Whose lives matter? An interview with Judith Butler
NEWS / Queer theorist talks marriage, sex work & Israeli Apartheid Week
Marcus McCann / National / Friday, March 11, 2011
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About 1,000 people – patient, if excited – form a damp line that loops down a hallway, hangs a right, traces a big U around the foyer and snakes off around one of the building’s curved walls.

Marshals with name tags – some barely out of their teens – are just as excited as the crowd. The name on everyone’s lips? Judith Butler. No one is quite able to play it cool.

In the end, many will be disappointed. Behan Auditorium sits fewer than 300, and even with a large overflow room, there simply isn’t enough space for everyone.

Two hours earlier, as Butler arrives at the lecture hall, a queue is already forming. In a second concrete auditorium off to the side — what will become the overflow room — Butler paces the room a couple of times before sitting down in a chair in the front row.

Meanwhile, organizers, marshals and the sound guy nip in and out around us. Each time the door opens, the crowd on the other side has gotten louder.

She groans.

Judith Butler can’t possibly suffer from stage fright, can she?

A little, she says, although it disappears – or at least dissipates – once the lecture begins.

As a crew member adjusts our audio levels, I slip in a couple of gossipy questions. Does Judith Butler have any guilty reading pleasures?

No, she says, “reading is a very serious thing for me. I can read novels, but I have to force myself not to write about them.”

It’s one of the perils of academic life. No lesbian pulp?

“No! I never liked them. They were never about me or my desires, so…”

She shakes her head.

I try another. Does Judith Butler ever look at her score on ratemyprofessor.com?

No, she says. She grimaces. Then she laughs.

Butler is on a sabbatical from her teaching gig at Berkeley in California. During her time away from teaching, she’s living in New York.

She hardly needs an introduction. She’s the author and editor of a stack of books. She became a household name – at least in geeky, queer households – for Gender Trouble, a 1990 classic of theory in which she argues that gender is performance, rather than part of our essential being.

Butler’s theory of gender-as-performance remains her best-known contribution to academia, but for the last decade, her attention has gradually shifted from gender to the politics of war. Now she’s struggling with questions like Whose deaths matter? and Why are some deaths grievable but others not?

During a ranging one-on-one with Xtra, Butler talks about the challenges facing the gay movement — including its increasing reliance on state recognition as a tool of change — and draws parallels between queer liberation and Palestinian human rights work. She insists the two are related. Consider, for example, the push to repeal Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, which pits formal, legal equality against anti-war and pacifist struggles.

Here’s a part of that conversation:

Judith Butler speaks to reporters before her talk at the University of Toronto, March 9.
(Marcus McCann)


Xtra:
Queer people have always been involved, but it seems in the last decade, certainly, there has been an uptick in queers who are taking issue with Israeli foreign policy.

Judith Butler: Let’s think about it. For me, the term queer, from its early days, was an idea of alliance. It wasn’t, for me, an issue of identity. I am queer, or I identify as queer. Queer was a way of accepting that there are complex identifications, and that gender and sexuality were not always easily described by identity categories. And I liked what Eve Sedgwick had to say, early on, that anyone who was against homophobia was welcome to the club.

But, I think, from early on, certainly from the early '90s, that there were a number of populations that were suffering in the AIDS crisis in the United States, and it was imperative to make alliances across minority populations. And I think the queer struggle for visibility and for AIDS education and AIDS prevention really started to be involved with questions of economic justice and political equality more broadly.

But, let me just say, it’s not a question of Israel’s foreign policy. The state of Israel has... 20 percent of its population is Palestinian. And they have what I would call damaged rights. They don’t have full equality under the legal structure of Israel. And then the occupied territory has a kind of uncertain status. Is it independent? Is it Israel? Certainly, Israel controls it militarily, and Israel retains the right to accept or reject any elections that take place there. So there’s no political autonomy; that’s what “occupied” means. So it’s not exactly foreign policy. It’s neither domestic nor foreign policy. I don’t know how to describe it.

Xtra: Perhaps that’s the kind of ambiguity you would have celebrated in your work, historically.

JB: Well, I would like to get the whole thing clarified, actually. I’d love to see a kind of political governance there that would guarantee equal rights regardless of religion or ethnicity or background. So yes, I do hold out for a different polity altogether.

Xtra:
The relationship between queers and the state has always been a strained one, and I wonder if in the struggle of dealing with Israeli policy, I wonder if queers are already cynical of the state, writ large.

JB: Yeah, well, you know, I think there are different states. There are different kinds of states, and in the US and several different European states and I think here in Canada as well, the gay and lesbian movement has been really focused on getting recognition by the state and having equal entitlements that would not only be recognized but guaranteed by the state.

So my sense is that the gay and lesbian movement has moved, has embraced the state as the centre of politics, much more than in earlier years, where it was maybe more of a cultural movement or a political movement that was taking place in civil society, not necessarily in relation to the state.

The idea of queer has never really easily lined up with lesbian and gay legal rights. Although we’re glad to have legal protections, the question is whether legal protections are the aim of political movement. My sense is that “queer” had a more critical relationship to those issues, much more fearful of normalization by the state.

Xtra: In your essay on gay marriage in Undoing Gender, you point out that recognition of gay marriage segregates the population. And also in that essay, you’re trying to come to a way of defending the movement against homophobes, the people on the rightwing who are opposed to gay marriage, without yourself endorsing it. It seems like an uneasy balance you’re trying to stake.

JB:
Yeah. Well, I think there are many homophobic arguments against gay marriage that have to be opposed. And then there’s a separate question, which is should gay marriage be at the centre of a movement that is meant to enfranchise or empower sexualities? And that’s where I want to say, Look, it’s not at the top of my agenda. And I’m not sure it should be at the top of the agenda. How did it come to be at the top of the agenda? But I don’t think it’s inconsistent to take those two positions.

Xtra:
I just thought it was brave, and maybe not a point that people have given a lot of thought to. In particular, you were talking about people who have maybe more complicated loving arrangements of more than two, or single people, and how it affects people of colour…

JB: I think, in the US at least, the right-to-marriage movement has focused on property and wanting acceptance as normalized bourgeois people and monogamy, and the idea of couplehood. So we think about the complex ways in which sexual and intimate relationships take place; they don’t always conform to that. And I think there are other forms of kinship that are not based on the family. I’ve made that clear in my work. But I also think there are modes of sexuality that aren’t centred on marriage-like arrangements, and that that’s been part of a radical sexual movement for a really long time, calling into question how we arrange sexuality, and what arrangements are best, and what works and what doesn’t, and what are the norms or ideals around which we organize our sexual lives. It seems really important to keep those questions open.

Xtra:
If that’s true, then the movement around Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell must be even more clearly about state recognition…

JB: I have a piece on Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell in my book Excitable Speech. But it was really about the debates about it. Of course, the point of repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell is to make sure that gay and lesbian people can come out in the military and not lose their positions or suffer discrimination or harassment.

But you know, this is where I have to say, it’s really important to take a kind of queer perspective on these things, because of course, I’m against harassment and discrimination and there should be no such policy, but we also need a queer critique of the military. If we’re just going to struggle for the rights of people to be out in the military, then we’re not asking what the military is doing and what we think the military ought to be doing.

It seems to me that queer people – if we can speak that way – know what it is to be dishonoured and not to have their lives considered valuable, not to have the opportunity to publicly grieve the losses we have endured. And that links up with questions of war, really.

So my work shifted, I think, from sexuality and gender to the politics of war, but they’re really linked by the question of whose lives count. And when we think about targeted populations and civilians who lose their lives in America’s wars, I think that queer people should have solidarity with those populations whose lives are not considered liveable. That’s a kind of alliance that I would understand as a queer alliance.

So that explains why I would – as someone who elaborated a queer theory – be very concerned with the situation in Palestine, where rights are abrogated and there is no real political self-determination for the Palestinian people, and where violence is waged against Palestinians, and where the loss of those lives is not regarded as equally valuable, as equally lost. You know, they are in some sense a disparaged population, so when parts of that population are destroyed, we don’t see the same outrage as when, say, people in New York are destroyed.

So I’ve become more concerned with writing that certain populations are grievable and certain ones are not. But that goes back to my AIDS activism, and it links what I have to say about queer politics and what I have to say about Palestine.

Xtra:
Speaking of bodies that are grievable or not grievable, in Canada, there’s been a bit of a resurgence in anti-prostitution feminism, and I wanted to get your thoughts on why there might be a resurgence right now.

JB:
Well, tell me a little bit more about what you’re thinking about. I’m aware of some, but I want to make sure.

Xtra:
Sure. There was a hotly contested debate here on the University of Toronto campus between the Coalition Against Trafficking Women and folks from Maggie’s, which is a support and advocacy group by and for sex workers. And in Vancouver, a group of lesbian feminists who just released a statement calling for the abolition of prostitution. I’m guessing that links up to other debates happening.

JB: Yes. I’m more aware of these debates in the UK than I am of the debates in Canada. But I do think that we have to ask whether all prostitution is coerced. I think it’s one thing to be against coerced sexuality — I’m against coerced sexuality. I’m against coercion. I’m against rape — and it’s another thing to decide that prostitution is by definition coercive sexuality. That’s where we need to be careful because there are many women who enter into sex work who are actually making a living wage and who need greater protection and good medical care and some kind of retirement guarantees. And I think we would be making an error if we understood a movement for those employment conditions as somehow promoting coerced sexuality.

I’m not convinced that all prostitution is coerced. It’s a choice that people make under certain economic conditions. And I can think of a lot of forms of labour that women are in that they may not like very much, that they will wish that they had another set of options, but I’m not sure that prostitution is the worst of them. And I guess I would call it sex work rather than prostitution.

My sense in the UK, though, is that it was an anti-immigrant argument, that they were arguing there that it was immigrant women from North Africa and the Philippines who were being brought in to be sexual slaves. An anti-prostitution argument was an anti-sexual slavery argument, which worked in the service of limiting immigration, so that the UK could have a moral reason for setting quotas up against immigration. So I would need to know more about the Canadian situation before I could really come to a good conclusion about it.

Xtra: When you decided not to accept the award at the Christopher St Day celebrations, the speech that you gave – in German, I should say – was that gays and lesbian people were being used as a way to fuel anti-immigration positions in Europe. So it sounds like there’s yet another parallel between sex work and the gay and lesbian movement.

JB: Yes. Well, it was actually some of the leaders of that parade who espoused very strong anti-immigration positions. So I’m not really sure they were being used. They were really putting it forth. Because they were calling for a greater police monitoring of minority populations in Berlin and seeming to identify that the threat of homophobia in Germany as coming from new immigrants, that I could not accept that prize. It struck me as Islamophobic, and of course, that wasn’t considering the various ways in which homophobia is reproduced at various major German institutions, educational institutions, religious institutions.

Not to say that there aren’t immigrants who have strong views about homosexuality or even have been offensive in their approach to homosexuality or gay people. But there is also a very large queer community of colour in Berlin, and they were acting as if queers were white and their enemies were not. So, I couldn’t really accept that map of power.

It is true, though, that we have to be careful when we see something like the state of Israel claiming to be a haven for gay people and that Palestine is not. I think that the Brand Israel campaign has come to deflect. It’s trying to say, “We’re free. We’re a place where you can enjoy freedom and mobility.” But the state of Israel has restricted freedom and mobility for 1.5 million people on the West Bank alone. So if we go and think, “Oh, Israel is free,” we have to rethink what is freedom? And who is free and who is not? And are we capitalizing on this freedom to deflect from an un-freedom that others suffer?

And I do think that we need to be in alliances that are dedicated to broader goals of social justice. I don’t think we should be taking our freedom at the expense of others.


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Reader Comments


 
Xtra smart
Excellent interview. Thanks.
Steven Maynard, Toronto Ontario
03/11/11 3:40 PM EST
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False Myth
The Arabs/Iran are building a false Myth. They will not be confused with real facts! Unfortunately some innocent people (or not?) from the west are joining the false chorus. By the Israeli law and practice all citizens are: Equal by low-----Full political rights----– Equals in universal human rights –--religious freedom–--Citizens express freely–--Women equality–--Social rights equality–- study on same universities---- sharing the same medical treatment in hospitals- serves as judges and lawyers- play in the same sport clubs--share equally all public infrastructures-- and more….. Is this is apartheid?? Should Israel changed in line to Muslims countries? The ridiculous call to change the above lows of some of so called human rights organization or democratic supporters! What s the status in Muslim countries? *Iran- more than 200 gays have been executed *Iran- Teachers were hanged up because teaching Bahai religion. *Iran Women low- Virgin women to be executed is raped by a guard ahead execution. *All over the Muslim countries: Christians are being persecuted and are under run. *Building or repairing of non Muslim shrines is either forbidden or severely restricted *Limited woman rights * Acceptable honor killing of doters and wife's *People conversing from Islam to other religions may get by low death sentence * Political parties are either forbidden or limited. *Iran- By low only Shia Muslim cab be president, army chief, judge. The so called human rights organization or democratic supporters don't blame, vote resolutions or demonstrate against Muslim countries. What is the definition of this behavior? Hypocrite!
Ariely, Jerusalem Israel Jerusalem
03/11/11 10:00 PM EST
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Judith Butlerisms
I've never enjoyed reading Judith Butler because her writing style is too complicated and unclear. She writes paragraph long sentences and uses vocabulary that induces headaches, ignoring the rule of 'don't use a big word where a diminutive one will suffice'. But this interview was alot better. I do fundamentally disagree with the anti-marriage segment of the queer movement, like Butler. She is wrong to presume that all gay and lesbian and heterosexual people who get married (or might want to get married) are going to adopt what she says is an idea 'focused on property and wanting acceptance as normalized bourgeois people and monogamy, and the idea of couplehood.' Not all marriages conform to this, and it's not a good reason to oppose or doubt legal marriage equality.
Ryan, Toronto ON
03/12/11 10:18 AM EST
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Judith Butler's bad writing
It’s true that Judith Butler is known for her bad writing. In fact, she once won the annual Bad Writing Contest sponsored by the scholarly journal Philosophy and Literature. She won the prize for this sentence - “The move from a structuralist account in which capital is understood to structure social relations in relatively homologous ways to a view of hegemony in which power relations are subject to repetition, convergence, and rearticulation brought the question of temporality into the thinking of structure, and marked a shift from a form of Althusserian theory that takes structural totalities as theoretical objects to one in which the insights into the contingent possibility of structure inaugurate a renewed conception of hegemony as bound up with the contingent sites and strategies of the rearticulation of power.” Source - http://www.denisdutton.com/bad_writing.htm
Anthony, Toronto Ontario
03/12/11 7:28 PM EST
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Most Boring Queerperson on Earth
Judith Butler is so full of herself. Her books are unreadable rubbish. Her ideas an embarrassingly immature sham. She is power and privilege personified. An elitist non-worker shilling magical thinking from her hermetic tower to her minion rebel without a clue army. One of the biggest phoney manques of the past 20 years. And she is worshipped by Queers who play endless identity games while the world burns. Decadence at its most vile.
david, Toronto ON
03/13/11 9:30 AM EST
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could queer theory; be 90%BS?
Not to be heretical, but could it be that queer theory is 90 percent bullshit--a bit of an intellectual sham? An academic construct with little basis in the real world? That would explain a lot of the sociological jargon and academic language. And it does create many articles, books, philosophical discussions and jobs.
james dubro, toronto ontario
03/13/11 11:59 AM EST
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Butler as a smooth careerist
james, you raise an interesting point. Others have said the same thing. For example, Camille Paglia once wrote the following. "Judith Butler is no radical: She is one of the smoothest careerists and veteran conference hoppers in the entire American academic system. She shrewdly adapted herself to the prevailing chic orthodoxy at Yale and became a major player in the ruthless academic marketplace, with its platinum perks and golden parachutes. The well-publicized jockeying and bidding wars that have gone on for Butler's services - among Hopkins, Berkeley, Stanford, Harvard, New York University, et al. - have driven her salary into the stratosphere, while the aboriginal Warholites remain ostracized. You're quite right to focus on the blatant inequities here: The star system, which accelerated in the 1980s, has warped the academic budget and helped keep graduate-student teaching assistants and adjunct instructors at slave wages." Source - http://www.salon.com/it/col/pagl/1999/02/24pagl.html
Anthony, Toronto Ontario
03/13/11 12:19 PM EST
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We get it, Xtra hates Israel
Yeah yeah, we get it guys, you hate Israeli gays. You made that pretty clear during Pride (ironically). Do you really still need to churn out these waffly articles about it?
William, Montreal QC
03/13/11 7:36 PM EST
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A good ally to people of colour
Butler's recent work has been more accessible, certainly anticolonial, and many racialized people appreciate the scope at which she defines queer. Butler understands that to wage a narrow identitarian definition of social justice organizing in any movement that is at the cost and violence of other people is not ethical or sustainable.
Louise, Toronto Ontario
03/14/11 2:38 AM EST
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English only on Xtra please
Hello Louise - As Canada's *national* newspaper, Xtra only caters for people who speak English (the only language in Canada that matters.) Could you try again please?
William, Montreal QC
03/14/11 2:05 PM EST
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Hey William, try google translator
Récents travaux de Butler a été plus accessible, certainement anticolonialiste, et de nombreuses personnes racialisées apprécier la portée à laquelle elle définit queer. Butler a compris que pour mener une définition étroite identitaire de la justice sociale dans l'organisation de tout mouvement qui est au coût et à la violence des autres personnes n'est pas d'ordre éthique ou durable.
Mike, Toronto ON
03/14/11 5:53 PM EST
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Nope
Nope, still doesn't make any sense. Maybe Google Translate needs to add a "horseshit" function.
William, Montreal QC
03/14/11 6:51 PM EST
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William try expanding your vocabulary
William I'm sorry to hear that you can't understand Louise's post, sometimes its hard to dumb down certain topics enough for people like you to understand them. Its not like Louise was using any unnecessarily large words when simpler words would have done just as well, she simply was being concise and assuming most people would understand the rather simple concepts she mentioned, and I'm sure that most people do, at least anyone who has anything informed to say about the topic of this story. There's no shame in not understanding what they're talking about, but its not the sort of thing I would brag about.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
03/15/11 2:59 PM EST
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and the Tea Party award goes to...
...William! for being able to take this interview with Butler and reduce it to "Xtra hates Israeli gays". That's right up there with the Tea Party reducing Obama's plan to make sure more Americans have health insurance to "socialized death panels". Or their solution to rampant gun crime being getting more guns into more hands. Its some accomplishment to be both so simplistic and ridiculous at the same time but luckily there are those who aspire to such heights. Congratulations William on reaching that pinnacle!
Rich, Toronto Ontario
03/15/11 3:23 PM EST
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He's just venting
Rich, William is just venting. We all know that QuAIA has won the Pride war. QuAIA supporters will again be marching at Pride and chanting hate against Israel. The old, "Happy Pride" is dead.
Joe, Toronto Ontario
03/16/11 1:41 AM EST
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Hate destroyed Pride
No, QuAIA and Xtra did not win the Pride "war", as you so eloquently put it (revealing choice of words.) Hate was allowed to destroy the basic founding principle of Pride - tolerance and love amongst gays. QuAIA and Xtra were simply the vehicles that were used by an idiot minority. I'm sorry if this reminder makes you uncomfortable. In the mean time, I'll be reading a real gay newspaper to get my Canadian community news (and supporting its advertisers).
William, Montreal QC
03/16/11 7:51 AM EST
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Learning to speak horsehit
By the way Rich, you're right, I could learn to speak Pseudoscientific-Horseshit, but I'm guessing the only thing it would be good for is talking to Pseudoscientific Horses' Arses.
William, Montreal QC
03/16/11 8:19 AM EST
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http://www.ManPals.com
Great interview Judith.... http://www.ManPals.com Gay social network for dating work and travel. Connect with like-minded people and expand your network of friends!
Alan, Toronto Ontorio
03/16/11 5:13 PM EST
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Why not report on this instead?
Why aren't you reporting on real gay news instead, like this: Teenager suspected of being gay is beaten to death in NYC http://www.fugues.com/main.cfm?l=fr&p=100_article&article_ID=17151 I hope your advertisers are paying attention. What a rubbish paper.
William, Montreal QC
03/17/11 11:27 AM EST
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Xtra needs to come out of the closet
William your right Xtra only seems to care more about the QuAIA or saying how much the hate Israel then LGBT community. Since they are only focus on Israel instead of teen suicides or real issues that affect our community lost any notion that it is even a LGBT Newspaper. I just wonder why Xtra can not come out of the closet over this issue? Also I just wonder why Xtra says it is Canada's National Newspaper when it only focus one issue or just reinterviews stories from rabble.ca. Why does Xtra always talks about Israel and not other situations such as in Libya when that government are murdering their own people in the streets? I wonder why Xtra is not even talking about this. As LGBT do we even care about the Human Rights of the people of Libya? I guess no since it not Israel. Xtra your bias sucks and everyone knows this
Your Bias, Sucks, Canada
03/17/11 4:57 PM EST
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get a grip
Your Bias says "Xtra only seems to care more about the QuAIA or saying how much the hate Israel then LGBT community" All I can say to that is get a grip, the piece on Israeli apartheid was only a small segment of the interview with Butler and that is the only mention of the Israeli-Palestine issue in this issue of Xtra and yet you claim Xtra doesn't care about the LGBT community because its only focused on Israel. What about its coverage of the GSA issue? The CAP report? Its series on Uganda? and the list goes on and on. It is in fact you and others like you that are solely focused on Israel to the exclusion of every other community concern, your type takes stories that have next to nothing to do with QuAIA or Kaluhna or whatever and in the comments make them all about Israel like William did with this interview with Butler where she barely mentions Israeli apartheid and makes it all about nothing but Xtra's alleged hatred of Israeli gays. It seems all of those of your type want to do is talk about Israel and how hard done by they are and then you complain that Xtra only talks about Israel when the facts clearly show that is not the case. What's up with that? Judging by your comments your thoughts seem to be focused on Israel and nothing else and yet you complain at the same time that Xtra isn't spending enough time talking about non-Israeli issues even though 99.9% of their recent issues have had nothing to do with Israel or QuAIA. It is you and people like William that ignore the rest of the LGBT community because they can't think of anything besides Israel as can be seen in your comments which are always all about Israel and nothing else. Besides which Xtra is not a national LGBT newspaper and only devotes a relatively small percent of its coverage to national or international issues, mostly its a Toronto, Ottawa, and Vancouver local LGBT newspaper dealing with local issues in those cities. Don't like it? start your own newspaper.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
03/17/11 6:08 PM EST
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Rich, you seem to be missing the point
Rich, you seem to be missing the point: Judith Butler came to Toronto to speak at Israeli Apartheid Week and that's why Xtra interviewed her. Her speaking engagement is what the first part of the article is describing. The Left in Toronto had been trumpeting her appearance at Israeli Apartheid Week in advance and I'm surprised that you're attempting to minimize it. For example, see: http://www.rabble.ca/news/2011/03/judith-butler-speak-israeli-apartheid-week-toronto
Joe, Toronto Ontario
03/17/11 7:56 PM EST
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