The Opinion Pages
Kenan Malik
Source: nytimes
Kenan Malik
LONDON — It
is just as well that I’m a writer, not an editor. Were I editing a newspaper or
magazine, I might soon be out of a job. For this is an essay in defense of
cultural appropriation.
In Canada
last month, three editors lost their jobs after making such a defense.
The
controversy began when Hal Niedzviecki, editor of Write, the magazine of the
Canadian Writers’ Union, penned an editorial defending the right of white
authors to create characters from minority or indigenous backgrounds. Within
days, a social
media backlash forced him to resign. The Writers’ Union issued an apology
for an article that its Equity Task Force claimed “re-entrenches the deeply
racist assumptions” held about art.
Another
editor, Jonathan Kay, of The Walrus magazine, was also compelled
to step down after tweeting his support for Mr. Niedzviecki. Meanwhile, the
broadcaster CBC moved
Steve Ladurantaye, managing editor of its flagship news program The National,
to a different post, similarly for an “unacceptable tweet” about the
controversy.
It’s not just
editors who have to tread carefully. Last year, the novelist Lionel Shriver generated
a worldwide storm after defending cultural appropriation in an address to the
Brisbane Writers Festival. Earlier this year, controversy
erupted when New York’s Whitney Museum picked for its Biennial Exhibition
Dana Schutz’s painting of the mutilated corpse of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old
African-American murdered by two white men in Mississippi in 1955. Many
objected to a white painter like Ms. Schutz depicting such a traumatic moment
in black history. The British artist Hannah Black organized
a petition to have the work destroyed.
Other works
of art have been destroyed. The sculptor Sam Durant’s piece “Scaffold,”
honoring 38 Native Americans executed in 1862 in Minneapolis, was recently
being assembled in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden. But after protests from
indigenous activists that Mr. Durant was appropriating their history, the
artist dismantled his own work, and made
its wood available to be burned in a Dakota Sioux ceremony.
What is
cultural appropriation, and why is it so controversial? Susan Scafidi, a law
professor at Fordham University, defines
it as “taking intellectual property, traditional knowledge, cultural
expressions, or artifacts from someone else’s culture without permission.” This
can include the “unauthorized use of another culture’s dance, dress, music,
language, folklore, cuisine, traditional medicine, religious symbols, etc.”
Appropriation
suggests theft, and a process analogous to the seizure of land or artifacts. In
the case of culture, however, what is called appropriation is not theft but
messy interaction. Writers and artists necessarily engage with the experiences
of others. Nobody owns a culture, but everyone inhabits one, and in inhabiting
a culture, one finds the tools for reaching out to other cultures.
Critics of
cultural appropriation insist that they are opposed not to cultural engagement,
but to racism. They want to protect marginalized cultures and ensure that such
cultures speak for themselves, not simply be seen through the eyes of more
privileged groups.
Certainly,
cultural engagement does not take place on a level playing field. Racism and
inequality shape the ways in which people imagine others. Yet it is difficult
to see how creating gated cultures helps promote social justice.
There are
few figures more important to the development of rock ’n’ roll than Chuck Berry
(who died in March). In the 1950s, white radio stations refused to play his
songs, categorizing them as “race music.” Then came Elvis Presley. A white boy
playing the same tunes was cool. Elvis was feted, Mr. Berry and other black
pioneers largely ignored. Racism defined who became the cultural icon.
But
imagine that Elvis had been prevented from appropriating so-called black music.
Would that have challenged racism, or eradicated Jim Crow laws? Clearly not. It
took a social struggle — the civil rights movement — to bring about change.
That struggle was built not on cultural separation, but on the demand for equal
rights and universal values.
Campaigns
against cultural appropriation reveal the changing meaning of what it is to
challenge racism. Once, it was a demand for equal treatment for all. Now it
calls for cultures to be walled off and boundaries to be policed.
But who
does the policing? Every society has its gatekeepers, whose role is to protect
certain institutions, maintain the privileges of particular groups and cordon
off some beliefs from challenge. Such gatekeepers protect not the marginalized
but the powerful. Racism itself is a form of gatekeeping, a means of denying
racialized groups equal rights, access and opportunities.
In
minority communities, the gatekeepers are usually self-appointed guardians
whose power rests on their ability to define what is acceptable and what is
beyond the bounds. They appropriate for themselves the authority to license
certain forms of cultural engagement, and in doing so, entrench their power.
The most
potent form of gatekeeping is religion. When certain beliefs are deemed sacred,
they are put beyond questioning. To challenge such beliefs is to commit
blasphemy.
The
accusation of cultural appropriation is a secular version of the charge of
blasphemy. It’s the insistence that certain beliefs and images are so important
to particular cultures that they may not appropriated by others. This is most
clearly seen in the debate about Ms. Schutz’s painting “Open Casket.”
In 1955,
Emmett Till’s mother urged
the publication of photographs of her son’s mutilated body as it lay in its
coffin. Till’s murder, and the photographs, played
a major role in shaping the civil rights movement and have acquired an
almost sacred quality. It was from those photos that Ms. Schutz began her
painting.
To
suggest that she, as a white painter, should not depict images of black
suffering is as troubling as the demand by some Muslims that Salman Rushdie’s
novel “The Satanic Verses” should be censored because of supposed blasphemies
in its depiction of Islam. In fact, it’s more troubling because, as the critic
Adam Shatz has observed, the campaign against Ms. Schutz’s work contains an
“implicit disavowal that acts of radical sympathy, and imaginative
identification, are possible across racial lines.”
Seventy
years ago, racist radio stations refused to play “race music” for a white
audience. Today, antiracist activists insist that white painters should not
portray black subjects. To appropriate a phrase from a culture not my own: Plus
ça change, plus c’est la même chose.
Kenan
Malik (@kenanmalik) is the
author, most recently, of “The Quest for a Moral Compass: A Global History of
Ethics” and a contributing opinion writer.
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