Women's Studies in Communication
ISSN: 0749-1409 (Print) 2152-999X (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/uwsc20
Theories in the Flesh and Flights of the
Imagination: Embracing the Soul and Spirit of
Critical Performative Writing in Communication
Research
Robert Gutierrez-Perez
To cite this article: Robert Gutierrez-Perez (2019): Theories in the Flesh and Flights of the
Imagination: Embracing the Soul and Spirit of Critical Performative Writing in Communication
Research, Women's Studies in Communication, DOI: 10.1080/07491409.2018.1551695
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/07491409.2018.1551695
Published online: 22 Feb 2019.
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WOMEN’S STUDIES IN COMMUNICATION
https://doi.org/10.1080/07491409.2018.1551695
ARTICLE
Theories in the Flesh and Flights of the Imagination:
Embracing the Soul and Spirit of Critical Performative
Writing in Communication Research
Robert Gutierrez-Perez
Department of Communication Studies, University of Nevada, Reno, Reno, Nevada, USA
ABSTRACT
KEYWORDS
This critical essay describes and demonstrates the uses and unique
contributions of performative writing as a form of inquiry into the
materialities and mobilities of sociocultural communicative phenomena. Embracing an Anzald
uan approach, the author utilizes
Mesoamerican Aztec and Chicanx history, iconography, and mythos
to argue for an ontological reimaging of where research should
begin and end. As a methodological intervention, this article challenges traditional impulses regarding where knowledge generation
occurs, which knowledges are valid, and who counts as a valuable
knowledge producer. By shifting genres, breaking grammatical rules,
and creatively constructing poetics and rhythm (flor y canto), this
“flight of the imagination” focuses on what Chicana, Latina, and indigenous scholars have termed “fleshing the spirit” or “spiriting the
flesh.” By embracing the soul work and spirituality of writing, this
piece offers an art-based approach to methodological inquiry that
functions as a sharp critique of the White capitalist cisheteropatriarchal structure of higher education that maintains status quo understandings of knowledge. When rerouting our methodological
impulses toward a critical and decolonial telos and embracing the
soul and spirit of performative writing, I argue that our first move
must be to make an ontological shift in how we see the world and
our place in it—we must begin and end with “theories in the flesh.”
Gloria Anzald
ua; Chicanx
history; decolonial theory;
Mesoamerican iconography;
queer of color critique
It is dangerous work
diving in
reaching out
changed, changing, breaking down
pulling yourself back together, loss,
losing, each pain a lesson
each wounding a bridge
to another image
flesh
bone
sinew
Move
Engage the witness
Perform the ceremony to open up
sacred critical dialogues
CONTACT Robert Gutierrez-Perez
rgutierrezperez@unr.edu
Department of Communication Studies, University of
Nevada, Reno, Mail Stop 0228, 1664 N. Virginia Street, Reno, NV 89557, USA.
ß 2019 The Organization for Research on Women and Communication
2
R. GUTIERREZ-PEREZ
don’t re-center
Shift into shifting
into meaning-making
into a cauldron como una bruja
stretching into yoga
breathing energy into the third eye
chakra, purple glowing
swirling violet over a question
an indigo theory
a body
performing
flesh
Stop
failing to fail
change the cage the metaphor
the definition
bars
chains
anchors
turn heavy
south
another mundo
the under belly
down into flesh
fingers in your navel
cradled in the deep
the rage
afraid to glimpse
shouting at the surface
darkness in your ears
unworthy
selfish
ugly
You think you deserve space
Look at you monstrous
crazy
shapeshifter
unknowable
Stay still and be what I need you to be
On your back I can be stable
letting you eat the crumbs
from my cake
you can
lick the frosting from my fingers
pink sweet greedy
needy to remain
insane in this contract
Spirit
lift me from this nightmare
to another image
Someone call una curandera to bring my soul back
from the dead
this susto
this loss
I promise to bring messages
from loved ones, from the creative
imaginary cenote
place of deep waters,
conocimientos,
rippling across the surface
drip dropping to another image
to another image
WOMEN’S STUDIES IN COMMUNICATION
3
to another image
imagine
In the opening poem, I have provided a barometer for this entire piece—a measuring of
pressure to give you, the reader, a corresponding and cascading density of images,
themes, characters, and narrative story line to help you engage as a witness to this essay.
I did this because I need you to trust me. If I tell you too much at the beginning (as in
any great adventure), then the writing becomes wooded and cold (Anzald
ua, Reader;
Gutierrez-Perez, “A Letter”). Predictable. Frozen. You aren’t allowed to feel uncomfortable. To feel unanchored, freewheeling, changed, changing, breaking down. Loss. On
this flight of the imagination, please feel free to circle back to this opening poem to
find your bearings if you do feel lost. In fact, I welcome this circular movement because
I want us to perform a ceremony on the page that resists recentering performative writing around the needs, values, and belief systems currently dominating communication
research (Calafell and Moreman; Chakravartty et al.). Decolonial performative writing is
a mode of research methodology that gives “voice to those deemed other, interrogate[s]
larger sociopolitical matrices of oppression, and speak[s] back to power” (Willink et al.
295). It feels dangerous to choose to do the labor of diving in and reaching out, showing you each pain, each lesson, each bridge to another image, but when I consider the
relationship between critical and performance theories, I must take risks because I am
literally trying to move the materiality of your flesh, bone, and sinew. Undertaking dangerous work (Madison, “Dangerous”) and/or “wicked problems” in communication
research (Willink et al.) means that performative writers must dive into their own flesh
as a way of connecting theory to the sacred and material dimensions inherent within
the process of writing about research.
These “theories in the flesh” are embodied, experiential, and intersectional theories of
resistance and agency drawn from everyday life (Anzald
ua, Light; Calafell, “Rhetorics”;
Moraga and Anzald
ua), yet performing on the page is inevitably restricted and
restrained by the politics of textuality (Conquergood). Indeed, textuality engages in
scriptocentrism as it largely remains embedded in colonial practices and histories that
legitimate particular forms of knowledge production. My performing body, as I write
this very page, also becomes placed in a “matrix of domination” (Hill Collins) where I
am always already both privileged and oppressed within a modern-colonial gender system (Anzald
ua, Reader; Ba~
nales; Lugones). In this piece, I confront the coloniality and
materiality of textual conventions through poetry, mythmaking, and performative
writing to move into a space in/between you and me where the flower and song of our
co-created performance takes us on a flight of the imagination to other worlds. These
worlds are places where we may enflesh the soul and spirit of writing about research
with the everyday lives of those surviving on the peripheries of society and culture
(Anzald
ua, Light; Facio and Lara).
As a queer man of color, I want to do scholarship that addresses both the mobilities
of displacement and exile, as well as the material contours of erasure for my (queer of
color) communities. As an urgent attempt to participate in an activist world through art
and scholarship, performative writing is dangerous work because the spiritual and psychic dimensions of creative acts of resistance transform images. As I have written about
elsewhere, “by opening borders, removing disciplinary walls, and standing on shifting
4
R. GUTIERREZ-PEREZ
sands, the performative writer is free to let the culture dictate the language and the rules
of its existence” (Willink et al. 303). Yet, as of now, scriptocentrism continues to uphold
“patriarchal constructions that align women with the body, and men with mental faculties, help keep the mind-body, reason-emotion, objective-subjective, as well as masculine-feminine hierarchies stable” (Conquergood 82). For society to undergo a
transformation, our relationships and creative projects need to undergo transformations
as well. White supremacist, capitalist, cisheteropatriarchal systems thrive in processes of
prediction and control, so performative writing that works from an awareness that the
spirit and soul are intimate parts of the writing and research process provides an alternative starting point for critical decolonial scholarship (Anzald
ua, Light 44; Facio and
Lara; Gonzalez).
Overwhelmed by this dangerous and embodied work (Gutierrez-Perez, “Bridging”)
and finding myself experiencing writer’s block, I decided to participate in a gong bath
with my husband and our two friends. According to the flyer at my yoga studio, a gong
bath is an ancient form of healing that utilizes sound and crystals through planetary
gongs tuned to the frequency of the sun.1 Arriving ten minutes early, I nervously asked
the workshop coordinator for a crystal to help with transitions. He wanted more details.
“Well, I am moving, graduating, starting a new job … ” He raised his hand to stop me.
“So you want to quicken the transition period.” I nodded, and he handed me a crystal
with a name I still can’t pronounce. He then told me to place it on my third eye (forehead) during the gong bath, explaining, “This is for quickening a spiritual transformation. If it gets to be too much, then take it off your forehead. Be careful. It’s
extraterrestrial.” To find my way around writer’s block, I elected to challenge the “rigid
disciplinary and academic dictates of what ‘counts’ as a source of knowledge or
information” (Gonzalez 633), choosing instead to approach research as an “intimate,
organic and interdependent” process (635). This flight of the imagination is and is not
about a gong bath, and it is absolutely not about the Western co-optation and appropriation of non-Western cultures for the purposes of consumption and control. As a
researcher and writer, I am always swirling over questions about scholarly tradition and
creative resistance. In this essay, I am stretching out an everyday moment, calling it violet, purple glowing. Like una bruja, I am making meaning in a cauldron: shifting, performing, and writing with my body, with my own flesh.
Performative writing is an embodied method of social scientific inquiry into a culture,
ideology, theory, image, or encounter. “In performance and performative writing we
have the potential to connect theory, performance, and lived experience” (Calafell,
Monstrosity 29). Performative writing is about materiality and mobility. For example,
when he was alive, my White and Deaf grandfather loved to fish, and now, my still-living Mexican and Deaf grandmother loves to sign me the story of when we all went
camping together when I was a young boy. With hands and face full of exclamation
and excitement, her fingers move, and I can feel the flurry of their motion circulate and
swirl the air around me. By submitting characters for examination and a scene for context, I utilize images to sketch out a biracial marriage within an ableist framework
where I, as a young mestizo boy, am near the lake playing beside my grandfather fishing. Gloria Anzald
ua describes images as “animals, helping beings, who assist us on our
underworld journey each night” (Light 28). As a performative writer, I wrestle and give
WOMEN’S STUDIES IN COMMUNICATION
5
birth to this image on the page by “tuning in to the ‘other’ mind or ‘other’ self,” which
emerges as “the creative unconscious taps into el cenote, an inner, underground river of
information” (28). Standing in the water as a young boy, my grandfather hooks a bite
and a silver fish comes splish-splashing out of the river. Shocked! I run screaming to
my grandmother. To them, this is a cute moment with their grandson. For me, it was
the beginning of my continuing fear of open bodies of water.
Can you imagine? The thought of an entire world moving and functioning all
around me without my knowledge—without the full range of my senses, and without
my control—frightens me to death. Lying on my blue yoga mat, I lift the crystal up
to the light falling directly on me from the skylight window in the ceiling (it is sunset). The unknown crystal has a smoky dull green opacity in the light. I place the triangular stone longwise on my “third eye” and begin settling into the cushion
underneath my head. I place a quilt made for me by my grandmother underneath my
feet, elevating them slightly. After a brief explanation of the instruments by the facilitator, the vibrations begin to wash over my body. Immediately, I feel a balancing, a
resonance as my ears adjust and register the continuity of the vibrations. I practice
leading my consciousness around my body. Left shoulder, arm, hip, leg, toes, then up
and down the right leg, toes, quad, hip, shoulder, neck. With my eyes closed, my
imagination travels through memories, taking me to another image, another image,
another image, imagine.
According to Anzald
ua, the “imagination opens the road to both personal and societal change—transformation of self, consciousness, community, culture, society” (Light
44). She writes, “My imagination allows me to use my intuition, to figure things out in
images. Imagination is my musa bruja. The images are a gateway to el cenote, the place
where they take a body and life” (36). Culture touches and influences images and circulates them to be adopted, modified, or enriched before passing them onto another culture, and “the process is repeated until the original meanings of images are pushed into
the unconscious” (Anzald
ua, Reader 180). Like a freshwater spring in the mountains, el
cenote, the communal unconscious reservoir, bubbles up metaphors and images if one
is willing to enter silence, go inward, and attend to feelings corresponding to earth,
female, and water energies (Anzald
ua, Interviews/Entrevistas). Creative acts, such as
writing and performance, utilize the spiritual and psychic component of the imagination
through practices “of spiritual excavation, of (ad)venturing into the inner void, extrapolating meaning from it and sending it out into the world. To do this kind of work
requires the total person—body, soul, mind, and spirit” (Anzald
ua, Reader 135).
Suddenly, the gong darkens in depth and length, and I am no longer in control of my
consciousness as images and colors flash across my eyes.
I focus on the space between my eyebrows and try to let the weight of the crystal
anchor me to my body. My heart is racing and my mind is swirling through images
and colors like an astronaut spiraling through space. I am reminded by critical performance scholar Dwight Conquergood that “with displacement, upheaval, unmooring, come
the terror and potentiality of flux, improvisation, and creative recombinations” (89).
How can we use the imagination to transform “customary frameworks and conceptual
categories reinforced by language and consensual reality” (Anzald
ua, Light 45)? How
can I utilize the performance paradigm to privilege the “particular, participatory,
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R. GUTIERREZ-PEREZ
dynamic, intimate, precarious, embodied experience grounded in historical process, contingency, and ideology” (Conquergood 92)? Thunk! I am in un otro mundo.
Underwater, I am breathing and feeling hot with a rage that I didn’t know I could
experience. Scared, I try to run, but my feet won’t move because they are stuck in the
sand. An image of the Grenada Underwater Sculpture Park registers in my mind, and I
feel the lives of those hauntingly beautiful statues of people underwater. Am I one of
these statues?! Am I in the underworld?!
In the Aztec ontomythological cosmos, the underworld is the “realm of Earth energies, animal spirits, and the dead who have not moved on to the next level of existence”
(Anzald
ua, Light 25). In writing about the soul and spirit of communication research as
material and mobile, I am attempting to displace notions that identity and culture are
“given and essential” and resituate these as “constructed and relational” (Conquergood
88). Identity (re)formation is a “performance in process” rather than a “postulate, premise, or originary principle” (89), so I am constructing a borderlands ontology drawing
from Conquergood’s insights into identity, culture, and performance to change the
frameworks and customs of where knowledge generation occurs, which knowledges are
valid, and who counts as a valuable knowledge producer.
My construction expands on Anzald
ua’s understanding of the realm of the soul as
the realm of the imagination (Light). The power of the soul comes from its intimate
connection with the dead (Light). Noting that the “the psyche’s language is metaphorical,” Anzald
ua describes these figures and landscapes as being “experienced as alive
and independent of the dreamer. They speak with their own voices; move about at will.
They possess an intelligence and an inner knowing” (Light 36). Flights of the imagination are intersectional in their performance, and the telos of writing, moving, circling,
looping through metaphoric play is to enact an intersectional rhetoric, which is a “kind
of rhetoric wherein one form of discourse is not privileged over another; rather, diverse
forms intersect organically to create something challenging to rhetorical norms” (EnckWanzer 191). Attempting to describe, touch, and feel an image like in this flight of the
imagination is an attempt to learn from another reality, another set of rules, another
story of what is and can be (Anzald
ua, Light).
I look up within my imagination and see a pale light shining through the surface of
the murky and smoky dull green water. I recognize this soft light as the moon: my
guardian. I focus on my breathing. Inhale. 1 2 3 4. Exhale. 1 2 3 4. Rather than fight
the image, I decide to stay and explore—a temporary immobility that is partially a conscious effort but mainly an unconscious and emotional one. From this approach,
Each reality is only a description, a system of perception and language. When you learn to
access other “realities,” you undo one description or plane/level of reality and reconstruct
another or others. You learn a new language and a new way of viewing the world, and you
bring this “magical” knowledge and apply it to the everyday world. (Anzald
ua, Light 45)
I decide to shift from my first-person perspective to a third-person perspective. What
do I look like? What sights can I see to help me describe this reality? I will my consciousness to look outside myself. In performance terms, Conquergood describes sight
and surveillance as dependent on detachment and distance whereas “getting perspective
on something entails withdrawal from intimacy” (87), so I move utilizing a willed perception that allows me to inhabit the image from a distance and look at myself stuck in
WOMEN’S STUDIES IN COMMUNICATION
7
the sand. I see long dark hair and a pale brown complexion. I am wearing a headdress
with multiple thick bands wrapped around my head, each lined on top and bottom
with small decorative balls. With two large tassels attached on each side of my face and
a large knot at the back of my head, I am a beautiful young woman, mouth agape,
screaming at the surface of the lake. Later in Yin Yoga,2 I connect this image to
Chalchiuhtlicue (“She of the Jade Skirt”), goddess of lakes, streams, rivers, and other
fresh waters in Aztec ontomythology. As I observe the female aspect of and wife to
Tlaloc, god of rain, I recognize and am suddenly aware that this body of water is a lake.
Anzald
ua writes that “awareness is not just in the mind, but also includes body knowledge. This awareness awakens some deep hidden memory or lost knowledge of times
past, reminding me that I’m doing something I didn’t know I knew” (Light 24). Once I
am aware of her, I cannot shake her; I cannot escape her fingering at my navel, her call
from the dark depths of water and earth urging my soul to remember.
In Aztec ontomythology, Chalchiuhtlicue ruled the world of the Fourth Sun, which
was a watery sun. In some tellings of her myth, she destroyed the Fourth Sun with a
massive flood that lasted for fifty-two years to purify the world (Le
on-Portilla). In other
versions, she was goaded on by the imbalance in the people of that world and by the
misgivings and manipulations of Tlaloc, who enraged her with his infidelity. In her
defense, she sent those worthy into the heavens while the rest were transformed into
fish (Kroger and Granziera). The Metropolitan Museum of Art currently displays online
a fifteenth- to early-sixteenth-century basalt and pigment stone-carved figure of this
powerful goddess.3 Chalchiuhtlicue was believed to have lived in the mountains, and
she represented floods and the terrestrial aspects of water, such as fertility, sustenance,
purity, source of life, and the instability/transience of life (Kroger and Granziera). Like
many Aztec deities, Chalchiuhtlicue represents qualities of both life and death, specifically in regard to the maladies and blessings that lakes, streams, rivers, and springs bring
to the people (Kroger and Granziera).
By remembering Chalchiuhtlicue, I reimagine critical and performance theory to create transformative images for those scholars looking to decolonize performance and
writing. Further, I want to resist White, heterosexual, Western-dominant thinking that
claims unfettered access to indigenous and queer knowledges as an unquestioned privilege of the researcher. In critical performative writing, those who do not reflexively
locate their place in hierarchies of power or who attempt to transcend the pain of their
own shame and guilt about privilege by taking over “other” (“exotic” or “ethnic”) subjectivities are not doing the work of emancipation. One needs to feel the bars and
chains of positionality. Privilege anchors you in this reality. Turns you heavy. South.
Into the underbelly. Cradled in the deep. How can a performative writer utilize healing
images to “bring back the pieces, heal las rajaduras” (Anzald
ua, Light 29)? How can I
imagine the world in which I want to exist?
I understand Chalchiuhtlicue to be an ancestral image from an Aztec and Chicanx
mythopoetic past that I deploy here as a metaphor of the personal and collective rage at
a colonial/modern gender system that continues to oppress, marginalize, and violently
suppress my (queer of color) communities. As Conquergood writes, “critical theory is
committed to unveiling the political stakes that anchor cultural practices—research and
scholarly practices no less than the everyday” (81). By moving into an image, a culture,
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R. GUTIERREZ-PEREZ
a research situation, the performative writer creatively engages with and intimately
becomes involved in the activity, the historical situatedness of the image, and the unique
individuals involved in the doing (Conquergood 93). Staring at the moon from within
the eyes of the imagined image of Chalchiuhtlicue, I understand my rage in this
instance to be that I, too, want to move beyond the surface and hear my queer of color
voice welcomed into academia, popular culture, and history. Discussing the politics of
narratives, history, queer temporality, and queer diaspora, Bernadette Calafell writes,
“[I]n the performance or reembodiment of memory not only are present and past conditions affected, but in this telling the future is opened. Idealistically, these openings
would allow for altered futures and possibilities, forays into materiality” (“Pro(re-)claiming” 53). As a queer Chicanx cisgender male, I want the world to remember She of the
Jade Skirt because I want them to remember how her power flooded over their skyscrapers. An image of a powerful femininity that showcases other ways of being for
Chicanas and Latinas beyond the Virgen de Guadalupe, La Malinche, or La Llorona
(Calafell, Latina/o, “Pro(re-)claiming”; Moreman and Calafell). Chalchiuhtlicue is a
metaphor for life (Anzald
ua, Light) or an “equipment for living” (Burke).
Suddenly, I am no longer passively observing through the eyes of the image; I am
shouting with it. Performative writing foregrounds story, orality, and voice as instruments to interrupt, transgress, transform, and transcend oppressive practices (Willink
et al.), so I am accepting the rage, the frustration, the need to spit the swallowed vitriol
back up out of me because I don’t want it. I don’t need it. I am claiming this image as
a counterstory to those racial and classed microaggressions hurled cruelly my way at
academic meetings and academic events (Willink et al. 293–96). You can have them
back. I will no longer stay still and be what you need me to be. I have embraced the
image of Chalchiuhtlicue, and I don’t want your pink sweet greedy cake. I will not lick
the frosting from your fingers. I would be insane to remain in this dynamic, in this
relationship. Spirit, lift me from this nightmare to another image. Someone call a curandera to bring my soul back.
In the Codex Borbonicus, created sometime before or after the conquest,
Chalchiuhtlicue is once again depicted in her distinctive headdress and jade skirt with a
river of water rushing out from below her, resembling a woman’s water breaking before
childbirth (5). In the river, two babies (one female and one male) are flowing out of
Chalchiuhtlicue, which depicts her role as materially present in childbirth as an element
vital to the watery nature of the human womb and the medical process of birthing (i.e.,
cleansing the newborn, perspiration during labor) (Kroger and Granziera). This image
of Chalchiuhtlicue does not equate womanhood with motherhood, but she is a spiritual
guardian that performed literally as the water in the ceremony and also as a symbol of
something radically interconnected to the world and the divine. Chalchiuhtlicue is the
patron goddess of childbirth.
Symbolized in the story of the destruction of the Fourth Sun, purification through
water is the domain of Chalchiuhtlicue, and her name and element is/was invoked in
the bathing ceremonies of Aztec newborns. According to Miguel Le
on-Portilla, these rituals were spiritual performances deeply connected to the soul. At the bathing ceremony,
the midwife would cut the child’s umbilical cord. As she washed the child, she would
speak the names of the gods, including a prayer directly to Chalchiuhtlicue (Kroger and
WOMEN’S STUDIES IN COMMUNICATION
9
Granziera). Afterward, the child would receive a name based on the day he or she was
born (Le
on-Portilla; Mckeever Furst). Names given were connected to the complex
Aztec calendar, which was in turn intimately connected to the movement of the cosmos;
therefore, one’s name was an expression of soul/fate (Mckeever Furst). Chalchiuhtlicue
is a nonessentialized metaphor for a particular type of earth, feminine, and water energy
that moves through our bodies in tandem with the cosmos (fate), the divine (spirit),
and the dead (soul). It is another place to start. It is a conocimiento rippling across the
surface drip-dropping to another image. Smelling a shadow, I turn to see silver flicks of
light. It is a school of fish. The vibrations begin to fade. I feel my soul being called back
from this susto. Back in that Denver yoga studio. I am reeling as we stumble dumbfoundedly to our car. We grab some fast food and discuss our experiences in the vibrations over soda and fries. I feel privileged and displaced as I chew and consume my
late dinner.
To/from the borderlands
To embrace the traumas of breaking down, changing, and bridging as a way of life is
to risk the safety of the soul and spirit. Anzald
ua describes these affective flights of
the imagination through the creative act of writing as a kind of “shaman aesthetic”
(Reader 121–25). How can I draw on the underground river of images of my ancestors without appropriating from the very real and living indigenous communities still
speaking Nahuatl? How I can I provide a barometer for the reader to measure the
degree of reflexivity necessary for this method of inquiry? Returning to the body foregrounds the flesh as a way of knowing and being (Conquergood 82), and by embracing the emotional, watery energy of Chalchiuhtlicue, I am engaging in a method of
performative writing that is invested in theories of and in the flesh. The construction
of a mind/body hierarchy is often uplifted in academic writing “so that mental
abstractions and rational thought are taken as both epistemologically and morally
superior to sensual experience, bodily sensations, and the passions” (Conquergood 82).
The tendency of textuality to freeze culture, identity, and history makes the embodied,
moving performance of letters and words, which at one point shook rapidly and
dynamically during the text’s creation, a long-forgotten memory. My hands, fluid over
the keyboard altar, coolly run together sentences and paragraphs about places my spirit has traveled … but the text continues to be embedded in colonial practices and
histories surrounding forms of knowledge production in which my performing body
is now implicated.
Place and displacement, language and hybridity, and appropriation and mimicry are
all key concepts in postcolonial theory that critical performance can reimage and
reroute to move intellectual inquiry toward healing. Flights of the imagination taken
through performative writing, such as the one staged in this essay, send the writer’s spirit to “address the range of effects and material consequences within the dynamic of
migration from one local site to another as well as migration from one’s homeland, as
the colonized margin, to the colonial center of the European or global North metropole” (Madison, Critical 58). To write this is not to equate material forms of diaspora
and (neo)colonial oppression with spiritual forms but to mark my position as a
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R. GUTIERREZ-PEREZ
performative writer who views text as sacred, as poetic, as art engaging in a process that
draws on the creative imaginary to utilize language in hybrid forms. I mark this as an
ontological shift because “my soul makes itself through the creative act” (Anzald
ua,
Borderlands 95), and instead of existing as dead/inert/frozen, “the work has an identity;
it is a ‘who’ or a ‘what’ and contains the presences of persons, that is, incarnations of
gods or ancestors or natural and cosmic powers” (89). As Anzald
ua succinctly explains:
“The ability of story (prose and poetry) to transform the storyteller and the listener into
something or someone else is shamanistic” (88). It is an aesthetic or an orientation to
the page that does not “split the artistic from the functional, the sacred from the secular, art from everyday life” (88). Shifting into an artistic orientation to the page, performative writing utilizes “the imagination to impose order on chaos; she gives psychic
confession form and direction, provides language to distressed and confused people—a
language that expresses previously inexpressible psychic states and enables the reader to
undergo in an ordered and intelligible form real experiences that would otherwise be
chaotic and inexpressible” (Anzald
ua, Light 39).
Principally, flights of the imagination are concerned with performance and hermeneutics: “What kinds of knowledge are privileged or displaced when performed experience becomes a way of knowing, a method of critical inquiry, a mode of
understanding?” (Conquergood 96). In performing such a practice, this essay offers a
call to embrace, rather than avoid, a language of the spirit and soul that is committed
to theories in the flesh. Oriented to the material relationships between writing, the
body, images, and decolonizing intellectual inquiry, theories in the flesh originate from
the following faculty: “practice as a form of theorizing and theorizing as a form of
practice” (Anzald
ua, Light 181).
Given how violence is being enacted on particular bodies linked to particular histories
and cultural identities at this particular moment, it is important to note that not all
writers are taking the same risks with this method or as vulnerable when undertaking
performative writing in communication research (Gutierrez-Perez and Andrade;
Gutierrez-Perez, “Bridging”). The challenge for writers and researchers is to learn which
old metaphors and images no longer serve our selves, our communities, or our collective vision of a world where we all matter (Anzald
ua, Reader; Calafell, “When”). Rather
than calling for the water to rise, I am interested in images that stimulate transformations, transgressions, transcendence. “Certain images change the images that live within
a person’s psyche, altering the stories that live within rather than trying to ‘fix’ the person that ‘houses’ these images” (Anzald
ua, Light 35). However, to locate such soul-healing images, a performative writer must dive into the pain, the loss, and the wounds/
traumas. There is always a tension within writing between attempts to capture fluidity,
movement, and bodily sensation and the detached, disembodied, and immobilizing
function of the text itself. This divide demands the courage to try (and risk failing) to
produce texts that imperfectly maintain the mobility and materiality of a spiritual, soulful, and enfleshed communicative experience.
Notes
1. At the time of publication of this essay, the video “Sol Mobilis—The 32” Sun Gong” is
available and can be used to sample the audio being described throughout this document.
WOMEN’S STUDIES IN COMMUNICATION
11
Please feel free to play this audio during the reading of this essay as an extra sensory layer
to this methodological intervention.
2. Yin Yoga is described by the Samadhi Center for Yoga in Denver, Colorado, as a “quiet yet
profound and highly therapeutic style of yoga that is available to all students at all levels.
The power of Yin is in its long-held relaxed floor postures. This kind of stretch stimulates
the deep, connective ‘Yin’ tissues of the body, affecting not only the physical body, but also
energetic aspects of the self. Yin yoga strengthens the flow of prana (life force) or chi,
maintains the health of the meridian system of the body, and as an additional bonus
contributes to the mindfulness necessary for a successful meditation practice” (Annie). My
interest in yoga began through my theoretical explorations of Chicana feminisms. For
example, Gloria Anzald
ua discuss a “yoga of the body” that AnaLouise Keating discusses
during their interview as a “union of body with mind and spirit” (Interviews/Entrevistas 99).
3. See https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/307651.
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