Friday, May 31, 2013

The Intelligibility of Dissensus: Encountering Whiteness, Rightness, and the Politics of Truth in Cultural Studies



 
This month, Vice Magazine’s online interface uploaded ashort video documentary entitled “White Student Union.” This video documents the hegemonic tensions that permeate Townson University’s student body after senior student Matthew Heimbach initiated the organization of a white supremacy group (The White Student Union) in 2012. This group dedicates itself to an ideology known as “Identitarianism”(0.2:15) for the purpose of “demanding equality for white people on campus” (00:55). The different perspective and beliefs expressed by each featured speaker suggests that truth, power, and justice are never simply given, and that the lived experience of individual speakers constitutes the grounds for expressing claims to the right, true, or just aimed at appealing to a "common sense," over the anticipation of ascending towards a valid consensus.
As students of Cultural Studies and Communication, we see Vice’s documentary as framing a site of hegemonic flux: the notion that truth, power, and conflict are continuous processes implicating what it means to make sense of the world. When truth, political rightness, or the sovereignty of one group is seen as self-evident and naturalized, then alternative ways of understanding the world are “rendered non-sensical or unthinkable” (Barker, 406). Our analysis focused on Heimbach’s speech acts through the lens of Habermas’ outlining of a “consensus theory of truth,” whereby “I can attribute a predicate to an object if and only if everyone else who could enter into discourse with me would also attribute the same predicate to the same object” (Habermas, 89). The WSU documentary serves to set up a political context for this theory of truth: for if truth is a virtue, and if it depends on the possibility of discursive consensus, then one method for achieving consensus would be to segregate, or render unintelligible, any group or person that would not contribute to the aim of consensus.
For Habermas, “truth” is one of four claims to validity that are fundamental to “smooth” communication. These validity claims include: “the intelligibility of the utterance, the truth of its propositional component, the normative rightness of its performative component, and the sincerity of the intention expressed by the speakers” (Habermas, 90). If we stay with the validity claim dealing explicitly with “truth,” we can note two conditions that establish the “truth” that we claim a proposition to have: “First, it must be grounded in experience […] Second, the statement must be discursively redeemable […] it must command the assent of all potential participants in a discourse” (Habermas, 89). Here, according to Habermas, are the conditions of truth as such. Our class noted that according to these principles of validity, the WSU is inherently contradictory: for the “truth” of its missions is rooted in an ancestral ideology, not existential grounds, and the existence of this ideology forecloses the possibility for discursive redemption in an intellectual environment that supports cultural difference and diversity through dominant hegemonic structures of normative rightness.
If the WSU is inherently contradictory, that is, if its ideology contradicts its validity claims, how does it continue to operate at a level of intelligibility that would attract members and support? Stanley Deetz might suggest that the existence of the WSU rests on the prevalence of “systematic distortion” in human communication. While distortion in human communication may in fact be more of a rule than an exception, we can identify its more pathological tendencies operating in the rhetoric of the WSU. These pathologies are grounded in the development of “internal logics and rules,” that form systems of communication that are predicated by "closure and fixed interpretive processes," and which "properly have no outside, no natural checks and balances, and few moments of escape to see the system as it works” (Deetz, 460). The absence of an “outside” is evidenced in the rhetoric of the WSU in a number of ways, notably through it's “naturalization” of its organizing principles – the commonality of the "race card" (13:55) and the assumed unified identity of “white European peoples” (18:09) – and in its “bounded rationality” – its appropriation of a “higher discourse,” such as Christian scripture, to create an insular, self-referential, hegemonic intelligibility.
To conclude, our analysis of the WSU documentary has led to an understanding of the WSU as a group that operates according to a pathologically distorted system of communication. In this system of self-referentiality, the validity of truth claims are not open to adjustment or negotiation, but are contingent on the exclusion and neutralization of opposing viewpoints. By rendering truth a “common sense” that is “given,” rather than as a consensus that may be ascended towards, the WSU can be seen as demonstrating what Ranciere calls a dissenssus – “a division put in the ‘common sense’: a dispute about what is given, about the frame within which we see something given” (Ranciere, 304). In staging a dissensus, the WSU demonstrates that cultural conflicts and hegemonic tensions need not be issues of “truth,” but are practices in the crafting of “common sense.”

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