Alice Jardine | |
---|---|
Born | May 7, 1951 |
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Professor, Writer, Feminist Scholar |
Known for | feminist theory, critical theory, French poststructuralist theory |
Alice Jardine is an American literary scholar, cultural critic, and feminist theorist. She is Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures [1] and of Studies of Women, Gender & Sexuality [2] at Harvard University, having co-founded and led the development of the latter. [3] In the field of 20th-21st-century French/Francophone literature and thought, Jardine's research focuses on Post-WWII fiction and critical theory, with an emphasis on French poststructuralist and American feminist and queer thought. [3] She is the author and editor of numerous books and articles.
Jardine grew up in Dayton, Ohio, attending public schools there until she left for college in 1969. She received her B.A. from Ohio State University (1973); her M.A. in French (1977) and her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature (1982) from Columbia University. [4] In 1973, while on a Fulbright Scholarship to teach at the Lycée Hélène Boucher in Paris, she knocked on Simone de Beauvoir’s door and introduced herself, commencing a years-long conversation with the famous feminist philosopher and activist. [5] Selected by the French Department at Columbia to be an exchange student in Paris, Jardine was the first woman in modern times to study at the École normale supérieure-rue d'Ulm (1979–80), where she was also reportedly the first woman to live in Samuel Beckett’s former dorm room. [6] [5]
In 1982, Jardine was appointed to Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures at Harvard University, advancing to Associate Professor in 1985 and full Professor in 1989. During this time, when relatively few women were appointed to the status of full tenured faculty, Jardine helped found the Committee on Degrees in Women's Studies concentration as well as the Boston Graduate Consortium in Women's Studies. [6] Despite limited support from the Harvard administration, she prevailed and women's studies at Harvard has grown exponentially since its early days. The program was renamed Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality in 2003. [7] Jardine was also a founding member of the Boston-area Graduate Consortium in Women's Studies––alongside other scholars such as Ruth Perry (MIT), Joyce Antler (Brandeis University), Laura Frader (Northeastern University), Carol Hurd Green (Boston College), and Barbara Haber (Radcliffe College), and Christiane Romero (Tufts University)––which is still active today. [8] Jardine's courses at Harvard focusing on issues of gender, sexuality, and women's studies have been highly popular among undergraduates, like her "I Like Ike but I Love Lucy" course, which at the time of its offering was one of the few cultural studies courses offered by the University and to which students "swarmed." In addition to mentoring, advising, and administrating, Jardine has been a key voice in advocating both nationally and internationally for the academic legitimacy of the field, dismantling broad administrative misconceptions about the field as simply a “polemical” discipline, or as a women's or affirmative action center. [9]
Jardine's intellectual trajectory and contribution to the formation of this knowledge owes much to the fact of having crossed paths or even worked alongside numerous 20th and 21st-century philosophers and thinkers. One such formative figure was Simone de Beauvoir, whom Jardine met just in 1973. [5] Another major influence on Jardine's intellectual commitment to the stakes of feminism is the philosopher and writer Julia Kristeva, for whom Jardine served as research assistant while a graduate student at Columbia University in 1976. [10] Alongside Leon Roudiez and Thomas Gora, Jardine played a prominent role in the translation of Kristeva's work into English during the 1980s, and, as of 2020, is the first person to write her complete biography. [11]
In the 1980s, Jardine was best known as a key figure in the ongoing global debates about feminism and its stakes in the contemporary era. Her earliest work participated in the study of what has been called “new French feminisms.” Her well-known 1985 book, Gynesis, worked to complexify and challenge the idea of “woman” as a catch-all metaphor for everything that escapes and defies Western monological thought. [12] Her invention of the term gynesis (gyn- signifying woman, and -sis designating process) instead seeks to rethink and transform “woman and the feminine into verbs at the interior of…narratives that are today experiencing a crisis of legitimation.” [13] The crisis to which Jardine refers and to which her book responds is the debate between sameness and difference that postmodernist currents in France had resuscitated, as it had never truly been resolved. [14] Jardine shows how these French thinkers were invested in theorizing the failure of the modernist project and moving its failed dialectic towards new theoretical horizons. [14] At the time of its publication, the book was predicted to be both important and controversial. [15] Indeed, Jardine’s identification of the concept of gynesis, in tandem with Toril Moi’s publication of Sexual/Textual Politics (1985) was instrumental in coining the term ‘French feminism.' [14] According to Françoise Lionnet, the concept of gynesis still poses questions being answered by contemporary Francophone fiction. [16] These, Jardine queries, include whether feminism, as a concept and practice, might be productively redefined as a way in which women can link up with other minoritized subjects within and against the dominant Western conceptual systems. [16]
In the 1990s, Jardine experienced a series of attacks from neoconservative and right-wing political commentators attempting to reify her teaching and scholarship as emblematic of symptoms of Leftist-driven cultural decay in the West. In 1991, Dinesh D’Souza visited her classroom, posing as a student, as part of his quest to attribute many modern social problems to “political correctness” [17] in his book Illiberal Education. In her response article, “Illiberal Reporting,” Jardine first points out his hypocritical indebtedness to the same practice of radical hospitality and openness that allowed him to (he claims) infiltrate academia and fuel his campaign to discredit it. [18] She also denounces DeSouza’s rhetorical posturing—a purported “higher obligation to truth unfettered by ideological predisposition”— [19] that veils a deeply conservative agenda. “D’Souza and his right-wing followers are projecting onto the Left the mirror image of their own ‘political correctness’ agenda: homophobia, racism, sexism, and of course, ever finessed, classism/elitism.” [20] She also notes his frequent use of auto-legitimizing rhetoric (self-characterizations like “commonsense,” “balanced,” and “forthright”) as an effort to claim “special access to empirical truth” as an alleged “defender of the American way of life.” [20] While the book received a largely respectful reception from mainstream media, Jardine’s public rebuttal of DeSouza was one of the first to denounce his methods as bordering on conspiratorial, by pointing out how they similarly tend to undermine trust in democratic political institutions. [21] DeSouza has since been officially categorized as a conspiracy theorist, [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28] denounced as a propaganda filmmaker, [29] [30] [31] and imprisoned for fraud. [32] [33]
The bad-faith characterization of Jardine’s teaching—as what François Furet described as part of the closing of the American mind in an education system rife with “ideological orthodoxy” [34] —was exported to France when accusations of political correctness came into vogue. A translation of Illiberal Education was printed by the prestigious Gallimard publishing company as L’éducation contre les libertés politiques de race et sexe (1993) and was widely accepted as an objective assessment of the state of affairs in the American academy. [34] Jardine experienced another attack in this fact-flouting-free-for-all, when in an article from April 16, 1994, Figaro journalist Victor Loupan called Harvard, “the temple of political correctness.” [34] In this same article, he claimed that of all the women faculty members in the French department, only she had “any semblance of university qualifications.” [34] Of these, he only recognizes (and mocks) her translation of Julia Kristeva’s Desire in Language (1980), when in reality, Jardine was at that time the author of the critically acclaimed Gynesis (1985) and editor of four other books. The journal also claimed that Jardine taught only courses on homosexual women of color when in reality she taught no such courses. [35] In response, Jardine and her colleague Susan Suleiman sued the Figaro for libel. [36] Her lawyer delighted in spreading hers and Suleiman’s numerous books, articles, and diplomas over the advocate’s bench. [35] Jardine officially won her lawsuit on May 12, 1995, with the French Supreme Court awarding her 150,000 francs, ruling that the paper had acted improperly in falsely reporting her academic credentials. [37] Suleiman’s case was dismissed because a bailiff failed to deliver her court papers before the filing deadline. [37] While not a significant amount in USD (about $30,000), the lawsuit handed down a symbolic verdict in the cultural frenzy to denounce the American academy. [37] Jardine’s lawyer told her that the sum of damages was the highest amount Le Figaro had ever paid in a lawsuit. [37] The win was significant because it sent a message: that with freedom comes responsibility, and that to libel or defame someone is unacceptable, by the very standards of democratic free thinking under whose auspices Le Figaro moved to discredit Jardine and cash in on the mediatic moment. [37]
Julia Kristeva is a Bulgarian-French philosopher, literary critic, semiotician, psychoanalyst, feminist, and novelist who has lived in France since the mid-1960s. She has taught at Columbia University, and is now a professor emerita at Université Paris Cité. The author of more than 30 books, including Powers of Horror, Tales of Love, Black Sun: Depression and Melancholia, Proust and the Sense of Time, and the trilogy Female Genius, she has been awarded Commander of the Legion of Honor, Commander of the Order of Merit, the Holberg International Memorial Prize, the Hannah Arendt Prize, and the Vision 97 Foundation Prize, awarded by the Havel Foundation.
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Dinesh Joseph D'Souza is an American right-wing political commentator, conspiracy theorist, author, filmmaker and convicted felon who received a Presidential pardon by Donald Trump for his crimes. He has made several financially successful films, and written over a dozen books, several of them New York Times best-sellers.
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Barbara Creed is a professor of cinema studies in the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne. She is the author of six books on gender, feminist film theory, and the horror genre. Creed is a graduate of Monash and La Trobe universities where she completed doctoral research using the framework of psychoanalysis and feminist theory to examine horror films. She is known for her cultural criticism.
Evelynn Maxine Hammonds is an American feminist and scholar. She is the Barbara Gutmann Rosenkrantz Professor of the History of Science and Professor of African and African-American Studies at Harvard University, and former Dean of Harvard College. The intersections of race, gender, science and medicine are prominent research topics across her published works. Hammonds received degrees in engineering and physics. Before getting her PhD in the History of Science at Harvard, she was a computer programmer. She began her teaching career at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, later moving to Harvard. In 2008, Hammonds was appointed dean, the first African-American and the first woman to head the college. She returned to full-time teaching in 2013.
Lisa Lowe is Samuel Knight Professor of American Studies at Yale University, and an affiliate faculty in the programs in Ethnicity, Race, and Migration and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. Prior to Yale, she taught at the University of California, San Diego, and Tufts University. She began as a scholar of French and comparative literature, and since then her work has focused on the cultural politics of colonialism, immigration, and globalization. She is known especially for scholarship on French, British, and United States colonialisms, Asian migration and Asian American studies, race and liberalism, and comparative empires.
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2000 Mules is a debunked 2022 American conspiracist political film from right-wing political commentator Dinesh D'Souza. The film falsely claims unnamed nonprofit organizations supposedly associated with the Democratic Party paid "mules" to illegally collect and deposit ballots into drop boxes in the swing states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin during the 2020 presidential election. D'Souza has a history of creating and spreading false conspiracy theories.
In her study, Alice A. Jardine seeks to rethink feminine approaches to cultural translation and to transform, "woman and the feminine into verbs at the interior of ... narratives that are today experiencing a crisis of legitimation" (25).
Most recently the conspiracy theorist Dinesh D'Souza accused Soros of supporting antifa, that is, of backing 'domestic terrorism.'
The US conspiracy theorist and pro-Trump commentator Dinesh D'Souza...
The documentary "2000 Mules" does not provide any concrete, verifiable evidence of widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election. Technology and election integrity experts consulted by Reuters also did not find the geolocation, surveillance or any other information presented showed plausible evidence of fraud.