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Love and Sexual Difference

chronicle · Saturday, February 24th, 1996 · 5 min read

The discussion started by Column No. 29 on the abortion issue gave me the idea of developing my ideas on sexual difference a little further. I have resisted the temptation to call this column  Engendering GA , not merely because the play on words is about as trite as  Yogi Berra ‘s quote about  déjà vu , but because the term  gender  is used today to imply that there is no fundamental difference between the sexes, that feminine and masculine roles are socially determined. The traditional French reply to this utopian denial of the facts is  vive la différence! But in order to speak about this difference, we must first attempt to understand it in originary terms. GA  has said little about sexuality. Its theory of desire, founded on the primary relation of  mimesis , is suspicious of any attempt to specify the objects of desire. In my  Abortion  column, I suggested the following definition of sexual difference: Men relate to others externally; women have the additional potential of an internal relation to a human other.  To be biologically equipped to bear children is  what a woman is  (and  what a man is not )–which does not mean that it need be the essential determinant of her (or his) behavior. The germ of the feminist argument that men resent female superiority is that women have a way of relating to others that is inaccessible to men. But this definition is not biological; it is  anthropological .  Otherness  is an exclusively human category. The abortion issue touches directly on the nature of this internal relation; when does the fetus become a  human other  and cease to be a mere part of the woman? But of far greater interest is the way in which this conception of sexual difference can enlighten us about the chief subject of these columns, which is  love . My original idea was to call this series  Chronicles of Resentment . But as I especially emphasized in  Column No. 6 , if there is one thing that saves us from resentment, it is love–sexual,  romantic love . Clearly we can understand love up to a certain point without referring to sexual difference. Although the religious and literary tradition gives a quite different picture, in the  Athens  of  Plato ‘s time, the only culturally interesting form of love was  homosexual . The expulsion of sexual difference from Greek  eros  is one of the founding gestures of mature Athenian culture, and certainly of philosophy. But the culture of sexual love in the West since the Middle Ages has returned to its heterosexual roots; modern homosexuality is best understood as a deviation from this norm. The notion of love that I have attempted to develop in these columns, as well as in my recent seminar, is that love is essentially  tenderness , the  caring awareness  by each of  the other’s vulnerability , and therefore of his or her need for love. The obvious source of this sentiment in the originary scene is mourning for the central being torn to pieces in the  sparagmos . But the specific quality of the  love-relationship  as it develops in Western culture reflects the integration within external human relations of the internal otherness of the  mother-child relationship . This relationship is fundamentally  non-rivalrous . Lovers can indeed become rivals; they are as subject to the mechanism of mimesis as anyone else. But what makes the love relationship tender is the  non-mimetic appreciation  of the other’s  difference . The infant in the womb–and for a long time afterward–is incapable of mimetic rivalry; this only begins with the assumption of full humanity in the possession of  language . To engage in conflictive mimesis, as any two-year-old knows, it is essential to be able to say no . The mother’s tenderness for the child in the womb cannot be reciprocated; it is she who recognizes its need for her care. In contrast, the tenderness of lovers is  reciprocal . (A relationship in which one party depends unilaterally on the other is unworthy to be called love.) Love is an external relationship between adults, yet it strives toward  mutual internality , as if each were the nurturing mother of the other. Each treats the beloved not as a potential rival but as an object of asymmetrical  caring . The love-relationship lacks the biological element of internality; it achieves cultural grandeur by attempting to reproduce in an external relationship the visceral necessity of an internal one. As the deaths of  Tristan and Isolde ,  Romeo and Juliet , and countless others exemplify, the true lover cannot live without the beloved. These reflections on romantic love lead us to examine the role of love in  Christianity , the central cultural system of what  Hegel  called the  Romantic era. The love of each for each, which I have qualified as  omnicentric –each becomes a center for every other–is proposed in the  Gospels  as an alternative to the symmetrical opposition of rivals. Turn the other cheek  rather than retaliate in kind;  go the extra mile  rather than draw a line in the sand. The moral duty of  asymmetry  is associated with maternity in the figure of  the other as a child  that recurs so frequently in the Gospels. A recent lecture by my UCLA colleague, historian  Scott Bartchy , emphasized early Christianity’s subversion of the symmetrical male relationships of the Roman empire. This suggests that we should understand Christian love ( agapé ) as modeled on the asymmetrical caring relationship of  internal otherness . What Jesus proposes is the  feminization  of external relations as a non-sacrificial means of deferring violence. I will conclude with a reference to  Flaubert ‘s  Madame Bovary , probably the most significant novel of the nineteenth century. The excesses that bring about  Emma ‘s downfall are more financial than sexual. She is the first literary character of  consumer society . As the author might have said,  Madame Bovary, c’est nous . Emma ends badly, but her passion for consumer goods is prophetic of a society in which we can all differentiate ourselves without directly competing by using consumption to  make a statement  of our  social being . Emma is unconcerned with rivalry in the real world; the mimetic models she finds in books and magazines provide her with  consumption patterns –including  adultery . If mature market society has resisted the  final conflict  predicted by  Marx  and so many others, this is the result of the rise of consumption as a mitigating factor in social confrontation. Can we find a more specific linkage between the modern phenomenon of consumption that mediates between symmetrical rivalry and linear hierarchy and the relationship of  internal otherness ? Emma  is disinterested in motherhood; she cares more for her possessions than her child. Can we say then that the  meaningful consumer goods  of consumer society are (like pets)  cultural substitutes for children  that allow us solace  within ourselves  from the rivalrous externality of the social world? These ideas require further reflection. Enjoy this column? Yes No Δ

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