Androgyny and Popular Culture
From the Course: The Church and Pop Culture
Ethics 111 - 3 Credit Hours
Instructor:
The Rev. Jefferis Kent Peterson
The Scholar's Corner
111 S. Magnolia Dr.
Butler, PA 16001
Access to Instructor:
Internet: Email
(Licenses to use and distribute this course in other educational
facilities are available.)
Androgyny in Pop
Culture
©1996 by Jefferis Kent Peterson
The Scholar's Corner
Contents
Introduction
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Part
I ( A Review of Contemporary
Trends) -------------
Part
II (Philosophical and Political
Roots) ----------------
Part
III (Sociological Roots)
------------------------------
Conclusion -----------------------------------------------
End Notes
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Bibliography
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Introduction
The first half of the 1984 Grammy Award
presentations underscored a dramatic shift in cultural
consciousness that has taken place in the past twenty years.
Transvestite musicians such as Boy George of the Culture
Club and Annie Lennox of the Eurythmics competed for the
best new artist award; while Michael Jackson, an androgynous
figure himself, walked away with seven awards. The Awards
nominations became a celebration of androgyny and sexual
ambiguity.
The then current issues of Time and
People and Newsweek all clamored after these up and coming
stars. The picture of Michael Jackson alone guaranteed
additional millions in sales. The extent of Jackson's
success is put into perspective when it is revealed that he
sold more albums in three short years, from 1981 to 1984,
than the Beatles did in their entire 12 year career.
Jackson's commercial success lent the seal of popular
approval to this new wave of androgynous idols.
The rejection of past social conventions
during the 1960's created a climate where family and
cultural norms of prior generations were suspect. The old
conventions proved untrustworthy because they masked the
endemic racial injustice of the culture, and the previous
generation's blind obedience to existing authority had
produced an irrational war. So, the generation of the '60's,
the "Counter-Culture Generation," began to define itself as
much by what it opposed as by anything it stood for. The lack
of a norm, except the norm of rejection of the past, created
a climate where new ideas and behaviors were valued
precisely because they seemed "unconventional." In fact,
that generation delighted in challenging and defying social
expectations. So, anything that was new and unusual in pop
culture served to validate the generation's desire to
redefine itself. If the "new" also was an affront to past
convention, so much the better.
The commercial value of the
unconventional was quickly realized by the music industry
and other entertainment media. Ever eager to find and
exploit the next wave of consumer interest, the industry
recognized the commercial appeal of these new and unusual
forays into androgyny. The baby boom generation provided the
single biggest consumer block in the nation. According to
the ethics of American business, Jackson, especially, proved
himself by his commercial popularity and lawful success. Who
could argue with the billions of dollars being poured into
corporate coffers? Androgyny was "IN."
This cultural affirmation of androgyny
would have been inconceivable forty years ago. Indeed, the
explosion of traditional cultural expectations and the
shattering of traditional cultural norms could only have
come upon the heels of the great social upheaval of the
60's. The mass media's current fascination with
homosexuality, bisexuality, and androgyny as legitimate
alternate lifestyles can also be traced back to that same
period. My thesis is that the ideal of androgyny in
contemporary culture represents the breakdown of a healthy
social structure. Rather than creating a radically new
environment where people are loved, accepted, and celebrated
for their differences, the lack of social norms is a
reflection of a society in which people are valued not for
who they are but for what they do. As a result, the social
network of relationships is battered to the point of
potential extinction. The purpose of the thesis is not to
condemn the abnormal, but only to show that it is a
reflection of the inhumanity of contemporary culture and a
sign of its possible demise.
In order to establish the thesis, this
paper will review the current cult of androgyny, especially
as exemplified in the music industry, and to explore the
sociological and philosophical roots of this cultural
phenomenon. The first part of the paper will be a brief
review of the contemporary history of androgyny in popular
culture. The second part will investigate the philosophical
and political roots of our culture to see how our history
has influenced the rise of androgyny in the present. The
third part of the paper will seek to uncover the
sociological roots that provide both the conscious and
unconscious motivations for our present behavior.
Part 1
"The time is right" for the androgynous
look, observes cultural historian Marsall Berman, "because
American culture is more comfortable at handling sex and
playing with gender roles. 1
The evidence of our fascination with
sexual ambiguity is everywhere. While the focus of the paper
is on music, the ideology of ambiguity pervades the pop
media. "Androgyny is in, and it's about time!"2 The fashion
industry correctly predicted current trends over thirty
years ago with the Unisex style, and continued to capitalize
on the popularity of androgynous dress, copying the styles
of Boy George, Michael Jackson, David Bowie, and the Punk
scene.
One of the most prophetic movies of the
early 1970's was a film entitled Phantom of the Paradise. It
satirized the music industry and criticized the industry's
willingness to promote the demonic for a profit. The movie's
strange and unbelievable prophecy about blood spurting,
violent and androgynous rock groups came to pass with
uncanny precision. The Rocky Horror Picture Show, also of
the same era, became a cult film that celebrated the
confusion of sexual identity. Tim Currie, the star, played a
female with strangely seductive characteristics. In fact,
most of the female temptresses were played by males. Our
propensity for gender-blending gained a wider acceptance in
the 1980's as many films played with this theme of sex role
reversal. Victor-Victoria, Tootsie, and Yentle were three of
the current products of popular culture which addressed the
inequities of socially imposed gender roles from the
perspective of the victims of cultural stereotyping. Movie
producers attempted to make "gender blending" humane and
less threatening through these artistic comedies. As people
became familiar with androgyny they also become
de-sensitized to its transgressions of cultural norms. It
became an acceptable, if alternate, norm to a large portion
of modern culture. And on stage, the 60's fascination with
sex in general, with productions like Hair and O Calcutta,
became in the 80's a fascination with homosexuality in
particular, with La Cage Aux Folles competing for a Tony
Award in 1984.
The theological and scientific
assumptions which make acceptable the intentional
restructuring of gender were established in contemporary
culture by the anthropological assumptions of modern
psychology and oriental religion. Jungian psychology, itself
influenced by eastern religious thought, was very
influential in the founding of modern psychological theory.
The operative anthropology of Jungianism was a belief in the
androgynous nature of all people - that there are
female/feminine and male/masculine characteristics latent
within everyone:
We all have male and female qualities,
why not be able to show both? ...People are being looked at
for what's in their eyes--their inner sexuality.3
This view of essential human nature has
gained widespread, if uncritical, acceptance within modern
culture. Because this view of human nature is pliable, it
has proven itself a worthy servant of various ideological
and political causes. It justifies the examination and
restructuring of sexual and social roles according to more
modern ideas of the social good. Everyone, from feminists to
proponents of gay rights, uses this anthropological
assumption as justification for particular views in support
of political policies and social reforms. At the base line
of this thought, androgyny is not just acceptable, it is a
norm by which we may govern our social expectations. Sexual
identity, gender and social roles, are seen to be the
products of unthinking socialization, and therefore, are
without inherent purpose. To impose then, a traditional
morality upon a culture or social group, is to imprison that
group in the strictures of an outdated and prejudiced
ideology. It is further assumed, that as free beings, people
should be able to restructure their socio-sexual identities
in any way they so choose without regard to previous
patterns of oppressive expectation.
The entrance of this anthropology onto
the stage of contemporary culture has been the source of
unending conflicts in every area as traditionalists try to
cope with the application of such views to the educational,
political, and legal systems. While accepted without
question by the mass media, the agenda of "equal rights" for
sexual orientations has not been received with the same
enthusiasm by the culture as a whole. The same people who
buy K. D. Lang's CD's in the music store, may also resist
with anger and hostility any attempt by school boards to
endorse diversity (a.k.a. homosexual) appreciation in their
children's public school health courses. The reason for this
paradoxical reaction has many factors, but the root of the
disagreement arises from conflicting world views.
In contrast to the modern, androgynous
ideal, the traditional view of socio-sexual identity in
American culture is based in a Judeo-Christian world view
which speaks of a teleological purpose for gender. Aside
from the changing cultural conventions that dictate gender
roles, at root, a God-created difference between male and
female is assumed to exist. That difference is expressed in
social conventions, but it is not limited to the changing,
particular expressions of social roles. That difference of
sexual identity is at the core of one's being, and it ought
to be respected as a gift from God, not perceived as
evidence of inequality and injustice. The androgynous ideal,
to the traditionalist, speaks of the rejection of ordination
and puts in its place accident as the operative principle.
So, the traditionalist rejects not just the application of
androgynous assumptions to public policy, but is at war with
the theological assumptions which motivate androgyny. The
restructuring of sexual identity is not just the
manipulation of accidental externals, but represents
rebellion against God's created order.
The difficulty most traditionalists face
is differentiating social convention from ordained purpose
in gender. That difficulty has given rise to injustice and
unequal treatment of women, for example, before the law, but
it has also raised legitimate questions as to the proper
limits of gender homogeny. Should physical standards for
firemen be lowered just to assure equal numbers of females
on the force, for example, when that means that a woman who
cannot carry 180 pounds will not be able to rescue the
average male trapped in a fire?
In any case, the question of androgyny in
public policy has sparked a clash of world views and has led
to a level of intolerance in public discourse, in large part
because the mass media, which adopted the androgynous
assumptions, has ridiculed and demonized traditionalists -
implying that their resistance to social change is
equivalent to the racism of previous generations. Not only
has the media sparked a political debate, but it has further
alienated the traditionalists by indicting their religious
motivations as further evidence of intolerance and bigotry,
thus depriving both parties of a middle ground for civil
discourse. The polarization in the culture over this clash
of world views thus becomes entirely predictable as the new
social philosophy seeks to repudiate and replace the old.
In the music industry and in culture,
before 1960, ambiguity of gender was not acceptable, and
those who waded upon these uncertain shores were treated as
cultural oddities. Most kept their propensities secret,
while others who only suggested their difference were
sometimes tolerated. Liberace was one of the first in recent
memory to be questionable in dress and manner. And in the
late 60's, Tiny Tim enjoyed a short stay in the limelight.
Tim's feminine long hair and high voice were definitely
considered marks of oddity, while he always affirmed his
heterosexuality, and "proved it" by getting married on
television. Even so, Tim was never accepted by the culture
except as a joke. So, he could not really be called either a
model of or a model for culture,* but was more an aberration
all unto himself.
The first serious attempt at sexual
ambiguity was made by a man named Alice Cooper who rose to
fame in 1971. His physical appearance and violent stage
presence added to the titillating qualities of rock
showmanship. A contemporary of Cooper's, Little Richard,
also blended a high voice and feminine appearance with
serious musical appeal. Both of these musicians gained some
measure of success, but their appeal was limited within the
rock scene. (It is important to note that most of these
early musicians, except Tiny Tim of course, gained their
acceptance in culture first through the quality of their
musicianship and not through the bizarreness of their
character.)
The first musician to successfully appeal
to all segments of the rock culture was David Bowie. His
good music made listeners of people who would not have
tolerated him if they had only seen his image beforehand.
This man, who is considered the mother/father of the current
generation of androgynous stars, blended a physically
feminine appearance with an open confession of a
bisexual/homosexual nature. His original appeal in England
was to the homosexual community, but some recording
executive recognized his "cross-over" potential, and he
became a bearer of values to the culture as a whole. His
openness and forthrightness marked a change in the political
climate of England and the United States. Bowie was truly a
model of the homosexual community in England, but his
courage gave others confidence to express themselves
publicly and politically. So, in this sense, he was also the
first model for gender transformation in the culture.
As Bowie's fame increased in the early
'70's, other rock stars began to open up and confess the
androgyny of their character. Mick Jagger of the Rolling
Stones, who had been famous since the early '60's, hinted at
the bisexual nature of his appetites. And no one knew if
Elton John was bisexual, as he indicated, or truly gay, as
everyone suspected.
Once the executives of the industry found
out that this new wave of androgyny was commercially
successful, there was a scramble to find and promote this
new talent. Here we begin to see that odd musicians began to
reach the popular culture not through their musical talent,
which was negligible, but through the strangeness of their
stage acts, dress, and special effects. Groups such as Kiss
and other heavy metal bands won accolades for their
showmanship, and interest was generated in Kiss particularly
by their makeup--they refused to reveal their identity or to
go without this false front in public. Suddenly, groups that
were confessionally bisexual, homosexual, or androgynous,
were the "in thing," and many performers now felt that such
a stance, whether honest or purely for show, was necessary
to success. Common wisdom said, "You had to do something
weirder than the next group to get noticed and promoted."
Queen was such a group that participated in and flaunted the
questions of their gender. Now it seemed everybody was
coming out !
There is one important development that
paralleled the rise of the androgynous myth; that is the
rise of the openly demonic and satanic aspects of rock and
punk music. Some of this bizarre musical expression was not
confessionally demonic, but had qualities which might be
characterized as such. Sid Vicious and the Sex Pistols acted
out a "deliberate ugliness" that was full of violence and of
enticements to destructive behaviors. The Sex Pistols, as
the epitome of punk, rejected the hopeful idealism that was
part of the cultural revolution of the '60's, and resigned
themselves to the cynicism and hopelessness of the '70's.
Due in large part to the economic depression in England,
their nihilism was certainly a model of the despair of many
youth of the time.4 It is hard to live without a future.
But the most extreme development of the
androgynous age is the association of the demonic - and
outright satanic symbolism and demonic forms of bloody,
sacrificial worship on stage - with the purposeful
distortion of sexuality visible in many of the groups'
members as part of the intended effect. Homosexuality,
bisexuality, and androgyny were espoused for shock value.
Dead or Alive, Motley Crue (heavy metal), Kiss, Ozzy
Osborne, Black Sabbath, and many others exemplified the
trend. Whether androgyny had any direct relationship to
satanism was unclear, but those groups which dabbled in the
dark side of rock seemed to find in androgyny a natural ally
in their assault against conventional norms.
Finally in 1984, the trend of androgyny
exploded onto the scene in more moderate packages. Boy
George, Annie Lennox, Grace Jones, and Michael Jackson all
profited from the ambiguity of their sexuality. Their
ambiguity had certain advantages; it created a cultural
phenomenon. Some then began purposely to cultivate this
highly desirable image. Annie Lennox admits that her sexual
ambiguity is chosen precisely for its effect:
of course we're conscious of our image. .
. The image is kind of a disposable wrapper . . . something
that will draw people in.
Certainly, the growing acceptance of
androgyny by the culture reveals the waning influence of a
traditional biblical world view in society. These changes
were first and most strongly embraced among groups of
disenfranchised youth and urban poor. They adopted the trend
of androgyny as a new means of self identification, just
their elder brothers and sisters adopted "rebellious" rock
as a model for the counter culture of the '60's. The
androgynous ideal also strongly appealed to the homosexual
communities who felt their lifestyles and values finally
being affirmed and supported by the broader culture. As the
culture accepted the gender confusion in entertainment, it
slowly began to be established as a value norm for the rest
of society.
This androgynous model represents a
transformation of the religious understanding of humanity
for the culture. It is offering an alternate view of "Man's
place in the Universe." In the traditional, biblical model,
human beings are the focal point of Creation; they bear the
image of God, and they were created for the express pleasure
of the Creator. They are not accidental, but essential in
the grand scheme of things. Androgyny, however, hints at a
different world view in which humanity is but an accident of
evolutionary processes.
In order to become a model for culture,
the symbol of androgyny must attempt to present an alternate
form of meaning for the culture. It must offer a plausible
alternative to what it is replacing, and it can only do this
if current symbols of cultural identity are dying and losing
their effectiveness or if the new symbol is more powerful
and cohesive than the one that is already entrenched and
commonly held. In order to determine the meaning of this new
mythic symbol, we must analyze it from three religious
perspectives: life and death; order and chaos; and meaning
and meaninglessness.
In terms of the continuum of life and
death of a civilization, the birth of androgyny, according
to a traditional Christian perspective, is part of the death
of a culture (cf. Romans 1). The Old Testament forbid cross
dressing, which is one of the contemporary manifestations of
androgyny. Those who confused sexual and social roles, by
wearing the other sex's clothing, were put to death (Deut.
22:5). Not only were social roles well established in the
ritual laws that governed the society, but the nature of
sexual identity was so wedded to divine purpose, that to
deliberately confuse sexual roles and functions was to defy
God's order of creation. The prohibitions against
homosexuality were part and parcel of this understanding of
the telos of sexual differentiation. In Romans, Paul
identifies homosexuality as a sign of the "wrath" of God
upon a society. Because of the sin of idolatry, God gives
over a society to lust (Romans 1:24). And he then seems to
indicate that the most extreme manifestation of this
punishment is visible in homosexual conduct, which is against
nature, i.e., against the created order, and therefore
ultimately an act of self punishment:
For this reason God gave them up to
dishonorable passions. Their women exchanged natural
relations for unnatural, and the men likewise gave up
natural relations with women and were consumed with passion
for one another, men committing shameless acts with men and
receiving in their own persons the due penalty for their
error. And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God,
God gave them up to a base mind and to improper conduct.
(Romans 1:26-28, RSV).
Homosexuality and lesbianism are not seen
as sins deserving punishment, according to Paul, but as the
punishment for the sin of idolatry. As these practices
become widespread, it is a visible mark of the punishment on
the society as a whole, and thus becomes a sign of God's
wrath on a culture for its idolatry.
These biblical passages and
interpretations form the background of the Judeo-Christian
heritage as manifested in social consensus in morals that
governed the United States until the 1960's. The traditional
views regarding homosexuality, held commonly until 40 years
ago, are the direct result of an assumed Christian
worldview. The rise of the cult of androgyny and
homosexuality is contrary to the traditional worldview, and
so then represents to the traditionalist the degeneration
and decline of a civilization.
But as this commonly held biblical
worldview died, the loss of a unified vision and moral
consensus in modern culture provided an opportunity to see
androgyny not in the traditional terms of a deviation, but
as a symbol of a new moral consensus based not upon biblical
models, but upon ones created to suit the needs of the day.
Lust, traditionally a sin, had already been redefined as a
social good through the sexual revolution of the '60's, so
as sexual desire in general was liberated from traditional
restraints and judgments, so too came the opportunity to
redefine as normal desires of every persuasion. What was
being witnessed in this transition is the death of a
traditional, biblical culture. And if that culture was
indeed dying, it needed to be replaced by a new one.
Androgyny is an attempt to affirm life in
the midst of that death by giving direction to this new
culture. Boy George has said that his message is not "be
like me," but "be yourself." In essence, this is a secular
version of the message of God's grace: "Accept me for who I
am, not for who you want me to be." In a culture which
heavily emphasizes sex and sexuality, it is no wonder that
his "non-threatening" sexuality came as a welcome relief to
the youth of the day.7 The radical, youth culture of the
early '70's, especially in England, was rife with nihilism
and despair, due in large part to their economic status.
Since nihilism is self-negating and not affirming, it
creates a void of identity that is impossible to hold for
long. Boy George's message of grace was an affirmation of
life in the midst of their cultural decay.
Androgyny also offered a new context of
meaning for sexual functions divorced from any concern for
reproduction. Contemporary Western culture no longer values
procreation, but actually discourages it. Throughout
history, the validation of life in progeny has been
considered a mark of the health of a culture. Men and
women's roles as procreators of life gave a human response
to the threat and the fear of death. Sex within the
framework of procreation gave it a transcendent meaning and
value: it assured not only the survival of the family
through the couple, it also assured the continuance of the
tribe and community as well. So, men and women's sexual
roles as progenitors were assigned honor in the community
both as a norm of cultural life and as a valuable pursuit.
And in fact, the barren couple in many traditional cultures
is shamed and considered cursed.
Since our culture takes the opposite view
and curses those who bring forth abundant life, sex roles
themselves are devalued. Gender identity in such a culture
has no intrinsic value nor worth to the community. Therefore
the natural ascription of values to sexual identity is
displaced by other considerations. Life and death of the
individual become more immediate and more threatening in
terms of an ultimate sense of purpose or lack thereof. The
family no longer finds meaning or value in its identity as a
procreative unit. The devaluation of progeny denies them the
sense of continuity beyond death. The couple also loses
affirmation from the community as a family unit, and so its
relationship is undermined rather than upheld by the
culture.
Androgyny tries to fill the gap created
by the cultural vacuum with an alternate affirmation of
identity and value. Ultimately, however, that affirmation is
based in a negation: first, the concept of identity is so
pliable, that there is no inherent or ultimate meaning to
one's existence as a sexual creature - there is no God who
gives that sexual identity ultimacy, but sexual identity is
the relative creation of individual desire; second, by its
denial of the telos of procreation, androgyny subtly opposes
itself against the value of human life as expressed in the
desire for a continuing heritage - whether there is a
posterity is no longer of a concern, for only the life of
the individual matters. Finally, androgyny's affirmation is
based upon alienation: for the identity and affirmation
couples received in communion with one another is displaced
by singularity. Now, only one's individual identity matters:
sexual orientation, as an expression of that identity, is
purely a personal and private matter. One's relationship to
other human beings is derivative and no longer has ultimate
purpose nor community significance. It is highly alienating,
for the individual becomes the sum of his own attempts to
find meaning and value in his life. In his death, he is
finally and ultimately unrelated to any other human being.
Androgyny, more than any other form of sexual identity,
furthers the despair, isolation, and meaninglessness of
individual life precisely because it divorces sexual
identity from any ultimate meaning or purpose.
On the continuum of order and chaos, the
birthplace of androgyny is certainly in the destruction of
social and sexual roles for males and females. This
particular disintegration of social structures will be
examined later. Suffice it to say that the root of androgyny
is not in the affirmation of our differences, but is in the
denial of them.
But androgyny is also an attempt to
reestablish order in society by providing a new mythic
symbol system that is affirmed through ritual- the ritual of
public adoration at concerts, theater, and awards events.
Could it be that the culture's acceptance and promotion of
androgyny is a ritual attempt to affirm the ambiguity of our
age through the worship of these cult representatives? Where
rites of passage used to give social confirmation to our
sexual and social roles,** the cult of androgyny attempts to
put in a positive light our loss of sexual and social
identity. It now exalts this confusion as a new paradigm for
the culture. Confusion of sexual identity and standards is
now the norm of society. And those who have adopted the
androgynous myth as their archetype are now as threatened by
social conservatives who challenge that archetype as social
conservatives were once threatened by them.
The attempt to find meaning is closely
tied to the theme of order and chaos. Clearly, the ritual
affirmation of sexual ambiguity is an attempt to substitute
a new myth or archetypal symbol for Judeo-Christian
understandings. This theme will be addressed more
specifically in the second part of the paper.
We have reviewed the contemporary trends
and highlighted popular manifestations of androgyny in our
culture. The question remains; how did we get to this point?
What are the philosophical, political, and sociological
roots of our culture that have allowed this current
phenomenon to come to pass? In the next sections we will
attempt to uncover the roots of our great cultural tree.
Back to Index
Part
II
Philosophical and Political Roots.
Most people do not act of the basis of
philosophy, but they use philosophy to explain or to justify
unconscious motivations and existing behaviors. Only later,
as ideas become familiar and gain acceptance, does
philosophy be come a model for subsequent behavior. Twenty
years ago, homosexuality, bisexuality, and androgyny were
not culturally acceptable. Now they are not only accepted,
they are promoted. In order to promote behavior that is
contrary to established norms, an ideological foundation
must be laid so that an apologetic can disseminate ideas and
provide for them a favorable hearing.
If we uncover some of the presuppositions
for ideological androgyny, we will discover ancient roots
that date back to early Greek culture. The ancient root is
philosophical dualism. Many of the early Greeks believed
that human nature was of two parts, soul (or reason) and
matter, that were in conflict with each other. The body was
believed to be an accidental (non-essential) substance that
was a corrupt and material residence for a divine spark or
logos.8 The body, full of appetites, instincts, and driven
by impulse, stood in opposition to the mind of reason, which
was inherently good. The body, by its very nature, could
have no positive, spiritual purpose or intent; it merely
was. Our fall from pure and perfect spirit into this prison
of matter was the occasion of our corruption. And our sexual
division, as one of the accidents of creation was an
intrinsic evil.9 Our return to universal spirit, hopefully
at death, led to our return to the androgynous state. Our
sexual natures then, as male and female, are accidental
limitations that we may transcend through our freedom. In
this way, we may return to the essential sexless and
abstract humanity that is truly us. 10
From this line of argumentation, with
these philosophical presuppositions, homosexuality is just
as logical a form of normal behavior as is heterosexuality,
since the body has no sexual telos. Many of the proponents
of women's liberation and homosexual liberation have
unconsciously used this Greek anthropology as the foundation
of their argumentation. Coupled with Jungian psychology and
oriental philosophies mentioned before, the philosophic
dualism creates a fertile field for non-traditional views of
sexuality. Even among church theologians, psychology,
philosophy, and science are given equal authority in the
formation of doctrine and church polity, and traditional
biblical passages are often ignored or reinterpreted in the
light of current scientific opinion. This new paradigm of
authority has led to the acceptance of homosexual
orientation by many mainline denominations as a God given
norm of behavior and created identity.
Modern secular culture has especially
disavowed a spiritual purpose for sexuality and denied an
inherent biological purpose for our sexual desires. Secular
culture has defined sexuality as pure instinct and appetite,
with biochemically and genetically conditioned orientations.
All of which have nothing to do with our essential humanity.
As our culture adopts this anthropology, it attempts to
establish its own mythic understanding of humanity. As our
culture abandons a Judeo-Christian heritage and adopts
philosophical dualism, the clash of world views and mythic
symbols becomes pronounced. Adam and Eve as archetypes must
be supplanted to make room for a new androgynous vision of
humanity and deity.
A short critique of this androgynous
assumption from a traditional, Christian point of view will
be given here to contrast it with the assumptions made by
modern theologians:
In Genesis, God created humanity as male
and female, and the image of God is fulfilled in
complementarity. Indeed, for the Jews, a man was not a
complete person until he had become one flesh with his wife,
not simply by marriage but by the birth of children!11
Secondly, the Judeo-Christian anthropology defined human
beings as a psycho-somatic unity, the body being an
expression of the soul's reality. The body, as an expression
of the soul, is not accidental -- it is essential! And so,
the body is as much expressive of purpose as is a spiritual
nature.12 Homosexuality defies the purpose of God and is
therefore a perversion of the intent of creation expressed
in sexual differentiation. Homosexuality and androgyny
constitute a denial of the image of God in humanity as male
and female.
If one holds a traditional, biblical view
of complementary sexual nature as expressive of the creative
purposes of God, there is no way to reconcile that view with
the assumptions of androgyny and philosophical dualism. The
world views are irreconcilable at the root. And so,
conflicts in the social and legal sphere are
inevitable.
A second strand of an androgynous
worldview is an argument of libertinism that has a more
complex history. The argument is stated in terms of freedom:
"As long as someone wants to do such and such, and is not
injuring anyone else in the process, it is his or her
right." To unravel this line of argumentation, it is
necessary to uncover more of the philosophical and political
foundations of our culture.
Our understanding of a human being as one
individual among others with certain inherent rights and
freedoms has a long and convoluted history. In ancient
culture, human beings were thought of as social beings first
and as individuals second. People were understood to be born
into a social context from which they received their
identity. Relationships to family and tribe were the primary
sources of identity. This corporate understanding of
humanity is evident in the Old and New Testaments,
especially visible in the understanding of the Fall as a
corporate event: in Adam all share in the corporate nature
of sin, as sin and its consequences are passed on from one
generation to the next. The concept of individual rights
would have been severely limited in these cultures. And even
today, in many non-western societies, there is very little
predilection for the "benefits" of American individualism.
How did our understanding of individualism come
about?
In the 2 Century B. C., the Stoic school
of philosophy "helped to weave into a common scheme of
values, two ideas that were destined to affect all
subsequent social thought: 1) the idea of the individual,
(as) a distinct item of humanity, defined as his or her own
personhood, and 2) the idea of a universality, a world-wide
humanity in which all are endowed with a common nature."13
Populist and anti-aristocratic assumptions of contemporary
individualism can be traced to this stoic ideal. They come
to us through the Renaissance and the Reformation of the 14
- 17 Centuries. Supported by the cultural Christian
understanding of the infinite value of the soul to God,
these ancient beliefs were revived through Descartes and
Hobbes and finally were applied socially in the U. S.
Constitution. Now they shape our behavior and political
life.
In the early 17 C., Rene Descartes
resurrected the ideals of philosophical dualism and stoic
individualism. His most famous thesis of epistemology,
"Cogito, ergo sum," led to the identification of human
beings as distinct, individual, self-conscious beings. With
this anthropology, the fabric of our social identity was
rent.14 Now that we are defined as individual, subjective
consciousness, it would indeed be hard to define ourselves
by our relationships to one another.
The second idea of Descartes was perhaps
more influential from a sociological point of view. This
idea was the resurrection of an incipient dualism. Descartes
defined human nature as thinking substance (rational nature)
and as extended substance (material nature). "In the
corporeal realm, mechanical nature rules, whereas in the
realm of the mind there are freedom and purpose."15 By
identifying our physical natures with animal and conditioned
nature, and our spiritual natures with the mind, Descartes
defined the true self as separate from our physical nature.
Thus, he further undermined our ability to define ourselves
as beings in social relationship, because our social context
exists only on the physical plane, as our senses interact
with other bodies. Here on this non-essential plane, our
"true selves" never really meet! While Descartes never drew
this conclusion from his analysis, it is inherent in it, and
it was left to succeeding generations to ponder and apply.
In the middle of the 17 C., Thomas Hobbes
took the basic principles of Descartes' philosophy and
developed a theory of government based upon those ideas.
Hobbes reduced Descartes' anthropology to a purely
materialistic understanding which posited man as a
conditioned and mechanistic being, devoid of spirit and of
freedom of the will:
Since acts of will spring from
the feelings of pleasure or pain and are, therefore,
ultimately the consequences of received impressions, there
can be no freedom of the will, and the determinism and
mechanism which Hobbes finds in natural philosophy also rule
the social and political realm.16
Since we pursue pleasure and avoid pain,
and since self-preservation is our distinct and primary
pleasure, Hobbes believed that the primary relationship
between individuals should be a social contract; the express
purpose of which is to secure our survival and to maximize
our pleasure, i.e., to leave us "free" to pursue our
self-interest.17
We see in Hobbes the blueprint for all
subsequent theories of social contract forms of government.
The basic function of government in this framework is to
secure the "right" of every individual to "life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness" (or self-interest). By
accepting Descartes' definition of the individual, Hobbes
transformed our understanding of society from a communal
one, in which the individual is a secondary and derived
reality, into one in which the individual is the primary
reality. Social relations, therefore, are derived and
secondary realities. Through Hobbes, the foundation for
"liberal" government is laid. Thus in our society, the chief
aim of government is the preservation of the rights and
freedoms of individuals; not of social groups. Individual
freedom is seen as the source of the greatest good,
regardless of the object of our self-interest. The purpose
of government is to manage these interests so that they do
not conflict and cause chaos in society.18 (Since the
pursuit of androgyny or homosexuality falls within this
category of the individual pursuit of pleasure and
happiness, it conforms to the ideals of liberal government;
therefore, it is hard to dispute its value from a purely
political point of view.)
Through the Enlightenment of the 18 C.,
the enthronement of Reason as the sole source of truth led
to the abandonment of revelation and tradition. The moral
authorities based in religion, could no longer function as
governing norms of society. Liberal government, however, is
unencumbered by any need to determine the morality of the
object of one's desires, having defined self-interest as a
primary virtue of the social contract.19 Liberal government,
then, depends upon the moral consensus of the populace to
restrain vice and to determine virtue. Once moral norms are
challenged, however, if no one suffers directly and clearly
from the exercise of freedom, no appeal can be made to the
State to make a moral determination. The recourse of culture
is to appeal to the individual conscience, to reason, as the
source of moral determination and authority. As long as
there is cultural consensus as to values and morals, moral
standards can be maintained. But once those standards are
shattered by a wide divergence of opinion on essential
matters, the ability of liberal government to enforce a
particular view of right and wrong breaks down. If reason is
enthroned, as it was in the Enlightenment, then the source
of authority becomes highly individualistic, because only
individuals have the capacity for reason. And social norms
appear as a limitation to personal liberty.
So we see that in our society, the appeal
of Christians to the courts and to the legislative branches
of government to uphold social (Christian) norms of behavior
is doomed to failure. Religious morality and social
traditions cannot function as guideposts for the
legislature, because individual thoughts, freedoms, and
desires are the foundations of the social contract, not a
specific religious or moral view of the world. Therefore,
government cannot act as a moral authority to direct "people
individually and collectively toward the good,"20 but the
function of government must be to mediate and manage the
conflicts of self-interested individuals.
As we can see, the stage has been set for
20 C. political conflicts over the philosophical foundations
of our social contract. As our cultural consensus decays and
as there is disagreement as to the morality of individual
ideas and acts, it becomes impossible for our government to
distinguish between such things as homosexual and
androgynous behavior, on the one hand, and heterosexual
behavior on the other. The State has vowed itself to
neutrality in matters of religion (individual religious
freedom also is guaranteed by the principle of self-interest
in the pursuit happiness), so no appeal can be made to
religious norms. And as science is inconclusive in
demonstrating any harm of one form of behavior over another,
the only basis for decision making is the first principle of
government: securing the right of individuals to pursue
liberty, life, and happiness.
In the '70's, we see that these two ideas
of dualism (the arbitrariness of the body and its function)
and individualism have resurfaced to open the political
climate to androgyny, homosexuality, and bisexuality. Our
particular anthropology, whether Christian or dualistic, is
outside the realm of government's interest, as has already
been stated. But we may critique the political and
philosophical foundations of individualism:
The basic critique of political
individualism, as expressed in the ideal of "liberal"
government, from a Christian point of view would be two
fold:
1) From the time of Constantine
through the Reformation, the Church viewed the role of
secular government as an expression of the governance of
God on the earth. From time to time, governments were
seen as more or less faithful in their execution of this
God given charter. This widespread Christian
understanding of the function of government was based
upon interpretations of passages in the New Testament,
such as Rms. 13 & Eph. 3. And many saw in the
theocracy of the Old Testament an example of how the
Church and State should cooperate in administrating a
society according to the rule of God's laws. While among
the various denominations, there were specific
disagreements on how exactly Christian doctrine should be
applied to government, there was a general consensus on
the government's proper function. While government could
perform a positive good, it was not expected to create an
economic or social utopia. It's chief functions were more
narrow in scope, creating the possibility of a more just
society. They were:
a) to restrain evil and punish
wickedness within a society.
b) to allow the Church to direct the
people towards God by giving the Church the freedom to
proclaim the gospel.
c) to protect the citizens from attack
in times of war.
These functions of government were
seen as extensions of God's governance over the fallen
Creation. Government had an inherently moral purpose, but
its concern was primarily with the restraint of evil and
not with the promotion of individual
happiness.
2) According to any traditional
Christian standard, Liberal government is in error in
defining "the good" as the pursuit of self-interest. The
calling of Christians is not to pursue happiness, but to
do the will of God, "come what may."21 The corresponding
value in government would be the pursuit of civic
responsibility or public virtue, not individual
happiness. The government should function as a check
against unbridled self interest, not as its guarantor.
Furthermore, without an understanding of human nature as
inherently sinful, the biblical view, it becomes
impossible for liberal government to distinguish between
virtue and vice.22 Hence, contemporary liberal government
has no internal counterweight to restrain the pursuit of
individualism nor to measure the value of such pursuits.
Once the general population has abandoned a corporate
consensus of values based upon biblical traditions,
liberal government is left with nothing but the relative
values of rampant individualism to guide the social
whole. We can now see a corresponding loss of a sense of
civic obligation in contemporary culture as self interest
is pursued as the highest good. The blind pursuit of self
interest leads to a loss of civility and respect in
discourse and in politics, and to an emphasis on
"individual rights" without regard to the welfare of the
social whole .
The basic criticism of philosophical
individualism is that 1) it is based in a faulty
anthropology, and 2) that it fails to understand that we
receive much of our identity from our relationships to
others. We are not sufficient unto ourselves. But these
criticisms will be better explained in the next section of
the paper.
Part
III (Sociological Roots)
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