Saturday, April 29, 2006
Sexuality and Identity

However, there's another view, which is neither conservative nor liberal, Christian or non, which sees the foregoing characterization of identity as a recent historical phenomenon. Foucault's view, which I think falls into this category, is just one example. From Wikipedia's "biopower" article:
Sexuality, he [Foucault] argues, far from having been reduced to silence during the Victorian Era, was in fact subjected to a "sexuality dispositif" (or "mechanism"), which incites and even forced the subject to speak about his sex. Thus, "sexuality does not exist", it is a discursive creation, which makes us believe that sexuality contains our personal truth (in the same way that the discourse of "race struggle" sees the truth of politics and history in the everlasting subterranean war which takes place beneath the so-called peace).So what is the upshot? If sexuality doesn't contain our personal truth, if it isn't disclosive of who we are, what does this matter?
Beyond the immediate revelation that our historical self-interpretations might cover over the more important truths about our identity, I'm not exactly sure how to apply this. It doesn't mean that there will ever be a time without same-sex eroticism. But it might mean that there will be a time without identities informed by sexual preference, just like there will probably be a time when people have trouble understanding what money or commodities are (just as most Americans have trouble comprehending the economic structure of past societies who do not have commodities).
And perhaps recognition of the non-deliberative, historical mutability of identity might offer hope to those who seek a new identity in Christ (and jostle the complaceny of those who think their "thrown" identity baptized by God).