Monday, May 4, 2009

How can they see with sequins in their eyes?

When reading Shah's "Adjusting Intimacies", I was surprised by the lack of full attention to the gender issues at work in both cases. It could be because we only just finished Berlant's feminist reading, but they stood out starkly.

Shah did address the portrait of Don Sing's pitiable wife who marshaled sympathy by playing the role of the "worthy and helpless dependent woman" (128). The role of power in this instance is debatable. One one hand, it was clearly a show of submission and sympathy, extorting gender stereotypes that both cultures involved could connect to. On the other, by playing into these stereotypes, Don Sing was released while the two men arrested with him were not. The goal of the sympathy letter was fulfilled which, arguably, is a sort of power.

What Shah did not address adequately, however was how the case of Soledad Garcia Jubala was also a case of a weak woman appealing to a gendered stereotype to gain pity. Her attorneys appealed on behalf of the "Dona Ana county widow" (133) and her poor fatherless children. Again, the woman in the situation used a traditional stereotype in order to get her way and win the case. Nami Singh did not use this defense to legitimize her own marriage but attempted to use only primary proof that a divorce had not taken place. It is a sad but apparent truth that proof is trumped by an emotional appeal. This essay was a sad confirmation, to me, that the judicial system is a stage show. Whoever can cry the biggest tears, play the stereotype the most sympathetically, wins the case. Razzle dazzle 'em.



-Caitlin

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