Hi.  After sending you yiesterday's email about the Get Lit Players, I
realized there was something missing.
I knew the event was free, but Diane Lane wrote 'For more information go to
<blocked::http://www.classicslam.org/> www.classicslam.org.  (Free
admission was stated there)  Fair enough, but that often implies an entrance
fee.  I also checked with the  
Get Lit office and my understanding is correct.  There is no charge for this
extrordinary event.   
Needless to say, the Wiltern and associated costs are steep, so they would
appreciate donations.  That's my  
statement, as a friend, not theirs.  Anyway, please pack the joint.  If you
really liked what they're doing, please  
comment on the blog.  Keep stuff going, at   

 
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/diane-luby-lane/los-angeles-literary-riot_b_1
416291.html>
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/diane-luby-lane/los-angeles-literary-riot_b_14
16291.html

Now, here's another extrordinary woman with great ideas and working at them.
-Ed 
 
  <http://www.thenation.com/article/166939/eggs-are-people-too>
http://www.thenation.com/article/166939/eggs-are-people-too
 
Imaginary Citizens, United
 
Diary of A Mad Law Professor
: 
 <http://www.thenation.com/authors/patricia-j-williams> Patricia J. Williams
 The Nation: In the April 9, 2012 edition
<http://www.thenation.com/issue/april-9-2012> .
 
 
It's an interesting time to ponder the meaning of life and death in the eyes
of the law. On one hand, Christian conservatives increasingly seek to
sacralize embryos from the moment of conception. On the other, the Supreme
Court just heard a case that, among other things, considers the extent to
which the corporeal death of a parent is really the "end of the line" with
regard to "survivor" benefits for children conceived by artificial
insemination from the frozen sperm of a deceased father. On one hand,
Citizens United granted First Amendment rights to corporations that are
identical to-and some would say exceed-those of natural persons; on the
other, the Second Circuit recently ruled that individuals, but not
corporations, can be sued for human rights abuses.
It's interesting to consider the larger social anxieties at play when it
comes to the "right to life" debates. Rick Santorum recently made a great
show for personhood amendments, declaring, "Personhood is defined as an
entity that is genetically human and alive." But unfertilized eggs are
"genetically human." And sperm swim, so technically they're "alive." (Or, as
an irreverent friend suggested: fellatio must therefore be a form of
cannibalism.) If egg and sperm are sacralized even before they meet, it goes
a long way to explaining why the evils of contraception are back on the
table.But if we push this figuration only a little, "conceptually," life
begins with DNA. Conceivably, every cell in our body is brimming with
generative potential, particularly given new technologies of assisted
reproduction. Santorum's stance thus becomes a peculiar cross between the
theological imperative to be fruitful and multiply and the fetishism of
microbiological cellular promise.

The oddity of this discourse is best revealed by a recent rash of satiric
bills pressed by clever female legislators. Virginia State Senator Janet
Howell wrote an amendment to the requirement that women be subjected to
vaginal probe before being able to have an abortion: "Prior to prescribing
medication for erectile dysfunction, a physician shall perform a digital
rectal examination and a cardiac stress test. Informed consent for these
procedures shall be given at least 24 hours before the procedures are
performed." (Her amendment was defeated, but by a satisfyingly narrow margin
of 21 to 19.) In Oklahoma, Constance Johnson introduced the "anti-spillage"
amendment, which holds that "any action in which a man ejaculates or
otherwise deposits semen anywhere but in a woman's vagina shall be
interpreted and construed as an action against an unborn child."

Frankly, I respect the Oklahoma Personhood Amendment's proposal that life is
sacred, "regardless of place of residence, race, gender, age, disability,
health, level of function, condition of dependency, or method of
reproduction." But this expansive notion never seems to translate into
policies that would provide actual food, shelter, healthcare or material
succor for those precious lives, either pre- or post-birth. (In New Hanover,
North Carolina, the County Board of Commissioners recently turned down a
family healthcare grant, with one commissioner remarking that "if these
young women were responsible people and didn't have the sex to begin with,
we wouldn't be in this situation.") Those claiming to give "voice to the
voiceless" entities within the womb pit the interests of conceptual life
against the bodies of living women. In any event, I'm not sure why regard
for incipient humanity should make us feel bound to breed like bunnies
within marriage or be constrained from copulating outside of it-particularly
given that 99 percent of American women use some form of birth control.

At the same time, there are important principles being tested in these
debates: the degree to which we feel sex to be a natural bodily function,
whether pregnancy is always wholly a woman's autonomous choice. Framed this
way, our discussions of life and death seem oddly incoherent and
disconnected. We love the very thought of life, but we disparage "anchor
babies," "welfare children" and teens of color like Trayvon Martin. We spend
billions on fertility treatments for the wealthy but speak of pregnancy
among the poor in terms of economic surplus, burden, free rider.

These discussions also vivify proxies of personhood in much the same way
that corporations are enlivened: our updated Puritanism about reproduction
is peppered with overly deterministic images of what DNA "says" and with
marketed avatars of human perfectibility. Cytoplasm has been personified and
given life and active voice; you've got to probe a woman's body to see if
there's a separate life in there in need of rescue. You have to show her
pictures of her blastodermic vesicles in case she doesn't know.

Some anti-contraception arguments seem to cast birth control as actively
harming real, microscopic little people, wee homunculi waiting to
materialize, as though menstruation were a sinful waste. Eggs are people
too! The maternal sanctity of the inspired neo-egg is posited in constant
battle with the hot, sluttish moral disregard of any woman who has sex that
is not at the behest of a husband's procreative mission. Thus it is that
Sandra Fluke becomes pluralized into all the women in her testimony; and all
those women are reduced to a throbbing red light of a single really dirty
body part.

But this is not mere political hyperbole. If we are not yet a theocracy,
then it seems appropriate to observe that Santorum's comprehensive
invocation of "life" as a theological concept is, in the law, no more than a
literary device-one that is employed when we construct legal fictions of all
sorts. It is no different from granting "legal subjectivity" to a
municipality or bestowing "personhood" on a corporation. This is not about
what God endows. Rather, the law's concern is what we as a constituted
polity choose to animate and what we don't. How "we the people" come alive
in language, not merely in the womb, is the challenge of social justice: our
love of life must not be locked away in the perpetually future contingent
but fully engaged in the embodied present tense.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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