So, in the latest go-round on racism, reader response, and the like, I have very little useful to say. The one thing that I haven’t seen much discussion on--though I haven’t waded into many comment threads, so I might just have missed it--is about the false opposition between rational/academic/literary analysis and emotional/political response, specifically about what it means to have emotions. Anyone who tells you that they aren’t responding emotionally to anything they have spent the time to analyze has made a mistake. Emotion/reason is a common dualism (and therefore it’s never surprising to find it mapped onto power hierarchies). But no rational judgment can be made without emotion. This isn’t exaggeration: without emotion to tell us what to value, weighing factors with perfect accuracy is useless. A person engaging in what she calls “analysis” as opposed to “reaction” may be responding with emotion so well accommodated by prevailing structures that it looks to her like computer logic. But emotion is behind any analysis. For an overview of the relevant neuro/psychological research, the first half of this paper by David Arkush covers a lot of ground. (It’s law-oriented, but it’s also the most recent thing I read on the subject so it’s an easy cite.)
James Boyle, The Public Domain: Enclosing the Commons of the Mind: You can download a copy for free. This book is the latest in a round of popularizing the challenges of intellectual property protection in a networked world; Boyle is one of our most prominent low-protectionists. He's not quite the writer that Larry Lessig is, but he's pretty good, and the book serves as a fun, solid introduction to our current situation. Elegant explanation of synthetic biology and its patent discontents. Those already familiar with the basics probably won't learn much, but should consider checking out Boyle's Shamans, Software, and Spleens, a more theoretically oriented work that I like a lot but is sadly as yet not fully available online.
James Boyle, The Public Domain: Enclosing the Commons of the Mind: You can download a copy for free. This book is the latest in a round of popularizing the challenges of intellectual property protection in a networked world; Boyle is one of our most prominent low-protectionists. He's not quite the writer that Larry Lessig is, but he's pretty good, and the book serves as a fun, solid introduction to our current situation. Elegant explanation of synthetic biology and its patent discontents. Those already familiar with the basics probably won't learn much, but should consider checking out Boyle's Shamans, Software, and Spleens, a more theoretically oriented work that I like a lot but is sadly as yet not fully available online.
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And I might just download a copy of Boyle's, too. So many interesting things to read...
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Well said.
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Well said. In cultural studies (especially studying pop culture) there's currently a lot of people trying to explicitly use both emotion and reason, a la feminist critiques of culture in the 80s - those feminist critiques being what I always associate this problem with (because afaik they were the first ones to take the question on).
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From my own standpoint -- well, I'm a reviewer. I have to take into account my emotional, subjective reactions in tandem with any objective criteria I'm using or nothing I write makes any sense (not to me, anyway). You're right, though, if I can come in from the other side: it's recognizing the emotional reaction for what it is that's all too often missing -- the difference between "liking" something and "appreciating" it. I think the emotional reaction is so completely assumed that it's not even recognized. (Ah -- you did touch on that.)
And it seems to me that analysis is a way of distancing yourself from your emotional responses, which I'm sure has some relevance here: I do that regularly, coming up with summations that run on the order of "it has these flaws but I love it anyway, so purely for ratings purposes. . . ." (Add in that I tend very much toward text-based commentary, which is a series of trade-offs, so there's an emotional-response weighting that takes place there.)
I'm not sure that "value" as a measure has any meaning in a purely rational analysis, so you're right on that score, although my concept of it is slightly different.
I'd also like to point out that there's a marked tendency to use someone's emotional response to dismiss whatever rational take they may have on a question. I've seen that happen way too much, so maybe sometimes you do need to separate them, in discourse, at least, even if it's not really possible in process.
Interesting questions you pose.
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