Turning the tables: the table as utopian object for future struggle
Autor: | Tom Dillon, Linda Stupart |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Queer theory
Science Fiction Tables Transformative politics Utopian studies Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Kitchen table Everyday object Domestic labour media_common.quotation_subject White male Art Capitalism Philosophie sonstige Geisteswissenschaften Phenomenology (philosophy) Philosophy Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung Aesthetics ddc:100 Queer ddc:300 Women's Studies Feminist Studies Gender Studies Other Fields of Humanities Social sciences sociology anthropology media_common |
Zdroj: | Studies in Arts and Humanities Utopian Acts |
Popis: | Instead of looking for objects that contain within them an immanent Utopia, we propose to queer the everyday object of the table for use in the contemporary struggle for a future egalitarian society. We begin by applying Sara Ahmed’s critique of white male philosophy via the table in Queer Phenomenology, to To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf, in which Lily Briscoe is expected to imagine philosophy as ‘a kitchen table […] when you’re not there.’ Woolf considers the table, not as a ‘phantom’ object, disassociated from its use value, but as an object at the centre of domestic life with labour etched into its very surface. Lily Briscoe cannot imagine the table as merely a symbol of philosophy but of one that is ‘scrubbed…grained and knotted’, marked by both the history of its use and its production. Next we consider the table in a range of utopian writing, from Thomas More’s Utopia to Ernst Bloch’s The Principle of Hope before considering the table in The Dispossessed by Ursula Le Guin. In Le Guin’s novel the table acts as a novum of capitalism, estranging the protagonist Shevek from his own anarchist culture. The table becomes a way for Shevek to understand the gendered division of labour that structures and drives capitalist society; he sees a ‘woman in every table top’ as both constituting and being constituted by hierarchical relations between genders under capitalism. We then suggest a number of ways in which the table can be reoriented towards a Utopian future via queer use in present struggles; proposing the kitchen table as multi-purpose surface for domestic labour and resistance; through demanding ‘a place at the table’ for marginalised groups; and lastly through ‘turning the tables’, transforming that everyday object into revolutionary barricade. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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