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Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative

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Title: Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative
by Judith Butler
ISBN: 0-415-91588-0
Publisher: Routledge
Pub. Date: February, 1997
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $21.95
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Average Customer Rating: 3 (5 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 2
Summary: Irascible Speech
Comment: Several years ago, I saw a film entitled Total Eclipse, which is a dramatization of the complex and ill-fated relationship between Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine, two nineteenth-century French poets. In one scene, a manic Rimbaud, played by the pubescently-challenged Leonardo Dicaprio, exclaims that "The only unendurable thing about life is that nothing is unendurable" (I may have misquoted this slightly; as I said, its been several years since I saw the film). As I recall, the film was rather silly by and large, although I found that this particular exclamation had the ring of solid truth (incidentally, at the time I had been an autodidactic devotee of Nietzsche's philosophy). I subsequently incorporated it into my own repertoire of pithy aphorisms, held at the ready the appropriate occasion present itself.
However, by reading Butler's Excitable Speech in tandem with a whole host of other works of a theoretical/critical sort, I came to realize that there is in fact one thing that is truly unendurable for what appears to be just about every latter-day theoretician: viz., poststructuralist discursive determinism, especially the agentless, discursively animated individual that such determinism entails. Hence Butler's insistence upon the fundamental citationality of speech, which strikes me as the continental philosopher's version of the notion of "weak voluntarism" popular among certain ethicists of an Anglo-American bent. Butler's notion of the subject's agency is certainly a qualified one, in that the subject can only exhibit agency in and through language. But nevertheless, it appears that Butler considers this deterministic influence of language to be less than rigidly absolute. Agency does not in fact emerge ex nihilo, because it is impossible to produce positive effects by using absolutely nothing. The subject must have at her disposal something with which to demonstrate her agency, because agency is observed through its effects--just as "government" [an abstraction] is manifested only through people's comportment in a manner understood to be in accordance with the principles of such an abstraction. Language is a medium as well as a matrix. However, if agency is manifested empirically, that is, through effects, then it follows that agency is a posteriori synthetic, because we observers ascribe causal necessity to the action in relation to its source, the performer of the action. Therefore, I remain uncertain as to how these effects point to a capacity for agency that is intrinsic to the subject as constitutive of the subject a priori. Perhaps the answer lies in the distinction Butler draws between "agency" and "mastery," the latter of which connotes an absolute agency which is inimical to the "weak voluntarism" thesis she advances in Excitable Speech."

Rating: 2
Summary: Embarrassing
Comment: Judith Butler has managed to show that it is possible to emerge from the post-structuralist morass in favor of free speech. What's both endearing and disturbing is how difficult and how complicated the endeavor was for her. In 'Excitable Speech,' the (sometimes) eloquent theoretical discussions of 'Gender Trouble' and 'Bodies that Matter' are reduced to a bizarre, idle name-dropping that takes very simple arguments and makes them unnecessarily circuitous.

Butler's concern in 'Excitable Speech' is to critique legal representations of hate speech from a post-structuralist perspective. Why a post-structuralist perspective? It's unclear. Really the only thing that she accomplishes, as far as I can tell, is to put a real-world debate in the vocabulary of a cloistered group of irrelevant intellectuals such as herself.

None of Butler's arguments are "post-structuralist," really at all. Rather than bringing to bear a strong application of her earlier theorization of performativity, Butler appears to abandon her earlier theses all together and just re-hash liberal arguments about free speech. What makes her book unique is that instead of saying, "Legal scholars are wrong to say that hate speech automatically deprives people of their rights," she makes the reader listen to several pages of irrelevant Foucault quotes about the decline of juridical models of power to establish her perspective as being authoritatively "post-structuralist." As if needlessly re-hashing the history of bio-power wasn't enough, she then begins invoking speech act theory (especially the distinction between perlocutionary and illocutionary speech acts) when all she really needs to say is, "Terms such as .... aren't intrinsically injurious." Rather than saying, "Hate speech is an arbitrary category," she has to make those typical outlandish-sounding postmodern truisms ("the real is no longer real!") such as "the State produces hate speech." She then immediately acknowledges how stupid that sounds and explains what she really means (that the State produces the category of hate speech).

What I'm trying to get across is that Butler has nothing profound to say about hate speech. She takes simple arguments for free speech that everyone's already familiar with, draws them out, laces them with Foucault quotes, and tosses in fairly large quantities of postmodern jargon. What's weird is that she herself seems to find the theoretical apparatus she invokes to be needlessly unwieldy. But instead of hitting the "delete" key on her keyboard, she wastes even more of our time by backing away from the rhetorical power (or at least the rhetorical authority) of her initial formulations.

This book isn't interesting. It's nothing you haven't heard before. However, if you think that taking a very significant national debate and translating it into jargon so that you can discuss it with a bunch of Ivy Leage graduate students is a worthy endeavor, then go ahead... I guess.

What a waste of time. I wish Butler would stick to making interested, substantiated arguments instead of throwing out platitudes and saying, "Foucault said something kinda like this in The History of Sexuality!" That's great, Professor Butler. Really. We're soooo proud.

Rating: 1
Summary: dilettantism at its worst
Comment: The results of Butler's attempt to tackle the very serious issue of speech rights are disappointing in the extreme. With no legal background whatsoever and a myopic philosophical vision which seems ingorant of the liberal tradition upon which the right of free speech is grounded, Butler provides an obfuscted discussion (and that's all it is, a discussion) of the issue that is at the best of times, irrelevant, and at the worst of times, offensively misleading. The book is worthwhile only as an example of what happens when a postmodern thinker in the French tradition tries to tackle a subject outside the race/power/gender/subjectivity canon outlined by the philosophers of the 1960s. If you have an appetite for reading philosophical trainwrecks, then by all means read it. If you want something serious on the issue of free speech, look elsewhere.

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