<< 1 >>
Rating: Summary: The Religious Right's Attack on Equality Review: How did the very idea of equality come to be seen by some as a threat to the traditional family - where traditional family means the nuclear family - mother, father, children? Or, to say the same thing, why do some people believe that they have to attack the very notions of equality and privacy in order to defend the traditional family? Professor Linda Kintz set out to explain this in her recent book, Between Jesus and the Market, a study of recent developments in right wing American religion.I had attended last year's `Road to Victory' meting of the Christian Coalition in Atlanta. Over and over again, speakers vowed to protect famlilies and family values while asserting that liberals, feminists, gay and lesbian activists, and the federal government were the enemies of the family. They portrayed the government as dominated by advocates of equality - between the races, between the sexes, between sexual orientations. Pat Robertson even called for the repeal of ! any right to privacy and dismantling the independence of the judiciary. So much for the separation of powers. The politics of that movement seemed clear, but the source of the heated emotions was less obvious to me. Religious rage was competing with road rage in its intensity. This is where Linda Kintz sheds some light. Just what is it, she wanted to know, that drives the Christian Right to openly advocate abolishing the First Amendment, the cornerstone of religious liberty? In a word, her answer is that we live in a post modern culture - a world in flux where variety has the edge over conformity, where differences are coming to be valued in our social life and where more women than ever before are employed, yes, but also active in civic, professional and political leadership roles. The Christian Right is stoked by the belief that these are threatening developments which violate the natural law of God and they have nothing to do with the evolution of the economy or! ordinary democratic politics. They believe that the advoca! tes of equality would tear down the family by disrupting divinely ordained sex roles. They see the consequences of these changes in apocalyptic terms unless the evil is stopped. (And evil melts down into evil ones. ) Linda Kintz pays special attention to the critical role played by conservative women in defining the emotions and issues of the Christian Right. She examines books by Beverly LaHaye and Connie Marshner and concludes that they see conservative traditionalism as offering the promise of community, an appealing (if contradictory) sense of female agency, and the security of `responsible' male behavior. The community is their families and their movement. The sense of female agency is defined in terms of heroic submission to God's purpose for the female sex - motherhood. The `responsible' male behavior is cast in the image of the tender warrior, tender towards their women and children, warriors in the cultural battles against the sacrilege of equality. LaHaye ! and others offer an antifeminist Christian movement as the solution to the practical and spiritual complexities of postmodern women. Thus they link the primal feelings of love and affection associated with the family directly to a politics which portrays the government as an imminent threat to families. In short, they offer an idolatry of heterosexuality and the answer to humanism. Linda Kintz calls this linkage resonance, the almost ineffibleelement that constantly threatens to collapse church into state when politics are made (traditional) family-like. This accounts, in her analysis, for the success of the Christian Right in moving the center of political debate in their direction, a revisionary reconstruction of the role of emotions in political life. They seek to marshal the family feelings of love and affection which most people experience and value highly into a politics of hatred and exclusion for all things egalitarian. As long as this tide continues to ris! e, this is a book to be read.
Rating: Summary: Rehash, rehash Review: I was raised right-wing fundamentalist. Ms. Kintz has done nothing in this book except rehash 90% of what I already know. The analysis is so weak as to be nonexistant. I can only assume she was not raised believing as I was and this is all new, hence the shock and horror at such basic tenants as "a family should a married couple and their children." Unfortunately this shock clouds her ability to analyze anything. For a much better piece on the same topic, I suggest Donna Minkowitz's _Ferocious Romance: What my encounters with the Right taught me about Sex, God and Fury_.
Rating: Summary: Rehash, rehash Review: I was raised right-wing fundamentalist. Ms. Kintz has done nothing in this book except rehash 90% of what I already know. The analysis is so weak as to be nonexistant. I can only assume she was not raised believing as I was and this is all new, hence the shock and horror at such basic tenants as "a family should a married couple and their children." Unfortunately this shock clouds her ability to analyze anything. For a much better piece on the same topic, I suggest Donna Minkowitz's _Ferocious Romance: What my encounters with the Right taught me about Sex, God and Fury_.
Rating: Summary: New Required Reading for Those Baffled by the Right Review: Linda Kintz is to be commended, first and foremost, for doing something that most on the academic left (I number myself among them) would recoil from in horrow: slogging through the written words in which the increasingly focussed agenda of America's new right-wing finds its expression and lays down its thoughts. In one volume, Kintz goes a long way, I think, toward advancing the possibility of mutual discussion between Right and Left. Those on the Left, she argues, need to quit dismissing and laughing at what appears to be irrationality, cheesiness, and seductive sermonics; to understand the resurgence of the Right, one must get to the heart of exactly how powerful emotions are--emotions which, Kintz argues, are neither wholly rational nor irrational--in its recent success. Rather than predictably pin American religious and political conservatism on absolutist and narrow-minded interpretations of the (politically instrumentalized) Bible and thus of natural law, Kintz examines the dynamic interaction between such absolutism and the construction of gender roles in the American conservative family structure. This proves a very productive strategy, and enables her to offer astute readings of issues such as gun proliferation (which she links to a wounded masculine pride and budding national fear nascent in the post-Vietnam years) and the pro-life movement (which stems, she claims, from the very fixed role assigned to the power of reproduction in the religious right's imagining of the family). While reading "Between Jesus and the Market," I almost wished that Kintz had gone to greater lengths to interpret her material rather than provide extensive rehearsals of it, rich with quotes. But then I had to remember that the ground Kintz is covering--publications by right-wing think tanks and pundits--is so new for most of her (presumably left-wing-academic) readers, that the play-by-play really is, ultimately, useful for drawing liberal skeptics into the conservative world she is attempting to read. The reader who has an immediate and unpleasant visceral reaction at the name "Rush Limbaugh" will have a much more informed reaction after encountering large chunks of his actual words in Kintz' fine book. Thus, the prolonged engagement with the texts serves a powerful purpose, and Kintz is right to have recognized this. Implicit in this entire study is a sharp criticism of the Left. That there is little or no dialogue between conservatives and liberals in America is tragic, Kintz admits, but she quite rightly seems to insist that, if anything is to move forward, we on the acadmeic left must take it upon ourselves to emerge from the safety of our intellectual irony in an effort to understand the Right, and then to bridge the gap. As the only "liberal" in an immediate family that is almost entirely of the conservative bent that Kintz describes, I came away from this book with something even more valuable. Kintz has put the finger on exactly what my difficulty is in understanding where my parents come from--my parents, who, while among the most compassionate people I know, went door-to-door recently at the request of their church, helping to drum up votes in favor of an anti-gay initiative on the California ballots. "What kind of powerful rhetoric," Kintz asks, "can call itself love without recognizing that its effects are the same as if it called itself hatred?" (29) The sooner we can answer that question, the better off we'll all be.
<< 1 >>
|