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3
On Judith Butler and Performativity
SARA SALIH

S cience and naturalness are discur-


sive constructs and, although it might
seem strange to refute the authority of
PERFORMATIVITY
Butler has collapsed the sex/gender distinction
in order to argue that there is no sex that is not
science after quoting apparently scientific
always already gender. All bodies are gendered
data, the point Butler is making is clear: the
from the beginning of their social existence
body is not a mute facticity (GT: 129), i.e. a
(and there is no existence that is not social),
fact of nature, but like gender it is produced by
which means that there is no natural body
discourses such as the ones Butler has been
that pre-exists its cultural inscription. This
analyzing. As with gender, to suggest that there
seems to point towards the conclusion that
is no body prior to cultural inscription will lead
gender is not something one is, it is something
Butler to argue that sex as well as gender can
one does, an act, or more precisely, a sequence
be performatively reinscribed in ways that
of acts, a verb rather than a noun, a doing
accentuate its factitiousness (i.e. its construct-
rather than a being (GT: 25). Butler elabo-
edness) rather than its facticity (i.e. the fact of
rates this idea in the first chapter of Gender
its existence). Such reinscriptions, or re-citations
Trouble:
as Butler will call them in Bodies That Matter,
constitute the subjects agency within the law,
in other words, the possibilities of subverting Gender is the repeated stylization of the
body, a set of repeated acts within a highly
the law against itself. Agency is an important
rigid regulatory frame that congeal over
concept for Butler, since it signifies the oppor- time to produce the appearance of sub-
tunities for subverting the law against itself to stance, of a natural sort of being. A political
radical, political ends. genealogy of gender ontologies, if it is

SOURCE: This chapter was originally part of chapters 2 and 3 in Judith Butler. Copyright 2002 Sara
Salih. Reprinted by permission.
55
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56 SEXUALITIES AND COMMUNICATION

successful, will deconstruct the substantive performance presupposes a preexisting subject,


appearance of gender into its constitutive performativity contests the very notion of the
acts and locate and account for those acts
subject (GP: 33). In this interview Butler also
within the compulsory frames set by the var-
ious forces that police the social appearance explicitly connects her use of the concept per-
of gender. formativity to the speech act theory of J. L.
Austins How To Do Things With Words
Gender is not just a process, but it is a par- (1955) and Derridas deconstruction of Austins
ticular type of process, a set of repeated acts ideas in his essay Signature Event Context
within a highly rigid regulatory frame as (1972). Both of these texts are discussed in
Butler puts it. I have italicized that last phrase detail in Chapter 4 of Judith Butler, where I
in order to stress that, as with the wardrobe look at Butlers theorizations of language, but
analogy that I introduce later in this chapter, here it should be noted that, although neither
Butler is not suggesting that the subject is free Austin nor Derrida is in evidence in Gender
to choose which gender she or he is going Trouble, Butler implicitly draws from their lin-
to enact. The script, if you like, is always guistic theories in her formulations of gender
already determined within this regulatory identity.
frame, and the subject has a limited number of How is linguistic performativity connected
costumes from which to make a constrained to gender? Towards the beginning of Gender
choice of gender style. Trouble Butler states that [w]ithin the inher-
The idea of performativity is introduced in ited discourse of the metaphysics of substance,
the first chapter of Gender Trouble when Butler gender proves to be performative, that is, con-
states that gender proves to be performance stituting the identity it is purported to be
that is, constituting the identity it is purported (GT: 245). Gender is an act that brings into
to be. In this sense, gender is always a doing, being what it names: in this context, a mas-
though not a doing by a subject who might be culine man or a feminine woman. Gender
said to pre-exist the deed (GT: 25). She then identities are constructed and constituted by
quotes the claim Nietzsche makes in On the language, which means that there is no gender
Genealogy of Morals that there is no being identity that precedes language. If you like, it
behind doing, acting, becoming; the doer is is not that an identity does discourse or lan-
merely a fiction imposed on the doingthe guage, but the other way aroundlanguage
doing itself is everything (1887: 29), before and discourse do gender. There is no I
adding her own gendered corollary to his for- outside language since identity is a signifying
mulation: there is no gender identity behind practice, and culturally intelligible subjects are
the expressions of gender; that identity is per- the effects rather than the causes of discourses
formatively constituted by the very expres- that conceal their workings (GT: 145). It is in
sions that are said to be its results (GT: 25). this sense that gender identity is performative.
This is a statement that has confused many At this point, we might return to the
people. How can there be a performance wardrobe analogy I explored in an earlier
without a performer, an act without an actor? chapter of Judith Butler (p. 50), where I argued
Actually, Butler is not claiming that gender is that ones gender is performatively constituted
a performance, and she distinguishes between in the same way that ones choice of clothes is
performance and performativity (although at curtailed, perhaps even predetermined, by the
times in Gender Trouble the two terms seem society, context, economy, etc. within which
to slide into one another). In an interview one is situated. Readers familiar with Daphne
given in 1993 she emphasizes the importance du Mauriers novel Rebecca (1938) will remem-
of this distinction, arguing that, whereas ber that the nameless narrator shocks her
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Chapter 3: On Judith Butler and Performativity 57

husband by turning up at a party in an identi- emphasis). Once again we return to the notion
cal dress to that worn by his dead wife on a that there is no doer behind the deed, no voli-
similar occasion. In preparation for the party, tional agent that knowingly does its gender,
the narrator, assisted by the malign Mrs. since the gendered body is inseparable from the
Danvers, believes that she is choosing her cos- acts that constitute it. All the same, in the
tume and thereby creating herself, whereas it account of parody and drag that follows this
turns out that Mrs. Danvers is in fact recreat- description it does at times sound as though
ing the narrator as Rebecca. If Mrs. Danvers is there is an actor or a doer behind the deed,
taken to exemplify authority or power here, and Butler later admits that in Gender Trouble
Rebecca may provide an example of the way she waffled between describing gender in
in which identities, far from being chosen by terms of linguistic performativity and charac-
an individual agent, precede and constitute terizing it as straightforward theatre. Her
those agents or subjects (just as Rebecca lit- theories are clarified in Bodies That Matter
erally precedes the narrator). where Butler emphasizes the Derridean and
Austinian underpinnings of performativity that
are as yet only implicit in Gender Trouble.
SURFACE/DEPTH
Butlers argument that there is no identity out-
PARODY AND DRAG
side language leads her to reject the commonly
accepted distinction between surface and If the inner truth of gender is a fabrication
depth, the Cartesian dualism between body and if a true gender is a fantasy instituted and
and soul. In the third chapter of Gender inscribed on the surface of bodies, then it
Trouble she draws from Foucaults book seems that genders can be neither true nor
Discipline and Punish, in which he challenges false, but are only produced as the truth effects
the doctrine of internalization, the theory of a discourse of primary and stable identity,
that subjects are formed by internalizing disci- Butler writes in the third chapter of Gender
plinary structures. Foucault replaces this with Trouble (GT: 136). In that case, it must be
the model of inscription: as Butler describes possible to act that gender in ways which
it, this is the idea that [the] law is not literally will draw attention to the constructedness of
internalized, but incorporated, with the conse- heterosexual identities that may have a vested
quence that bodies are produced which signify interest in presenting themselves as essential
that law on and through the body (GT: and natural, so that it would be true to say
1345). Because there is no interior to gen- that all gender is a form of parody, but that
der the law cannot be internalized, but is some gender performances are more parodic
written on the body in what Butler calls the than others. Indeed, by highlighting the dis-
corporeal stylization of gender, the fantasied junction between the body of the performer
[sic] and fantastic figuration of the body (GT: and the gender that is being performed, paro-
135). Butler repeatedly refutes the idea of a dic performances such as drag effectively
pre-linguistic inner core or essence by claiming reveal the imitative nature of all gender identi-
that gender acts are not performed by the ties. In imitating gender, drag implicitly
subject, but they performatively constitute a reveals the imitative structure of gender
subject that is the effect of discourse rather itselfas well as its contingency, Butler
than the cause of it: that the gendered body is claims; part of the pleasure, the giddiness of
performative suggests that it has no ontological the performance is in the recognition of a rad-
status apart from the various acts which con- ical contingency in the relation between sex
stitute its reality, she writes (GT: 136; my and gender (GT: 1378; her emphasis).
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58 SEXUALITIES AND COMMUNICATION

Gender is a corporeal style, an act (or a subversive parody and the sort of ordinary
sequence of acts), a strategy which has cul- parody that Butler claims everyone is unwit-
tural survival as its end, since those who do tingly engaged in anyway? All gender is paro-
not do their gender correctly are punished dic, but Butler warns that [p]arody by itself is
by society (GT: 13940); it is a repetition, a not subversive, and she poses the important
copy of a copy and, crucially, the gender par- question as to which performances effect the
ody Butler describes does not presuppose the various destabilizations of gender and sex she
existence of an original, since it is the very describes, and where those performances take
notion of an original that is being parodied place (GT: 139). There are some forms of drag
(GT: 138). Gender performatives that do not that are definitely not subversive, but serve
try to conceal their genealogy, indeed, that go only to reinforce existing heterosexual power
out of their way to accentuate it, displace het- structuresin Bodies, Butler cites Dustin
erocentric assumptions by revealing that het- Hoffmans performance in Tootsie as an
erosexual identities are as constructed and example of what she calls high het entertain-
unoriginal as the imitations of them. ment, and we might also add the more recent
Gender does not happen once and for all film Mrs. Doubtfire in which Robin Williams
when we are born, but is a sequence of gives a cross-dressed performance as a nanny.
repeated acts that harden into the appearance Neither of these drag performances are subver-
of something thats been there all along. If sive, since they serve to reinforce existing distinc-
gender is a regulated process of repetition tions between male and female, masculine
taking place in language, then it will be possi- and feminine, gay and straight.
ble to repeat ones gender differently, as drag The question as to what constitutes subver-
artists do (and you might also recall my sive, as opposed to ordinary everyday gender
wardrobe analogythe ripped clothes and the parody, is left open in the conclusion to Gender
sequins representing my attempts to do my Trouble, From Parody to Politics, where
gender in subversive and unexpected ways). As Butler asserts that it is possible to disrupt
I argued previously, you cannot go out and what are taken to be the foundations of gender,
acquire a whole new gender wardrobe for anticipating what such parodic repetitions will
yourself, since, as Butler puts it, [t]here is achieve, without suggesting exactly how this
only a taking up of the tools where they lie, can take place. Butlers claim on the penulti-
where the very taking up is enabled by the mate page of Gender Trouble that [t]he task is
tool lying there (GT: 145). So you have to not whether to repeat, but how to repeat, or,
make do with the tools, or in my example, indeed to repeat and, through a radical prolifer-
the clothes that you already have, radically ation of gender, to displace the very gender
modifying them in ways which will reveal the norms that enable the repetition itself (GT:
unnatural nature of gender. 148) presents a similar problem: she has already
There are two problems with this formula- asserted that to describe identity as an effect is
tion: one is that the manner of taking up the not to imply that identity is fatally deter-
tool will be determined as well as enabled by mined or fully artificial and arbitrary, and
the tool itselfin other words, subversion and yet at times it sounds as though the subject she
agency are conditioned, if not determined, by describes is in fact trapped within a discourse it
discourses that cannot be evaded. This leads to has no power to evade or to alter. In which
the second problem, which is that, if subver- case, how to repeat will already be deter-
sion itself is conditioned and constrained by mined in advance, and what looks like agency is
discourse, then how can we tell that it is sub- merely yet another effect of the law disguised as
version at all? What is the difference between something different.
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Chapter 3: On Judith Butler and Performativity 59

All the same, this is certainly not a view THE TROUBLE WITH
Butler expresses, and she seems optimistic GENDER TROUBLE
about the possibilities of denaturalizing, pro-
The fact that Butlers description of gender
liferating and unfixing identities in order to
identity has raised so many questions is a tes-
reveal the constructed nature of heterosexual-
tament to its force, and at least some of
ity. A proliferation of identities will reveal the
Gender Troubles importance lies in the
ontological possibilities that are currently
debates it has generated amongst philoso-
restricted by foundationalist models of identity
phers, feminists, sociologists and theorists of
(i.e. those theories which assume that identity
gender, sex and identity, who continue to
is simply there and fixed and final). This is not,
worry over the meaning of performativity,
then, the death of the subject, or if it is, it is
whether it enables or forecloses agency, and
the theoretical death of an old, fixed subject,
whether Butler does indeed sound the death
and the birth of a new, constructed one char-
knell of the subject. In a written exchange with
acterized by subversive possibility and agency.
Butler, which took place in 1991 and was
Construction is not opposed to agency; it is
published in 1995 as Feminist Contentions:
the necessary scene of agency, Butler affirms
A Philosophical Exchange, the political
(GT: 147; see also CF: 15), and this leads her
philosopher Seyla Benhabib asserts that femi-
to refute another assumption popular among
nist appropriations of Nietzsche, which
critics who are hostile to so-called postmod-
Benhabib dubs the death of the subject the-
ern formulations of identity: [t]he decon-
sis, can only lead to self-incoherence. If there
struction of identity is not the deconstruction
is no gender identity behind the expressions of
of politics; rather, it establishes as political
gender, asks Benhabib, then how can women
the very terms through which identity is artic-
change the expressions (by which she
ulated (GT: 148). Identity is intrinsically
apparently means acts) by which they are
political, while construction and deconstruc-
constituted? If we are no more than the sum
tion (note that they are not antithetical) are
total of the gendered expressions we perform,
the necessaryin fact the onlyscenes of
is there ever any chance to stop the perfor-
agency. Subversion must take place from
mance for a while, to pull the curtain down,
within existing discourse, since that is all
and let it rise only if one can have a say in the
there is.
production of the play itself? (Benhabib et al.
However, a number of important questions
1995: 21). Butler claims that the Self is a mas-
remain. We have already encountered a poten-
querading performer, writes Benhabib, and
tial difficulty in the attempt to differentiate
between subversive and ordinary parody, and we are now asked to believe that there is no
we still have not answered the question as to self behind the mask. Given how fragile and
what or who exactly is doing the parodying. tenuous womens sense of selfhood is in
Indeed, if there is no pre-discursive subject, is many cases, how much of a hit and miss
affair their struggles for autonomy are, this
it possible to talk in terms of parody and
reduction of female agency to a doing
agency at all, since both might seem to pre- without the doer at best appears to me to
suppose an I, a doer behind the deed? How be making a virtue out of necessity.
helpful is the notion of parodic gender any- (Benhabib et al. 1995: 22)
way? Does it really reveal the lack of an origi-
nal that is being imitated, or does it merely The claim that the subject is necessary, if
draw attention to the factitiousness of the drag only as a fiction, has been made by other
artist? Some of these questions and criticisms theorists, who are also likely to collapse per-
are dealt with in the next section. formativity into performance. Indeed, this
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60 SEXUALITIES AND COMMUNICATION

elision leads Benhabib to assume that there who is so interested in psychoanalysis, as


is a subjective entity lurking behind the psychoanalysis is centrally concerned with the
curtaina notion that we know Butler refutes. I and the process of its constitution (Hood
Butler replies to Benhabibs (sometimes literal) Williams and Cealy Harrison 1998: 83).
misreadings in her essay For a Careful Furthermore, they describe Butlers reading of
Reading, which is also included in Feminist Freud as idiosyncratic (1998: 85), while the
Contentions, where she corrects the reduction of theorist Jay Prosser also questions the accu-
performativity to theatrical performance. racy of Butlers analysis of Freud, particularly
Two sociologists, John Hood Williams and a mis-citation of a key passage from Freuds
Wendy Cealy Harrison, also question Butlers The Ego and the Id, the theory that the body
assertion that there is no doer behind the is a fantasized surface and a projection of the
deed, although their critique is based on a ego. Prossers book is an attempt to read
clearer understanding of performativity than individual corporeal experience back into
Benhabibs. Although they think it is helpful to theories of the body (1998: 7), so for him
deconstruct the idea of the ontological status the question as to whether the body is a phan-
of gender, they wonder whether a new ontol- tasmatic surface or a pre-existing depth is
ogy is founded on the equally foundationalist crucial. Claiming that formulations of trans-
conception of gender performativity (Hood gendered identity are central to queer studies
Williams and Cealy Harrison 1998: 75, 88). (and the transgendered individual is indeed
Feminist critic Toril Moi similarly objects important for both Butler and Foucault),
that Butler has instated power as her god Prosser rejects the notion that gender is per-
(1999: 47), and this does indeed raise the ques- formative, pointing out that there are trans-
tion as to whether one essential subject (stable, gendered trajectories, in particular transsexual
coherently sexed and gendered) has merely trajectories, that aspire to that which this
been replaced by another (unstable, performa- scheme [i.e. performativity] devalues. Namely,
tive, contingent). Furthermore, we might con- there are transsexuals who seek very pointedly
sider the ways in which the characterization to be nonperformative, to be constative, quite
of power as proliferating and self-subverting simply, to be (1998: 32).
draws attention away from its oppressive and Butler addresses some of these criticisms in
violent nature, a point that is made by the fem- the Preface to the 1999 anniversary edition of
inist theorist Teresa de Lauretis in her book, Gender Trouble, where she acknowledges that
Technologies of Gender (though not in rela- the first edition of the book contains certain
tion to Butler) (1987: 18). We have also seen omissions, in particular, transgender, intersex-
that Butlers theories of discursively con- uality, [r]acialized sexualities and taboos
structed melancholic gender identities might against miscegenation. Butler also accepts that
imply that the subject she describes is, like the her explanation of performativity is insuffi-
Lacanian subject, negatively characterized by cient, and she admits that sometimes she does
lack, loss and its enthrallment to a pervasive not distinguish between linguistic and theatri-
and unavoidable law. cal performativity which she now regards as
Hood Williams and Cealy Harrison also related (GTII: xxvi, xxv).
question the theoretical wisdom of combining Butlers next book, Bodies That Matter, con-
speech act theory and psychoanalytic theory, tinues in similar interrogative mode, answering
since they argue that there is nothing citational some of the questions arising from Gender
about psychoanalytic accounts of identity Trouble and posing new and equally trou-
(1998: 90). They find the assertion that there bling ones about the matter of the body, its
is no I behind discourse curious for a theorist signification and its citation in discourse.
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Chapter 3: On Judith Butler and Performativity 61

PERFORMATIVE BODIES are always constituted in the act of descrip-


tion. When the doctor or nurse declares Its a
In one section of Judith Butler, we encounter girl/boy!, they are not simply reporting on
Butlers glancing reference to the performativ- what they see (this would be a constative
ity of the phallus and look in detail at her utterance), they are actually assigning a sex
account of a discursively constructed body and a gender to a body that can have no exis-
which cannot be separated from the linguistic tence outside discourse. In other words, the
acts that name it and constitute it. Here we statement Its a girl/boy! is performative.
will turn to a statement Butler makes in the Butler returns to the birth/ultrasound scene in
Introduction to Bodies, that, when it comes to the final chapter to Bodies, Critically
the matter of bodies, the constative claim is Queer, where, as before, she argues that dis-
always to some degree performative (BTM: course precedes and constitutes the I, i.e. the
11). Remember the interpellative call of the subject:
policeman who hails the man in the street, or
the doctor or nurse who exclaims Its a girl! To the extent that the naming of the girl
when the image of a foetus is seen on a scan. is transitive, that is, initiates the process by
which a certain girling is compelled, the
Earlier, I placed Butlers formulations of per-
term or, rather, its symbolic power, governs
formative identities in the context of J. L. the formation of a corporeally enacted fem-
Austins linguistic theories. In Bodies That ininity that never fully approximates the
Matter Butler once again draws from these lec- norm. This is a girl, however, who is com-
tures on linguistics, How To Do Things With pelled to cite the norm in order to qualify
Words. Austin distinguishes between two and remain a viable subject. Femininity is
thus not the product of a choice, but the
types of utterances, those that describe or
forcible citation of a norm, one whose com-
report on something, and those that, in saying, plex historicity is indissociable from rela-
actually perform what is being said. An tions of discipline, regulation, punishment.
example of the first, which Austin calls con- (BTM: 232)
stative utterances, might be the statement, Its
a sunny day, or I went shopping (Austin Its a girl! is not a statement of fact
also calls these perlocutionary acts); by saying but an interpellation that initiates the process
I went shopping, I am not doing it, I am of girling, a process based on perceived
merely reporting an occurrence. On the other and imposed differences between men and
hand, if I am a heterosexual man standing in women, differences that are far from nat-
front of a registrar in a Register Office and ural. To demonstrate the performative oper-
I utter the words I do in answer to the ques- ations of interpellation, Butler cites a cartoon
tion, Do you take this woman to be your strip in which an infant is assigned its place in
wife?, then I am actually performing the the sex-gender system with the exclamation
action by making the utterance: statements Its a lesbian! Far from an essentialist joke,
like these are called performative utterances or the queer appropriation of the performative
illocutionary acts. To name the ship is to say mimes and exposes both the binding power of
(in the appropriate circumstances) the words the heterosexualizing law and its expropriabil-
I name &c. When I say, before the registrar or ity, writes Butler (BTM: 232; her emphasis).
altar &c., I do, I am not reporting on a mar- We will return to expropriability and citation
riage, I am indulging in it (Austin 1955: 6). shortly; here the point to note is that, since
To claim, as Butler does, that sex is always sexual and gendered differences are performa-
(to some degree) performative is to claim tively installed by and in discourse, it would be
that bodies are never merely described, they possible to designate or confer identity on the
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62 SEXUALITIES AND COMMUNICATION

basis of an alternative set of discursively sometimes forcibly and sometimes not.


constituted attributes. Clearly, to announce that Derridas essay Signature Event Context is a
an infant is a lesbian is not a neutral act of response to Austins claim that performative
description but a performative statement that utterances are only successful if they remain
interpellates the infant as such. Its a girl! within the constraints of context and authorial
functions in exactly the same way: it is a perfor- intention. According to Austin, in order for a
mative utterence that henceforth compels the statement to have performative force (in other
girl to cite both sexual and gendered norms in words, in order for it to enact what it names),
order to qualify for subjecthood within the het- it must 1) be uttered by the person designated
erosexual matrix that hails her. to do so in an appropriate context; 2) adhere
It is in terms of a norm that compels a cer- to certain conventions; and 3) take the inten-
tain citation in order for a viable subject to be tion(s) of the utterer into account. For
produced that the notion of gender performa- example, if a brain surgeon stands at a church
tivity calls to be rethought, Butler claims altar facing two people of the same sex and
(BTM: 232). The term citation, highlighted announces I pronounce you man and wife,
in Butlers statement by its quotation marks, the statement will have no performative force
has been used throughout Bodies in a specifi- in the Austinian sense, since we can assume
cally Derridean sense that both differentiates it that the brain surgeon is not ordained and
from, and aligns it with, performativity. The therefore is not the person authorized to marry
citation of sex and gender norms will be dealt the pair. Similarly, a priest who whispers
with in the next section. I pronounce you man and wife to his two
teddy bears late at night before going to sleep
is not conducting a marriage ceremony, even
CITATIONAL SIGNS
though he is authorized to do so, but is play-
In the previous section I quoted Butlers asser- ing a game or having a fantasy. Clearly, his
tion that femininity is not a choice but the statement will have as little force as the unor-
forcible citation of a norm. What exactly does dained brain surgeons, since 1) the context is
it mean to cite sex or gender, and how does inappropriate; 2) as with same-sex couples, in
Butler use this term in Bodies That Matter? the UK and the US there is currently no law or
The Oxford English Dictionary definition of convention regulating or permitting the mar-
the verb to cite reveals interesting etymolog- riage of toys; and 3) it is presumably not the
ical links with interpellation (although these priests intention to marry his teddy bears to
are not connections Butler acknowledges). The one another.
word comes from the Latin citare, to set in Austin spends some time attempting to dis-
motion or to call, and its meanings are listed tinguish felicitous from infelicitous performa-
as: 1) to summon officially to appear in a court tives. What is important at this stage is that
of law; 2) to summon or arouse; 3) to quote; Derrida seizes on the weakness Austin dis-
4) to adduce proof; and 5) to call to mind, cerns in the linguistic sign: after all, Austin
mention, refer to. The third, fourth and fifth would not attempt to differentiate between
dictionary definitions are closest to Butlers felicitous and infelicitous performatives if he
use of the term, but summoning could also did not know that statements are liable to be
indicate the theoretical links between citation taken out of context and used in ways that
and interpellation. their original utterers did not intend. Derrida
Butler uses citation in a specifically asserts that what Austin regards as a pitfall or
Derridean sense to describe the ways in which a weakness is in fact a feature of all linguistic
ontological norms are deployed in discourse, signs that are vulnerable to appropriation,
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Chapter 3: On Judith Butler and Performativity 63

reiteration and, to return to the subject of and agency. In Bodies she returns to drag
this section, re-citation. This is what Derrida as an example of what she calls queer trou-
calls the essential iterability of [a] sign which ble, and she finds other occasions for
cannot be contained or enclosed by any con- Nietzschean hopefulness in the iterability
text, convention or authorial intention (1972: and citationality of the sign. We will return to
93). Rather, Derrida asserts that signs can be these ways of making trouble in the next
transplanted into unforeseen contexts and section but one.
cited in unexpected ways, an appropriation
and relocation that he calls citational grafting:
THE MATTER OF RACE
all signs may be placed between quotation
marks (sex, race), cited, grafted, and reit- Can race, like sex, sexuality and gender be
erated in ways that do not conform to their cited and re-cited in ways that reveal the vul-
speakers or writers original intentions and nerability of the terms of the law to appropri-
this means that, as Derrida puts it, the possi- ation and subversion? Is race an interpellated
bility of failure is intrinsic and necessary to the performance, and is a racial identity some-
sign, indeed it is constitutive of the sign (1972: thing that is assumed rather than some-
97, 1013). thing one simply is? Would it be possible
These ideas will be familiar from Gender once again to alter the terms of de Beauvoirs
Trouble where, as I noted, Derrida is an implicit statement and affirm that one is not born
rather than a stated presence, and where fail- but rather one becomes black/white? Or could
ure, citation and re-citation are crucial to the word race be substituted for sex in
Butlers discussions of subversive gender per- Butlers description of Bodies That Matter as
formatives. In Bodies, Butler sees potential for a poststructuralist rewriting of discursive per-
subversion in Derridas characterizations of formativity as it operates in the materialization
the citational sign, and she now charts a move of sex? (BTM: 12).
in her own theory from performativity to cita- Discussions of race were largely absent
tionality, since rethinking performativity from Gender Trouble, and in Bodies Butler is
through citationality is deemed useful for rad- careful to make the addition of considera-
ical democratic theory (BTM: 191; see also tions of racial identity to her analyses of iden-
14). Specifically, Butler asserts that Derridas tity formation (BTM: 18). Accepting that
citationality will be useful as a queer strategy normative heterosexuality is not the only reg-
of converting the abjection and exclusion of ulatory regime operating in the production of
non-sanctioned sexed and gendered identities the body, Butler asks what other regimes of
into political agency. regulatory production contour the materiality
In the final chapter of Bodies, Butler sug- of bodies (BTM: 17), and she asserts that
gests that what she has called the contentious [t]he symbolicthat register of regulatory
practices of queerness exemplify the politi- idealityis also and always a racial industry,
cal enactment of performativity as citationality indeed, [it is] the reiterated practice of racializ-
(BTM: 21). Butler is referring to subversive ing interpellations (BTM: 18; original
practices whereby gender performatives are emphasis). Butler rejects models of power that
cited, grafted onto other contexts, thereby see racial differences as subordinate to sexual
revealing the citationality and the intrinsic difference, and she argues that both racial and
but necessary and usefulfailure of all gender heterosexual imperatives are at work in repro-
performatives. Butler gave examples of these ductive and sexing practices.
practices in Gender Trouble, where she focused Interpellations do not just call us into
on parody and drag as strategies of subversion sex, sexuality and gender, but they are also
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64 SEXUALITIES AND COMMUNICATION

racializing imperatives that institute racial theorized in exactly the same way as the
difference as a condition of subjecthood. Sexual sexualized, sexed or gendered body, although
and racial differences are not autonomous or this is not to dispute Butlers assertion that all
discrete axes of power (BTM: 11617) and these vectors of power operate simultaneously
Butler repeatedly emphasizes that sex and gen- and through one another.
der are in no way prior to race. What appear It may be significant that Butlers most
within such an enumerative framework as sep- extended discussion of race centers on a
arable categories are, rather, the conditions of novella by Nella Larsen, Passing, in which one
articulation for each other, she states; How of the protagonists attempts to pass for
is race lived in the modality of sexuality? white. Here the body is not visibly black, and
How is gender lived in the modality of race? Clare (the woman who is passing for white)
How do colonial and neo-colonial nation- is only outed (Butlers term, BTM: 170) when
states rehearse gender relations in the consoli- her white husband encounters her among a
dation of state power? (BTM: 117). group of black people. Butler uses Passing to
These are the questions Butler sets herself, confirm her point that race and sexuality are
but in spite of this the matter of race is not imbricated and implicated, since she discerns
convincingly integrated into her discussions an overlapping of the mute homosexuality
(which is why I am dealing with the question between the two women protagonists and
in a separate, penultimate section here). Clares muted blackness, which, like
Although she analyzes how sex, sexuality and homosexual desire, attempts to conceal itself
gender are interpellated, assumed and perfor- (BTM: 175). Moreover, just as heterosexuality
matively constituted, there are no parallel dis- requires homosexuality in order to constitute
cussions of performative race or how exactly its coherence, so whiteness requires black-
race is interpellated by what Butler calls ness to offset itself and confirm its racial
racializing norms. Moreover, some critics boundaries. Heterosexuality and whiteness are
might feel that it is important to preserve the simultaneously destabilized in Passing, as
distinction between the raced body and queeringi.e. the desire between the two
the gendered/sexed/sexualized one. Remember womenupsets and exposes both racial and
the Its a lesbian! joke: there the humor is sexual passing (BTM: 177). (For a discussion
derived from the fact that sexuality is not visi- of race and melancholia, see Butlers interview
ble at birth, whereas by contrast race very On Speech, Race and Melancholia, 1999).
often (although certainly not always) is. The Butlers analysis of Larsens novella similarly
African-American theorist Henry Louis Gates queers psychoanalytic theory by exposing
Jr. effectively crystallizes this issue when he its assumption of the primacy of sexuality
makes the following statement in his essay and whiteness. In fact, Butler sees Passing
The Masters Pieces: as a challenge to psychoanalytic theory, a
theorization of desire, displacement, and
Its important to remember that race is jealous rage that has significant implications
only a sociopolitical category, nothing for rewriting psychoanalytic theory in ways
more. At the same timein terms of its
that explicitly come to terms with race
practical performative forcethat doesnt
help me when Im trying to get a taxi on the (BTM: 182).
corner of 125th and Lenox Avenue. (Please The other analysis of race in Bodies occurs
sir, its only a metaphor.) (1992: 378) in Butlers discussion of Jennie Livingtons Paris
Is Burning (BTM: 12140), a film about drag
Gates wry observation shows that the visi- balls in Harlem that are attended by/
bly raced body (black or white) cannot be performed by African-American or Latino/Latina
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Chapter 3: On Judith Butler and Performativity 65

men. Again, Butler sees the film as exemplify- Antigones Claim), while Passing similarly
ing her assertion that sexual difference does not reveals how hegemonic racial and sexual
precede race or class in the constitution of the norms may be destabilized by subjects who do
subject, so that the symbolic is also a racializing not fit neatly in the categories of white hetero-
set of norms and the subject is produced by sexuality. Such norms are far from monolithic
racially informed conceptions of sex (BTM: or stable, but, as we saw in a previous section,
130). Butlers analyses of Paris Is Burning and they may be reiterated and cited in ways that
Passing lead her to conclude that the theoretical undermine heterosexual hegemony. (For an
priority of homosexuality and gender must give alternative reading of Paris Is Burning, see bell
way to a more complex mapping of power that hooks essay, Is Paris Burning? [1996].)
places both terms in their specific racial and However, if all linguistic signs are cita-
political contexts (BTM: 240). tional, citationality in and of itself is not a sub-
Butler herself has been scrupulous in not versive practice, and it follows that some signs
suggesting that any one term takes priority will continue to work in the service of oppres-
over another, even though the organization of sive heterosexuality norms (and this is some-
Bodies might suggest otherwiseif not the thing we already know from Butlers
priority of sex over race, at least the separabil- description of femininity as a forcible citation
ity of the terms. Since race is largely dealt with of the norm [BTM: 232; my emphasis]).
in discrete chapters (and, for that matter, these Clearly, there are good (subversive) citations
chapters are literary rather than theoreti- and bad (forced) citations, and the task will
cal in their focus), as I noted before, the be to distinguish between themwhich is not
matter, so to speak, remains somewhat at a always easy as we shall see. Another problem
distance from Butlers other theoretical discus- is that discourse and the law operate by con-
sions. We may be left with questions concern- cealing their citationality and genealogy, pre-
ing the relationship between race and the senting themselves as timeless and singular,
lesbian phallus, or how Butlers description of while performativity similarly conceals or
girling might be applied to race, since nei- dissimulates the conventions of which it is a
ther the lesbian phallus nor interpellation/ repetition (BTM: 12). Again, it will be neces-
performativity are specifically discussed in sary to distinguish between those performa-
the context of race. All the same, to talk in tives which consolidate the heterosexual norm
terms of racializing norms is indeed to sug- and those that work to reveal its contingency,
gest that race, like gender, sex and sexuality, is instability and citationality.
constructed rather than natural, assumed in In a previous example, I described an unor-
response to the interpellative call of dis- dained brain surgeon who conducts a mar-
course and the law, even though Butler is riage ceremony that, in Austinian terms, will
somewhat unspecific as to how exactly this have no performative (or indeed legal) force
call to race takes place. because it falls outside recognized and sanc-
tioned conventions. Butler, on the other hand,
might assert that the utterance of I pro-
QUEER TROUBLE
nounce you, etc. by someone who is not
In spite of the tragic outcome of both texts, authorized to do so is a subversive political
Butler highlights the moments of promising strategy, since it is a recitation of an unstable
instability in Paris Is Burning and Passing. In heterosexual norm that is always vulnerable to
Butlers analysis, Paris Is Burning represents appropriation. There are alternative, equally
the resignification of normative heterosexual subversive ways of citing heterosexual signs
kinship (an issue to which Butler will return in that are all vulnerable to appropriation: the
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66 SEXUALITIES AND COMMUNICATION

lesbian phallus is one such recitation, and for a heterosexual economy that must
Butler gives other examples, some of which are constantly police its own boundaries against
theatrical. As in Gender Trouble, parody and the invasion of queerness (BTM: 126).
drag are modes of queer performance that As before, it is difficult to disentangle sub-
subversively allegorize (to use Butlers term) versive citations and performatives from the
heterosexual melancholy, thereby revealing power structures they oppose, since subver-
the allegorical nature of all sexual identities. sion is necessarily and inevitably implicated in
Although Butler is careful to distinguish per- discourse and the law. However, this consti-
formance from performativity in Bodies, she tutes the promise as well as the problematic of
also asserts that theatre provides crucial performativity, and Butler argues that making
opportunities for queer politics. [A]n impor- use of existing resources for subversive ends
tant set of histories might be told in which the will require vigilance and hard work. How
increasing politicization of theatricality for will we know the difference between the power
queers is at stake, she writes. Such a history we promote and the power we oppose?, she
might include traditions of cross-dressing, drag writes. The problem, of course, is that one
balls, street walking, butch-femme spectacles . . . cant know this in advance, so that subversive
kiss-ins by Queer Nation; drag performance recitation will always involve a certain amount
benefits for AIDS (BTM: 233). of risk. It is a risk that Butler well understands,
What Butler calls the increasing theatrical- as she once again submits her work to the
ization of political rage in response to the scrutiny of readers who are likely to interpret
killing inattention of public policy-makers on and deploy her ideas in unforeseen ways. The
the issue of AIDS is epitomized by the appro- effects of ones words are incalculable, since
priation of the term queer, an interpellative performatives and their significations do not
performative that has been converted from an begin or end (BTM: 241). Perhaps it will be
insult into a linguistic sign of affirmation and appropriate to end with a citation of Butlers
resistance (BTM: 233). And yet, although she concluding acknowledgment of the vulner-
continues to find subversive potential in the ability of her own terms to appropriation and
contingency and resignifiability of the sign, redeployment:
Butler is also aware that citation is not neces-
sarily subversive and she points out that cer- it is one of the ambivalent implications of
tain denaturalizations of the heterosexual the decentering of the subject to have ones
writing be the site of a necessary and
norm actually enforce heterosexual hegemony
inevitable expropriation. But this yielding of
(BTM: 231). Such parodies may certainly be ownership over what one writes has an
domesticated so that they lose their subver- important set of political corollaries, for the
sive potential and function merely as what taking up, reforming, deforming of ones
Butler calls high het entertainment, and words does open up a difficult future terrain
Butler cites Julie Andrews in Victor, Victoria, of community, one in which the hope of
ever fully recognizing oneself in the terms by
Dustin Hoffmann in Tootsie or Jack Lemmon which one signifies is sure to be disap-
in Some Like It Hot as examples of drag per- pointed. This not owning of ones words is
formances that have been produced by the het- there from the start, however, since speak-
erosexual entertainment industry for itself ing is always in some ways the speaking of a
(further examples might include Julian Clarry stranger through and as oneself, the melan-
cholic reiteration of a language that one
and Eddie Izzard) (BTM: 126). Such perfor-
never chose, that one does not find as an
mances only confirm the boundaries between instrument to be used, but that one is, as it
straight and not straight identities, pro- were, used by, expropriated in, as the unsta-
viding what Butler calls a ritualistic release ble and continuing condition of the one
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Chapter 3: On Judith Butler and Performativity 67

and the we, the ambivalent condition of (2000) Antigones Claim: Kinship Between
the power that binds. (BTM: 2412) Life and Death, New York: Columbia
University Press.
This statement could be interpreted as a de Beauvoir, Simone [1949] The Second Sex (La
Deuxime Sex), trans. H. M. Parshley,
gesture of humility or a disclaimer of responsi- London: Everyman, 1993.
bility on Butlers part, and there may be con- de Lauretis, Teresa (1987) Technologies of Gender:
texts in which it is problematic to claim that Essays on Film, Theory and Fiction,
one does not use language but is, rather, used Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
by it. (I didnt write those words! They wrote Derrida, Jacques [1972] Signature Event Context
(Signature Evnement Contexte), in Peggy
me.) Butler returns to the issues of speech
Kamuf (ed.) A Derrida Reader: Between the
acts, linguistic responsibility and the reach Blinds, New York: Columbia University Press,
of . . . signifiability (BTM: 241) when she 1999, pp. 80111.
analyzes hate speech, obscenity and censor- Foucault, Michel [1975] Discipline and Punish: The
ship in her next book, Excitable Speech. Birth of the Prison (Surveiller et Punir:
Naissance de la Prison), trans. Alan Sheridan,
London: Penguin, 1977.
REFERENCES Freud, Sigmund [1923] The Ego and the Id (Das
Ich und das Es), The Pelican Freud Library
Austin, J. L. [1955] How to Do Things With Vol. 11, London: Penguin, 1991, pp. 339407.
Words, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Gates, Henry Louis Jr. (1992) The Masters Pieces:
Press, 1962. On Canon-Formation and the African-
Benhabib, Seyla, Judith Butler, Drucilla Cornell and American Tradition, in H. L. Gates (ed.)
Nancy Fraser (1995) Feminist Contentions: Loose Canons: Notes on the Culture Wars,
A Philosophical Exchange, London: Routledge. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 1742.
Butler, Judith (1990; Anniversary edition 1999) Hood Williams, John and Wendy Cealy Harrison
Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion (1998) Trouble With Gender, The Socio-
of Identity, New York: Routledge. logical Review 46 (1): 7394.
(1992) Contingent Foundations: Feminism hooks, bell (1996) Is Paris Burning? in bell hooks
and the Question of Postmodernism, in Reel to Real: Race, Sex, and Class at the
Judith Butler and Joan Scott (eds.) Feminists Movies, London: Routledge, pp. 21426.
Theorize the Political, London: Routledge, Larsen, Nella [1928, 1929] Quicksand and Passing,
pp. 321. Deborah E. MacDowell (ed.), New Brunswick,
(1993) Bodies That Matter: On the New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1986.
Discursive Limits of Sex, New York: Moi, Toril (1999) What Is a Woman? and Other
Routledge. Essays, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
(1994) Gender as Performance: An Nietzsche, Friedrich [1887] On the Genealogy of
Interview with Judith Butler, Radical Morals (Zur Genealogie der Moral), trans.
Philosophy: A Journal of Socialist and Douglas Smith, Oxford: Oxford University
Feminist Philosophy 67 (Summer): 329. Press, 1996.
(1997) Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Prosser, Jay (1998) Second Skins: The Body
Performative, New York: Routledge. Narratives of Transsexuality, New York:
(1999) On Speech, Race and Melancholia: Columbia University Press.
An Interview with Judith Butler, Theory,
Culture and Society 16 (2): 16374.
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Discussion Questions
1. What, according to Salihs discussion of Judith Butlers work, is gender? What does
it mean to say that gender is performative? How is performativity different than
performance?
2. What are some of the questions that have been raised about Butlers conception of
gender performativity?
3. Do you think that performativity is a useful way of thinking about other social iden-
tities, such as race, ethnicity, and class? Why or why not?
4. How well does Weeks notion of sexual identities as necessary fictions complement
Butlers concept of sex and gender as performative?
5. After reading this chapter, what do you believe is possible in regard to subverting
hegemonic norms of gender, sex, and sexual identity?

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