Not You/Like You: Post-Colonial Women and the Interlocking Questions of Identity and Difference - Trinh T. Minh-ha
My suggestion to the “lack” is: let difference replace conflict. Difference as understood in many feminist and non-Western contexts, difference as foreground in my film work is not opposed to sameness, nor synonymous with separateness. Difference, in other words, does not necessarily give rise to separatism. There are differences as well as... See more
Not You/Like You: Post-Colonial Women and the Interlocking Questions of Identity and Difference - Trinh T. Minh-ha
It is probably difficult for a normal, probing mind to recognize that to seek is to lose, for seeking presupposes a separation between the seeker and the sought, the continuing me and the changes it undergoes.
Not You/Like You: Post-Colonial Women and the Interlocking Questions of Identity and Difference - Trinh T. Minh-ha
All deviations from the dominant stream of thought, that is to say, the belief in a permanent essence of woman and in an invariant but fragile identity whose loss is considered to be a specifically human danger, can easily fit into the categories of the mentally ill or the mentally underdeveloped
Not You/Like You: Post-Colonial Women and the Interlocking Questions of Identity and Difference - Trinh T. Minh-ha
This means that at heart X must be X, Y must be Y, and X cannot be Y. Those running around yelling X is not X and X can be Y, usually land in a hospital, a rehabilitation center, a concentration camp, or a reservation
Not You/Like You: Post-Colonial Women and the Interlocking Questions of Identity and Difference - Trinh T. Minh-ha
The search for an identity is, therefore, usually a search for that lost, pure, true, real, genuine, original, authentic self, often situated within a process of elimination of all that is considered other, superfluous, fake, corrupted, or Westernized
Not You/Like You: Post-Colonial Women and the Interlocking Questions of Identity and Difference - Trinh T. Minh-ha
Identity, thus understood, supposes that a clear dividing line can be made between I and not-I, he and she; between depth and surface, or vertical and horizontal identity; between us here and them over there.
Not You/Like You: Post-Colonial Women and the Interlocking Questions of Identity and Difference - Trinh T. Minh-ha
Identity as understood in the context of a certain ideology of dominance has long been a notion that relies on the concept of an essential, authentic core that remains hidden to one’s consciousness and that requires the elimination of all that is considered foreign or not true to the self, that is to say, non-I, other.