Body and Gender (photocopy)
Perfect Difference: Gender and the Analogy of Being
D. C. SchindlerThe theme of difference is no doubt one of the most prevalent in contemporary thought, especially in that thought which is recognized as “postmodern.” Unsurprisingly, perhaps, it was among the French (who have been known traditionally for their appreciation of the matter: “Vive la différence!”) that the postmodern version of the theme first became a direct focus. We have, for example, Emmanuel Levinas’s recovery of the importance of otherness over against what he took to be a kind of totalizing ego-centeredness dominating Western patterns of thought. Even more broadly influential on this score is Levinas’s student, Jacques Derrida, who gave the word a new spelling (“différance”) and, on its basis, engaged a relentless attack on the traditional thinking that he felt to be inextricably caught up in various binary oppositions: pure-impure, speech-writing, good-bad, act-potency, form-matter, male-female, and so forth. However seriously Derrida may have been taken inside the academy—in the end, his philosophy seems to have had the most success, not so much in France as in the United States, and not so much in the field of philosophy as in English, where identity politics seems to be especially present—his critique of binary thinking has recently started to become mainstream. This is above all the case with respect to the issue of gender. A few months ago, for example, one of the two siblings formerly known as the “Wachowski brothers” decided to join his sibling in “transitioning,” and accompanied his announcement with what amounts to a brief manifesto: