that sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially con-structed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written off within the terms of that theory as
Trang 1that sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially con-structed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written off within the terms of that theory as “male-identified” or “unenlight-ened.” Indeed, it is often unclear within Irigaray’s text whether sexuality
is culturally constructed, or whether it is only culturally constructed within the terms of the phallus In other words, is specifically feminine pleasure “outside” of culture as its prehistory or as its utopian future? If
so, of what use is such a notion for negotiating the contemporary strug-gles of sexuality within the terms of its construction?
The pro-sexuality movement within feminist theory and practice has effectively argued that sexuality is always constructed within the terms of discourse and power, where power is partially understood in terms of heterosexual and phallic cultural conventions.The emergence
of a sexuality constructed (not determined) in these terms within
les-bian, bisexual, and heterosexual contexts is, therefore, not a sign of a
masculine identification in some reductive sense It is not the failed project of criticizing phallogocentrism or heterosexual hegemony, as if
a political critique could effectively undo the cultural construction of the feminist critic’s sexuality If sexuality is culturally constructed within existing power relations, then the postulation of a normative sexuality that is “before,” “outside,” or “beyond” power is a cultural impossibility and a politically impracticable dream, one that postpones the concrete and contemporary task of rethinking subversive possibili-ties for sexuality and identity within the terms of power itself This critical task presumes, of course, that to operate within the matrix of power is not the same as to replicate uncritically relations of domina-tion It offers the possibility of a repetition of the law which is not its consolidation, but its displacement In the place of a “male-identified” sexuality in which “male” serves as the cause and irreducible meaning
of that sexuality, we might develop a notion of sexuality constructed in terms of phallic relations of power that replay and redistribute the pos-sibilities of that phallicism precisely through the subversive operation of
“identifications” that are, within the power field of sexuality, inevitable
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