Mourning and Militancy PDF
Mourning and Militancy PDF
Mourning and Militancy PDF
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DOUGLAS CRIMP
2. For other analyses of the slogan Silence=Death, writtenfrom the perspective of people
directlyengaged in AIDS activistand servicework,see Stuart Marshall,"The ContemporaryUse of
Gay History:The Third Reich," forthcomingin October;and Cindy Patton, "Power and the Condi-
tions of Silence," CriticalQuarterly,vol. 31, no. 3 (Fall 1989). See also Douglas Crimp and Adam
Rolston,AIDS Demo Graphics,forthcomingfromBay Press, Spring 1990.
3. I want to thank those people who discussed this subject with me, including their personal
experiences,and helped me throughthe taskof writingthepaper: in addition to Gregg Bordowitz-
David Barr, Peter Bowen, Rosalyn Deutsche, Mitchell Karp, Don Moss, and Laura Pinsky.This
paper was initiallygiven at the 1989 English Instituteat Harvard in the "Gay Men in Criticism"
session organized by D. A. Miller. My thanksto David for resistingthe "policing functionof the
literary"to invitean AIDS activistworkingoutside the disciplineto thisforum.
10. Michael Moon, "Memorial Rags," paper presentedin a session titled"AIDS and Our Profes-
sion" at the 1988 MLA convention,manuscript.I wishto thankMichael Moon for
makingthispaper
available to me.
11. Freud, p. 125.
12. Ibid., pp. 126, 127.
or at all -is one of the mostpersistentscandalsof the AIDS epidemic. LarryKramergave a detailed,
damningaccount of the scandal on a panel discussionof AIDS in the printmedia organized by the
PEN AmericanCenter in New York Cityon May 11, 1989. In the summerof 1989, the Timesran an
editorial that both typifiedits position throughoutthe historyof the epidemic and reached new
heightsof callousness. Implicitlyclaimingonce again that its presumed readers had littleto worry
about, since "the disease is stillverylargelyconfinedto specificriskgroups," the writerwent on to
say, cheerily,"Once all susceptiblemembers [of these groups] are infected,the numbers of new
victimswilldecline." The newspaper'ssimplewritingoffof the livesof gay men, IV drug users,their
sex partnersand children-a mere 200,000-400,000 people alreadyestimatedto be HIV-infected
in New York Cityalone-triggered offan ACT UP demonstration,whichwas in turnthwartedby
perhaps the largestpolice presence at any AIDS activistdemonstrationto date. ACT UP stickers
saying "Buy Your Lies Here. The New YorkTimesReports Half the Truth about AIDS" stilladorn
newsstandsin New York City, while the coin slots of Timesvending machines are covered with
stickersthatread "The New YorkTimesAIDS Reportingis OUT OF ORDER." The Timeseditorialis
reproduced as part of a Gran Fury project titled "Control" in Artforum, vol. xxvii,no. 2 (October
1989), p. 167.
17. Freud, pp. 136-137.
18. The decision not to share the fate of the lost object, as well as guilt at having survived,are
certainlyproblemsof mourningforeveryone.Clearlyinsofaras any death bringsus face to face with
our own mortality,identificationwiththe lost object is somethingwe all feel. Thus, thisdifficulty
of
mourningis certainlynot gay men's alone. I only wishto emphasize itsexacerbationfor gay men to
the extentthatwe are directlyand immediatelyimplicatedin the particularcause of thesedeaths,and
implicated,as well, throughthe specificnature of our deepest pleasures in life--our gay sexuality.
Simon Watney has urged that this very implicationbe taken as the reason for formingconsensus
among gay men about AIDS activism:"I believe thatthe single,centralfactorof greatestsignificance
forall gay men should be the recognitionthatthe currentHIV antibodystatusof everyonewho had
unprotectedsex in the long yearsbeforethe viruswas discoveredis a matterof sheercoincidence
.
Every gay man who had the good fortuneto remain uninfectedin the decade or so before the
emergence of safersex should meditatemost profoundlyon the whimof fate that spared him, but
not others.Those of us who chance to be seronegativehave an absoluteand unconditionalresponsibil-
ityfor the welfareof seropositivegay men" (Simon Watney, "'The Possibilitiesof Permutation':
Pleasure, Proliferation,and the Politicsof Gay Identityin the Age of AIDS," in James Miller,ed.,
AIDS: Crisisand Criticism,Toronto, Universityof Toronto Press, forthcoming1990.
30. Marshall Kirk and Hunter Madsen, AftertheBall: How AmericaWill Conquer Its Fear and
Hatred ofGaysin the'90s, New York, Doubleday, 1989, p. 154.
31. "Cleaning Up Our Act" is actuallya subheadingof the book's finalchapter,whichconcludes
with "A Self-PolicingCode."
32. Kirk and Madsen, p. 278.
33. These accusations appear in Chapter 6: "The State of Our Community:Gay Pride Goeth
before a Fall."
38. Darrell Yates Rist, "The Deadly Costs of an Obsession," Nation, February 13, 1989,
p. 181. For the responseof ACT UP, among others,see the issuesof March 20 and May 1, 1989. For
an impassioned discussion of the entire debate, see Simon Watney, "'The Possibilities of
Permutation.'"
39. It seems to me particularlytelling that throughoutthe epidemic the dominant media has
routinelyfeaturedstoriesabout anxietiesprovoked by AIDS- the anxietiesof health care workers
and cops exposed to needle sticks,of parents whose childrenattend school with an HIV-infected
child,of straightwomen who once upon a timehad a bisexual lover . . . But I have neveronce seen
a storyabout the millionsof gay men who have lived withthese anxietiesconstantlysince 1981.
40. Jacqueline Rose, "Where Does the MiseryCome From?" in Richard Feldstein and Judith
Roof, Feminismand Psychoanalysis,
Ithaca, Cornell UniversityPress,p. 28.
41. Ibid.
New York has too few testingsites to accommodate the people wishingto be
testedas it is, and thatthe servicesnecessaryto care forpeople who testpositive
cannot even accommodate the currentcaseload. Agreeing that testing,counsel-
ling, monitoring,and early treatmentinterventionare indeed crucial, we de-
manded instead an increase in the number of anonymous testingsites and a
systemof neighborhoodwalk-inHIV clinicsfor monitoringand treatment.We
were entirelyconfidentof the validityour protestsand demands. We know the
historyof StephenJoseph's provocations,we know the citygovernment'sabys-
mal failureto provide healthcare foritshuge infectedpopulation,and we know
not onlythe advantagesof earlyinterventionbut also exactlywhat the treatment
options are. But withall this secure knowledge,we forgetone thing:our own
ambivalenceabout being tested,or, ifseropositive,about makingdifficult treat-
ment decisions. For all the hours of floor discussion about demanding wide
availabilityof testingand treatment,we do not alwaysavail ourselvesof them,and
we seldom discuss our anxiety and indecision.42Very shortlyafterJoseph's
announcementin Montreal and our successfulmobilizationagainst his plan,4s
Mark Harrington,a member of ACT UP's Treatment and Data Committee,
made an announcementat a Monday-nightmeeting: "I personallyknow three
people in thisgroup who recentlycame down withPCP," he said. "We have to
realize thatactivismis not a prophylaxisagainstopportunisticinfections;it may
be synergisticwithaerosolized pentamidine,but it won't on itsown preventyou
fromgettingAIDS."
By referringto Freud's conceptof the death drive,I am not sayinganything
so simpleas thata drive to death directlypreventsus fromprotectingourselves
against illness. Rather I am sayingthat by ignoringthe death drive, that is, by
makingall violence external,we fail to confrontourselves,to acknowledge our
ambivalence,to comprehend that our miseryis also self-inflicted. To returnto
myexample: it is not only New York City'scollapsinghealth care systemand its
sinisterhealthcommissionerthataffectour fate. Unconscious conflictcan mean
42. I do not wish to claim that the "right" decision is to be tested. AIDS activistsinsistquite
properlyonlyon choice, and on makingthatchoice viable throughuniversallyavailable health care.
But problemsof HIV testingare not onlysociopolitical,theyare also psychic.In "AIDS and Needless
Deaths: How Early Treatment Is Ignored," Paul Harding Douglas and Laura Pinskyenumeratea
number of barriersto early interventionin HIV disease, includinglack of advocacy, lack of media
coverage, lack of services,and, crucially,"The Symbolic Meaning of Early Interventionfor the
Individual." This finalsectionof theirpaper providesa much-neededanalysisof psychicresistanceto
takingthe HIV antibodytest.I wishto thankPaul Douglas and Laura Pinskyformakingtheirpaper
available to me.
43. The successesof the AIDS activistmovementare, unfortunately, never secure. In the late fall
of 1989, during the transitionfromEd Koch's mayoraltyto that of David Dinkins,StephenJoseph
resignedhis positionas healthcommissioner.But not withouta partinginsultto those of us who had
opposed his policies all along: once again, and now supposedlywiththe consensusof the New York
City Board of Health,Josephasked the state health departmentto collect the names of people who
test HIV antibodypositiveand to trace and contact their sex partnersand those with whom they
shared needles.