Due to recent events i came across an article by Zizek that i found very interesting and thought i`d share. I tried to make an argument against a group of people that make all sorts of crude jokes in the internet (racist, antisemitic and rape jokes) and some of them see it as a limitation of free speech when you try to explain to them that some jokes are simply promoting hate rather than fun.
I personally think that if you take the time to gather in the internet and make "rape jokes" there must be something inside humans that trigger them to find that "laughable". There must be a common denominator of an intrinsic hate or "yes yes- its a gentleman`s crime" if you think its fun to make such jokes. I was argumenting with the notion that the pure fact some things are made jokes off and others are not , are promoting second class citizenship and make it harder for minorities and people in bad situations to be taken serious.
I wonder what you guys think. Am i "interrupting free speech" (of course i went into the beehive and protested against it - typical Nina , there are only people gathering that make such jokes and i tried to argue them out of doing so - in a polite way) . I went into the "beehive" because this group is participating in an internet organization that i really do like and someone founded a subgroup with that content i stumbled across. Some people are really polite in discussions and its interesting. What do you guys think? Are there some jokes that are "too much" or am i overreacting?
Here is an interesting article i used to point out my take on it, its called enjoyment as a political factor which basically holds the notion that "if you find it funny then there is a subliminal hate within that group of people that finds such jokes funny", because what triggers the laughter? My question is - how far can we go in jokes about other ethnicities and prejudices? Am i rigid or am i just more aware or how to find a consense between the outrage that i feel when i read jokes like "How to rape a blind and deaf woman - you break her hands so she can`t tell her mum" and between jokes that are not as severe, but still pointing in a similar direction? .
Here is a quote:
"We are dealing with what I am tempted to call a kind of canned hatred. In the same way that the TV set laughs for you, relieves you of the obligation to really laugh, [a Nazi like] Eichmann himself didn't really have to hate the Jews; he was able to be just an ordinary person. It's the objective ideological machinery that did the hating; the hatred was "out there.With the disintegration of state socialism, we are witnessing this eruption of enjoymnet in the re-emergence of aggressive nationalism and racism.
With the lid of repression lifted, the desires that have emerged are far from democratic. To explain this apparent paradox, says Slavoj Zizek, socialist critical thought must turn to psychoanalysis. For They Know Not What They Do seeks to understand the status of enjoyment within ideological discourse,"
- Slavoij Zizek"
here is a full excerpt of his book. I hope to trigger some fruitful discussions about boundaries and how far is too far, and i hope this topic is not too "serious" either.
Love Nina Sastri
http://www.lacan.com/zizekchro1.htm