all parties not to use the ICJ advisory opinion “as a pretext for further unilateral actions that deepen divisions or for supplanting a negotiated two-state solution.”

The ICC arrest warrants

The most damning legal indictment of Israel’s conduct of its offensive in Gaza came on November 21, when the pre-trial Chamber of the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then-Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant.

The court stopped short of charging Netanyahu and Gallant with genocide, accusing them only (!) of “the war crime of starvation as a method of warfare; and the crimes against humanity of murder, persecution, and other inhumane acts.”

Among (many) other things, the ICC pre-trial chamber asserts:

both individuals intentionally and knowingly deprived the civilian population in Gaza of objects indispensable to their survival, including food, water, and medicine and medical supplies, as well as fuel and electricity … [as well as] impeding humanitarian aid in violation of international humanitarian law and their failure to facilitate relief by all means at its disposal …


Needless to say, reaction in Israel—though not always among the Jewish community internationally—was uniformly hostile. Netanyahu’s office denounced the chamber’s decision as “antisemitic,” while Gallant claimed it “sets a dangerous precedent against the right to self-defense and moral warfare.” Opposition politicians concurred. Benny Gantz said the decision was a “shameful stain of historic proportion that will never be forgotten,” and Yair Lapid called it a “prize for terror.” Not to be outdone, Itamar Ben-Gvir urged Israel to annex the West Bank by way of reply.

Unlike most Western democracies—and together with Israel, Russia, China, and India—the US is not a party to the Rome Statute that established the ICC in 2002, and is not one of the 124 countriesthat accept its jurisdiction. This did not stop it from welcoming the same court’s issue of an arrest warrant in March 2023 against Vladimir Putin for war crimes in Ukraine (which Joe Biden said was “justified” and “makes a very strong point”).

But for Israel—as usual—it is a different story. “We fundamentally reject the court’s decision to issue arrest warrants for senior Israeli officials,” said White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre. “We remain deeply concerned by the prosecutor’s rush to seek arrest warrants and the troubling process errors that led to this decision.” In fact, the court took months longer to issue arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant than it had for Putin. “The United States has been clear that the ICC does not have jurisdiction over this matter,” the US national security council added.

It is telling that these statements focus on questions of the court’s jurisdiction—which the Chamber actually considered in its decision—and process, and avoid addressing the substance of the charges entirely.

Republicans outdid one another in macho belligerence. Mike Waltz posted that “The ICC has no credibility and these allegations have been refuted by the US government,” adding “You can expect a strong response to the antisemitic bias of the ICC and UN come January.” Invoking the 2002 so-called Hague Invasion Act, which authorizes the use of military force to free Americans or allied citizens detained by the ICC, Tom Cotton declared that “The ICC is a kangaroo court and [ICC prosecutor] Karim Khan is a deranged fanatic. Woe to him and anyone who tries to enforce these outlaw warrants.”

Trump’s ally South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham—who ironically is a former Chair of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary—not only called on the US government to impose sanctions against ICC personnel (as the previous Trump administration did), but threatened “To any ally, Canada, Britain, Germany, France, if you try to help the ICC, we’re going to sanction you. If you are going to help the ICC as a nation enforce the arrest warrant against Bibi and Gallant … I will put sanctions on you.”

Democratic majority leader Chuck Schumer didn’t go so far as to threaten America’s allies, but urged the Senate “to pass the bipartisan legislation that came from the House sanctioning the Court for such an outrage and President Biden needs to sign it.”

As ever, US support for Israel—even against charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity—was bipartisan. Among other Democrats, Florida Congressman Jared Moskowitz accused the ICC of “antisemitic double standards,” Nevada Senator Jacky Rosen urged Biden to “use his authority to swiftly respond to this overreach,” and New York Congressman Ritchie Torres accused the ICC of “criminalizing self-defense.”

Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman posted on X, “No standing, relevance, or path. Fuck that,” accompanied by an emoji of the Israeli flag.

Questions of equivalence

More chilling than any of this all-American bluster was the official White House response from Joe Biden. Here is his presidential statement—in full:

The ICC issuance of arrest warrants against Israeli leaders is outrageous. Let me be clear once again: whatever the ICC might imply, there is no equivalence—none—between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security.


Though Justin Trudeau promised that Canada would abide by the ICC ruling, he had advanced the same line of argument back in May, when ICC prosecutor Karim Khan first requested arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant (as well as three Hamas leaders whom Israel has since assassinated). What the Canadian prime minister found “troubling,” in his words, was “the sense of an equivalency between the democratically elected leaders of Israel and the bloodthirsty terrorists that lead up Hamas.”

Trudeau’s Special Advisor on Jewish Community Relations and Antisemitism, Anthony Housefather, similarly condemned drawing “moral equivalency … between the leaders of a recognized terrorist organization and the elected leaders of a democratic state.” Then-UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak got on the same high horse, pontificating that “There is no moral equivalence between a democratic state exercising its lawful right to self defense and the terrorist group Hamas. It is wrong to conflate and equivocate between those two different entities.” In similar vein, on November 24 the Washington Post condemned the ICC for “putting the elected leaders of a democratic country with its own independent judiciary in the same category as dictators and authoritarians.”

It suffices to recall that Adolf Hitler was the duly elected leader of a Western democratic state to see the fundamental flaw in these arguments. The issue is not the standing of the accused—democratically elected politicians as against “terrorists” (as designated by the West though not in this case by much of the rest of the world)—but the equivalency of the crimes they are charged with having committed, no matter who they are.

To argue that democratic regimes should be exempt from prosecution for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide simply because they are democracies is to say that there should be one law for the West and another for the rest.

Lindsey Graham obligingly let the cat out of the bag, when he told a Turkish broadcaster that “The Rome Statute doesn’t apply to Israel, the United States, France, Germany, or Great Britain because it wasn’t conceived to come after us.”

Kind of like US law doesn’t apply to Hunter Biden because his loving Dad pardoned him.

Where ignorant armies clash by night

It is not only Palestinians that are dying on the killing fields of Gaza. The genocide exacts a toll on its perpetrators too. Israel and its Western enablers—principally, but no means exclusively, the United States—are committing two kinds of crime in Gaza.

The first are the war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocidal acts that have led to the ICJ and ICC rulings discussed here. Though the mainstream Western media has for the most part denied, distorted, deflected from, or simply not reported these crimes, there can be no excuse for continuing to ignore them. The evidence is overwhelming.

Apart from the courts’ own documents, Israel’s crimes have been copiously documented in reports published over the last year from UN agencies and rapporteurs, human rights organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, NGOs like Oxfam and Save the Children, and research units like Forensic Architecture.

A particularly rich and detailed—and extremely harrowing—source is the Israeli historian Lee Mordechai’s online database of Israeli war crimes in Gaza, which:

[C]ontains over 1,400 footnotes referencing thousands of sources. It details instances of Israeli troops shooting civilians waving white flags, abusing individuals, captives and corpses, randomly firing their weapons, gleefully destroying houses, burning books and defacing Islamic symbols.


I quote a lengthy article on Mordechai’s database in the newspaper Haaretz—Israel’s longest-running daily newspaper (it was founded in 1918), with which the Netanyahu government has now banned its employees from having any contact.

To dismiss all of these as “antisemitic propaganda” is risible—and disingenuous in the extreme.

The second kind of crime, with which I have been more concerned here, are crimes against the rule of law. These may prove to be no less consequential. Or genocidal.

For over a year now, the West has been tearing up the legal and institutional fabric on which the post-war international order and its increasingly threadbare claims to moral authority rest—in much the same way as Joe Biden has overridden the US judicial system in order to grant his wayward son an unprecedented pardon and Donald Trump promises to weaponize the same system to settle scores with his political enemies.

An old-new Wild West beckons, only this time with nukes and 2,000-pound bunker-buster bombs and hellfire missiles and AI-guided quadcopters and drones in place of Colt 45s. A lawless future is a bleak future. For everybody except the rich and powerful.

The closing lines of Matthew Arnold’s “Dover Beach,” written in 1867, the same year Karl Marx published Capital, come to mind:

And we are here as on a darkling plain

Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,

Where ignorant armies clash by night.

Nowhere was the suppression of Palestinian voices and erasure of the Gaza genocide more evident than in Harris’s campaign

First published in Canadian Dimension, November 21, 2024

Kamala Harris speaking with attendees at the 2019 Iowa Democratic Wing Ding at Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa. Photo by Gage Skidmore/Flickr.

Red lines? What red lines?

If anyone has any remaining doubts about the outgoing Biden-Harris administration’s support for Israel’s genocide in Gaza—even after Kamala Harris lost the election to Donald Trump—they can safely put them to rest. As Joe Biden reminded his longtime “personal friend” and “friend to our nation” Israeli President Isaac Herzog in the Oval Office on November 12, “the United States’ commitment to Israel is ironclad.”

That same day Biden made good on his promise, as he has repeatedly done—at whatever cost to Palestinians and to the Democrats’ electoral prospects—throughout the last year. Joe may be a lame duck president, but nothing is going to stop him from going the extra mile for his Zionist buddies while he still can.

A month prior, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin had warned Israel that unless within 30 days it demonstrated “a sustained commitment to implementing and maintaining” concrete measures “to reverse” what they euphemistically termed “the downward humanitarian trajectory” in Gaza, there might be “implications for US policy under NSM-20 and relevant US law (weapons supply).”

This was widely reported as a threat to cut off, or at least to limit, the flow of American arms unless Israel dramatically improved its treatment of Palestinian civilians, especially in north Gaza, which the IDF had been brutally besieging since early October.

Key demands in the letter included expediting (rather than blocking) the flow of aid into Gaza; facilitating “humanitarian pauses” in the fighting to allow aid to be distributed; allowing the Red Cross to visit Palestinian detainees in Israeli prisons “in light of reports of abuse”; and ending “the isolation of northern Gaza Strip” and “officially announc[ing]” that Israel “has no policy of forced evacuation of Palestinians from northern Gaza Strip to the southern Gaza Strip.”

These were indeed—for the first time—concrete, measurable benchmarks by which to assess Israeli progress in meeting the US’s alleged concerns.

The timing of this “leak” of what the White House claimed was “a private diplomatic communication” raised widespread suspicions at the time that this might be no more than an electoral ploy designed to stem the hemorrhage of Muslim, Arab, and youth support for Harris shown by the “uncommitted” movement in key swing states.

Now that the election has come and gone, the doubters have been proved right. As the 30-day deadline expired on November 12, the State Department announced it “has concluded that Israel is not currently impeding assistance to Gaza and therefore is not violating US law.” The flow of American weapons to Israel continues as before.

A post-apocalyptic environment

Israel’s own figures show that less aid entered Gaza in the last month than at any time since December 2023. While the Blinken-Austin letter demanded that Israel allow 350 aid trucks to enter Gaza per day, ”with five days remaining in the 30-day review period, just over 1,000 total trucks had crossed into Gaza, an average of just 42 trucks a day.”

I quote here from a “Gaza Scorecard” drawn up by independent experts on behalf of eight humanitarian groups, including Save the Children, MercyCorps, and Oxfam. The report shows that of 19 US benchmarks set out in the letter, Israel failed to comply with 15 and only partially complied with four.

Meanwhile, “Israel … concurrently took actions that dramatically worsened the situation on the ground, particularly in Northern Gaza. That situation is in an even more dire state today than a month ago.”

Speaking to CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on November 14, UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini described Gaza today as “a post-apocalyptic environment,” with “people just waiting to be killed, either by airstrike, by disease, or even by hunger.”

Ignoring another demand in Blinken and Austin’s letter, on October 28 the Israeli parliament overwhelmingly passed two laws criminalizing UNRWA—the only body with the resources, experience, and staff capable of coordinating any competent relief effort in Gaza—as a “terrorist organization” and banning it from operating in Israel, including within the occupied territories of East Jerusalem, the West Bank, and Gaza. The Israeli government has since confirmed that these laws will take effect within 90 days.

Lazzarini warned that “dismantling UNRWA will collapse the United Nations humanitarian response [in Gaza], which relies heavily on the Agency’s infrastructure.” EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Josep Borrell Fontelles was another who urged “Israeli authorities to reconsider, in order to prevent disruptions to UNRWA’s life-saving services and ensure continued and unhindered humanitarian access for UNRWA to the Palestine refugees that it was set up to serve,“ adding for good measure: “This legislation stands in stark contradiction to international law.” These appeals fell on deaf ears.

On November 5, IDF Brigadier General Itzik Cohen let slip what was really going on. “There is no intention of allowing the residents of the northern Gaza Strip to return to their homes,” he told Israeli reporters. “Humanitarian aid would be allowed to ‘regularly’ enter the south of the territory but not the north, since there are ‘no more civilians left.’”

The Israeli daily Haaretz had no hesitation in calling a spade a spade. Its lead editorial on November 10 proclaimed:

The Israeli military is conducting an ethnic cleansing operation in the northern Gaza Strip. The few Palestinians remaining in the area are being forcibly evacuated, homes and infrastructure have been destroyed, and wide roads in the area are being built and completing the separation of the communities in the northern Strip from the center of Gaza City.


Two important independent studies published on November 14 concur. In a damning report starkly titled “Hopeless, Starving, and Besieged”: Israel’s Forced Displacement of Palestinians in Gaza, Human Rights Watch concluded that “the Israeli government’s acts of forced displacement … amount to a crime against humanity. Israel’s actions appear to also meet the definition of ethnic cleansing.”

The latest report of the UN Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People went still further, concluding that “Israel is intentionally causing death, starvation and serious injury, using starvation as a method of war and inflicting collective punishment on the Palestinian population,” all of which are methods of warfare “consistent with the characteristics of genocide.”

I won’t speculate here on how far Israel’s recent actions are an attempt to implement the so-called General’s Plan (to depopulate North Gaza prior to turning it into a free-fire zone) or form a prelude to resettling the area with Jewish settlements, West Bank–style, as has been advocated by the more extreme members of the Israeli government.

Suffice it to say that the US State Department’s claim that Israel is “making progress” in meeting the demands set out in the Blinken-Austin letter is a sick joke.

So too are the repeated assurances that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are “working tirelessly” “around the clock” for a ceasefire in Gaza and a solution to the Palestinian–Israeli conflict. On November 20—for the fourth time—the US used its veto to block a UN Security Council resolution mandating an immediate and unconditional ceasefire in Gaza. The other 14 members of the council all voted in favour of the resolution.

It is not reality on the ground that matters here. As Guardian columnist Owen Jones succinctly puts it, “no matter what the people of Gaza endure, the narrative prevails.”

The most moral army in the world

Honed in the hasbara factories of Tel Aviv, parroted by Western politicians across the spectrum, and amplified by Western media ad nauseam, the narrative to which Jones refers has more than a whiff of Orwellian doublethink (“the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one’s mind simultaneously, and accepting both of them”) about it.

While this narrative affirms the sanctity of supposed Western values of national self-determination, democracy, human rights, and the international rule of law, it defends gross violations of these same principles with equal passion in the case of Israel. The IDF, we are assured after every massacre, is “the most moral army in the world.”

This doublethink requires us to believe that this is a war of “children of light” against “children of darkness,” of civilization against barbarism, of the enlightened West against the benighted rest. It requires us, in short, to buy into the most racist tropes of the Western colonialist heritage in order to defend a present-day colonialist genocide.

“War is peace, freedom is slavery, ignorance is strength,” ran the party’s slogan in George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. “The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.”

Winston Smith goes on to say “Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.”

In many Western countries today, the freedom to say that two plus two make four is no longer always granted—at least, not in relation to speech concerning Israel and Palestine. The prevailing narrative prevails not because it is true but because other voices, other stories, have been drowned out.

If—with the imprimatur, let us remember, of the UN, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), leading international NGOs (Oxfam, Save the Children, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, etc.), and a growing number of Western nations (Ireland, Spain, Norway, Belgium, among others)—you dare to reject the doublethink and insist that irrespective of the undoubted war crimes Hamas committed on October 7, Israel is guilty of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and (by now more than “plausible”) genocide in Gaza on an infinitely greater scale, you are likely to pay dearly.

It may cost you your job, your opportunity to publish, exhibit, or perform, and even put you behind bars.

Last month in Britain, pro-Palestinian journalists were woken by dawn police raids and had their phones and computers confiscated under “terrorism” legislation. Canadian authorities soon emulated their UK colleagues by sending a SWAT team to the Vancouver home of the international coordinator of the Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, which they recently (and controversially) declared a “terrorist entity.” In both cases the intent seems to be to intimidate: no charges have yet resulted from either raid.

Across North America, university authorities have called in baton-wielding police to break up protest encampments and disciplined hundreds of students and faculty for doing no more than exercising their right to say two plus two make four. Some now have criminal records, while others merely lost their housing, health insurance, and degrees.

This week’s Joe Biden prize for doublethink must surely go to Harvard Divinity School, which has just suspended students from using its library for two weeks after 55 graduate students, many of whom are Jewish, held a “pray-in” there. “In and of itself, advocacy for the cause of people under duress—whether in Israel, Gaza, or other parts of the world—is noble,” explained the Dean. So what exactly was the problem?

In Canada, MP Anthony Housefather, “senior advisor to prime minister Trudeau on antisemitism,” announced in July that he was working with Deborah Lyons, former Canadian ambassador to Israel and “Canada’s special envoy on preserving holocaust remembrance and combatting antisemitism,” to put pressure on Windsor University to cancel an agreement it had made with its own students to consider their demands for divestment from Israel in exchange for their peacefully ending their encampment.

The German parliament is currently considering a government resolution that would enforce the IHRA definition of antisemitism (which has been widely condemned for conflating criticism of Israel or of Zionism with antisemitism) and remove state funding for artistic and scientific endeavours from any individuals or organizations supporting boycotts of Israel. The same IHRA definition forms the basis of a new “handbook” for combatting antisemitism issued in October under the auspices of Heritage Canada.

Though the handbook, prepared by Lyons’ office, assures us that it is “non-legally binding” and “does not constitute a legal opinion or a legislative interpretation of antisemitism”—best cover your ass against future Charter of Rights challenges, eh?—its recommendations add up to a chillingly totalitarian apparatus of moral regulation.

Among its suggestions are “Incorporating the definition into school policies and campus codes of conduct—helping administrators and institutions draw the line as to what is and what is not antisemitism.”

Since October 7 state power has been mobilized across the “free world” to suppress dissent and ensure that the prevailing narrative continues to prevail. There is little doubt about who can speak and whose voices are not to be heard.

I’m speaking!

Nowhere was this suppression of Palestinian voices and erasure of the Gaza genocide more evident than in Kamala Harris’s campaign for the US presidency.

Ahmad Ibsais, who describes himself as a “first generation Palestinian American and law student,” summarized the experience of Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim Americans during the 2024 election. These American communities certainly didn’t feel the “joy” that was—obscenely, some might think, given the circumstances—touted as Harris’s hallmark.

Just look at how the Democrats campaigned in the state I live in, Michigan. A crucial swing state where elections can hinge on mere thousands of votes, Michigan is home to some 200,000 Muslim Americans. Over the past year, these voters made it clear, in every way they could, that their vote was conditioned on the party pledging to end its financial, political and military support of massacres of Palestinians, Lebanese and Yemenis. The “uncommitted” campaign—looking to end the Democratic Party’s support for Israel’s genocide—secured more than 100,000 votes in the state’s Democratic primary.

The Democratic Party did not listen. Harris not only refused to abandon Biden’s staunchly pro-Israel policies on Palestine but also personally supported continued bloodshed in Gaza by publicly insulting anti-genocide campaigners in the state. When pro-Palestinian protesters interrupted a Harris rally in Detroit by simply stating that they “won’t vote for genocide”, she shut them up with her catchphrase, “I’m speaking”. She then sent former President Bill Clinton to the state to deliver a speech that tried to justify the mass killing of Palestinians. Liz Cheney, the Republican daughter of Iraq war architect and war criminal Dick Cheney, also made an appearance in the state to campaign for Harris. Congressman Ritchie Torres, who spent the past year accusing anyone demanding an end to the bloodshed in Gaza of being an anti-Semitic terrorist, was another surrogate Harris sent to Michigan.

As a result, understandably, Muslims in Michigan did not vote for Harris.


Palestinian voices were kept off the stage at the Democratic National Convention in August in Chicago, despite the uncommitted movement offering to endorse Harris’s candidacy as well as having their representative’s speech vetted in advance.

“I’ve had some pretty crushing days, but to be honest today took the cake,” Ruwa Romman, a Georgia State representative who was one of the speaker candidates uncommitted submitted to the Harris campaign, posted on X. “I do not understand how there’s room for an anti-choice Republican [presumably Liz Cheney] but not me in our party. I need someone to explain to me what to do now.”

Jamaal Bowman, the pro-Palestinian New York congressman whom the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and other superpacs spent a reported $23 million to unseat in a special election in June, says he offered to campaign for Harris in Michigan (where he is popular) but his offer was declined in favor of Cheney, Clinton, and Torres.

Steve Salaita, who was hounded out of the tenured position he had been offered and accepted as a Professor of American Indian Studies at the University of Illinois after a series of tweets criticizing Israel’s 2014 bombardment of Gaza—this “war” did not begin on October 7—gets to the heart of things:

Liberals can tolerate you only when you behave: vote (as per their demands), show up for diversity photoshoots, ease up on the religion, and don’t make too much noise about Palestine. They see you as children to be marshalled into civic duty every few years according to their own convenience. The moment you reject their delusions of lesser evilism, even when the supposedly lesser evil is incinerating your kin and leading the world to the brink of catastrophe, they no longer feel obliged to maintain decorum. It’s now obvious that liberals were itching for an excuse to unleash a lot of deep-seated animosity. All it took was your principled rejection of genocide.

Harris’s electoral collapse

Although some votes still remain to be counted, as of November 19 Kamala Harris had won 73,966,464 votes (48.3 percent) in the November 5 election as against Donald Trump’s 76,581,025 (50 percent). This gave Trump a majority of 312 to 226 in the Electoral College, beating Biden’s 306 to 232 score in 2020. Trump also won the popular vote, the only Republican candidate to do so since 1988, apart from George W. Bush in 2004.

Nevertheless, 2024 is less an election Trump won than an election that Harris lost—spectacularly. Despite it being widely billed as a “historic” election that Americans considered “the most important in their lifetime,” overall turnout was down by nearly three million over 2020, from 65.8 to 63.5 percent. A lot of folks chose to stay home, and the numbers suggest that many of them were Biden voters in 2020.

In Cook County, Illinois, which includes Chicago, turnout was down by a whopping 20 percent. Trump matched his 2020 vote, but Harris’s total was more than 417,000 votes adrift of Biden’s.

Though Trump’s share of the national vote rose from 46.9 percent in 2020 to 50 percent in 2024, he increased the actual number of his votes by only a modest 2.3 million (from 74,224,319 to 76,581,025)—in an election in which an additional four million eligible voters were added to the rolls since 2020. Harris’s vote, by contrast, fell precipitously. It was down by more than seven million on Biden’s 81,284,666 total in 2020.

These patterns hold both nationally and in the seven battleground states that decide the outcome of most American presidential elections, and in particular in the three “blue wall” states that Trump took from the Democrats in 2016 and Biden recovered in 2020—Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan.

These were must-win states for the Democrats, and Kamala Harris spent a lot of time campaigningthere.

This year Trump won all seven battleground states by narrow but clear majorities, and posted margins of 1.8 percent in Pennsylvania, 0.9 percent in Wisconsin, and 1.4 percent in Michigan. This compares with Biden’s margins of 1.2 percent in Pennsylvania, 0.6 percent in Wisconsin, and 2.8 percent in Michigan. These were all tight races and small swings, but Michigan—where Abdul Ibsais and 200,000 other Muslim Americans live—registered the biggest shift.

Where Biden racked up 2,804,040 votes in Michigan in 2020, Harris managed 2,724,029—a net loss of some 80,000 votes. A significant part in this loss was clearly due to Arab American and Muslim voters either abstaining, voting for third-party anti-war candidate Jill Stein, or shifting their vote to Trump.

In the Detroit suburb of Dearborn, where 55 percent of the residents are of Middle Eastern descent and Biden got 69 percent of the vote in 2020, Trump won 42.48 percent of the vote, Harris 36.26 percent, and Stein 18.37 percent. In Dearborn Heights, where 39 percent of the residents are of Middle Eastern descent, Trump defeated Harris by 44 to 38.3 percent, with Stein at 15.1 percent. In Hamtramck, the first majority-Muslim city in the US, Harris got 46.2 percent—as compared with Biden’s 85 percent in 2020—while Trump got 42.7 percent and Stein 8.96 percent. Lost Muslim votes are also likely to have impacted Democrat performance in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Had Harris won the three blue-wall states and the rest of the results stayed the same, she, not Donald Trump, would now be US president-elect.

It is significant, then, that Trump’s combined margin of victory over Harris in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin—and therefore, the difference between the Democrats’ holding or losing the White House—was a razor-thin 232,000 votes. Additionally, Jill Stein got 91,475 votes, many of which might otherwise have gone to the Democrats had they moderated their stance on Gaza.

These numbers by no means prove that Gaza was the only factor in Harris’s collapse, but they certainly show that it cannot be ignored.

We might reasonably ask whether, if Harris had been less adamant in her insistence that “I’m speaking!” and more willing to move on Israel, she might have persuaded enough of Biden’s 2020 voters—not only Muslim Americans, but college kids, other young people, and progressives who campaigned hard for the Democrats in 2020 but were nauseated by Biden’s policies on Gaza—to support her. Instead, they flipped or stayed home.

Gaza’s revenge?

I suppose it is heartening to see Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, who endorsed and campaigned for Kamala Harris whatever their reservations on Gaza, co-sponsoring a Senate motion of disapproval on the Biden administration’s continuing to supply arms to Israel despite the latter’s failure to meet the conditions set out in the Blinken-Austin letter.

Sanders now thunders: “There is no longer any doubt that Netanyahu’s extremist government is in clear violation of US and international law as it wages a barbaric war against the Palestinian people in Gaza.” Warren now warns: “The failure by the Biden administration to follow US law and to suspend arms shipments is a grave mistake that undermines American credibility worldwide.”

Really, senators? What took you so long? Even some of your less performatively progressive colleagues like Tim Kaine and Chris Van Hollen (who told Zeteo: “President Biden’s inaction, given the suffering in Gaza, is shameful. I mean, there’s no other word for it”) have long demanded conditioning on the supply of offensive weapons to Israel.

Unsurprisingly, the motion failed. But at least 18 Senate Democrats seem to be belatedly developing a conscience, now that it is too late to influence policy.

US support for Israel’s genocide was important not only because it cost Harris substantial support in battleground states—we’ll never know how much, because exit polls by definition don’t capture the reasons millions of voters stayed home—but also as the most conspicuous symptom of a deeper sickness in the Democratic Party.

And the country.

Exploring how and why the election result has left him “disappointed, fearful, numb,” prize-winning author Viet Thanh Nguyen puts it well. The source of his disappointment and fear is not just the prospect of a second (and likely much worse) Trump term:

Donald Trump does not represent something new in the United States. Instead, he is part of a fundamental contradiction that the United States was born from, a contradiction that has never gone away. On the one hand, the beauty of democracy, opportunity, freedom, and equality (for some). On the other hand, the brutality that made that beauty possible: colonization, genocide, enslavement, occupation, and war. Some willingly embrace the brutality, others are willing to look away from it. That is why the Democratic Party’s loss of its moral compass on Gaza and calling what Israel is doing a genocide was not simply a “single issue,” but a symptom of the rot within a party that hoped that the beauty of multiculturalism and diversity would somehow be enough to overcome the brutality. 


There are limits to doublethink. If you campaign on “ironclad support” for Israel’s genocide and ethnic cleansing in Palestine, you are saying there are no moral limits on the means you use so long as the ends are worthy. Don’t be surprised if people then conclude it’s fine to vote for mass deportations, internment camps, jailing of political opponents, and using the military to quash dissent at home in support of their (decent, Christian, patriotic) doublethink agendas. Sow the wind, reap the whirlwind.

In its contempt for the rule of law in international affairs, not to mention its acquiescence in domestic suppression of free speech on Palestine, the Biden-Harris administration has helped prepare the ground for the coming Trump tyranny at home.

Trump’s triumph will not stop Israel’s assault on Gaza. Palestinians know that very well, and they do not need Pennsylvania’s Democrat junior senator John Fetterman to lecture them (“Congratulations, you’re going to love the next Muslim ban,” he sneered) on the dire consequences of their refusing to vote as Bill Clinton told them to.

The election result could be seen as Gaza’s revenge for the Democrats’ hypocritical indifference to Palestinian suffering while campaigning on abortion rights, the price of eggs and gas, and “saving American democracy.” Now liberal America will suffer too.

So, unfortunately, will many others.

As America votes, the genocide in Gaza goes on—and on and on

First published in Canadian Dimension, November 4, 2024

Palestinians mourn their relatives killed during an Israeli airstrike in southern Gaza. Photo by Abed Rahim Khatib.

An eternity ago, back in March, accepting his Academy Award for The Zone of Interest, director Jonathan Glazer coined the concept of an “ambient genocide.”

The Zone of Interest focuses on the everyday life of Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss and his wife and children in a palatial home and beautiful garden immediately adjacent to the camp walls. The only indications of the genocide going on behind the walls and out of sight lie in the film’s soundtrack, in which “the ambient noise generated by the horrors within the camp is evoked with a suffocating intensity that matches the choking pall of smoke billowing continuously from the Auschwitz furnace chimneys.”

Commenting on both the film and Glazer’s speech (which got him denounced as a kapo and antisemite by Zionists), Naomi Klein applied the concept to present-day events:

More than five months into the daily slaughter in Gaza, and with Israel brazenly ignoring the orders of the international court of justice, and Western governments gently scolding Israel while shipping it more arms, genocide is becoming ambient once more—at least for those of us fortunate enough to live on the safe sides of the many walls that carve up our world. We face the risk of it grinding on, becoming the soundtrack of modern life. Not even the main event.


After a year of bombardment, and with all eyes on the US presidential election, Gaza has become exactly what Klein feared—part of the soundtrack to everyday life, background noise we can all too easily tune out. But while life goes on as normal on our side of the walls, the genocide continues, barely within earshot.

A week is a long time in genocides

On October 15, in a letter whose convenient leaking many suspected had more to do with trying to salvage the Democrats’ electoral chances in Michigan than changing US policy on Gaza, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin put Israel on notice that if it did not take “concrete measures” to ensure the safety of Palestinian civilians in Gaza within 30 days—taking us to November 15, and therefore after the US election—its supply of American weapons might be in jeopardy.

So far, at least—assuming it was ever anything more than a cynical electoral ploy in the first place—this latest (alleged) US attempt to rein in Israeli aggression appears to have had zero effect.

The last few weeks have seen significant escalation in the Middle East conflict with Israeli assassinations of Hamas and Hezbollah leaders; bombardment and invasion of Lebanon (where at least 3,000 people have now been killed); air strikes on Syria, Yemen, and Iran; and growing settler and IDF violence against Palestinians in the West Bank.

In the Gaza Strip, the last three weeks have been among the bloodiest for civilians since the early days of the war.

Writing in the Guardian on October 29, Peter Beaumont details how,

Israel’s current offensive in northern Gaza, which began on October 7, has killed more than 700 people in a little over three weeks, with nearly 300 of those deaths, mainly in the north, occurring in the past nine days alone.


By November 4, according to the Palestinian civil defence agency, that figure had risen to over 1,300 deaths. These figures are—it is always necessary to add—almost certainly a considerable underestimate. Many more bodies will be rotting beneath the rubble.

Earlier, on October 29, Beaumont filed another report on a single incident, describing how that morning the IDF had bombed apartment blocks in Beit Lahiya in Northern Gaza for the second time in nine days. In the earlier attack, on October 20, “At least 87 people were killed overnight when an Israeli airstrike hit several multi-storey buildings … Images suggested two or three big blocks of flats were demolished in the strike.” This time,

Scores of Palestinians, including many women and children, were killed in an Israeli airstrike on a crowded block of flats in Beit Lahiya. Gaza’s civil defence agency said 93 people had been killed and 40 were missing, as emergency workers dug through the rubble on Tuesday looking for the dead and injured. Many of those in the block were members of the extended Abu Nasr family as well as Palestinians displaced from elsewhere.


According to the UN Human Rights Office, the airstrike “left 93 dead or missing including at least 25 children, making it one of the deadliest single attacks in Gaza in nearly three months.”

The Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem demanded that “Israel’s campaign of vengeance and destruction in the Gaza Strip must cease immediately”:

Whoever gave the order to bomb a building where sheltering civilians were gathered is a war criminal. Whoever carried out this patently unlawful order is an accomplice to this crime … Dr. Husam Abu Safiyah, a physician at Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahiya, told the media: “Only two pediatricians remain in the hospital. Most of the specialized medical staff have been arrested by the Israeli army or evacuated. We’re working around the clock, performing surgeries, because otherwise, we’ll lose a wounded person every hour.” [He added] “there are no working ambulances left in Beit Lahiya and Jabalya, and without urgent aid, people will, literally, die in the streets.”


The appeal fell on deaf ears. For the IDF the assaults on Beit Latiya were just another day at the office. This is what the brave boys and girls of the most moral army in the world have been doing in Gaza every day for a year. Massacres of the innocent are par for the course.

According to various UN agencies, two days later “the third floor of Kamal Adwan Hospital was bombed, destroying medical supplies delivered just five days ago during a joint mission led by the World Health Organization” … “Rescue teams are unable to work due to the arrests of personnel and the confiscation of essential equipment, including ambulances and a fire truck” … “Attacks on hospitals in the north—including Kamal Adwan, which is the main provider of obstetric care—have shut down the last functioning neonatal intensive care unit in the region” … “Only two out of 20 health service points in the north are partially functioning. The same applies to two hospitals there, with the Al-Awda Hospital inaccessible due to damaged roads and the Israeli army presence.“

In the meantime, “Almost no aid operations have been permitted into North Gaza … and the humanitarian crisis is being worsened by dwindling supplies, high casualties, frequent strikes on healthcare facilities and widespread displacement.”

Forced displacement continues to be reported. According to humanitarian partners, some 300 Palestinians—including women, children and the elderly—were displaced today [Oct 31] from the north to the south through the Al Rashid checkpoint. Within northern Gaza, Palestinians staying around the Indonesian hospital and Tal Al Arabi school in the Al Fakhoura area were displaced today to Beit Lahiya.

Since the start of this latest ground operation in the north on 6 October, about 100,000 people have been displaced from North Gaza Governorate to Gaza city.

Meantime, back in Tel Aviv

Blinken and Austin’s letter went on to warn that the passage of legislation before the Knesset aimed at effectively preventing the UN’s Palestine refugee agency, UNRWA, from operating in Israel or the occupied Palestinian territories, including Gaza, “would be devastating for the humanitarian effort in the Gaza Strip at a critical time and would prevent education and welfare services for tens of thousands of Palestinians in Jerusalem.” The Americans demanded that “Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu exercise his powers and influence over Knesset members so the bill doesn’t pass.”

On October 26, the foreign ministers of Canada, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, Republic of Korea and the United Kingdom weighed in with a joint statement expressing their “grave concern” over the upcoming Knesset vote. In considerably stronger language, they affirmed that “We once again condemn in the strongest possible terms the brutal and unjustified terror attacks by Hamas on Israel on October 7, 2023.”

They might as well have given Israel a green light. It was pretty clear that just as on earlier occasions, Israel’s Western allies might offer mild criticisms of Israeli excesses but they would not take any significant practical actions to defend Palestinian lives, like an arms embargo or other sanctions. This remained the case even after the IDF fired on UN peacekeepers who refused to leave their posts in southern Lebanon.

Just as Israel had previously defied Joe Biden’s publicly stated “red line” with impunity and gone ahead with its invasion (and wholesale destruction) of Rafah, in this case too, it thumbed its nose at its US ally and principal arms supplier.

On October 28—the day before the second Beit Lahiya attack—the Knesset passed two billsdesignating UNRWA as a “terrorist organization,” banning it from operating in Israel or the occupied territories, and prohibiting Israeli authorities from having contact with it.

The bills passed by majorities of 92 to 10 and 87 to nine, with the only opposition coming from Arab MPs.

This legislation has since been condemned not only by UN and UNWRA personnel, but by among others the European Union (“This legislation stands in stark contradiction to international law and the fundamental humanitarian principle of humanity, and will only exacerbate an already severe humanitarian crisis”), the governments of Ireland, Norway, Slovenia and Spain (“The legislation … sets a very serious precedent for the work of the United Nations and for all organizations of the multilateral system”), and NGOs.

statement by Doctors without Borders (MSF) is representative of the latter:

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) denounces this legislation, which represents an inhumane ban on vital humanitarian aid. The Knesset’s vote is propelling Palestinians towards an even deeper humanitarian crisis. It is imperative that the world acts to safeguard Palestinians’ fundamental rights. Immediate international intervention is needed to pressure Israel to allow unhindered access to humanitarian aid, implement a ceasefire and bring to an end the current campaign of destruction in Gaza.


Unlike Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, Keir Starmer and David Lammy (who recently informed the UK parliament that that using the word genocide about Gaza “undermines the seriousness of that term”), Antony Albanese and Penny Wong, Justin Trudeau and Mélanie Joly, MSF have first-hand knowledge of that of which they speak.

The Israeli government has since confirmed that it has formally notified the UN that the country will ban UNRWA from operating inside Israel within 90 days.

Pro-Palestine rally in Austin, Texas, November 12, 2023. Photo by Larry D. Moore/Wikimedia Commons.

Apocalypse now

Founded in 1991, the Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC) is “the longest-standing and highest-level humanitarian coordination forum of the United Nations system”—an international body, in other words, whose pronouncements should not be taken lightly.

On 1 November IASC issued a statement titled “Stop the assault on Palestinians in Gaza and on those trying to help them.” It makes for bleak reading:

The situation unfolding in North Gaza is apocalyptic. The area has been under siege for almost a month, denied basic aid and life-saving supplies while bombardment and other attacks continue. Just in the past few days, hundreds of Palestinians have been killed, most of them women and children, and thousands have once again been forcibly displaced. 

Hospitals have been almost entirely cut off from supplies and have come under attack, killing patients, destroying vital equipment, and disrupting life-saving services. Health workers and patients have been taken into custody. Fighting has also reportedly taken place inside hospitals. 

Dozens of schools serving as shelters have been bombed or forcibly evacuated. Tents sheltering displaced families have been shelled, and people have been burned alive. 

Rescue teams have been deliberately attacked and thwarted in their attempts to pull people buried under the rubble of their homes. 

The needs of women and girls are overwhelming and growing every day. We have lost contact with those we support and those who provide lifesaving essential services for sexual and reproductive health and gender-based violence. 

And we have received reports of civilians being targeted while trying to seek safety, and of men and boys being arrested and taken to unknown locations for detention. 

Livestock are also dying, crop lands have been destroyed, trees burned to the ground, and agrifood systems infrastructure has been decimated. 

The entire Palestinian population in North Gaza is at imminent risk of dying from disease, famine and violence. 


Two other recently published reports document Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza in chilling detail and on a monumental scale.

Compiled by the Goldsmiths College, University of London Forensic Architecture team, A Cartography of Genocide: Israel’s Conduct in Gaza Since October 2023 comprises an incredibly detailed 826-page report and an “interactive cartographic platform” that “compiles evidence of thousands of acts of violence, destruction, or obstruction committed by the Israeli military against all aspects of civilian life in Gaza.” A summary of the group’s findings can be found here. I recommend it to anyone who wants to face the facts, as distinct from deluding themselves with platitudes or propaganda.

Complementing this is the report of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, Francesca Albanese. Genocide as colonial erasure, which runs to 387 pages. This is Albanese’s summary:

In the present report, the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, Francesca Albanese, examines the unfolding horrors in the occupied Palestinian territory. While the wholesale destruction of Gaza continues unabated, other parts of the land have not been spared. The violence that Israel has unleashed against the Palestinians post-7 October is not happening in a vacuum, but is part of a long-term intentional, systematic, State- organized forced displacement and replacement of the Palestinians. This trajectory risks causing irreparable prejudice to the very existence of the Palestinian people in Palestine. Member States must intervene now to prevent new atrocities that will further scar human history.


It is not beside the point to record here that as I was writing this article, authorities at McGill University in Montréal (according to student union representatives) “fought to shamelessly shut down” a talk by Albanese organized by several student law groups and the university’s chapter of Independent Jewish Voices. Having been excluded from the law faculty—there is a nice symbolismin that, given Israel’s flagrant contempt for international humanitarian law—Albanese was heard by a rapt audience in a packed ballroom in the students’ union building. There may yet be hope in the young.

Listen to the sounds from behind the walls of complicity, of doublethink, of evasion, of repression, of denial. Whoever wins the US presidential election, in Palestine it is apocalypse now.

The Blinken-Austin letter could be a game-changer, or just another electoral gimmick

First published in Canadian Dimension, October 15, 2024

Aftermath of an Israeli bombing raid on the Jabalia refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. Photo courtesy the Palestinian News & Information Agency-WAFA/Wikimedia Commons.

In my most recent article for Canadian Dimension, I wrote about the stark discrepancies between US policy on supplying arms to Ukraine and Israel.

Though both states are nominally US allies, the Biden-Harris administration’s “unwavering support” for Ukraine has not stopped it from limiting or conditioning supplies of “offensive” as distinct from “defensive” weapons—long-distance ballistic missiles that are capable of reaching deep into Russia, for instance—in the interests of preventing escalation of the conflict and keeping European allies onside.

The US’s “ironclad commitment” to Israel, by contrast, has meant that the supply of offensive weaponry—like 500-pound and 2,000-pound “bunker buster” bombs capable of demolishing whole apartment blocks and incinerating their occupants—has continued to flow unimpeded, notwithstanding widespread international condemnation (including by several European states) of Israel’s war crimes, crimes against humanity, and possible genocide in Gaza, or the Netanyahu government’s frequent breaches of what the US has itself described as “red lines.”

Until now. But a recent report by Axios suggests things may—may—be about to change.

Axios claims to have seen a letter sent on October 14 by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin to Israeli Minister for Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer and Minister of Defence Yoav Galant, which was first reported on Israel’s Channel 12.

If the Axios report is accurate, for the first time the US administration is explicitly threatening to suspend military aid to Israel unless some very specific conditions are met.

These conditions, says Axios, amount to “the most wide-ranging and comprehensive list of US demands from Israel since the beginning of the war.”

Noting that IDF evacuation orders have forced 1.7 million Palestinians into Mawasi, a narrow strip of land on the Gaza coast where they are prey to dangerous diseases, at the same time as recent Israeli policies have made it harder to supply international aid into Gaza and limited its movement within the Strip, Blinken and Austin wrote that:

The amount of assistance entering Gaza in September was the lowest of any month during the past year … to reverse the downward humanitarian trajectory as consistent with its assurances to us, Israel must, starting now and within 30 days act on the following concrete measures …

Failure to demonstrate a sustained commitment to implementing and maintaining these measures may have implications for US policy under NSM-20 and relevant US law (weapons supply).


These “concrete measures” included demands that Israel must:

  • allow “the permanent transfer of 350 aid trucks daily to the Gaza Strip through all four current border crossings as well as the opening of a fifth border crossing”;
  • enable “humanitarian pauses [in the fighting] throughout Gaza to allow the distribution of aid for at least the next four months”;
  • permit “the Palestinians who are concentrated along the coast in Mawasi to move east inland and away from the coastal area before winter”;
  • “end the isolation of northern Gaza Strip and officially announce it has no policy of forced evacuation of Palestinians from northern Gaza Strip to the southern Gaza Strip”; and
  • “allow the Red Cross to visit Palestinian detainees in detention facilities in Israel as soon as possible, in light of reports of abuse of detainees.”

In addition, Blinken and Austin expressed the US administration’s “concern” about a bill currently before the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, that would “sever ties between the Israeli government and UNRWA and to change the status-quo towards the organization in Jerusalem.”

Noting that this law, if passed, “would be devastating for the humanitarian effort in the Gaza Strip at a critical time and would prevent education and welfare services for tens of thousands of Palestinians in Jerusalem” and could also “constitute a violation of US laws,” Blinken and Austin demanded that “Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu exercise his powers and influence over Knesset members so the bill doesn’t pass.”

Finally, Blinken and Austin wrote, “the US wants to establish a new mechanism with Israel to discuss incidents of mass Palestinian civilian casualties during IDF operations.”

On reading this report my response was mixed. This could be a game-changer, not only for Gaza but for the rapidly escalating conflict that threatens to engulf the entire Middle East (if not eventually the world). Without US arms and diplomatic support at the United Nations for its defiance not only of UN Security Council resolutions but also the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court, Israel becomes far more vulnerable not only militarily but to international pressure.

A change in US policy on arms at this point would also make domestic political sense. The presidential election is less than a month away, and the race is too close to call in the critical swing states.

While Kamala Harris has doubled down on Biden’s “ironclad commitment” to Israel’s defence, a threat to condition the supply of offensive weapons of the sort that has been the administration’s policy in Ukraine could win back some of the Palestinian American, Arab American, Muslim American, and young American votes the Democrats have lost over Gaza—because these groups have much to lose otherwise from a Trump victory.

If, that is, it is not too late. Remember Hubert Humphrey’s loss, in uncannily similar circumstances—cleaving too close to an unpopular president despite US involvement in a divisive war (Vietnam)—to Richard Nixon in 1968?

On the other hand, Biden has ignored his own red lines before, and Blinken has recently been exposed as flagrantly disregarding State Department advice back in April that Israel’s actions in Gaza were not in conformity with the very same legal requirements he is now invoking. The Blinken-Austin letter sets a 30-day deadline for Israel to act on its demands, which takes us to November 12—a week after the US election.

Should Harris, buoyed by the apparent prospect of a U-turn on Biden’s policy on arms to Israel, win on November 5, what is there to prevent her administration, having done its due diligence, from certifying that Israel’s assurances that it is acting in accord with relevant US laws are “credible and reliable,” as Blinken did—outrageously—before?

So long as the IDF continue to blockade aid, turn Jabalia refugee camp into a free-fire kill zone, fire on UN peacekeepers in Lebanon, and burn hospital patients alive with US-supplied bombs, this is not a time to ease up on the pressure on Israel and the US to obey international law.

It is a time, on the contrary, for heightened vigilance.


Update

The full text of the Blinken-Austin letter has now been posted on X by the Israeli journalist Barak Ravid and its authenticity confirmed by the White House, whose spokesman Matthew Miller describes it as “a private diplomatic communication” whose “timing was not influenced by next month’s presidential election.” Sure.

The contents of the letter are as described by Axios, though there are some additional demands made of Israel that are not mentioned in the Axios report.


It has been a strange year, when, as I reached the ripe old age of 74, whatever illusions I still harbored about “western civilization” died on the killing fields of Gaza. Perhaps that is why I was more drawn to meditative solo piano or quiet jazz trios and quartets this year, with my song of the year being Caroline Shaw and So Percussion’s haunting deconstruction of Schubert’s beautiful An die Musik. Adam Sliwinski of So Percussion likens it in his sleevenotes to “the ghost of a structure, like a ruined building or an ancient underwater city.” Seems apt for the times.

That said, who can resist the joyfulness of Ezra Collective or the Sun Ra Arkestra—led by the irrepressible Marshall Allen, still going strong at 100? Or the sublime lyricism of Charles Lloyd, who is just hitting his prime at 86?

Do not go gentle into that good night.

PROBABLY NOT JAZZ TOP 10

Album of the year

Hurray for the Riff Raff The Past Is Still Alive

The Past Is Still Alive - Album by Hurray For The Riff Raff | Spotify

Finalists 

Adrianne Lenker Bright Future

English Teacher This Could be Texas

Caroline Shaw & So Percussion Rectangles and Circumstances

King Hannah Big Swimmer

Mdou Moctar Funeral for Justice

Jason Isbell Live at the Ryman vol 2

T-Bone Burnett The Other Side

Kim Deal Nobody Loves You More

Waxahatchee Tiger’s Blood


MAYBE JAZZ TOP 10

Album of the year

Jeff Parker & the EVA IVtet The Way Out of Easy

The Way Out of Easy | Jeff Parker ETA IVtet | International Anthem

Finalists 

Wadada Leo Smith and Amina Claudine Myers Central Park’s Mosaics of Reservoir, Lake, Paths and Gardens

Nala Sinephro Endlessness

Tyshawn Sorey Trio The Susceptible Now

Nubya Garcia Odyssey

Ezra Collective Dance, No One’s Watching

Vijay Iyer, Linda May Han Oh, Tyshawn Sorey Compassion

Walter Smith III Three of Us Are from Houston and Reuben Isn’t

Sun Ra Arkestra Lights on a Satellite

Charles Lloyd The Sky Will Still Be There Tomorrow


REISSUES/FIRST ISSUES OF OLDER RECORDINGS

Jimmie Dale and the Flatlanders All American Music

Miles Davis in France 1963 & 1964

Keith Jarrett, Paul Motian, Gary Peacock The Old Country

Miles in France - Miles Davis Quintet 1963/64: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 8 | Miles  Davis Official Site

I ALSO LIKED

Philip Glass Solo (2024)

Jon Batiste Beethoven Blues

Ryuichi Sakamoto Opus

Ambrose Akenmusire Owl Song

Kamasi Washington Fearless Movement

Philip Glass Solo | Philip Glass

SONG OF THE YEAR

Caroline Shaw/So Percussion To Music (An die Musik, Schubert)

Rectangles and Circumstance | Caroline Shaw, Sō Percussion | Sō Percussion

Finalists

Kamasi Washington Prologue

Kim Deal Coast

Hurray for the Riff Raff Buffalo

Ezra Collective feat. Yazmin Lacey God Gave Me Feet for Dancing

English Teacher Albert Road

This is the submitted version of an article accepted for publication in Sociology Lens (DOI: 10.1111/johs.12490)

Abstract   Submitting an invited text for the Anthropology and Humanism festschrift “Hundreds for Katie,” I experienced cognitive dissonance between the objectives of ethnographic writing championed by Kathleen Stewart and the journal’s submission requirements.  The insistence that every submission must contain keywords and an abstract signifies deeper issues with academic writing.  Specific forms of writing enforce the disciplinary norms of Thomas Kuhn’s “normal science.”  To “write difference” we may need to write differently.  The paper draws inter alia on works by Kathleen Stewart, Lauren Berlant, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Peter Winch, Walter Benjamin, James Clifford, Georges Bataille, and members of the Mass–Observation group. 


The Tyranny of the Abstract

In memory of Lesley Stern

Form follows function—that has been misunderstood. Form and function should be one, joined in a spiritual union.

Frank Lloyd Wright[1]

1

I was recently invited to participate in a project to honor the anthropologist Kathleen Stewart’s retirement from the University of Texas at Austin, titled “100s for Katie.”  Though I was doubtful about what I could offer—this would be my first attempt at writing a “hundred”—I welcomed the chance to contribute.  Katie is a friend whose work I have deeply admired since I first encountered A Space on the Side of the Road (1996), her ethnography of “an ‘other’ America that survives precariously among the ruins of the West Virginia coal camps and ‘hollers’ … as an excluded subtext to the American narrative of capitalism, modernization, materialism, and democracy.”[2]   This was followed by Ordinary Affects (2007) and her jointly authored volume with Lauren Berlant, The Hundreds (2019).  Running through all Katie’s writing is an abiding suspicion of what I call the violence of abstraction.  I borrowed this concept from Karl Marx,[3] but it is a vice of which the intellectual left is far from innocent.   “This book is set in a United States caught in a present that began some time ago,” Katie observes at the beginning of Ordinary Affects:

But it suggests that the terms neoliberalism, advanced capitalism, and globalization that index this emergent present, and the five or seven or ten characteristics used to summarize and define it in shorthand, do not in themselves begin to describe the situation we find ourselves in.  The notion of a totalized system, of which everything is always already somehow a part, is not helpful (to say the least) in the effort to approach a weighted and reeling present.  This is not to say that the forces these systems try to name are not real and literally pressing.  On the contrary, I am trying to bring them into view as a scene of immanent force, rather than leave them looking like dead effects imposed on an innocent world.[4]

            Throughout her career Katie has pushed the boundaries of academic discourse, exploring forms of writing that in her view are better attuned to grasping and expressing excluded subtexts (and marginalized subjects) than the research article or scholarly monograph.   I emphasize forms of writing.  What are we writing about, and how is it best captured?   In Katie’s own words, “These works are experiments that write from the intensities in things, asking what potential modes of knowing, relating or attending to things are already being enacted and imagined in ordinary ways of living.”  She seeks to give expression to “what might happen, what things in process might become, what something might be related to, a pattern” in everyday worldings.[5]  Her starting points lie in “the forces that come into view as habit or shock, resonance or impact.  Something throws itself together in a moment as an event and a sensation; something both animated and habitable.”[6]  It is this something—something real, tangible, out there, in here, even if it is as yet inchoate and unnamed—that she strives to find ways of researching and articulating.  This requires immersion rather than distance.  “Ethnographic writing is ‘writing difference‘ through a process of participant observation—an attention to scenes you are somehow ‘in,'” Katie tells her students, whether these be “a group, an identity, a practice like running or caring for someone, or a brief situation like riding a bus.” “In writing culture, we are learning to describe with precision how a range of things impact lives.  Write through details!” she urges, for “as a method of writing, ethnography composes with what’s already composed.”[7]  

            “Hundreds” are an experimental form of writing first developed by Emily Bernard and the 100-Word Collective at the University of Vermont in 2009, which Circe Sturm (who was a member of Bernard’s original group) introduced to colleagues in Austin in 2012 and applied to ethnographic writing.  “In Emily Bernard’s approach,” explains Kim Tallbear, “a writer launches their piece from an idea, phrase, single word, or anything that resonates or sparks from the previous piece. There are no limitations for form, style, or subject.”[8]  Sturm suggests that “One of the reasons so many of us are drawn to this abbreviated format is that it allows us to dialogue with other writers, even when our lives are extremely busy. We also feel freer to experiment with content, form and voice, and to risk vulnerability in our writing …  Some ideas catch fire and never lose their burn. This seems to be one of them.”[9]  Sturm, Stewart, and other members of the Austin Public Feelings group “brought [the 100s] to the concept of the new ordinary we’d been developing, and The Hundreds project took off.”  

            Berlant and Stewart provide the briefest of possible introductions (titled “Preludic”) to The Hundreds, leaving plenty space for the texts that follow to engage the reader as they may:

The constraint of the book is that our poems (makings) are exercises in following out the impact of things(words, thoughts, people, objects, ideas, worlds) in hundred-word units or units of hundred multiples.  Honoring the contingency of the experiment, there is no introduction up front but distributed commentary throughout the book, plus reflection in many spots about how the writing attempts to get at a scene or process a hook.  We don’t want to say much in advance about what kind of event of reading or encounter the book can become.  We tried not to provide even this preliminary.[10]

2

Each contributor to “100s for Katie” was invited to write one hundred words on a topic of their choice, to be published in a special section in the American Anthropological Association (AAA) journal, Anthropology and Humanism.  My contribution—in its entirety—read as follows:

Hundreds and Hundreds

Columbine, West Nickel Mines School, Virginia Tech, Northern Illinois U, Collier Township women’s aerobics class, U Alabama Huntsville, Chardon HS, Oikos U, Oak Creek Sikh temple, Sandy Hook ES, Isla Vista sorority house, Marysville Pilchuck HS, Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Umpqua Community College, Pulse nightclub Orlando, Sutherland Springs First Baptist Church, Stoneman Douglas HS, Santa Fe HS, Tree of Life synagogue, Borderline Bar Thousand Oaks, UNC Charlotte, Walmart El Paso, Texas A & M Greensville, Atlanta spas, Oxford HS, Top supermarket Buffalo, Robb ES Uvalde, U Virginia Charlottesville, Arts HS St Louis, Club Q Colorado Springs, Michigan State U …[11]      

Anyone with a passing acquaintance with recent American history will immediately recognize at least some of these names as the locations of mass shootings.[12]  They register forces that “come into view as habit or shock, resonance or impact”—or in this case all of the above—without my having to say another word.

            Having made it through peer review—a standard academic procedure that felt distinctly out of place in this context—my text was accepted without revision.  But when it came to proof stage, I was instructed to: “Add your Summary (up to 200 words) and up to five keywords below your address.  Keywords, or something very close to them, should also appear in the Abstract itself to maximize searchability. In this case the Summary can be 1-2 sentences, e.g., ‘In this ‘hundreds’ in honor of Kathleen Stewart, I …'”  This instruction was part of a set of Author Guidelines to which all contributions to Anthropology and Humanism (apart from poetry, which had its own separate guidelines) had to conform, irrespective of their subject matter.  Among other things, these guidelines mandated that authors use American spellings, follow the Chicago Manual of Style, and leave one rather than two spaces after a period.   It had apparently not crossed the minds of the editors of an ethnography journal that if, as Peter Winch once put it, “our language and our social relations are just two different sides of the same coin. To give an account of the meaning of a word is to describe how it is used; and to describe how it is used is to describe the social intercourse into which it enters,”[13] then “to describe with precision how a range of things impact lives” may sometimes require deviation from the Chicago Manual of Style.  A rereading of Clifford Geertz’s classic essay on thick description, published fifty years ago, might not come amiss in this context.[14]

            My particular concern here is with the demand to provide Keywords and Abstracts, which Anthropology and Humanism‘s guidelines treat as a merely formal, technical issue, a matter of making the text visible to internet search engines.  It is also, I learned later, a result of major commercial publishers standardizing submission and typesetting templates across their journals in the service of automating (and offshoring) their production processes. Unfortunately for the social sciences and humanities, these templates more often than not reflect the priorities of the science journals that form the largest portion of the big journal publishers’ stables.   But whatever technical and financial reasons journals may have for mandating Abstracts and Keywords, these elements cannot but function as paratexts that influence what kind of event of reading or encounter the text can become.  They epitomize the kind of prescriptive framing Lauren and Katie’s “Preludic” takes pains to avoid.  Gérard Genette, who coined the concept, describes a paratext as “a threshold, or—a word Borges used apropos of a preface—a ‘vestibule’ that offers the world at large the possibility of stepping inside or turning back.  It is an ‘undefined zone’ between the inside and the outside, a zone without any hard and fast boundary on either the inward side (turned toward the text) or the outward side (turned toward the world’s discourse about the text), an edge, or as Philippe Lejeune put it, ‘a fringe of the printed text which in reality controls one’s whole reading of the text.'”[15]  

            As a longtime coeditor of another academic journal,[16] I am well aware that in today’s precarious funding environments metrics matter.  Keywords are clickbait, comparable to headlines for news media.  I duly provided my five: America, hate, homophobia, misogyny, racism.  They were not inaccurate; my text did bear on all these topics.  How useful they are to readers or researchers, given their abstraction, is another issue.  I deliberately did not use the generic term “mass shootings,” which might seem the most obvious classification under which to file my piece, for reasons I shall explain more fully later.  But I baulked at the absurdity of writing an Abstract or Summary of “1-2 sentences,” let alone of “up to 200 words,” to frame a 100-word text.  This was not just a question of proportion.  Like Katie and Lauren, I was loath to say anything in advance about what kind of event of reading or encounter my text could become.  I did not want to circumscribe my potential readership or restrict the ways in which the text might be read by too narrow a prior summary of what my 100 words were “about.”  My aim was to make people think—to open up what Katie calls “a contact zone for analysis”[17]—rather than telling them what to think.  From this point of view, any summary would be too narrow.  I concur with Roland Barthes that “a text is not a line of words releasing a single ‘theological’ meaning (the ‘message’ of the Author-God) but a multi-dimensional space in which a variety of writings, none of them original, blend and clash.”[18]  No text can ever be closed, definitively pinned down in one interpretation—even its author’s interpretation.  Especially, perhaps, its author’s interpretation.  I wanted my words—words I did not invent, that came heavily freighted with cultural resonances of their own—to speak for themselves, through whatever they evoked for each individual reader.  As a poem might.  

            I returned the proof without an Abstract, hoping it wouldn’t be missed.  A couple days later the editor reminded me that I needed to provide one, within seven days please.  Not wanting to get into an argument in which we would likely just talk past one another—after all it seemed such a trifling quibble, a storm in an academic teacup—I gave in.  Keeping in mind George Bataille’s dictum that “A dictionary would begin starting from the moment when it no longer provided the meanings of words but their jobs,”[19] I did not attempt to summarize what my text says, so much as to inform readers what it tries to do.  This was therefore not, strictly speaking, an Abstract.  It read: “This contribution to the special section ‘100s for Katie’ attempts to communicate the depth and breadth of the hatred infecting contemporary America in one hundred words.”  

            Along with several other contributions, all of which were headed “Poetry” or “Creative Nonfiction” (as distinct from “Research Articles”), my hundred words were published online as a self-contained piece in Early View format, a week after I had delivered the corrected proof and months before publication of the special issue as a whole.  Driven by an economy in which large commercial journal publishers increasingly make their money not from library subscriptions but open access payments (APCs)[20] or download fees for individual articles, this is a process of Spotification[21] that disrupts my text’s connection with the rest of the “100s for Katie” (I would never have written this text, in this way, outside of this context), networking it instead to whatever else is found by searching under its keywords.  This too violates the spirit of the hundreds, which are typically written for writing groups whose members are variously stimulated by (rather than academically responding to) one another’s texts in the open-ended ways described by Kim Tallbear and exemplified by Katie and Lauren in The Hundreds.  At least my omission of “mass shootings” from the keywords and abstract may deter searchers from subsuming my text under Criminology. 

            The visual design of the anthropology and Humanism Early View page acts as a further paratext.[22]  What draws the eye in the layout of these articles, because of the size of the typeface and its placing in an indented box at the head of each text is—the Summary (heading in bold, font larger than the main text) and KEYWORDS (heading in bold capitals).[23]  This pre-text stands out even more than it would in the case of a normal length article, because the text it introduces is so short: in my case, just eight lines.  Everything conspires to suggest to the reader that the gist, the core, the meat, the heart, the message, the essence of the text is to be found here—in the Abstract.  I am playing with words now, but with serious intent.  As the Collins Dictionary explains, “When you talk or think about something in the abstract, you talk or think about it in a general way, rather than considering particular things or events.”[24]  Abstraction is the polar opposite to what the hundreds set out to do.  In Katie’s words, introducing Ordinary Affects, her writing:

tries to slow the quick jump to representational thinking and evaluative critique long enough to find ways of approaching the complex and uncertain objects that fascinate because they literally hit us or exert a pull on us.  My effort here is not to finally “know” them—to collect them into a good enough story of what’s going on—but to fashion some form of address that is adequate to their form; to find something to say about ordinary affects by performing some of the intensity and texture that makes them habitable and animate.  This means building an idiosyncratic map of connections between a series of singularities.  It means pointing always outward to an ordinary world whose forms of living are now being composed and suffered, rather than seeking the closure or clarity of a book’s interiority or riding a great rush of signs to a satisfying end …  From the perspective of ordinary affects, thought is patchy and material.  It does not find magical closure or even seek it, perhaps only because it’s too busy trying to imagine what’s going on.[25]

3

The list of mass shootings in my “hundred for Katie” is far from comprehensive: from dozens of shootings over the same period listed in Wikipedia,[26] I chose a selection of those that seemed (to me) to speak to “what things in process might become, what something might be related to, a pattern.”  The earliest shooting in my list took place when Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold donned their trench coats and gunned down twelve of their fellow students and one of their teachers at Columbine High School in Colorado on April 20, 1999.  I began with Columbine because in the popular imaginary Columbine has become the paradigmatic, iconic, quintessential mass shooting, the event that “laid down the ‘cultural script’ for the next generation of shooters.”[27]  The very word Columbine has acquired the totemic power of one of Roland Barthes’ myths, a self-sufficient sign that “abolishes the complexity of human acts, it gives them the simplicity of essences, it does away with all dialectics, with any going back beyond what is immediately visible, it organizes a world which is without contradictions because it is a world without depth, a world wide open and wallowing in the evident, it establishes a blissful clarity: things appear to mean something by themselves.”[28]  The rest of my shootings all happened during the present century, beginning with the shooting of ten girls aged between six and thirteen (five were killed) at West Nickel Mines School, an Old Order Amish one-room schoolhouse in Lancaster County, PA, on October 2, 2006.  

            The form of my text—a bald, unadorned list—was integral to what I was trying to do.  It is not an argument, an analysis, an explanation, a narrative, or a critique.  As Katie says of her own work, it is “an attempt to find something to say about ordinary affects by performing some of the intensity and texture that makes them habitable and animate.”  It maps a contemporary affectual terrain—a zone of fear and anxiety, of morbid fascination and perverse excitement, a scene that attracts like an accident on the highway—by enumerating some of its landmarks. These are names that resonate with significances.  The text communicates through what its one hundred words evoke rather than anything it explicitly says.  It says nothing, because these words are not linked in meaningful propositions.  They don’t even form a coherent sentence.  The impact of the text relies entirely on their connotations.  If this hundred works (I accept that for many readers it may not), it does so by calling to mind “what’s already composed” in everyday worldings.

            The very fact that I—or Wikipedia—can compile such a list shows how far this terrain has become part of the landscape of everyday American life; not to mention how peculiar America is in that regard, since nowhere else in the developed world would a list of mass shootings over this period get close to one hundred words.[29]  The geographical spread of locations, from Buffalo to El Paso and from Orlando to Santa Barbara, and the variety of social sites in which the shootings occurred, underline not only the scale of these killings but their ordinariness, suggesting they could happen to anyone anytime anywhere.  Full of juxtapositions as surreal as Lautréamont’s chance encounter of a sewing machine and an umbrella on an operating table—a women’s aerobics class in suburban Pennsylvania, a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, a high school in Parkland, Florida, massage parlors in Atlanta, Georgia—the list is as non-sensical as the classification of animals in Borges’s imaginary Chinese Encyclopedia with which Michel Foucault begins The Order of Things.  Like that classification, it shatters “all the familiar landmarks of … our thought, the thought that bears the stamp of our age and our geography—breaking up all the ordered surfaces and all the planes with which we are accustomed to tame the wild profusion of existing things.”[30]  It disturbs, it disrupts, it deranges, it disorders.  Only, it is unlikely to provoke laughter.  

            If we “slow the quick jump to representational thinking and evaluative critique” and pause to think about what these names conjure up, one by one, each in its singularity, their cumulative weight becomes unbearable—for me, anyway.  As we go down the list, year by year, killing by killing, the recitation takes on the incantational cadences of a litany.  For some, it may recall other occasions when names are ritually intoned:  “At the going down of the sun and in the morning/We will remember them.”[31]  But it is as likely to be met with a meh of world-weary ennui, the “blasé attitude” of Georg Simmel’s sophisticated modern urbanite for whom “the meaning and differing values of things, and thereby the things themselves, are experienced as insubstantial.”  Recognizing what the names in the list are instances of soon enough, how many readers will stop reading long before they have reached the 100-word limit?  What’s new? This indifference, Simmel argued, is born out of attempts to protect the personality against the barrage of novel stimuli in the metropolis; but “self-preservation … is brought at the price of devaluating the whole objective world, a devaluation which in the end unavoidably drags one’s own personality down into a feeling of the same worthlessness.”[32]  Simmel was writing in 1903: in the multi-channel metaverse of 24-hour TV, internet, and social media, modernity’s assault on the senses, emotions, and intellect never ends.  Just as it had no real beginning—there were after all dozens of mass shootings before Columbine—this list has no terminus either.  The text concludes not with a period but an ellipsis, marking a space for the killings we know are still to come.  Hundreds and hundreds of them.

            This was an attempt to write from the intensities of things.  “Your writing,” Katie tells her students, “though non-fiction, will be creative in its effort to evoke and speculate on worlds that are both real and actively mediated and composed both through your writing and through all kinds of modes of expression present in the everyday compositions of living.”[33]  The worlds evoked by my hundred words are horribly real, and their expressions are ever-present in the highly mediated virtual forms through which most of us have experienced them—the everyday compositions of TV, newspapers, social media.  Who has not been touched, however vicariously, by a Sandy Hook, a Parkland, an Uvalde, punching a hole in the armor of indifference?  Or perhaps, depending on our race or gender or sexual orientation, the punctum that pierced the ordered surfaces and planes of our thought and our world was the killings at an Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church or a Tree of Life Synagogue, a sorority house in Santa Barbara or a Top supermarket in East Buffalo, a Club Q or a Pulse gay nightclub?  Every one of these shootings took place in a particular location in a particular community.  They are not just instances of a more general trend.  Like a photograph, each name recalls specific moments of horror, dragging us back to “the absolute Particular, the sovereign Contingency, matte and somehow stupid, the This … in short, what Lacan calls the Tuché, the Occasion, the Encounter, the Real, in its indefatigable expression.”[34]  The particulars refuse to dissipate into the lightness of generalization.  

            But this “idiosyncratic map of connections between a series of singularities” is something more than just an arbitrary list of unrelated events.  While these shootings do not share any single common property or set of defining characteristics, what connects them, not just in my text but in the world, is akin to what Ludwig Wittgenstein called family resemblances—”a complicated network of similarities overlapping and criss-crossing; sometimes overall similarities, sometimes similarities of detail.”[35]  These killings are sudden flares in a dark landscape of hate, eruptions of a volcanic underworld of horribly ordinary affects that “work not through ‘meanings’ per se, but rather in the way they pick up density and texture as they move through bodies, dreams, dramas, social worldings of all kinds.” “We look for a lesson in Columbine and its offshoots,” Katie writes, “But the kids, or the records they leave behind, tell stories that have their own complex trajectories … These stories don’t end in a moral but are left to resonate with all the other ways that intensities rise out of the ordinary and then linger, unresolved, until memory dims or some new eruption catches our attention … And we’re left with the visible signs of relays we can’t name or predict and don’t know what to do with.”[36]   

            My hundred words are a hook, an entry point, a way to open up Katie’s “contact zone for analysis”—a call to wrench the discourse away from indexing, classifying, defining, theorizing, explaining, in favor of the infinitely more difficult task of describing.

4

Like standardization of anything else in life from school curricula to flight attendants’ dress codes, the standardization of writing conventions cannot be a neutral process.  It is never just a matter of mere stylistic preferences. Somebody has to set the standards. Taken as a whole, Anthropology and Humanism‘s guidelines (which are not untypical of contemporary social science journals) select, elevate, and hegemonize one form of writing—a very particular form of writing, which is bound up in a powerful apparatus of disciplinary institutions and practices—over all others.  The fact that Anthropology and Humanism has separate categories for Creative Nonfiction and Poetry is itself revealing of the hierarchy of ways of knowing the world that is at play.  We should probably be grateful that Anthropology and Humanism carries such forms of writing at all when many other journals do not: here, the subtexts are merely marginalized rather than wholly excluded as irrelevant to the scholarly enterprise.  The archetypes of academic writing are the scientific paper or Research Article and, in the humanities and some areas of the social sciences, the scholarly monograph or book.  A Research Article is decidedly not Creative Nonfiction and still less is it Poetry, from which it is categorically distinct in all senses of the word.[37]  It has strict written and unwritten conventions (as does the academic book), some of which I and other contributors brushed up against in our contributions to “100s for Katie.”   Depending on how you look at it, the Abstract is the epitome or the reductio ad absurdum of this power/knowledge regime. 

            The notion that we can abstract the essence (gist, core, meat, heart, message) of a text in a couple sentences without significant loss of content assumes a very definite kind of text.  Nobody but a philistine would think we could abstract The Waste Land or summarize Ulysses.  We might be able to summarize the plot of Ulysses, but to do so would provide few clues as to why anyone should want to read Joyce’s magnum opus.[38] A novel is no more reducible to its plot than a film is reducible to its screenplay or a musical performance to its score.  We can regard an Abstract as an adequate summary of a Research Article only to the extent that the essence (gist, core, meat, heart, message) of the article is deemed to lie in its argument, for which any particulars serve merely as evidence or illustration.  Physicists are not interested in the color or taste of Isaac Newton’s apple, but what its fall from the tree tells them about the laws of motion.  A grotesque—but revealing—outcome of this assumption can be found in the Paper Summaries service academia.edu offers its premium subscribers, which promises to “scan the high quality papers on the site, find key words, phrases, and conclusions, and present them to you by paper section in a five-minute read.”[39]  With this feature, academia.edu boasts, you can “read the central arguments of a paper” and “see the 10 key points in any paper,” so that you need “never waste time on a paper again.”[40]  A similar “AI assistant,” which promises to “Summarize your docs in a click, ask questions to get quick answers, and level up your productivity,” is now offered as a (subscriber only) add-on to Adobe Acrobat, the popular software that generates the industry-standard PDF file format.[41]

            Much the same applies mutatis mutandis to scholarly books: while readers of novels or poetry don’t expect an introduction telling them what the text is about, publishers of academic monographs invariably demand one.  In both scholarly books and research articles, more or less obligatory literature reviews and rigorous citation practices situate the text in relation to wider disciplinary fields, as a contribution to ongoing academic debates.  I vividly remember the editors of the venerable English historical journal Past and Present requiring me to add a superfluous footnote referencing “the standard literature on nationalism” in a lengthy article they had already reviewed and accepted, not because I was engaging with that literature but because, well, one should.  I naively thought I could describe from primary sources how in nineteenth-century Prague speaking German or Czech shifted over the course of a century from a marker of class difference to a badge of national identity without doffing my cap to Benedict Anderson, Hobsbawm and Ranger, or Edward Said, but I was breaking an unwritten rule.[42]  To its credit, at least back in 1998 Past and Present did not require articles to have an abstract; nowadays it does.  The context for this form of writing is Thomas Kuhn’s puzzle-solving normal science—a “disciplinary matrix” of shared values, theories, methods, and exemplars that forms the framework within which scientists work and is questioned only in those relatively rare moments of crisis when the established paradigms break down.[43]

            I quoted Peter Winch earlier to the effect that to give an account of the meaning of a word is to describe how it is used, and to describe how it is used is to describe the social intercourse into which it enters.  The Concise Oxford Dictionary offers the following definition—a summary, of sorts—of ordinary usages of the word abstract

abstract adj., v., & n.  •adj. … 1 a to do with or existing in thought rather than matter, or theory rather than practice; not tangible or concrete (abstract questions rarely concerned him).  b (of a word, esp. a noun) denoting a quality or condition or intangible thing rather than a concrete object.  2 (of art) achieving its effect by grouping shapes and colours in satisfying patterns rather than by the recognizable representation of physical reality.  •v. … 1 tr. (often foll. by from) take out of; extract; remove.  2 a tr. summarize (an article, book.).  b intr. do this as an occupation.  3 tr. & refl. (often foll. by from) disengage (a person’s attention, etc.); distract.  4 tr. (foll. by from) consider abstractly or separately from something else.  5 tr. euphem. steal.  •n. … 1 a summary or statement of the contents of a book etc.  2 an abstract work of art.  3 an abstraction or abstract term.[44]

In colloquial speech and everyday intercourse, most of these uses of the word abstract are faintly pejorative.  The abstract is the realm of the mental rather than the material, the theoretical rather than the practical, the intangible rather than the concrete; abstract paintings may be aesthetically pleasing, but they are not recognizable representations of reality.  To abstract is to take away, to extract, to remove, to disengage, to distract—even, in one euphemistic usage, to steal.  

            Ordinary language tacitly recognizes that abstraction always impoverishes, because any process of abstraction involves loss. Only within the ivory towers of academe is it assumed that what is discarded in the process of abstraction is inessential—indeed, that not only can we abstract without loss, but that it is the act of abstraction itself that reveals what is essential.  The young Karl Marx viciously satirized this “mystery of speculative construction” back in 1845:

If from real apples, pears, strawberries and almonds I form the general idea “Fruit,” if I go further and imaginethat my abstract idea “Fruit,” derived from real fruit, is an entity existing outside me, is indeed the true essence of the pear, the apple, etc., then in the language of speculative philosophy—I am declaring that “Fruit” is the “Substance” of the pear, the apple, the almond, etc. I am saying, therefore, that to be a pear is not essential to the pear, that to be an apple is not essential to the apple; that what is essential to these things is not their real existence, perceptible to the senses, but the essence that I have abstracted from them and then foisted on them, the essence of my idea—”Fruit.” I therefore declare apples, pears, almonds, etc., to be mere forms of existence, modi, of “Fruit.” My finite understanding supported by my senses does of course distinguish an apple from a pear and a pear from an almond, but my speculative reason declares these sensuous differences inessential and irrelevant. It sees in the apple the same as in the pear, and in the pear the same as in the almond, namely “Fruit.” Particular real fruits are no more than semblances whose true essence is “the substance”—”Fruit.”[45]

One is tempted to cut to the chase and conclude that this “contemptuous attitude toward the particular case,” as Wittgenstein described it, has its roots in a form of life in which, fancying themselves to be neutral outside observers rather than involved (and compromised) participants, academics abstract themselves from the worlds they study—but let that pass.  “The idea that in order to get clear about the meaning of a general term one had to find the common element in all its applications,” Wittgenstein continues, “has shackled philosophical investigation; for it has not only led to no result, but also made the philosopher dismiss as irrelevant the concrete cases, which alone could have helped him understand the usage of the concrete term.”[46]

            Wittgenstein goes on to suggest that “Our craving for generality has another main source: our preoccupation with the method of science”:       

Philosophers constantly see the method of science before their eyes, and are irresistibly tempted to ask and answer questions in the way science does. This tendency is the real source of metaphysics, and leads the philosopher into complete darkness.  I want to say here that it can never be our job to reduce anything to anything, or to explain anything.  Philosophy really is ‘purely descriptive’.[47]

Anthropologists—and sociologists, and historians—should take heed of Wittgenstein’s warning, which does not apply just to philosophers but to students of human societies in general.  Our interests lie in the differentia specifica that make social and cultural phenomena what they are and not anything else.  And these, Katie Stewart suggests, “are not just dead social constructions that we can trace back to a simple origin, but rather are forms of contagion, persuasion, and social worlding”[48] that are always in flux, in statu nascendi.  What we banish from the abstractions though which we think the world comes back in the ordinary affects through which we feel it.  The problem for anthropologists and sociologists and historians—at this point, given the resonances of the term, I no longer want to describe us as social scientists—is how to grasp, articulate, and communicate these affects textually.  The reason abstract concepts like neo-liberalism, advanced capitalism, and globalization “do not in themselves begin to describe the situation we find themselves in” is that in themselves they do not describe any thing at all.  Which is of course why we have trouble reconnecting them with the world of everyday experience.  

            To describe the social world is to write difference.  And to write difference may just require us to write differently.         

5

There is a long tradition of research and writing, which until relatively recently remained mostly outside the academy, upon which we are able to draw.  I can only scrape the surface here.[49]  On January 30, 1937, a letter appeared in theNew Statesman and Nation under the headline “Anthropology at Home,” in which two members of the British Surrealist Group, the poet and sometime Daily Mirror journalist Charles Madge and the documentary filmmaker Humphrey Jennings, joined with the birdwatcher and amateur ethnographer Tom Harrisson, author of the Left Book Club bestseller Savage Civilisation,[50] to announce the formation of an enterprise that has since become legendary in the annals of social research.  Mass–Observation proposed to recruit 5000 people from all walks of life to carry out “an anthropology of ourselves.”[51]  Soon, over a thousand “coalminers, factory hands, shopkeepers, salesmen, housewives, hospital nurses, bank clerks, business men, doctors and schoolmasters, scientists and technicians” had applied to be mass–observers.[52]  Their principal task was to compile “Day Surveys” in which they related everything they did from waking to sleeping on the twelfth day of every month.  

            “The original purpose of the Day Surveys,” wrote Madge and Harrisson, “was to collect a mass of data without any selective principle.” “Mass–Observation has always assumed that its untrained Observers would be subjective cameras, each with his or her distortion,” they added, who “tell us not what society is like, but what it looks like to them.”[53]  The anthropological establishment of the time was appalled—not least, at the erosion of the boundary between observer and observed that is crucial to sustaining the illusion (and authority) of scientific objectivity.  Though Bronislaw Malinowski applauded Mass–Observation’s objectives, he criticized their “rough and perhaps crude empiricism,” “inchoate observation of everything,” and “inability to make a clear distinction between the relevant and the adventitious.”[54]  As it turned out, the Day Surveys that formed the basis for Mass–Observation’s first book fell on the day of George VI’s coronation.  In May the Twelfth, complained Raymond Firth (who succeeded Malinowski as Professor of Social Anthropology at the London School of Economics in 1944), “description of Coronation activities is interlarded continuously with remarks on the weather, accounts of people’s health, or babies or toilet, or argument about women cyclists or art,” with the result that “what to an anthropologist are essential phases of the phenomenon, namely the complex ritual involved, the religious and moral precepts associated with kingship, and the political structure which gives the framework for the ceremony” are buried under “masses of irrelevant crude fact.”[55]  It seems not to have occurred to him that the rituals he deems essential are his and his anthropological colleagues’ abstractions, while the remarks on the weather and arguments about women cyclists and art were equally constitutive of the coronation day as a social event—comprised of a simultaneous multiplicity of worldings.  To distinguish between “the sociological law of universal validity on the one hand, and sundry happenings and subjective reactions on the other” is harder than Malinowski supposes.[56]  Ironically, social historians have been mining Mass–Observation’s archive as an unparalleled source on the everyday life of the period ever since.

            Around the same time, on the other side of the English Channel, the exiled German critic Walter Benjamin was deep into his Arcades Project, an investigation of the dreamworlds of nineteenth-century Paris through its surviving material fabric and cultural artifacts that he had begun to research in 1927.  When he fled Paris to escape the German advance in 1940, Benjamin left the manuscript in the safekeeping of his friend Georges Bataille, who hid it in the stacks of the Bibliothéque Nationale for the duration of the war.    Benjamin committed suicide on the Spanish border to avoid being repatriated to occupied France in September 1940.  The Arcades Project was not published in the original German and French until 1982 or translated into English until 1999.  Alongside other belatedly translated texts like his Berlin Childhood around 1900 and One-Way Street,[57] it offers an approach to writing history that is equally respectful of the intensities in things.  “Must the Marxist understanding of history necessarily be acquired at the expense of the perceptibility of history?” Benjamin asks himself, wondering “in what way is it possible to conjoin a heightened graphicness to the realization of the Marxist method?”  His answer draws upon one of the most formally revolutionary innovations of twentieth-century art.  “The first stage in this undertaking will be to carry over the principle of montage into history,” he writes.  “That is, to assemble large-scale constructions out of the smallest and most precisely cut components.  Indeed, to discover in the analysis of the small individual moment the crystal of the total event.”[58]  

            Benjamin’s large-scale construction bears no resemblance to the grand narratives toward which, says Jean-François Lyotard, our postmodern era feels only incredulity, or the metahistories criticized by Hayden White as “a narrative prose discourse that purports to be a model, or icon, of past structures and processes in the interest of explaining what they are by representing them.”[59]  “This work has to develop to the highest degree the art of citing without quotation marks,” Benjamin observes; “Its theory is intimately related to that of montage.”[60]  The text of the Arcades Project is made up of hundreds of numbered individual passages quoted verbatim from the most heterogeneous primary sources, which Benjamin gathers into loose folders or “convolutes” without providing any overarching sense-making narrative under which they could be subsumed.  Though the text is spattered with his own often gnostic observations, Benjamin does not try to systematize these into an argument.  There are a multitude of ways through this labyrinth, connections within and across the convolutes, to which he provides no signposts or map.  He is confident that the details will speak for themselves.  “I needn’t say anything.  Merely show,” he writes.  “I shall purloin no valuables, appropriate no ingenious formulations.  But the rags, the refuse—these I will not inventory but allow, in the only way possible, to come into their own, by making use of them.”[61]

            Humphrey Jennings’s Pandaemonium 1660-1886: The Coming of the Machine as Seen by Contemporary Observers adopts a methodology of composing from fragments that is remarkably similar to Benjamin’s Arcades Project, even though the likelihood is that the two men never met.[62]  Pandaemonium assembles a vast panorama of extracts from diaries, letters, poems and novels, newspapers, scientific journals, speeches, and government reports, arranged chronologically, once again with minimal commentary.   “In this book I present the imaginative history of the Industrial Revolution,” the co-founder of Mass–Observation explains. “I say ‘present’, not describe or analyse, because the Imagination is a function of man whose traces are more delicate to handle than the facts and events and ideas of which history is usually constructed … I present it by means of what I call Images“:

These are quotations from writings of the period in question … which either in the writing or in the nature of the matter itself or both have revolutionary and symbolic and illuminatory quality.  I mean that they contain in little a whole world—they are the knots in a great net of tangled time and space—the moments at which the situation of humanity is clear—even if only for the flash time of the photographer or the lighting …

            And these images—what do they deal with?  I do not claim that they represent truth—they are too varied, even contradictory, for that.  But they represent human experience.  They are the record of mental events.  Events of the heart.  They are facts (the historian’s kind of facts) which have been passed through the feelings and mind of an individual and have forced him to write … They are all moments in the history of the Industrial Revolution, at which clashes and conflicts suddenly show themselves with extra clearness, and which through that clearness can act as symbols for the whole inexpressible uncapturable process … [T]his window-opening quality … differentiates these pieces of writing from purely economic or political, or social analyses.  Theirs is a different method of tackling, of presenting the same material, the same conflicts, the method of poetry.[63]

6

Both Walter Benjamin and Mass–Observation were directly influenced by the surrealists, who André Breton insisted in the first Surrealist Manifesto were “simple receptacles of so many echoes, modest recording instruments” rather than creative artists.[64]  In retrospect, the surrealists’ battery of techniques—collages, automatic writing, dérives, found objects, games of chance, and the rest—were all attempts at composing with “what’s already composed.”[65]  It is time Louis Aragon’s Paris Peasant, Philippe Soupault’s Last Nights of Paris, and André Breton’s Nadja were seen as experiments in ethnographic writing, and not simply as works of literature—precursors of the anthropology of Pierre Clastres, Michel de Certeau, and Marc Augé (not to mention the remarkable writings of Annie Ernaux, which shatter the boundaries between biography and history, participant and observer, the thought and the felt).[66]  James Clifford was one of the earliest Anglo-American scholars to recognize the importance of this surrealist legacy for anthropology in his 1981 essay “On Ethnographic Surrealism,” in which he argued that surrealism and ethnography are complementary facets of the cultural crisis unleashed by the civilizational dislocation of World War I, in which “Reality is no longer a given, a natural, familiar environment” and “The self, cut loose from its attachments, must discover meaning where it may.”  Where ethnography “suggests a characteristic attitude of participant observation among the artifacts of a defamiliarized cultural reality,” he goes on, surrealism “tended to work in the reverse sense, making the familiar strange.”[67]  

            Surrealism and ethnography came together explosively in the pages of Bataille’s journal Documents, whose “basic method,” Clifford writes, “is juxtaposition—fortuitous or ironic collage” in which “the proper arrangement of cultural symbols and artifacts is constantly placed in doubt … Its images, in their equalizing gloss and distancing effect, present in the same plane a Châtelet show advertisement, a Hollywood movie clip, a Picasso, a Giacometti, a documentary photo from colonial New Caledonia, a newspaper clip, an Eskimo mask, an Old Master, a musical instrument.”[68]  Documents was an exercise in what Bataille and Leiris’s “Critical Dictionary” called l’informe(formless):

formless is not only an adjective having such and such a meaning, but a term serving to declassify [déclasser], requiring in general that everything should have a form … For academics to be satisfied, it would be necessary, in effect, for the universe to take on a form.  The whole of philosophy has no other aim; it is a question of fitting what exists into a frock-coat, a mathematical frock-coat.  To affirm on the contrary that the universe resembles nothing at all and is only formless, amounts to saying that the universe is something akin to a spider or a gob of spittle.[69]

Interviewed for a symposium on l’informe in 2021, Michael Taussig argued that “Clifford not only presented a new history of anthropology but one that opened the gates to a surrealist anthropology that challenged the hegemony that still holds in France, the UK, and the USA”:

Anthropology, like anything else, goes through its fashions—functionalism, structuralism, post-structuralism, the literary turn, anti-colonialism, the ontological turn, etc.—but there is an unwritten law not to mess with form. Clifford’s essay held out the possibility of new writing by exposing and exploring the historical roots of a para-anthropology centered on ‘surrealism’ involving Bataille among others. To me it seemed like an invitation to think more creatively about the experience of one’s fieldwork, to allow the strange to wreak havoc with our normal, and to create a new feeling as to reality itself.[70]   

We are a long way from Malinowski and Firth—and Kuhnian normal science.

            These once heretical perspectives have had greater currency in the Anglophone academy during the last thirty years than at any time during the preceding century.  Walter Benjamin’s star, in particular, has never shone brighter.  It is, then, supremely ironic—part comic, but mostly tragic—that this is the moment when commercial journal publishers choose to standardize their templates along the lines of natural science models, seemingly regardless of the intellectual consequences.  A specific ideal of academic writing is being coercively materialized in the very technologies of journal production in ways that cannot but marginalize or exclude alternative forms and voices.   The irony is compounded by the fact that in more sensitive hands, these same digital technologies could be used to broaden the scope of ethnographic and historical writing, whether through the creative employment of hypertext and intertext or the combination of text with audio or visual elements, in ways that Benjamin or the surrealists could only have dreamed of.[71]  

            Given the continuing importance of research article publication in both universities’ tenure and promotion procedures and national research assessment exercises like the UK’s Research Excellence Framework (REF),[72] this may have serious consequences both for the shape of future knowledge and for individuals’ careers.  Unless there is some recognition of the problem by journal editors and effective resistance to this creeping standardization—not least on the part of professional associations like the American Anthropology Association—some of our most innovative writers, especially younger scholars working in these long-marginalized intellectual traditions, will find it increasingly difficult to publish their work in academically respectable venues at all—to their individual detriment, and to our collective loss.       


[1] Quoted in “Form Follows Function,” at https://www.guggenheim.org/teaching-materials/the-architecture-of-the-solomon-r-guggenheim-museum/form-follows-function (this and all other on-line resources cited in this article accessed on 19 July 2023 unless stated otherwise).

[2] Kathleen C. Stewart, A Space on the Side of the Road: Cultural Poetics in an “Other” America.  Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996.  I quote from the book’s jacket description.

[3] Derek Sayer, Marx’s Method: Ideology, Science and Critique in ‘Capital ‘ (Brighton: Harvester Press and Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1979); and The Violence of Abstraction: The Analytic Foundations of Historical Materialism (Oxford and New York: Blackwell, 1987).

[4] Kathleen Stewart, Ordinary Affects.  Durham, NC, and London: Duke University Press, 2007, p. 1.  My emphasis.

[5] Kathleen C. Stewart, University of Texas at Austin website, at https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/anthropology/faculty/kcs.  My emphasis.

[6] Ordinary Affects, p. 1.

[7] I quote from Kathleen Stewart’s description of her UT Austin course ANT 324L Ethnographic Writing, at https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/anthropology/faculty/kcs.  My emphasis.

[8] Kim Tallbear, “Prairie Relations 100S,” Unsettle, February 2, 2022, at https://kimtallbear.substack.com/p/prairie-relations-100s#details. &nbsp;

[9] Circe Accurso Sturm, “100-Word Collective,” Voices in Italian Americana, Vol. 24, Nos. 1-2, 2013, p. 95.  In the context of issues I raise later in this paper, it is interesting to compare this with earlier surrealist practices of group work and, in particular, such “games” as the exquisite corpse.  See further Derek Sayer, Making Trouble: Surrealism and the Human Sciences (Chicago: Prickly Paradigm Press, 2017).

[10] Lauren Berlant and Kathleen Stewart, The Hundreds.  Durham, NC, and London: Duke University Press, 2019, p. ix.  My emphasis.  

[11] Derek Sayer, “Hundreds and Hundreds,” Anthropology and Humanism 00(0): 1, 2023.  Open access, available at https://doi.org/10.1111/anhu.12447 (Early View).  Published under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license.

[12] As defined by the Gun Violence Archive, “Mass Shootings are, for the most part an American phenomenon. While they are generally grouped together as one type of incident, they are several different types including public shootings, bar/club incidents, family annihilations, drive-by, workplace and those which defy description but with the established foundation definition being that they have a minimum of four victims shot, either injured or killed, not including any shooter who may also have been killed or injured in the incident.” https://www.gunviolencearchive.org/explainer

[13] Peter Winch, The Idea of a Social Science and Its Relation to Philosophy.  London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1963, p. 123.

[14] Clifford Geertz, “Thick Description: Toward an Interpretive Theory of Culture,” in his The Interpretation of Cultures.  New York: Basic Books, 1973.

[15] Gérard Genette, Paratexts. Thresholds of Interpretation.  Trans. Jane E. Lewin, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 2.  My emphasis.

[16] The Journal of Historical Sociology, published quarterly from 1988 to 2022 by Basil Blackwell Publishers, subsequently Wiley.  See https://journals.scholarsportal.info/browse/09521909 (accessed 3 December 2024).

[17] Ordinary Affects, p. 5.

[18] Roland Barthes, “The Death of the Author,” in his Image Music Text.  Ed. and trans. Stephen Heath, London: Fontana, 1977, p. 146.

[19] Georges Bataille, “Informe,” Documents, No. 7, December 1929, p. 382.  My translation.  

[20] On APCs see Royal Society of Chemistry, “Open Access Payments and Funding,” at https://www.rsc.org/journals-books-databases/open-access-publishing/open-access-payments-apcs-and-funding/. &nbsp;

[21] I am alluding to the music streaming service Spotify, which—for good or ill—alters the experience of listening to an album by abstracting individual tracks, which can then be infinitely recombined in playlists.

[22] See Genette, Paratexts, Ch. 2.

[23] See https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/anhu.12447

[24] “Definition of ‘in the abstract,’ Collins Dictionary, at https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/in-the-abstract#google_vignette

[25] Ordinary Affects, pp. 4-5.  My emphasis.

[26] “List of Mass Shootings in the United States,” Wikipedia, at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mass_shootings_in_the_United_States. &nbsp;

[27] Malcolm Gladwell, “Thresholds of Violence: How School Shootings Catch On,” New Yorker, October 19, 2015, quoting Ralph Larkin. 

[28] Roland Barthes, Mythologies.  Trans. Annette Levers, New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, l991, p. 143.

[29] The US accounted for 73 percent of mass shootings that occurred in thirty-six developed countries between 1998 and 2019.  America’s 101 shootings led to 816 deaths.  France had the next highest number of shootings with eight, leading to 179 deaths.  Half the countries surveyed had no mass shootings at all, and only ten had more than one: Belgium, the Czech Republic, Italy, the Netherlands and Switzerland had two, Finland three, Canada four, and Germany five.  See Jason R. Silva, “Global mass shootings: comparing the United States against developed and developing countries,” International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice, online publication 28 December 2022.  I put the term “developed” under erasure (writing it as “developed“), in Jacques Derrida’s sense, to indicate that it is a word I need to use here because of its referents but do not consider adequate as a concept.

[30] Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences.  Trans. Alan Sheridan, New York: Vintage, 1994, p. xv. 

[31] Lawrence Binyon, “For the Fallen,” at https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/57322/for-the-fallen

[32] “The Metropolis and Mental Life,” in The Sociology of Georg Simmel, ed. and trans. Kurt H. Wolff.  Glencoe, IL: The Free Press, 1950, p. 415.

[33] Course description for ANT 324L Ethnographic Writing.

[34] Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography.  Trans. Richard Howard, New York: Hill and Wang, 1981, p. 4.  I am using the term punctum in the sense Barthes gives it in the same book: a “sting, cut, little hole—and also a cast of the dice. A photographer’s punctum is that accident which pricks me (but also bruises me, is poignant to me” (p. 27).

[35] Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations.  Trans G. E. M. Anscombe, second edition, Oxford: Blackwell, 1958, p. 32.

[36] Ordinary Affects, pp, 3, 74. 

[37] “Categorical” is defined in Merriam-Webster Dictionary as “1 Absolute, unqualified”; and “2 a. of, relating to, or constituting a category,” or “b. involving, according with, or considered with respect to specific categories.” https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/categorical

[38] See here Sally Rooney’s excellent essay “Misreading Ulysses,” in Paris Review, December 27, 2022, at https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2022/12/07/misreading-ulysses/

[39] https://support.academia.edu/hc/en-us/articles/360045673953-What-is-Summaries-

[40] Promotional email from academia.edu headed “You would have saved 6,864 minutes with Summaries,” 29 July 2023.

[41] “Chat with your docs.  Meet Acrobat AI Assistant.”  https://www.adobe.com/acrobat/generative-ai-pdf.html (accessed December 13, 2014).

[42] See Derek Sayer, “The Language of Nationality and the Nationality of Language: Prague, 1780-1920,” Past and Present, No. 153, p. 182, note 67.

[43] Thomas S. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.  Second edition, enlarged, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970, p. 182.

[44] The Concise Oxford Dictionary.  Ninth Edition, ed. Della Thompson. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995, p. 6.

[45] K. Marx and F. Engels, The Holy Family, in Marx–Engels Collected Works, Vol. 4, London: Lawrence and

Wishart, 1975, pp. 57-8.

[46] Ludwig Wittgenstein, The Blue and Brown Books.  Oxford: Blackwell, 1958, p. 20. Emphasis added.

[47] Blue and Brown Books, p. 17. Emphasis added.

[48] Ordinary Affects, p. 65.

[49] I have discussed these and other examples at greater length in Making Trouble: Surrealism and the Human Sciences.  See note 9.

[50] Tom Harrisson, Savage Civilisation.  London: Victor Gollancz, Left Book Club edition, third

impression, 1937.

[51] Tom Harrisson, Humphrey Jennings, and Charles Madge, “Anthropology at Home,” New Statesman and Nation, 30 January 1937, p. 155.

[52] Humphrey Jennings and Charles Madge with T. O. Beachcroft, Julian Blackburn, William Empson, Stuart Legg, and Kathleen Raine, eds., May the Twelfth: Mass-Observation Day-Surveys 1937 by over two hundred observers.  London: Faber and Faber, 1937, pp. ix–x.

[53] Charles Madge and Tom Harrisson, The First Year’s Work.  London: Lindsay Drummond, 1938, p. 66. First emphasis added.

[54] Bronislaw Malinowski, “A Nationwide Intelligence Service,” in Madge and Harrisson, The First Year’s Work, pp. 85–86.

[55] Raymond Firth, “An Anthropologist’s View of Mass-Observation,” Sociological Review, Vol. 31, no. 2 (1939), pp. 178–179.

[56] “A Nation-wide Intelligence Service,” p. 85.

[57] Walter Benjamin, One-Way Street and Other Writings, trans. J. A. Underwood (London: Penguin, 2009); Berlin Childhood Around 1900: Hope in the Past, trans. Howard Eiland (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006).

[58] Walter Benjamin, The Arcades Project.  Trans. Howard Eiland and Kevin McLaughlin, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999, pp. 460-61.

[59] Jean-François Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, trans. Geoff Bennington and Brian Masumi (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1984), p. xxiv; Hayden White, Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1973), p. 2.

[60] Arcades Project, p. 458.

[61] Arcades Project, p. 460.  My emphasis.

[62] For an extended discussion see Michael Saler, “Whigs and Surrealists: the ‘Subtle Links’ of Humphrey Jennings’s Pandaemonium,” in George K. Behlmer and Fred M. Leventhal, eds., Singular Continuities: Tradition, Nostalgia, and Identity in Modern British Culture (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2000).

[63] Humphrey Jennings, Pandaemonium 1660-1886: The Coming of the Machine as Seen by Contemporary Observers, ed. Marie-Louise Jennings and Charles Madge.  London: Icon Books, 2012, p. xiii.  My emphases.  The text compiled posthumously and published in 1985 runs to 376 pages; according to Marie-Louise Jennings, this was “around one third of the original text” (p. xxviii). Jennings’s use of “present” here is analogous to Katie Stewart’s use of “perform.”

[64] André Breton, “Manifesto of Surrealism,” in his Manifestoes of Surrealism, trans. Richard Seaver and Helen R. Lane (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1972), p. 28.

[65] As Ben Highmore has also argued, surrealism was “a form of social research into everyday life,” whose products should be seen “not as works of art but as documents of this social research.  In this way artistic techniques such as collage become methodologies for attending to the social.”  Everyday Life and Cultural Theory: An Introduction.  London: Routledge, 2002, p. 46.

[66] Louis Aragon, Paris Peasant (London: Cape, 1987); Philippe Soupault, Last Nights of Paris (Cambridge, MA: Exact Change, 1992); André Breton, Nadja (New York: Grove Press, 1960); Pierre Clastres, Society Against the State: Essays in Political Anthropology (London: Zone, revised edition, 1990); Michel de Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life (Berkeley: University of California Press, 3rd edition, 2011); Mark Augé, In the Metro (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002); Annie Ernaux, The Years (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2017). 

[67] James Clifford, “On Ethnographic Surrealism,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, Vol. 23, No. 4, 1981, p. 541.  A revised version of this essay was included as Ch. 4 of Clifford’s The Predicament of Culture: Twentieth-Century Ethnography, Literature, and Art(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988).

[68] Clifford, Predicament of Culture, pp. 120-21.

[69] Bataille, “Informe.”  Yve-Alain Bois and Rosalind E. Krauss translate déclasser as “to bring things down in the world” in their book Formless: A User’s Guide (New York: Zone, 1997), unpaginated front matter; for Bois, the term has “the double sense of lowering and taxonomic disorder” (p. 18).  See further Karen Engle and Yoke-Sum Wong, “Thinking Feeling,” introduction to their edited book Feelings of Structure: Explorations in Affect (Montreal and Kingston/London/Chicago: McGill-Queens University Press, 2018. 

[70] “Michael Taussig in conversation with Nancy Goldring,” November, Vol. 1, 2021, at https://www.novembermag.com/content/michael-taussig. My emphasis.  See also, in this context, Taussig’s book Walter Benjamin’s Grave (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006).

[71] See for example the websites of Writing with Light (http://www.writingwithlight.org) and the Bureau for Experimental Ethnography (https://bureauxethnography.dwrl.utexas.edu) (both accessed 3 December 2024).

[72] I have discussed the latter at length in Derek Sayer, Rank Hypocrisies: The Insult of the REF, London: Sage, 2015.