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2.53 MB

Extraction Summary

4
People
2
Organizations
1
Locations
1
Events
1
Relationships
5
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Article / blog post printout (house oversight evidence)
File Size: 2.53 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a personal essay or blog post included in a House Oversight evidence dump (labeled HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018595). The text discusses the intersection of feminism, BDSM, and cultural imperialism, referencing an interaction at a Post Office and a blog post by a writer named 'Trinity.' It explores arguments regarding whether specific sexual preferences are innate or symptoms of societal oppression/patriarchy.

People (4)

Name Role Context
The Author ('I') Narrator/Writer
Identifies as a 'kinkster,' pro-BDSM activist, and feminist; discussing cultural imperialism and sexuality.
Unidentified Male ('He') Interlocutor
A man at the Post Office who comments on American vs. African culture.
Trinity Blogger
Described as a 'very articulate BDSM blogger' who wrote a post titled 'Why BDSM?'.
Unidentified Commenter Commenter
A 'radical feminist commenter' quoted from Trinity's blog post.

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
Post Office
Location where the opening interaction takes place.
House Oversight Committee
Implied by the footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018595'.

Timeline (1 events)

Unknown
Interaction at a Post Office involving a discussion on culture.
Post Office
The Author Unidentified Male

Locations (1)

Location Context
Physical location of the opening anecdote.

Relationships (1)

The Author Reader/Admirer Trinity
Refers to Trinity as 'very articulate' and mentions 'one of my favorite Trinity posts'.

Key Quotes (5)

""Well, that's American culture," he said finally. "It's not African culture.""
Source
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Quote #1
"I'm a kinkster and pro-BDSM activist, but I'm also a feminist, which can make for some serious anxiety."
Source
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Quote #2
"If we lived in a healthy society, the idea of BDSM would not even come up in the first place."
Source
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Quote #3
"In other words: the Patriarchy made me kinky, and if I don't challenge kink then I'm supporting the Patriarchy."
Source
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Quote #4
"Give up on our desires and never have satisfying sex again?"
Source
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Quote #5

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,352 characters)

He looked shocked; I wondered if he'd expected me to say no. "What?!" he cried, and took a moment to regain his composure. "Well, that's American culture," he said finally. "It's not African culture."
I took a deep breath and pressed my lips together. I'd be in big trouble with my employer if I kicked up a storm at the Post Office, but oh, man -- in that moment, I really, really wanted to. "How much do I owe you?" I asked instead, and went home to lose myself in a nice sex-positive book.
Personally, what I find most intriguing about these assertions of cultural imperialism is how they compare to similar assertions in the West. I'm a kinkster and pro-BDSM activist, but I'm also a feminist, which can make for some serious anxiety. A lot of my coming-out process involved both a difficult internal struggle and my observations of arguments between kinksters and anti-BDSM feminists, who often make very similar allegations to these African speakers on "cultural imperialism."
The very articulate BDSM blogger Trinity (who, of late, has sadly decreased her involvement in the blogosphere) has spent lots of time analyzing and participating in those arguments. One of my favorite Trinity posts, titled "Why BDSM?", hosts a radical feminist commenter who writes:
If we lived in a healthy society, the idea of BDSM would not even come up in the first place. BDSM is here, as a manifestation of that unhealthiness, but to try to 'stop' the people who aren't being coerced into it would do more harm than the thing itself....
I am not saying tolerance of BDSM directly causes our sick society, but that it is a very strong symptom of a society were hierarchy, inequality and degradation are seen as the norm of human relations. Accepting BDSM is accepting this status quo. ... by challenging all inequality, including that in BDSM, we are putting forward the idea that other possibilities are available.
In other words: the Patriarchy made me kinky, and if I don't challenge kink then I'm supporting the Patriarchy. I would imagine that Africans pushing the cultural imperialism argument would say something similar: Western colonial influence made you gay, and if you don't challenge homosexuality then you're supporting Western colonial influence.
Well, "with us or against us" arguments are inherently flawed. And then there's the fact that, similarly to homosexuals, many of us kinksters consider our desires to be innate and largely unchangeable. So if our desires can't be changed, then what exactly is accomplished by shaming us through anti-oppressive theory-speak? (And make no mistake -- for those of us who take the theory seriously, it really does feel shameful to find others telling us we're in opposition, even within the private sphere of sexuality.) I'm not remotely convinced that our sexuality arose solely because of an oppressive society -- but even if it's true, then what am I, or African gay people, supposed to actually do in order to challenge the sick status quo? Give up on our desires and never have satisfying sex again?
I tend to think that the idea of sexual orientations or innateness is a red herring -- not because I believe that innateness doesn't exist, but because it's not actually relevant to sexual morality. What should be important is only the question of whether all involved
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018595

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