25 May 2025

Bad Writing, Part 3

 

[This is the third installment of my series on “Bad Writing” in academia, presenting two responses to Philosophy and Literature’s contest and the writing of the first prize winner.  The first commentary is from a reporter for the New York Times and the second is from another academic in the field of philosophy. 

[This is Part 3 of the series; I recommend reading Part 1 and Part 2, published on 19 and 22 May, before reading the new installment.]

WHEN IDEAS GET LOST IN BAD WRITING
by Dinitia Smith

[Dinitia Smith’s column appeared in the New York Times on 27 February 1999 (sec. B [“Arts & Ideas”]), the same month as Martha Nussbaum’s critique of Butler’s writing in “Professor of Parody” (Part 2), about two months after Philosophy and Literature’s announcement of the Bad Writing Contest winners (Part 1), and a month before Judith Butler’s riposte, “A ‘Bad Writer’ Bites Back.” in the New York Times (Part 1).]

Attacks on Scholars Include a Barbed Contest With ‘Prizes’

Ridiculing academic writing is becoming commonplace these days.

The journal Philosophy and Literature has taken to holding an annual Bad Writing Contest, with prizes going to the work of some of the country’s top scholars. There is even an Internet site that automatically creates a “post-modern” essay, replete with bloated jargon and incomprehensible sentence structure, every time someone logs onto it (www.cs.monash.edu.au/cgi-bin /postmodern [this link longer works; it belonged to Monash University in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia]). (“If one examines a post-dialectic conceptualist theory, one is faced with a choice: either reject post-dialectic conceptualist theory or conclude that culture is capable of truth,” was a recent creation.)

Yet the debate has taken a new twist recently with a decision by Edward Said [1935-2003; Palestinian-American academic, literary critic, political activist, and a professor of literature at Columbia University], the new president of the Modern Language Association [1999-2003], to use his first official column in the association’s newsletter to denounce bad writing [I couldn’t find a source for the MLA Newsletter, online or print]. In an essay on how science is growing at the expense of the humanities, he accused literature departments of fostering incomprehensible writing and factionalism, resulting even more in their “diminishment and incoherence.”

It wasn’t just Mr. Said’s position as head of the largest and most influential organization of literary scholars that caught people’s attention, however: Mr. Said himself is a progenitor of a new kind of literary and cultural criticism that has frequently used difficult language.

One of the country’s most prominent literary critics, Mr. Said concedes that his own writing hasn’t always been easily accessible, but he said in an interview: “I moved away from that kind of thing many years ago, because I feel myself that it’s terribly important as an intellectual to communicate as immediately and forcefully as possible.

“At some point critics and writers become parodies of themselves.”

Indeed, in 1996, Alan Sokal [b. 1955; American professor of mathematics at University College London and professor emeritus of physics at NYU; a letter by Sokal will be in a later installment], a New York University physicist, tricked the journal “Social Text” [academic journal that addresses a wide range of social and cultural phenomena; see my commentary on “Sokal Hoax,” in Steve Fuller’s essay below] into publishing his parody of academic writing, filled with nonsensical words and gibberish, as a serious article.

The argument over bad writing is more than a schoolyard spat. It is at the heart of the continuing “culture wars,” feeding conservative attacks on the abandonment of traditional standards and subjects at universities. What’s more, it raises questions about the purpose of scholarship. What is the goal of literary and cultural criticism? Who should the nation’s educated elite be talking to? Are scholars increasingly making themselves irrelevant?

The debate has energetic advocates on both sides. In last week’s issue of The New Republic, Martha Nussbaum, a professor of law and ethics at the University of Chicago, wrote a long attack on Judith Butler [“Professor of Parody”], a Berkeley professor and influential feminist theorist, for “ponderous and obscure” writing. An essay by Ms. Butler that won first prize in this year’s Bad Writing Contest said in part: “The insights into the contingent possibility of structure inaugurate a renewed conception of hegemony.” Ms. Butler’s writing, Ms. Nussbaum charged, resorts to mystification in an effort to create “an aura of importance.”

“It is difficult to come to grips with Butler’s ideas, because it is difficult to figure out what they are,” Ms. Nussbaum writes. “Hungry women are not fed by this, battered women are not sheltered by it, raped women do not find justice in it, gays and lesbians do not achieve legal protections through it.”

Ms. Butler declined comment. But Jonathan Culler [b. 1944; literary critic], a Cornell professor [1977-present; now emeritus] who edits the magazine Diacritics [academic journal that covers literature and literary criticism], the original publisher of the “winning” essay by Ms. Butler [“Further Reflections on Conversations of Our Time”; see Part 1], said of the contest that it was “bad faith” to pick out a few sentences of a larger work and ridicule them.

Joan Scott [b. 1941; American historian of France with contributions in gender history], a professor of social science at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton [now emerita], offered a more aggressive defense. When a scholar uses difficult language, he or she is “not pretending to be a journalist” or to be writing for the general public, Ms. Scott said. She argues that the attack on academic writing is “a kind of anti-intellectualism that is everywhere in the culture, a demand for things they already agree with.”

Despite his recent criticisms, Mr. Said clearly has a soft spot for the writing of some of his colleagues. He too said that difficult writing was sometimes necessary in scholarly work. For example, Mr. Said said that Fredric Jameson [1934-2024; literary critic, philosopher, and Marxist political theorist], a Duke professor who uses Marxist theory to study post-modernism and whose work has won the Bad Writing Contest twice, was “in his way a poet” whose writing, though difficult, has a cumulative brilliance. When scholars explore new areas, Mr. Said explained, they sometimes use language in new ways “about which there is no consensus.” He added that there was similarly no consensus about the subjects they study either.

Homi Bhabha [b. 1949; Indian scholar and critical theorist; won second place in the 1998 Bad Writing Contest; see Part 1], a University of Chicago English professor who works on the culture of post-colonial societies, is an example, Mr. Said said. Although he called Mr. Bhabha an admired and gifted friend, he did say: “Writers like Bhabha are looking for the occasion to work out ideas. There’s something unfinished about it.”

Mr. Bhabha’s work won second place in this year’s Bad Writing Contest with an essay that included the words: “If, for a while, the ruse of desire is calculable for the uses of discipline soon the repetition of guilt, justification, pseudo-scientific theories, superstition, spurious authorities, and classifications can be seen as the desperate effort to ‘normalize’ formally the disturbance of a discourse.”

He responded to winning the bad writing prize with what his critics might say was uncharacteristic brevity: “I’m trying not to write bad sentences, particularly not ones that will be read in New Zealand,” the home of Denis Dutton, the editor of the journal that sponsors the contest [see Part 1].

Just why is there is so much of what some call “bad” or what others call “demanding” writing?

Ms. Nussbaum says scholars are sometimes encouraged to write in obscure language. “Graduate students in analytic philosophy often get the message that if you write in a way that is accessible to nonspecialists, it means you are going to hurt your career,” she said.

Ralph Hexter [b. 1952; currently distinguished professor of classics and comparative literature at the University of California, Davis], dean of humanities at the University of California at Berkeley, who has written on difficult language in classics scholarship, says that some scholarly language is a result of an effort to make literary or cultural criticism “a human science.” He said, “A more scientific approach creates an expectation that there might be a scientific vocabulary.”

Mr. Hexter conceded that sometimes a scholar who uses difficult language makes it “harder to recognize good writing or bad writing.”

“If you define good writing as clarity, limpidity,” he said, “most of this will be by definition bad writing.”

Both Mr. Hexter and Mr. Bhabha say that one reason academic writing is sometimes hard to understand is that the work of the new generation of scholars is heavily influenced by the Continental philosophers, Europeans like Sartre, Hegel and Jacques Derrida, who are practitioners of difficult language themselves. “The basic orientation of Anglo-American philosophy has been very empirical,” said Mr. Bhabha, who was born in India and trained at Oxford University. But “South Asian and Continental traditions tend to be more metaphoric and symbolic in their use of language.”

•  Jean-Paul Sartre – 1905-80; French philosopher, playwright, novelist, screenwriter, political activist, biographer, and literary critic; considered a leading figure in 20th-century French philosophy and Marxism

  Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Hegel – 1770-1831; German philosopher; proponent of 19th-century German idealism, which claims the true objects of knowledge are “ideal,” meaning mind-dependent, as opposed to material, as derived from Plato’s view of “Ideas”

  Plato – b. ca. 428-423 BCE, died 348/347 BCE; ancient Greek philosopher who’s considered a foundational thinker in Western philosophy

  Jacques Derrida – 1930-2004; French Algerian philosopher who developed the philosophy of deconstruction

Contemporary scholars, he added, are also “interested in the process of language itself,” that is, in the way in which words and sentence structure can distort meaning to fit ideological or political agendas.

Indeed, the current debate is as much about politics as it is about language. Dense, difficult writing is most often associated with newer academic fields like cultural studies, women’s studies and “queer theory.” These fields often cast a critical eye on historic figures and received wisdoms, arguing that our understanding of the “truth” is really a function of who holds power at the moment.

Mr. Hexter says that an approach that opens Western values and history to attack is discomfiting to many people. “One side of the culture wars thinks we should read texts that ennoble us and show the strength of our civilization,” Mr. Hexter said. As Ms. Scott in Princeton argues, “Things that are disturbing or critical or self-reflective are targets.”

Conservative critics like Sanford Pinsker [b. 1941; professor of English, Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pennsylvania], editor of Academic Questions, the journal of the National Association of Scholars [politically conservative education advocacy organization], said that the subjects being studied by the post-modernists “are hardly new.”

“People used to discuss their disagreements in plain English,” he said. But now “you set up a whole new world of language and these people say they’re king or queen of it.” That’s why Mr. Pinsker insists the bad writing contest is “a lot tougher than the Oscars,” adding, “There are just so many wonderful contributions by people with tin ears for the sound of language and no capacity for clarity of thinking.”

Of course, making fun of academic writing is part of a long tradition. As Mr. Hexter noted, none other than Socrates [ca. 470-399 BCE; Greek philosopher who is credited as the founder of Western philosophy] himself was attacked for the difficulty of his ideas. Even Aristophanes [ca. 446-ca. 386 BCE; Ancient Greek comic playwright], in “The Clouds,” [original 423 BCE, incomplete revision from 419-416 BCE survives] Mr. Hexter said, “mocks Socrates for his technical language.”

[Dinitia Smith was a reporter for the New York Times for 11 years (1995-2006).  She wrote for the Times about literature and intellectual trends and has also been a contributing editor at New York Magazine during that same period.  Smith’s writing has also appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Boston Globe, Simon and Schuster, Literary Hub, Kirkus Reviews, RealClear Books; she’s the author of short stories and five novels.  

[Smith is also an Emmy Award-winning filmmaker, and a drama she wrote and directed, Passing Quietly Through, was chosen for the New York Film Festival in 1971.  She’s taught fiction writing at numerous institutions including Columbia University, Barnard College, the Center for Fiction, and to prison inmates through the Bard College Prison Initiative.]

*  *  *  *
WHOSE BAD WRITING?
by Steve Fuller 

[Steve Fuller’s response to the 1998 Bad Writing Contest, published in Philosophy and Literature 23.1 (April 1999): 374-78, was accompanied by an “Editor’s note.”  Denis Dutton stated, as he had in the announcement of the contest’s results (in the same issue as this essay), posted in Part 1 of this series: “Many of the debates generated by the Philosophy and Literature Bad Writing Contest have been carried out on the Internet.  One especially incisive critique that came our way was by Professor Steve Fuller.  We invited him to elaborate on his comments for our pages.” 

[Below is Fuller’s (b. 1959; American social philosopher in the field of science and technology studies; now Chair in Social Epistemology at the University of Warwick, England) reply.  (I don’t usually use footnotes on Rick On Theater, but there are a few embedded in Fuller’s text, and I have left them.)] 

What exactly is the point of Philosophy and Literature’s Bad Writing Contest? Undeniably it helps puncture inflated egos, as the nominees are usually big time academic players and the nominators obscure scribes. In that case, the awards would seem to be a welcomed bit of academic populism. However, I am disturbed by what those less charitable than I may regard as the irresponsible character of the contest, since the nominators are not compelled to advance a proper diagnosis of the nominated pieces of “bad writing.” Is it that their authors are literally talking gibberish, as was allegedly demonstrated in the Sokal Hoax, or are they simply in need of stricter editors and less indulgent audiences? These are two very different diagnoses, the blurring of which has also been characteristic of the more mischievous attacks launched on trendy forms of critical theory in the overlapping skirmishes known as the “culture wars,” the “canon wars,” and most recently the “science wars.” While I have no reason to believe that either the readers or editors of Philosophy and Literature wish to add fuel to these fires, the type of textual engagement fostered by the contest does not inspire confidence. Could it even be that the nominators shy away from attempting to explain the bad writing because they are not themselves certain what lies behind it but are afraid to reveal their own ignorance in the process?

[New York University physics professor Alan Sokal (see Dinitia Smith’s “When Ideas Get Lost in Bad Writing,” above) submitted an article entitled “Transgressing the Boundaries: Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity” to the humanities journal Social Text, an academic journal of cultural studies, in 1996. This act initiated what’s come the be known as the Sokal Hoax or the Sokal Affair.

[The essay was a parody of postmodern thinking, containing just enough legitimate physics to satisfy a non-scientific eye, but liberally sprinkled with nonsense and absurdities so that a physics student would spot it instantly as a prank. At that time, however, Social Text didn’t use a peer review in selecting articles for publication, so no physicist saw the essay before it appeared in print.

[After the article was published (in the May 1996 Spring/Summer “Science Wars” issue [no. 46/47]), Sokal exposed the hoax via an essay in Lingua Franca (“A Physicist Experiments With Cultural Studies,” May/June 1996 [6.4]). He has said that he did it to expose the fuzzy thinking and lack of academic standards in certain cultural journals. The editors of Social Text printed a work on quantum physics—about which they knew nothing—without consulting even one physicist. Had they done so they would never have published Sokal’s essay.

[The editors of Social Text were awarded the 1996 Ig Nobel Prize for Literature for “eagerly publishing research that they could not understand, that the author said was meaningless, and which claimed that reality does not exist.” The award is given by Improbable Research, Inc., the publisher of the bimonthly magazine Annals of Improbable Research, which promotes its focus as “research that makes people LAUGH, then THINK.” (After the Sokal debacle, Social Text instituted the practice of submitting proposed articles for peer review before publication.)

[A considerable body of writing had been published since the Sokal Hoax, including several follow-ups by Sokal himself, often with various collaborators. For a more complete rundown of this still-resonating event, see the Wikipedia article, “Sokal affair.” (If you google “Alan Sokal,” “Sokal affair,” or “Sokal hoax,” you will discover hundreds of hits.)]

In what follows I concentrate on the 1998 winning entry because while I think it is legitimately regarded as bad writing, its selection raises some deeper issues that the contest might usefully address in the future. But to give the reader a sense of how I think about these things, I shall briefly deliver my own verdicts on the previous two years’ winners, sentences taken from Fredric Jameson’s Signatures of the Visible [Routledge, 1990] and Roy Bhaskar’s Plato, Etc.[: The Problems of Philosophy and Their Resolution (Verso, 1994)].

Jameson’s award winner began notoriously, “The visual is essentially pornographic” and then continues in a vaguely menacing manner.[1] I would say that this is “bad” only in a rather old-fashioned sense: the extent to which the visual is pornographic is never made entirely clear, and so the reader remains unsure whether the metaphor is meant to be deep or superficial. I say “old-fashioned” because academics inhabiting the postmodern condition should be used to reading “into” such a semantically underdetermined text as much or little depth as would enable them to continue to engage with what the author has to say—especially given that the sentence is the first in the book!

Bhaskar’s passage, which attempts to compress the entire history of Western philosophy into a sentence, is somewhat more difficult to evaluate.[2] However, it appears to be a clumsy instance of what [Theodor W.] Adorno [1903-69; German philosopher, musicologist, and social theorist] called “combinatorial writing,” namely, the attempt to capture the totality of a complex thought by beckoning the reader to reflect off its various parts.[3] Bhaskar [1944-2014; English philosopher of science, best known as initiator of critical realism (CR)] does not simply want to survey the history of Western thought in a hurry. Rather he aims to highlight the ways philosophers have resolved the age-old ambivalence between the actual and the real. For Bhaskar, the two must be kept separate in order to underwrite an “emancipatory epistemology” in which “the ought” (a.k.a. the real) transcends “the is” (a.k.a. the actual). The defense of this sort of writing, in Bhaskar’s case, is that it may be the only means at his disposal to philosophize radically—that is, conjure up in one thought that positivism, existentialism, and postmodernism are successive historical moments of the objectionable “actualist” philosophy. I am not necessarily persuaded by this view, but it has the virtue of problematizing the grammarian’s cliché that a sentence expresses a complete thought.

My concern with the phenomenon of bad writing extends more than fifteen years to the very beginning of my academic career. While writing my doctoral thesis under the watchful gaze of positivism’s last stand in American philosophy, I published several articles—including in this journal—that attempted to translate French poststructuralist thought into an idiom that analytic philosophers might appreciate.[4] In fact, it was this work, not my dissertation, that landed me my first academic appointment—as a “continental philosopher.” Back in those days, poststructuralism was said to be hard to fathom because of its “literary nihilism” that deliberately subverted the idea that reality could be faithfully represented in language, an assumption of normal prose conventions. To be sure, [Jacques] Derrida did not invent this stylistic strategy—not only is [Martin] Heidegger [1889-1976; German philosopher and Nazi Party member known for contributions to phenomenology, hermeneutics, and existentialism] the obvious precedent but also a version of this strategy, deployed to quite different effect, can be found in Adorno’s mature work. My view then (and now) is that as long as language remains the principal means by which philosophers probe the limits of reality, the taken-for-granted forms of expression that pass for clear writing will always be problematic. Of course, this point implies nothing in particular about how philosophers should allow it to be manifested in their texts.

Given the remarkable institutional robustness of poststructuralist thought in the United States over the last two decades, I have shifted my views on these matters in one important respect. I now believe that it is possible to identify “good” and “bad” versions of what might be called “philosophically difficult” writing—and to do so in a way that does not guarantee that the guru will always appear a better writer than the “gurued.” For example, I happen to believe that the winning entry for 1998’s Bad Writing Contest is, indeed, a bad version of philosophically difficult writing. Here is the passage:

The move from a structuralist account in which capital is understood to structure social relations in relatively homologous ways to a view of hegemony in which power relations are subject to repetition, convergence, and rearticulation brought the question of temporality into the thinking of structure, and marked a shift from a form of Althusserian theory [of or pertaining to Louis Althusser (1918-90; French Marxist philosopher)] that takes structural totalities as theoretical objects to one in which the insights into the contingent possibility of structure inaugurate a renewed conception of hegemony as bound up with the contingent sites and strategies of the rearticulation of power.

The writing is “bad” for the usual banal reasons. This one sentence could either have been broken down to two or three or, better still, compressed into one that actually brought the entire thought out at once. The author appears to be contrasting a classical Marxist view whereby social relations are mere reflections of relations of production with a more postmodern view whereby the two sorts of factors interact with each other in rather unpredictable ways. This, in turn, opens up the possibility that the power relations in society may be subverted by challenging an officially noneconomic realm like culture. I imagine that very few readers of Philosophy and Literature would want to gainsay this sentiment. True, it is neither the original nor the clearest expression of this thought, but it is also neither offensive nor nonsensical.

But why was this relatively pedestrian passage—as opposed to many others that suffer similarly—given such prominence in the competition? It is striking, for example, that no one has bothered to nominate a sentence or two from the Oxford philosopher Michael Dummett [1925-2011; English academic who made original contributions in the philosophies of mathematics, logic, language, and metaphysics] or one of his more eminent students. Here too one could find repetitious streams of colorless abstractions in search of punctuation. To be sure, no one would dream of accusing an adept in “analytic philosophy of language” of writing nonsense. But once the relevant hairs were split, one might reasonably wonder whether the sense made in a given Dummettian sentence was worth making. However, in the case of the winning passage, the social context is quite different. We are not talking about a representative of an obscure inbred elite. Rather, the offending author is such an icon among poststructuralist feminists that she has her own fanzine. Consequently, the contest invites consideration of how such bad writing can enchant such large numbers of intelligent people.

It would be interesting to learn both how a certain passage comes to be nominated for this contest, and then how it comes to win. If Judith Butler were not held in high esteem by a significant minority of academics, I doubt that the passage would have merited the scorn heaped upon it. But Butler enjoys just this status, and the question implicitly posed by her award is: why? There is a fairly straightforward sociological explanation that makes it appear that if she did not exist, some enterprising dissertation director would have had to invent her.[5] Over the last two decades, the major works of French poststructuralism have been translated into English. Because of their common Parisian provenance, they are easily taught as a relatively self-contained body of thought. Moreover, gender politics being what it is, even in ostensibly progressive academic cultures, there is a significant time lag between the translation of relevant works by male and female French poststructuralists (i.e., Luce Irigaray [b. 1930; Belgian-born French feminist, philosopher, linguist, psycholinguist, psychoanalyst, and cultural theorist], Helene Cixous [b. 1937; French writer, playwright, and literary critic], and even Julia Kristeva [b. 1941; Bulgarian-French philosopher, literary critic, semiotician, psychoanalyst, feminist, and novelist]). This made it possible for someone well-versed in the French male poststructuralist literature to address, in an “original” way, a largely female anglophone audience on the deconstruction of gender even before the works by the relevant female poststructuralists were widely known: hence, Judith Butler’s significance on the anglophone academic scene.

If we dig a bit deeper, this explanation may also help illuminate the winning passage. Because poststructuralism leans so heavily on “strong” (i.e., revisionist) readings of classic works of philosophy and literature, many teachers find it not worth the trouble to introduce students to “straight” readings of, say, Plato or even Freud before launching into Derrida and Lacan. Most of Butler’s writing consists of strong readings of the poststructuralist masters, done in aid of keeping open possibilities for social and personal change that tend to be left unexplored, if not actively discouraged, by our cultural conventions. I believe that her project is a worthy one, especially given the strange mystiques that continue to surround sex and gender. However, her writing suffers stylistically—and perhaps more deeply—from its captivity to the body of work from which it was generated. Consequently, one is easily left with the impression that the only way to launch a strong political challenge to gender oppression is by “thinking through” the poststructuralist masters, which invariably means sounding like them. While this may have been Butler’s own route to self-discovery, I wish humanists were more sensitive to the distinction my positivist forebears made between the contexts of discovery and justification.

In short, why must Butler’s politically powerful sentiments continue to be expressed in the cramped academic discourse in which they were first articulated? One possible answer is insecurity: one fears that the sentiments might be trivialized or coopted if they are not expressed in forbidding language. Many of Butler’s sympathetic readers would probably agree. Less sympathetic readers might conclude that Butler has a rather superstitious belief in the anti-oppressive power of poststructuralist incantations. I happen to think her language is designed to do two things at once, neither of which is done effectively, yet the result of which is exciting to those who are unlikely to excel in either task themselves. One is the philosophical exercise of critiquing the foundations of poststructuralist thought, the other the political exercise of combating oppressive gender practices. The only rhetorical context in which the same piece of writing might conceivably perform both functions equally well is the unjust discrimination of academics who do not happen to be heterosexual males. To be sure, this is a far from trivial group but equally, a far from representative group of oppressed humanity. 

I hope to have illustrated how the Bad Writing Contest could be used as a springboard for “critique” in the original Enlightenment sense that currently lacks a home in academic journals. However else he may be criticized, Alan Sokal at least took off his joker’s mask long enough to explain what he thought was wrong with the writing he parodied in his Social Text article. Consequently, he exposed himself to charges that he did not understand the bad writing he simulated and scorned. Moreover, after his book-length consideration of the offending passages, Sokal had come to realize that what he originally advertised as errors of fact and conception were now better cast as profound philosophical disagreements over the nature of scientific knowledge.[6] Many of the more absurd French pronouncements turn out to be absurd only if social constructivism or cultural relativism is false. Perhaps a head count would quickly decide the matter in Sokal’s favor, but given that his fears were ignited by the popularity of the offending authors, he would be on rhetorically shaky ground suddenly appealing to the masses. In any case, by rendering his literary gesture accountable, Sokal has not been silenced but rather forced to articulate his views in increasingly civil and illuminating ways. Thus, it is possible to take the bitter with the sweet in the original eighteenth-century way: to indulge first in satire and engage then in argument.

[In 1997, Sokal and Jean Bricmont (b. 1952; Belgian theoretical physicist and philosopher of science) co-wrote Impostures intellectuelles ([Intellectual frauds] Paris: Odile Jacob, 1997) published in the US, with revisions, as Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals' Abuse of Science (New York: Picador, 1998) and in the U.K. as Intellectual Impostures (London: Profile, 1998). The book featured analysis of extracts from established intellectuals’ writings that Sokal and Bricmont claimed misused scientific terminology and closed with a critical summary of postmodernism in academia.]

In conclusion, I offer the following advice for improving the Bad Writing Contest. The nominators should append a brief critique (an upper word limit would be most advisable) that diagnoses the writing in question. The following issues are fair game to raise in such a critique:

1. The writing is gibberish because it confuses concepts and/or misuses facts—the corrected versions of which, à la Sokal, are provided by the nominator.

2. The writing exhibits a spurious novelty or excitement that reflects the peculiar relation in which the -author stands to his or her intended audience. My critique of 1998’s winning passage was an example of this.

3. The writing is needlessly obtuse as an accompanying streamlined translation easily shows. This was the strategy behind C. Wright Mills’s [1916-62; sociologist, and professor of sociology at Columbia University] deflation of Talcott Parsons’s [1902-79; sociologist] pretensions to “grand theory.”[7]

To be sure, the nominators may think twice before submitting an entry, but then one can never think too much.

Steve Fuller
University of Durham [England]

[Denis Dutton, the editor of Philosophy and Literature and the originator of the Bad Writing Contest, never had the opportunity to consider or test Fuller’s recommendations for improving the contest.  It was discontinued after its fourth edition in 1998.

[I looked for an announcement from the journal stating why it was ending the contest, but I never found one.  Speculation by others, however, suggests two reasons.  One was that the contest was perceived to have a bias afainst the left, which led to a backlash from the targeted academic community, and generated concerns about the contest's potential for academic intimidation and the promotion of a narrow view of “good” writing.

[Another suggested reason was the journal believed that bad writing had become too prevalent in academia and the contest was no longer serving its intended purpose.  The publishers felt that the contest had inadvertently contributed to the very phenomenon it was criticizing and some critics of the contest argued that it had become a tool for ridicule rather than a critical examination of academic writing.

[The next installment of “Bad Writing” will be posted on Wednesday, 28 May.  It will contain some letters from readers with their responses to both the contest and its “winners,” and to the analyses by other academics and writers and the defenses of the “honorees.”]

Footnotes

[1] “The visual is essentially pornographic, which is to say that it has its end in rapt, mindless fascination; thinking about its attributes becomes an adjunct to that, if it is unwilling to betray its object; while the most austere films necessarily draw their energy from the attempt to repress their own excess (rather than from the more thankless effort to discipline the viewer).” Fredric Jameson, Signatures of the Visible (New York: Routledge, 1990), p. 1.

[2] “Indeed dialectical critical realism may be seen under the aspect of Foucauldian strategic reversal—of the unholy trinity of Parmenidean/Platonic/Aristotelean provenance; of the Cartesian-Lockean-Humean-Kantian paradigm, of foundationalisms (in practice, fideistic foundationalisms) and irrationalisms (in practice, capricious exercises of the will-to-power or some other ideologically and/or psycho-somatically buried source) new and old alike; of the primordial failing of western philosophy, ontological monovalence, and its close ally, the epistemic fallacy with its ontic dual; of the analytic problematic laid down by Plato, which Hegel served only to replicate in his actualist monovalent analytic reinstatement in transfigurative reconciling dialectical connection, while in his hubristic claims for absolute idealism he inaugurated the Comtean, Kierkegaardian and Nietzschean eclipses of reason, replicating the fundaments of positivism through its transmutation route to the superidealism of a Baudrillard.” Roy Bhaskar, Plato etc: The Problems of Philosophy and Their Resolution (New York: Verso, 1994).

[3] Theodor Adorno, Negative Dialectics (New York: Continuum, 1979).

[4] Steve Fuller, “The ‘reductio ad symbolum’ and the Possibility of a ‘Linguistic Object,’” Philosophy of the Social Sciences 13 (1983): 129–56; “A French Science (with English Subtitles),” Philosophy and Literature 7 (1983): 3–14; “Is There a Language-game That Even the Deconstructionist Can Play?” Philosophy and Literature 9 (1985): 104–9; “When philosophers are forced to be literary,” in D. Marshall, ed., Philosophy as Literature/Literature as Philosophy (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1987), pp. 24–39.

[5] As background to this argument, see Michele Lamont, “How To Become a Dominant French Philosopher: The Case of Jacques Derrida,” American Journal of Sociology 93 (1987): 584–622.

[6] Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont, Intellectual Impostures (London: Profile Books, 1998).

[7] C. Wright Mills, The Sociological Imagination (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1959), pp. 33–59. Mills alleged that Parsons was able to get away with writing this way because he never expected his claims to be tested, partly because of his institutional clout but also because no one would bother. [In chapter two of The Sociological Imagination, Mills seems to be criticizing Parsonian Sociology, directly addressing Parsons’s The Social System (The Free Press, 1951).]

 Copyright © 1999 The Johns Hopkins University Press

 


22 May 2025

Bad Writing, Part 2

 

[I’m continuing with the series on bad academic writing; Part 2 is below.  This, as I previewed in “Bad Writing, Part 1,” posted on 19 May, is Martha Nussbaum’s critical essay on Judith Butler’s writing career.  Because of its length, “Professor of Parody” comprises the entirety of this installment. 

[Nussbaum’s critique was published two months after the announcement in Philosophy and Literature (see Part 1), to which Nussbaum refers once, so we can assume that Butler’s having won first prize in the 1998 Bad Writing Contest played some part in impelling Nussbaum, a political philosopher, ethicist. feminist, and liberal theorist, to review Butler’s writing.  It did seem to have an inciting effect on the subsequent commentary on the discussion that followed the 1998 contest and the announcement of the “award.”

[Oddly, though Butler’s response to the criticism of her writing (“A ‘Bad Writer’ Bites Back,” New York Times, 20 March 1999; see Part 1), came out a month after Nussbaum’s critique, the first prize-winner didn’t mention it.  Others, however, did, along with Butler’s arguments in “Bad Writer.”]

The Professor of Parody
by Martha C. Nussbaum 

[On 22 February 1999, Martha Nussbaum (b. 1947), who, at the time, was a professor of law and philosophy at the University of Chicago, published the article below.  It ran in the New Republic (vol. 220, no. 8), an editorial magazine focused on domestic politics, news, culture, and the arts from a left-leaning perspective, that puts out ten issues annually.  Nussbaum focused principally on Butler’s writing—not what she wrote, but how—which the law professor described as “ponderous and obscure.” 

[This assessment of Butler’s work seems to have ignited a level of critical scrutiny that attracted a lot of public, journalistic, and academic interest.  In December 1998, that interest was sparked when the academic journal Philosophy and Literature, which explores the connections between literature and philosophy, awarded Butler the first prize in the fourth Bad Writing Contest, which Denis Dutton, then the journal’s editor, started in 1995.

[Below, and in subsequent posts, I’ll be republishing some of those responses.  I’ll start with Nussbaum’s critique.]

The hip defeatism of Judith Butler

For a long time, academic feminism in America has been closely allied to the practical struggle to achieve justice and equality for women. Feminist theory has been understood by theorists as not just fancy words on paper; theory is connected to proposals for social change. Thus feminist scholars have engaged in many concrete projects: the reform of rape law; winning attention and legal redress for the problems of domestic violence and sexual harassment; improving women’s economic opportunities, working conditions, and education; winning pregnancy benefits for female workers; campaigning against the trafficking of women and girls in prostitution; working for the social and political equality of lesbians and gay men.

Indeed, some theorists have left the academy altogether, feeling more comfortable in the world of practical politics, where they can address these urgent problems directly. Those who remain in the academy have frequently made it a point of honor to be academics of a committed practical sort, eyes always on the material conditions of real women, writing always in a way that acknowledges those real bodies and those real struggles. One cannot read a page of Catharine MacKinnon [b. 1946; feminist legal scholar, activist, and author], for example, without being engaged with a real issue of legal and institutional change. If one disagrees with her proposals—and many feminists disagree with them—the challenge posed by her writing is to find some other way of solving the problem that has been vividly delineated.

Feminists have differed in some cases about what is bad, and about what is needed to make things better; but all have agreed that the circumstances of women are often unjust and that law and political action can make them more nearly just. MacKinnon, who portrays hierarchy and subordination as endemic to our entire culture, is also committed to, and cautiously optimistic about, change through law—the domestic law of rape and sexual harassment and international human rights law. Even Nancy Chodorow [b. 1944; sociologist and professor], who, in The Reproduction of Mothering [University of California Press, 1978], offered a depressing account of the replication of oppressive gender categories in child-rearing, argued that this situation could change. Men and women could decide, understanding the unhappy consequences of these habits, that they will henceforth do things differently; and changes in laws and institutions can assist in such decisions.

Feminist theory still looks like this in many parts of the world. In India, for example, academic feminists have thrown themselves into practical struggles, and feminist theorizing is closely tethered to practical commitments such as female literacy, the reform of unequal land laws, changes in rape law (which, in India today, has most of the flaws that the first generation of American feminists targeted), the effort to get social recognition for problems of sexual harassment and domestic violence. These feminists know that they live in the middle of a fiercely unjust reality; they cannot live with themselves without addressing it more or less daily, in their theoretical writing and in their activities outside the seminar room.

In the United States, however, things have been changing. One observes a new, disquieting trend. It is not only that feminist theory pays relatively little attention to the struggles of women outside the United States. (This was always a dispiriting feature even of much of the best work of the earlier period.) Something more insidious than provincialism has come to prominence in the American academy. It is the virtually complete turning from the material side of life, toward a type of verbal and symbolic politics that makes only the flimsiest of connections with the real situation of real women.

Feminist thinkers of the new symbolic type would appear to believe that the way to do feminist politics is to use words in a subversive way, in academic publications of lofty obscurity and disdainful abstractness. These symbolic gestures, it is believed, are themselves a form of political resistance; and so one need not engage with messy things such as legislatures and movements in order to act daringly. The new feminism, moreover, instructs its members that there is little room for large-scale social change, and maybe no room at all. We are all, more or less, prisoners of the structures of power that have defined our identity as women; we can never change those structures in a large-scale way, and we can never escape from them. All that we can hope to do is to find spaces within the structures of power in which to parody them, to poke fun at them, to transgress them in speech. And so symbolic verbal politics, in addition to being offered as a type of real politics, is held to be the only politics that is really possible.

These developments owe much to the recent prominence of French postmodernist thought. Many young feminists, whatever their concrete affiliations with this or that French thinker, have been influenced by the extremely French idea that the intellectual does politics by speaking seditiously, and that this is a significant type of political action. Many have also derived from the writings of Michel Foucault (rightly or wrongly) the fatalistic idea that we are prisoners of an all-enveloping structure of power, and that real-life reform movements usually end up serving power in new and insidious ways. Such feminists therefore find comfort in the idea that the subversive use of words is still available to feminist intellectuals. Deprived of the hope of larger or more lasting changes, we can still perform our resistance by the reworking of verbal categories, and thus, at the margins, of the selves who are constituted by them.

[French postmodernist thought, also known as poststructuralism, is a broad intellectual movement that critically examines the nature of knowledge, truth, and reality, often questioning the foundations of modern philosophy and Western thought. It emphasizes the role of language, discourse, and power in shaping our understanding of the world, rejecting notions of objective truth and universal values. 

[Key figures include Georges Bataille (1897-1962; French philosopher and intellectual working in philosophy, literature, sociology, anthropology, and history of art), Jean Baudrillard (1929-2007; French sociologist and philosopher with an interest in cultural studies), Jean-François Lyotard (1924-98; French philosopher, sociologist, and literary theorist), Michel Foucault (1926-84; French historian of ideas and philosopher), and Jacques Derrida (1930-2004; French Algerian philosopher who developed the philosophy of deconstruction).]

One American feminist has shaped these developments more than any other. Judith Butler [b. 1956] seems to many young scholars to define what feminism is now. Trained as a philosopher, she is frequently seen (more by people in literature than by philosophers) as a major thinker about gender, power, and the body. As we wonder what has become of old-style feminist politics and the material realities to which it was committed, it seems necessary to reckon with Butler’s work and influence, and to scrutinize the arguments that have led so many to adopt a stance that looks very much like quietism and retreat.

[In philosophy, quietism is the view of avoiding or rejecting grand, systematic theories and explanations in favor of a more modest or practical approach to philosophical problems. Quietist philosophers believe that philosophy has no positive thesis to contribute; rather, it defuses confusions in other subjects. Quietism a rejection of metaphysics, a focus on language and meaning, or a skeptical approach to knowledge claims.]

II.

It is difficult to come to grips with Butler’s ideas, because it is difficult to figure out what they are. Butler is a very smart person. In public discussions, she proves that she can speak clearly and has a quick grasp of what is said to her. Her written style, however, is ponderous and obscure. It is dense with allusions to other theorists, drawn from a wide range of different theoretical traditions. In addition to Foucault, and to a more recent focus on [Sigmund] Freud [1856-1939; Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis], Butler’s work relies heavily on the thought of Louis Althusser [1918-90; French Marxist philosopher], the French lesbian theorist Monique Wittig [1935-2003; French author, philosopher, and feminist theorist], the American anthropologist Gayle Rubin [b. 1949; cultural anthropologist, theorist, and activist], Jacques Lacan [1901-81; French psychoanalyst and psychiatrist], J. L. Austin [1911-60; English philosopher of language], and the American philosopher of language Saul Kripke [1940-2022; analytic philosopher and logician]. These figures do not all agree with one another, to say the least; so an initial problem in reading Butler is that one is bewildered to find her arguments buttressed by appeal to so many contradictory concepts and doctrines, usually without any account of how the apparent contradictions will be resolved.

A further problem lies in Butler’s casual mode of allusion. The ideas of these thinkers are never described in enough detail to include the uninitiated (if you are not familiar with the Althusserian concept of “interpellation,” you are lost for chapters) or to explain to the initiated how, precisely, the difficult ideas are being understood. Of course, much academic writing is allusive in some way: it presupposes prior knowledge of certain doctrines and positions. But in both the continental and the Anglo-American philosophical traditions, academic writers for a specialist audience standardly acknowledge that the figures they mention are complicated, and the object of many different interpretations. They therefore typically assume the responsibility of advancing a definite interpretation among the contested ones, and of showing by argument why they have interpreted the figure as they have, and why their own interpretation is better than others.

[Interpellation, not to be confused with ‘interpolation,’ is a concept developed by Althusser which refers to the process by which individuals are recognized and positioned as subjects within a particular ideology or social structure (or ‘construct,’ such as class, gender, racial, or other identities). Essentially, it's the act of being “hailed” or called out (French: interpeller) by social forces (such as the family, mass media, schools, churches, the judicial system, police, government), leading individuals to recognize themselves as members of a specific group or category.  This identity isn’t self-determined and may or may not be accurate.]

We find none of this in Butler. Divergent interpretations are simply not considered—even where, as in the cases of Foucault and Freud, she is advancing highly contestable interpretations that would not be accepted by many scholars. Thus one is led to the conclusion that the allusiveness of the writing cannot be explained in the usual way, by positing an audience of specialists eager to debate the details of an esoteric academic position. The writing is simply too thin to satisfy any such audience. It is also obvious that Butler’s work is not directed at a non-academic audience eager to grapple with actual injustices. Such an audience would simply be baffled by the thick soup of Butler’s prose, by its air of in-group knowingness, by its extremely high ratio of names to explanations.

To whom, then, is Butler speaking? It would seem that she is addressing a group of young feminist theorists in the academy who are neither students of philosophy, caring about what Althusser and Freud and Kripke really said, nor outsiders, needing to be informed about the nature of their projects and persuaded of their worth. This implied audience is imagined as remarkably docile. Subservient to the oracular voice of Butler’s text, and dazzled by its patina of high-concept abstractness, the imagined reader poses few questions, requests no arguments and no clear definitions of terms.

Still more strangely, the implied reader is expected not to care greatly about Butler’s own final view on many matters. For a large proportion of the sentences in any book by Butler—especially sentences near the end of chapters—are questions. Sometimes the answer that the question expects is evident. But often things are much more indeterminate. Among the non-interrogative sentences, many begin with “Consider . . .” or “One could suggest. . .”—in such a way that Butler never quite tells the reader whether she approves of the view described. Mystification as well as hierarchy are the tools of her practice, a mystification that eludes criticism because it makes few definite claims.

Take two representative examples:

What does it mean for the agency of a subject to presuppose its own subordination? Is the act of presupposing the same as the act of reinstating, or is there a discontinuity between the power presupposed and the power reinstated? Consider that in the very act by which the subject reproduces the conditions of its own subordination, the subject exemplifies a temporally based vulnerability that belongs to those conditions, specifically, to the exigencies of their renewal.

And:

Such questions cannot be answered here, but they indicate a direction for thinking that is perhaps prior to the question of conscience, namely, the question that preoccupied [Baruch] Spinoza [1632-77; also known as Benedictus de Spinoza; philosopher of Portuguese-Jewish origin], [Friedrich] Nietzsche [1844-1900; German philosopher], and most recently, Giorgio Agamben [b. 1942; Italian philosopher]: How are we to understand the desire to be as a constitutive desire? Resituating conscience and interpellation within such an account, we might then add to this question another: How is such a desire exploited not only by a law in the singular, but by laws of various kinds such that we yield to subordination in order to maintain some sense of social “being”?

[In philosophy, a “constitutive desire” refers to a foundational or essential desire that is necessary for something to exist or to be understood in a particular way. It’s a desire that, unlike “performative desires” (which are directed towards specific actions), shapes the very nature or identity of something.]

Why does Butler prefer to write in this teasing, exasperating way? The style is certainly not unprecedented. Some precincts of the continental philosophical tradition, though surely not all of them, have an unfortunate tendency to regard the philosopher as a star who fascinates, and frequently by obscurity, rather than as an arguer among equals. When ideas are stated clearly, after all, they may be detached from their author: one can take them away and pursue them on one’s own. When they remain mysterious (indeed, when they are not quite asserted), one remains dependent on the originating authority. The thinker is heeded only for his or her turgid charisma. One hangs in suspense, eager for the next move. When Butler does follow that “direction for thinking,” what will she say? What does it mean, tell us please, for the agency of a subject to presuppose its own subordination? (No clear answer to this question, so far as I can see, is forthcoming.) One is given the impression of a mind so profoundly cogitative that it will not pronounce on anything lightly: so one waits, in awe of its depth, for it finally to do so.

In this way obscurity creates an aura of importance. It also serves another related purpose. It bullies the reader into granting that, since one cannot figure out what is going on, there must be something significant going on, some complexity of thought [see Part 3, where there’s some discussion of the Sokal Hoax], where in reality there are often familiar or even shopworn notions, addressed too simply and too casually to add any new dimension of understanding. When the bullied readers of Butler’s books muster the daring to think thus, they will see that the ideas in these books are thin. When Butler’s notions are stated clearly and succinctly, one sees that, without a lot more distinctions and arguments, they don’t go far, and they are not especially new. Thus obscurity fills the void left by an absence of a real complexity of thought and argument.

Last year Butler won the first prize in the annual Bad Writing Contest sponsored by the journal Philosophy and Literature, for the following sentence:

The move from a structuralist account in which capital is understood to structure social relations in relatively homologous ways to a view of hegemony in which power relations are subject to repetition, convergence, and rearticulation brought the question of temporality into the thinking of structure, and marked a shift from a form of Althusserian theory that takes structural totalities as theoretical objects to one in which the insights into the contingent possibility of structure inaugurate a renewed conception of hegemony as bound up with the contingent sites and strategies of the rearticulation of power.

Now, Butler might have written: “Marxist accounts, focusing on capital as the central force structuring social relations, depicted the operations of that force as everywhere uniform. By contrast, Althusserian accounts, focusing on power, see the operations of that force as variegated and as shifting over time.” Instead, she prefers a verbosity that causes the reader to expend so much effort in deciphering her prose that little energy is left for assessing the truth of the claims. Announcing the award, the journal’s editor remarked that “it’s possibly the anxiety-inducing obscurity of such writing that has led Professor Warren Hedges of Southern Oregon University [b. 1963; tenured professor in SOU’s English department] to praise Judith Butler as probably one of the ten smartest people on the planet.’” (Such bad writing, incidentally, is by no means ubiquitous in the “queer theory” group of theorists with which Butler is associated. David Halperin [b. 1952; theorist in the fields of gender studies, queer theory, and critical theory], for example, writes about the relationship between Foucault and [Immanuel] Kant [1724-1804; German philosopher and one of the central Enlightenment thinkers], and about Greek homosexuality, with philosophical clarity and historical precision.)

Butler gains prestige in the literary world by being a philosopher; many admirers associate her manner of writing with philosophical profundity. But one should ask whether it belongs to the philosophical tradition at all, rather than to the closely related but adversarial traditions of sophistry and rhetoric. Ever since Socrates [ca. 470-399 BCE; Greek philosopher from Athens who is credited as the founder of Western philosophy] distinguished philosophy from what the sophists and the rhetoricians were doing, it has been a discourse of equals who trade arguments and counter-arguments without any obscurantist sleight-of-hand. In that way, he claimed, philosophy showed respect for the soul, while the others’ manipulative methods showed only disrespect. One afternoon, fatigued by Butler on a long plane trip, I turned to a draft of a student’s dissertation on Hume’s views of personal identity. I quickly felt my spirits reviving. Doesn’t she write clearly, I thought with pleasure, and a tiny bit of pride. And Hume, what a fine, what a gracious spirit: how kindly he respects the reader’s intelligence, even at the cost of exposing his own uncertainty.

III.

Butler’s main idea, first introduced in Gender Trouble[: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (Routledge)] in 1989 and repeated throughout her books, is that gender is a social artifice. Our ideas of what women and men are reflect nothing that exists eternally in nature. Instead they derive from customs that embed social relations of power.

This notion, of course, is nothing new. The denaturalizing of gender was present already in Plato [b. ca. 428-423 BCE, died 348/347 BCE; ancient Greek philosopher who’s considered a foundational thinker in Western philosophy], and it received a great boost from John Stuart Mill [1806-73; English philosopher, political economist, politician, and civil servant], who claimed in The Subjection of Women [1869] that “what is now called the nature of women is an eminently artificial thing.” Mill saw that claims about “women’s nature” derive from, and shore up, hierarchies of power: womanliness is made to be whatever would serve the cause of keeping women in subjection, or, as he put it, “enslav[ing] their minds.” With the family as with feudalism, the rhetoric of nature itself serves the cause of slavery. “The subjection of women to men being a universal custom, any departure from it quite naturally appears unnatural . . . . But was there ever any domination which did not appear natural to those who possessed it?”

Mill was hardly the first social-constructionist. Similar ideas about anger, greed, envy, and other prominent features of our lives had been commonplace in the history of philosophy since ancient Greece. And Mill’s application of familiar notions of social-construction to gender needed, and still needs, much fuller development; his suggestive remarks did not yet amount to a theory of gender. Long before Butler came on the scene, many feminists contributed to the articulation of such an account.

In work published in the 1970s and 1980s, Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin [1946-2005; radical feminist writer and activist best known for her analysis of pornography] argued that the conventional understanding of gender roles is a way of ensuring continued male domination in sexual relations, as well as in the public sphere. They took the core of Mill’s insight into a sphere of life concerning which the Victorian philosopher had said little. (Not nothing, though: in 1869 Mill already understood that the failure to criminalize rape within marriage defined woman as a tool for male use and negated her human dignity.) Before Butler, MacKinnon and Dworkin addressed the feminist fantasy of an idyllic natural sexuality of women that only needed to be “liberated”; and argued that social forces go so deep that we should not suppose we have access to such a notion of “nature.” Before Butler, they stressed the ways in which male-dominated power structures marginalize and subordinate not only women, but also people who would like to choose a same-sex relationship. They understood that discrimination against gays and lesbians is a way of enforcing the familiar hierarchically ordered gender roles; and so they saw discrimination against gays and lesbians as a form of sex discrimination.

Before Butler, the psychologist Nancy Chodorow gave a detailed and compelling account of how gender differences replicate themselves across the generations: she argued that the ubiquity of these mechanisms of replication enables us to understand how what is artificial can nonetheless be nearly ubiquitous. Before Butler, the biologist Anne Fausto Sterling [b. 1944; sexologist who has written extensively on the social construction of gender, sexual identity, gender identity, gender roles, and intersexuality], through her painstaking criticism of experimental work allegedly supporting the naturalness of conventional gender distinctions, showed how deeply social power-relations had compromised the objectivity of scientists: Myths of Gender ([Basic Books,] 1985) was an apt title for what she found in the biology of the time. (Other biologists and primatologists also contributed to this enterprise.) Before Butler, the political theorist Susan Moller Okin [1946-2004; liberal feminist political philosopher and author] explored the role of law and political thought in constructing a gendered destiny for women in the family; and this project, too, was pursued further by a number of feminists in law and political philosophy. Before Butler, Gayle Rubin’s important anthropological account of subordination, The Traffic in Women (1975) [in Rayna Reiter, ed., Toward an Anthropology of Women (Monthly Review Press)], provided a valuable analysis of the relationship between the social organization of gender and the asymmetries of power.

So what does Butler’s work add to this copious body of writing? Gender Trouble and Bodies that Matter[: On the Discursive Limits of “Sex” (Routledge, 1993)] contain no detailed argument against biological claims of “natural” difference, no account of mechanisms of gender replication, and no account of the legal shaping of the family; nor do they contain any detailed focus on possibilities for legal change. What, then, does Butler offer that we might not find more fully done in earlier feminist writings? One relatively original claim is that when we recognize the artificiality of gender distinctions, and refrain from thinking of them as expressing an independent natural reality, we will also understand that there is no compelling reason why the gender types should have been two (correlated with the two biological sexes), rather than three or five or indefinitely many. “When the constructed status of gender is theorized as radically independent of sex, gender itself becomes a free-floating artifice,” she writes.

From this claim it does not follow, for Butler, that we can freely reinvent the genders as we like: she holds, indeed, that there are severe limits to our freedom. She insists that we should not naively imagine that there is a pristine self that stands behind society, ready to emerge all pure and liberated: “There is no self that is prior to the convergence or who maintains ‘integrity’ prior to its entrance into this conflicted cultural field. There is only a taking up of the tools where they lie, where the very ‘taking up’ is enabled by the tool lying there.” Butler does claim, though, that we can create categories that are in some sense new ones, by means of the artful parody of the old ones. Thus her best known idea, her conception of politics as a parodic performance, is born out of the sense of a (strictly limited) freedom that comes from the recognition that one’s ideas of gender have been shaped by forces that are social rather than biological. We are doomed to repetition of the power structures into which we are born, but we can at least make fun of them; and some ways of making fun are subversive assaults on the original norms.

The idea of gender as performance is Butler’s most famous idea, and so it is worth pausing to scrutinize it more closely. She introduced the notion intuitively, in Gender Trouble, without invoking theoretical precedent. Later she denied that she was referring to quasi-theatrical performance, and associated her notion instead with Austin’s account of speech acts in How to Do Things with Words. Austin’s linguistic category of “performatives” is a category of linguistic utterances that function, in and of themselves, as actions rather than as assertions. When (in appropriate social circumstances) I say “I bet ten dollars,” or “I’m sorry,” or “I do” (in a marriage ceremony), or “I name this ship . . .,” I am not reporting on a bet or an apology or a marriage or a naming ceremony, I am conducting one.

Butler’s analogous claim about gender is not obvious, since the “performances” in question involve gesture, dress, movement, and action, as well as language. Austin’s thesis, which is restricted to a rather technical analysis of a certain class of sentences, is in fact not especially helpful to Butler in developing her ideas. Indeed, though she vehemently repudiates readings of her work that associate her view with theater, thinking about the Living Theater’s subversive work with gender seems to illuminate her ideas far more than thinking about Austin.

[The Living Theatre (it uses the British spelling of ‘theatre’ in its name) is the oldest experimental theater in the United States, founded by actress Judith Malina (1926-2015) and painter/poet Julian Beck (1925-85) in 1947. The company is dedicated to transforming the organization of power within society from a competitive, hierarchical structure to cooperative and communal expression.

[The troupe opposes the commercial orientation of Broadway productions and have contributed to the off-Broadway theater movement in New York City, staging poetic dramas. The Living, as it’s called, reflects the influence of Antonin Artaud (1896-1948], as revealed in The Theatre and its Double, published in France in 1937 (by which Beck encountered it) and by Grove Press in the U.S. in 1958, by staging multimedia plays designed to exhibit Artaud’s metaphysical Theatre of Cruelty.]

Nor is Butler’s treatment of Austin very plausible. She makes the bizarre claim that the fact that the marriage ceremony is one of dozens of examples of performatives in Austin’s text suggests “that the heterosexualization of the social bond is the paradigmatic form for those speech acts which bring about what they name.” Hardly. Marriage is no more paradigmatic for Austin than betting or ship-naming or promising or apologizing. He is interested in a formal feature of certain utterances, and we are given no reason to suppose that their content has any significance for his argument. It is usually a mistake to read earth-shaking significance into a philosopher’s pedestrian choice of examples. Should we say that Aristotle’s [384-322 BCE; Ancient Greek philosopher and polymath] use of a low-fat diet to illustrate the practical syllogism suggests that chicken is at the heart of Aristotelian virtue? Or that [sJohn] Rawls’s [1921-2002[ moral, legal, and political philosopher in the modern liberal tradition who’s been described as one of the most influential political philosophers of the 20th century] use of travel plans to illustrate practical reasoning shows that A Theory of Justice [Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1971] aims at giving us all a vacation?

Leaving these oddities to one side, Butler’s point is presumably this: when we act and speak in a gendered way, we are not simply reporting on something that is already fixed in the world, we are actively constituting it, replicating it, and reinforcing it. By behaving as if there were male and female “natures,” we co-create the social fiction that these natures exist. They are never there apart from our deeds; we are always making them be there. At the same time, by carrying out these performances in a slightly different manner, a parodic manner, we can perhaps unmake them just a little.

Thus the one place for agency in a world constrained by hierarchy is in the small opportunities we have to oppose gender roles every time they take shape. When I find myself doing femaleness, I can turn it around, poke fun at it, do it a little bit differently. Such reactive and parodic performances, in Butler’s view, never destabilize the larger system. She doesn’t envisage mass movements of resistance or campaigns for political reform; only personal acts carried out by a small number of knowing actors. Just as actors with a bad script can subvert it by delivering the bad lines oddly, so too with gender: the script remains bad, but the actors have a tiny bit of freedom. Thus we have the basis for what, in Excitable Speech [Routledge, 1997], Butler calls “an ironic hopefulness.”

Up to this point, Butler’s contentions, though relatively familiar, are plausible and even interesting, though one is already unsettled by her narrow vision of the possibilities for change. Yet Butler adds to these plausible claims about gender two other claims that are stronger and more contentious. The first is that there is no agent behind or prior to the social forces that produce the self. If this means only that babies are born into a gendered world that begins to replicate males and females almost immediately, the claim is plausible, but not surprising: experiments have for some time demonstrated that the way babies are held and talked to, the way their emotions are described, are profoundly shaped by the sex the adults in question believe the child to have. (The same baby will be bounced if the adults think it is a boy, cuddled if they think it is a girl; its crying will be labeled as fear if the adults think it is a girl, as anger if they think it is a boy.) Butler shows no interest in these empirical facts, but they do support her contention.

If she means, however, that babies enter the world completely inert, with no tendencies and no abilities that are in some sense prior to their experience in a gendered society, this is far less plausible, and difficult to support empirically. Butler offers no such support, preferring to remain on the high plane of metaphysical abstraction. (Indeed, her recent Freudian work may even repudiate this idea: it suggests, with Freud, that there are at least some presocial impulses and tendencies, although, typically, this line is not clearly developed.) Moreover, such an exaggerated denial of pre-cultural agency takes away some of the resources that Chodorow and others use when they try to account for cultural change in the direction of the better.

Butler does in the end want to say that we have a kind of agency, an ability to undertake change and resistance. But where does this ability come from, if there is no structure in the personality that is not thoroughly power’s creation? It is not impossible for Butler to answer this question, but she certainly has not answered it yet, in a way that would convince those who believe that human beings have at least some pre-cultural desires—for food, for comfort, for cognitive mastery, for survival—and that this structure in the personality is crucial in the explanation of our development as moral and political agents. One would like to see her engage with the strongest forms of such a view, and to say, clearly and without jargon, exactly why and where she rejects them. One would also like to hear her speak about real infants, who do appear to manifest a structure of striving that influences from the start their reception of cultural forms.

Butler’s second strong claim is that the body itself, and especially the distinction between the two sexes, is also a social construction. She means not only that the body is shaped in many ways by social norms of how men and women should be; she means also that the fact that a binary division of sexes is taken as fundamental, as a key to arranging society, is itself a social idea that is not given in bodily reality. What exactly does this claim mean, and how plausible is it?

Butler’s brief exploration of Foucault on hermaphrodites does show us society’s anxious insistence to classify every human being in one box or another, whether or not the individual fits a box; but of course it does not show that there are many such indeterminate cases. She is right to insist that we might have made many different classifications of body types, not necessarily focusing on the binary division as the most salient; and she is also right to insist that, to a large extent, claims of bodily sex difference allegedly based upon scientific research have been projections of cultural prejudice—though Butler offers nothing here that is nearly as compelling as Fausto Sterling’s painstaking biological analysis.

And yet it is much too simple to say that power is all that the body is. We might have had the bodies of birds or dinosaurs or lions, but we do not; and this reality shapes our choices. Culture can shape and reshape some aspects of our bodily existence, but it does not shape all the aspects of it. “In the man burdened by hunger and thirst,” as Sextus Empiricus [flourished in mid-late 2nd century CE; Greek Pyrrhonist philosopher, a school of skepticism which rejects dogma and advocates the suspension of judgement over the truth of all beliefs, and Empiric school physician, who derived his knowledge from experiences only, with Roman citizenship] observed long ago, “it is impossible to produce by argument the conviction that he is not so burdened.” This is an important fact also for feminism, since women’s nutritional needs (and their special needs when pregnant or lactating) are an important feminist topic. Even where sex difference is concerned, it is surely too simple to write it all off as culture; nor should feminists be eager to make such a sweeping gesture. Women who run or play basketball, for example, were right to welcome the demolition of myths about women’s athletic performance that were the product of male-dominated assumptions; but they were also right to demand the specialized research on women’s bodies that has fostered a better understanding of women’s training needs and women’s injuries. In short: what feminism needs, and sometimes gets, is a subtle study of the interplay of bodily difference and cultural construction. And Butler’s abstract pronouncements, floating high above all matter, give us none of what we need.

IV.

Suppose we grant Butler her most interesting claims up to this point: that the social structure of gender is ubiquitous, but we can resist it by subversive and parodic acts. Two significant questions remain. What should be resisted, and on what basis? What would the acts of resistance be like, and what would we expect them to accomplish?

Butler uses several words for what she takes to be bad and therefore worthy of resistance: the “repressive,” the “subordinating,” the “oppressive.” But she provides no empirical discussion of resistance of the sort that we find, say, in Barry Adam’s [b. 1952; currently Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada] fascinating sociological study The Survival of Domination ([Elsevier/Greenwood,]1978), which studies the subordination of blacks, Jews, women, and gays and lesbians, and their ways of wrestling with the forms of social power that have oppressed them. Nor does Butler provide any account of the concepts of resistance and oppression that would help us, were we really in doubt about what we ought to be resisting.

Butler departs in this regard from earlier social-constructionist feminists, all of whom used ideas such as non-hierarchy, equality, dignity, autonomy, and treating as an end rather than a means, to indicate a direction for actual politics. Still less is she willing to elaborate any positive normative notion. Indeed, it is clear that Butler, like Foucault, is adamantly opposed to normative notions such as human dignity, or treating humanity as an end, on the grounds that they are inherently dictatorial. In her view, we ought to wait to see what the political struggle itself throws up, rather than prescribe in advance to its participants. Universal normative notions, she says, “colonize under the sign of the same.”

This idea of waiting to see what we get—in a word, this moral passivity—seems plausible in Butler because she tacitly assumes an audience of like-minded readers who agree (sort of) about what the bad things are—discrimination against gays and lesbians, the unequal and hierarchical treatment of women—and who even agree (sort of) about why they are bad (they subordinate some people to others, they deny people freedoms that they ought to have). But take that assumption away, and the absence of a normative dimension becomes a severe problem.

Try teaching Foucault at a contemporary law school, as I have, and you will quickly find that subversion takes many forms, not all of them congenial to Butler and her allies. As a perceptive libertarian student said to me, Why can’t I use these ideas to resist the tax structure, or the antidiscrimination laws, or perhaps even to join the militias? Others, less fond of liberty, might engage in the subversive performances of making fun of feminist remarks in class, or ripping down the posters of the lesbian and gay law students’ association. These things happen. They are parodic and subversive. Why, then, aren’t they daring and good?

Well, there are good answers to those questions, but you won’t find them in Foucault, or in Butler. Answering them requires discussing which liberties and opportunities human beings ought to have, and what it is for social institutions to treat human beings as ends rather than as means—in short, a normative theory of social justice and human dignity. It is one thing to say that we should be humble about our universal norms, and willing to learn from the experience of oppressed people. It is quite another thing to say that we don’t need any norms at all. Foucault, unlike Butler, at least showed signs in his late work of grappling with this problem; and all his writing is animated by a fierce sense of the texture of social oppression and the harm that it does.

Come to think of it, justice, understood as a personal virtue, has exactly the structure of gender in the Butlerian analysis: it is not innate or “natural,” it is produced by repeated performances (or as Aristotle said, we learn it by doing it), it shapes our inclinations and forces the repression of some of them. These ritual performances, and their associated repressions, are enforced by arrangements of social power, as children who won’t share on the playground quickly discover. Moreover, the parodic subversion of justice is ubiquitous in politics, as in personal life. But there is an important difference. Generally we dislike these subversive performances, and we think that young people should be strongly discouraged from seeing norms of justice in such a cynical light. Butler cannot explain in any purely structural or procedural way why the subversion of gender norms is a social good while the subversion of justice norms is a social bad. Foucault, we should remember, cheered for the Ayatollah, and why not? That, too, was resistance, and there was indeed nothing in the text to tell us that that struggle was less worthy than a struggle for civil rights and civil liberties.

[Foucault initially expressed enthusiasm and support for the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (1900 or 1902-1989) and the Iranian Revolution (January 1978-February 1979). He even visited Khomeini in exile in Paris before traveling to Iran to report on the revolution for a newspaper.

[Foucault saw the revolution as a rejection of Western modernity and a spiritual uprising with the potential to liberate people from materialism. However, his views later evolved and became more critical of the new regime, particularly regarding the implementation of the new regime and its treatment of certain groups.]

There is a void, then, at the heart of Butler’s notion of politics. This void can look liberating, because the reader fills it implicitly with a normative theory of human equality or dignity. But let there be no mistake: for Butler, as for Foucault, subversion is subversion, and it can in principle go in any direction. Indeed, Butler’s naively empty politics is especially dangerous for the very causes she holds dear. For every friend of Butler, eager to engage in subversive performances that proclaim the repressiveness of heterosexual gender norms, there are dozens who would like to engage in subversive performances that flout the norms of tax compliance, of non-discrimination, of decent treatment of one’s fellow students. To such people we should say, you cannot simply resist as you please, for there are norms of fairness, decency, and dignity that entail that this is bad behavior. But then we have to articulate those norms—and this Butler refuses to do.

V.

What precisely does Butler offer when she counsels subversion? She tells us to engage in parodic performances, but she warns us that the dream of escaping altogether from the oppressive structures is just a dream: it is within the oppressive structures that we must find little spaces for resistance, and this resistance cannot hope to change the overall situation. And here lies a dangerous quietism.

If Butler means only to warn us against the dangers of fantasizing an idyllic world in which sex raises no serious problems, she is wise to do so. Yet frequently she goes much further. She suggests that the institutional structures that ensure the marginalization of lesbians and gay men in our society, and the continued inequality of women, will never be changed in a deep way; and so our best hope is to thumb our noses at them, and to find pockets of personal freedom within them. “Called by an injurious name, I come into social being, and because I have a certain inevitable attachment to my existence, because a certain narcissism takes hold of any term that confers existence, I am led to embrace the terms that injure me because they constitute me socially.” In other words: I cannot escape the humiliating structures without ceasing to be, so the best I can do is mock, and use the language of subordination stingingly. In Butler, resistance is always imagined as personal, more or less private, involving no unironic, organized public action for legal or institutional change.

Isn’t this like saying to a slave that the institution of slavery will never change, but you can find ways of mocking it and subverting it, finding your personal freedom within those acts of carefully limited defiance? Yet it is a fact that the institution of slavery can be changed, and was changed—but not by people who took a Butler-like view of the possibilities. It was changed because people did not rest content with parodic performance: they demanded, and to some extent they got, social upheaval. It is also a fact that the institutional structures that shape women’s lives have changed. The law of rape, still defective, has at least improved; the law of sexual harassment exists, where it did not exist before; marriage is no longer regarded as giving men monarchical control over women’s bodies. These things were changed by feminists who would not take parodic performance as their answer, who thought that power, where bad, should, and would, yield before justice.

Butler not only eschews such a hope, she takes pleasure in its impossibility. She finds it exciting to contemplate the alleged immovability of power, and to envisage the ritual subversions of the slave who is convinced that she must remain such. She tells us—this is the central thesis of The Psychic Life of Power[: Theories in Subjection (Stanford University Press, 1997)]—that we all eroticize the power structures that oppress us, and can thus find sexual pleasure only within their confines. It seems to be for that reason that she prefers the sexy acts of parodic subversion to any lasting material or institutional change. Real change would so uproot our psyches that it would make sexual satisfaction impossible. Our libidos are the creation of the bad enslaving forces, and thus necessarily sadomasochistic in structure.

Well, parodic performance is not so bad when you are a powerful tenured academic in a liberal university. But here is where Butler’s focus on the symbolic, her proud neglect of the material side of life, becomes a fatal blindness. For women who are hungry, illiterate, disenfranchised, beaten, raped, it is not sexy or liberating to reenact, however parodically, the conditions of hunger, illiteracy, disenfranchisement, beating, and rape. Such women prefer food, schools, votes, and the integrity of their bodies. I see no reason to believe that they long sadomasochistically for a return to the bad state. If some individuals cannot live without the sexiness of domination, that seems sad, but it is not really our business. But when a major theorist tells women in desperate conditions that life offers them only bondage, she purveys a cruel lie, and a lie that flatters evil by giving it much more power than it actually has.

Excitable Speech, Butler’s most recent book, which provides her analysis of legal controversies involving pornography and hate speech, shows us exactly how far her quietism extends. For she is now willing to say that even where legal change is possible, even where it has already happened, we should wish it away, so as to preserve the space within which the oppressed may enact their sadomasochistic rituals of parody.

As a work on the law of free speech, Excitable Speech is an unconscionably bad book. Butler shows no awareness of the major theoretical accounts of the First Amendment, and no awareness of the wide range of cases such a theory will need to take into consideration. She makes absurd legal claims: for example, she says that the only type of speech that has been held to be unprotected is speech that has been previously defined as conduct rather than speech. (In fact, there are many types of speech, from false or misleading advertising to libelous statements to obscenity as currently defined, which have never been claimed to be action rather than speech, and which are nonetheless denied First Amendment protection.) Butler even claims, mistakenly, that obscenity has been judged to be the equivalent of “fighting words.” It is not that Butler has an argument to back up her novel readings of the wide range of cases of unprotected speech that an account of the First Amendment would need to cover. She just has not noticed that there is this wide range of cases, or that her view is not a widely accepted legal view. Nobody interested in law can take her argument seriously.

But let us extract from Butler’s thin discussion of hate speech and pornography the core of her position. It is this: legal prohibitions of hate speech and pornography are problematic (though in the end she does not clearly oppose them) because they close the space within which the parties injured by that speech can perform their resistance. By this Butler appears to mean that if the offense is dealt with through the legal system, there will be fewer occasions for informal protest; and also, perhaps, that if the offense becomes rarer because of its illegality we will have fewer opportunities to protest its presence.

Well, yes. Law does close those spaces. Hate speech and pornography are extremely complicated subjects on which feminists may reasonably differ. (Still, one should state the contending views precisely: Butler’s account of MacKinnon is less than careful, stating that MacKinnon supports “ordinances against pornography” and suggesting that, despite MacKinnon’s explicit denial, they involve a form of censorship. Nowhere does Butler mention that what MacKinnon actually supports is a civil damage action in which particular women harmed through pornography can sue its makers and its distributors.)

But Butler’s argument has implications well beyond the cases of hate speech and pornography. It would appear to support not just quietism in these areas, but a much more general legal quietism—or, indeed, a radical libertarianism. It goes like this: let us do away with everything from building codes to non-discrimination laws to rape laws, because they close the space within which the injured tenants, the victims of discrimination, the raped women, can perform their resistance. Now, this is not the same argument radical libertarians use to oppose building codes and anti-discrimination laws; even they draw the line at rape. But the conclusions converge.

If Butler should reply that her argument pertains only to speech (and there is no reason given in the text for such a limitation, given the assimilation of harmful speech to conduct), then we can reply in the domain of speech. Let us get rid of laws against false advertising and unlicensed medical advice, for they close the space within which poisoned consumers and mutilated patients can perform their resistance! Again, if Butler does not approve of these extensions, she needs to make an argument that divides her cases from these cases, and it is not clear that her position permits her to make such a distinction.

For Butler, the act of subversion is so riveting, so sexy, that it is a bad dream to think that the world will actually get better. What a bore equality is! No bondage, no delight. In this way, her pessimistic erotic anthropology offers support to an amoral anarchist politics.

 VI.

When we consider the quietism inherent in Butler’s writing, we have some keys to understanding Butler’s influential fascination with drag and cross-dressing as paradigms of feminist resistance. Butler’s followers understand her account of drag to imply that such performances are ways for women to be daring and subversive. I am unaware of any attempt by Butler to repudiate such readings.

But what is going on here? The woman dressed mannishly is hardly a new figure. Indeed, even when she was relatively new, in the nineteenth century, she was in another way quite old, for she simply replicated in the lesbian world the existing stereotypes and hierarchies of male-female society. What, we may well ask, is parodic subversion in this area, and what a kind of prosperous middle-class acceptance? Isn’t hierarchy in drag still hierarchy? And is it really true (as The Psychic Life of Power would seem to conclude) that domination and subordination are the roles that women must play in every sphere, and if not subordination, then mannish domination?

In short, cross-dressing for women is a tired old script—as Butler herself informs us. Yet she would have us see the script as subverted, made new, by the cross-dresser’s knowing symbolic sartorial gestures; but again we must wonder about the newness, and even the subversiveness. Consider Andrea Dworkin’s parody (in her novel Mercy [Four Walls Eight Windows, 1991]) of a Butlerish parodic feminist, who announces from her posture of secure academic comfort:

The notion that bad things happen is both propagandistic and inadequate . . . . To understand a woman’s life requires that we affirm the hidden or obscure dimensions of pleasure, often in pain, and choice, often under duress. One must develop an eye for secret signs—the clothes that are more than clothes or decoration in the contemporary dialogue, for instance, or the rebellion hidden behind apparent conformity. There is no victim. There is perhaps an insufficiency of signs, an obdurate appearance of conformity that simply masks the deeper level on which choice occurs.

In prose quite unlike Butler’s, this passage captures the ambivalence of the implied author of some of Butler’s writings, who delights in her violative practice while turning her theoretical eye resolutely away from the material suffering of women who are hungry, illiterate, violated, beaten. There is no victim. There is only an insufficiency of signs.

Butler suggests to her readers that this sly send-up of the status quo is the only script for resistance that life offers. Well, no. Besides offering many other ways to be human in one’s personal life, beyond traditional norms of domination and subservience, life also offers many scripts for resistance that do not focus narcissistically on personal self-presentation. Such scripts involve feminists (and others, of course) in building laws and institutions, without much concern for how a woman displays her own body and its gendered nature: in short, they involve working for others who are suffering.

The great tragedy in the new feminist theory in America is the loss of a sense of public commitment. In this sense, Butler’s self-involved feminism is extremely American, and it is not surprising that it has caught on here, where successful middle-class people prefer to focus on cultivating the self rather than thinking in a way that helps the material condition of others. Even in America, however, it is possible for theorists to be dedicated to the public good and to achieve something through that effort.

Many feminists in America are still theorizing in a way that supports material change and responds to the situation of the most oppressed. Increasingly, however, the academic and cultural trend is toward the pessimistic flirtatiousness represented by the theorizing of Butler and her followers. Butlerian feminism is in many ways easier than the old feminism. It tells scores of talented young women that they need not work on changing the law, or feeding the hungry, or assailing power through theory harnessed to material politics. They can do politics in safety of their campuses, remaining on the symbolic level, making subversive gestures at power through speech and gesture. This, the theory says, is pretty much all that is available to us anyway, by way of political action, and isn’t it exciting and sexy?

In its small way, of course, this is a hopeful politics. It instructs people that they can, right now, without compromising their security, do something bold. But the boldness is entirely gestural, and insofar as Butler’s ideal suggests that these symbolic gestures really are political change, it offers only a false hope. Hungry women are not fed by this, battered women are not sheltered by it, raped women do not find justice in it, gays and lesbians do not achieve legal protections through it.

Finally there is despair at the heart of the cheerful Butlerian enterprise. The big hope, the hope for a world of real justice, where laws and institutions protect the equality and the dignity of all citizens, has been banished, even perhaps mocked as sexually tedious. Judith Butler’s hip quietism is a comprehensible response to the difficulty of realizing justice in America. But it is a bad response. It collaborates with evil. Feminism demands more and women deserve better.

[Martha Nussbaum is currently the Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago, where she is jointly appointed in the law school and the philosophy department.

[Nussbaum's work has focused on ancient Greek and Roman philosophy, political philosophy, existentialism, feminism, and ethics, including animal rights.  She also holds associate appointments in classics, divinity, and political science, is a member of the Committee on Southern Asian Studies, and a board member of the Human Rights Program.  

[She’s written more than two dozen books, including The Fragility of Goodness (1986).  She received the 2016 Kyoto Prize in Arts and Philosophy, the 2018 Berggruen Prize, and the 2021 Holberg Prize.  In recent years, she has also been considered a candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

[“Bad Writing, Part 3,” with several more responses to the designation of Judith Butler as the number one worst writer of 1998, will be posted on Sunday, 25 May.  Please come back to see where the reaction and the concern over academic writing went from here.]