A fascinating snippet from a fascinating site.
Michel Foucault, The
History of Sexuality Volume One: The Will To Knowledge, Penguin, London.
(First published: 1976).
hspace=10 src="/img/histsex1.gif" vspace=3 width=72>— Queer theory grew, basically,
out of this book. Why? Because Foucault argues that the current Western social
view of sexuality is not the sum total of knowledge gathered over the aons, but
was invented last century. Our current discourses about homosexuality (or
heterosexuality) suggest that these are distinct conditions, or identities; but
to Foucault these are just labels put onto people because of some actions they
may or may not engage in. In other societies which employ different discourses,
these labels would just not make sense.
Foucault also argued that power is
not possessed but is exercised; and the exercise of power produces a
corresponding resistance. It is therefore partly because people try to shovel
discourse about sexuality into the cupboard that it comes crashing out all over
the place again.
[See the Foucault pages for
more].
Oh, my! So much to think, and so little time.
There is a warm wind. It shakes the house, rattles the windows which have been open all night, and makes the doors sound like someone is there, trying to get in. It's a storm; a mild summery Nor'easter, with clouds close and fast moving one way, and above them, high and slow, other clouds moving the other way. The warm, wild air through the screen makes me glad that I am here.
On a night like this, with God panting so near, can heaven be far behind?
Thanks Mary.