Madonna: Plantation Mistress or Soul Sister?
bell hooks
From 'Black Looks: Race and Representation'
Subversion is contextual, historical, and above all social. No matter how
exciting the "destabitizing" potential of texts, bodily or otherwise, whether
those texts are subversive or recuperative or both or neither cannot be
determined by abstraction from actual social practice.
--Susan Bordo
White women "stars" like Madonna, Sandra Bernhard, and many others publicly name their
interest in, and appropriation of, black culture as yet another sign of their radical chic.
Intimacy with that "nasty" blackness good white girls stay away from is what they seek. To
white and other nonblack consumers, this gives them a special flavor, an added spice. After
all it is a very recent historical phenomenon for any white girl to be able to get some
mileage out of flaunting her fascination and envy of blackness. The thing about envy is that
it is always ready to destroy, erase, take over, and consume the desired object. That's exactly
what Madonna attempts to do when she appropriates and commodifies aspects of black
culture. Needless to say this kind of fascination is a threat. It endangers. Perhaps that is why
so many of the grown black women I spoke with about Madonna had no interest in her as a
cultural icon and said things like, "The bitch can't even sing." It was only among young
black females that I could find die-hard Madonna fans. Though I often admire and, yes at
times, even envy Madonna because she has created a cultural space where she can invent and
reinvent herself and receive public affirmation and material reward, I do not consider myself
a Madonna fan.
Once I read an interview with Madonna where she talked about her envy
of black culture, where she stated that she wanted to be black as a child. It is a sign of white
privilege to be able to "see" blackness and black culture from a standpoint where only the
rich culture of opposition black people have created in resistance marks and defines us. Such
a perspective enables one to ignore white supremacist domination and the hurt it inflicts via
oppression, exploitation, and everyday wounds and pains. White folks who do not see black
pain never really understand the complexity of black pleasure. And it is no wonder then that
when they attempt to imitate the joy in living which they see as the "essence" of soul and
blackness, their cultural productions may have an air of sham and falseness that may titillate
and even move white audiences yet leave many black folks cold. Needless to say, if
Madonna had to depend on masses of black women to maintain her status as cultural icon
she would have been dethroned some time ago. Many of the black women I spoke with
expressed intense disgust and hatred of Madonna. Most did not respond to my cautious
attempts to suggest that underlying those negative feelings might lurk feelings of envy, and
dare I say it, desire. No black woman I talked to declared that she wanted to "be Madonna."
Yet we have only to look at the number of black women entertainers/stars (Tina Turner,
Aretha Franklin, Donna Summer, Vanessa Williams, Yo-Yo, etc.) who gain greater crossover
recognition when they demonstrate that, like Madonna, they too, have a healthy dose of
"blonde ambition." Clearly their careers have been influenced by Madonna's choices and
strategies. For masses of black women, the political reality that underlies Madonna's and our
recognition that this is a society where "blondes" not only "have more fun" but where they
are more likely to succeed in any endeavor is white supremacy and racism. We cannot see
Madonna's change in hair color as being merely a question of aesthetic choice. I agree with
Julie Burchill in her critical work Girls on Film, when she reminds us: "What does it say
about racial purity that the best blondes have all been brunettes (Harlow, Monroe, Bardot)? I
think it says that we are not as white as we think. I think it says that Pure is a Bore." I also
know that it is the expressed desire of the nonblonde Other for those characteristics that are
seen as the quintessential markers of racial aesthetic superiority that perpetuate and uphold
white supremacy. In this sense Madonna has much in common with the masses of black
women who suffer from internalized racism and are forever terrorized by a standard of
beauty they feel they can never truly embody.
Like many black women who have stood outside the culture's fascination with the blonde beauty and who have only been able to reach
it through imitation and artifice, Madonna often recalls that she was a working-class white
girl who saw herself as ugly, as outside the mainstream beauty standard. And indeed what
some of us like about her is the way she deconstructs the myth of "natural" white girl
beauty by exposing the extent to which it can be and is usually artificially constructed and
maintained. She mocks the conventional racist-defined beauty ideal even as she rigorously
strives to embody it. Given her obsession with exposing the reality that the ideal female
beauty in this society can be attained by artifice and social construction, it should come as no
surprise that many of her fans are gay men, and that the majority of nonwhite men,
particularly black men, are among that group. Jennie Livingston's film Paris Is Burning
suggests that many black gay men, especially queens/divas, are as equally driven as
Madonna by "blonde ambition." Madonna never lets her audience forget that whatever "look"
she acquires is attained by hard work--"it ain't natural." And as Burchill comments in her
chapter "Homosexual Girls": I have a friend who drives a cab and looks like a Marlboro
Man but at night is the second best Jean Harlow I have ever seen. He summed up the kind
of film star he adores, brutally and brilliantly, when he said, "I like actresses who look as if
they've spent hours putting themselves together--and even then they don't look right."
Certainly no one, not even die-hard Madonna fans, ever insists that her beauty is not attained
by skillful artifice. And indeed, a major point of the documentary film Truth or Dare: In Bed
With Madonna was to demonstrate the amount of work that goes into the construction of her
image. Yet when the chips are down, the image Madonna most exploits is that of the
quintessential "white girl." To maintain that image she must always position herself as an
outsider in relation to black culture. It is that position of outsider that enables her to colonize
and appropriate black experience for her own opportunistic ends even as she attempts to
mask her acts of racist aggression as affirmation. And no other group sees that as clearly as
black females in this society. For we have always known that the socially constructed image
of innocent white womanhood relies on the continued production of the racist/sexist sexual
myth that black women are not innocent and never can be. Since we are coded always as
"fallen" women in the racist cultural iconography we can never, as can Madonna, publicly
"work" the image of ourselves as innocent female daring to be bad. Mainstream culture
always reads the black female body as sign of sexual experience. In part, many black women
who are disgusted by Madonna's flaunting of sexual experience are enraged because the very
image of sexual agency that she is able to project and affirm with material gain has been the
stick this society has used to justify its continued beating and assault on the black female
body. The vast majority of black women in the United States, more concerned with
projecting images of respectability than with the idea of female sexual agency and
transgression, do not often feel we have the "freedom" to act in rebellious ways in regards to
sexuality without being punished. We have only to contrast the life story of Tina Tumer with
that of Madonna to see the different connotations "wild" sexual agency has when it is
asserted by a black female. Being represented publicly as an active sexual being has only
recently enabled Turner to gain control over her life and career. For years the public image
of aggressive sexual agency Turner projected belied the degree to which she was sexually
abused and exploited privately. She was also materially exploited. Madonna's career could
not be all that it is if there were no Tina Turner and yet, unlike her cohort Sandra Bernhard,
Madonna never articulates the cultural debt she owes black females.
In her most recent appropriations of blackness, Madonna almost always imitates phallic black masculinity.
Although I read many articles which talked about her appropriating male codes, no critic
seems to have noticed her emphasis on black male experience. In his Playboy profile,
"Playgirl of the Western World," Michael Kelly describes Madonna's crotch grabbing as "an
eloquent visual put-down of male phallic pride." He points out that she worked with
choreographer Vince Paterson to perfect the gesture. Even though Kelly tells readers that
Madonna was consciously imitating Michael Jackson, he does not contextualize his
interpretation of the gesture to include this act of appropriation from black male culture. And
in that specific context the groin grabbing gesture is an assertion of pride and phallic
domination that usually takes place in an all-male context. Madonna's imitation of this
gesture could just as easily be read as an expression of envy.
Throughout [many] of her autobiographical interviews runs a thread of expressed desire to possess the power she
perceives men have. Madonna may hate the phallus, but she longs to possess its power. She
is always first and foremost in competition with men to see who has the biggest penis. She
longs to assert phallic power, and like every other group in this white supremacist society,
she clearly sees black men as embodying a quality of maleness that eludes white men. Hence
they are often the group of men she most seeks to imitate, taunting white males with her
own version of"black masculinity." When it comes to entertainment rivals, Madonna clearly
perceives black male stars like Prince and Michael Jackson to be the standard against which
she must measure herself and that she ultimately hopes to transcend.
Fascinated yet envious of black style, Madonna appropriates black culture in ways that mock and
undermine, making her presentation one that upstages. This is most evident in the video
"Like a Prayer." Though I read numerous articles that discussed public outrage at this video,
none focused on the issue of race. No article called attention to the fact that Madonna flaunts
her sexual agency by suggesting that she is breaking the ties that bind her as a white girl to
white patriarchy, and establishing ties with black men. She, however, and not black men, does
the choosing. The message is directed at white men. It suggests that they only labeled black
men rapists for fear that white girls would choose black partners over them. Cultural critics
commenting on the video did not seem at all interested in exploring the reasons Madonna
chooses a black cultural backdrop for this ~video, i.e., black church and religious experience.
Clearly, it was this backdrop that added to the video's controversy.
In her commentary in the Washington Post, "Madonna: Yuppie Goddess," Brooke Masters writes: "Most
descriptions of the controversial video focus on its Catholic imagery: Madonna kisses a black
saint, and develops Christ-like markings on her hands. However, the video is also a feminist
fairy tale. Sleeping Beauty and Snow White waited for their princes to come along, Madonna
finds her own man and wakes him up." Notice that this writer completely overlooks the issue
of race and gender. That Madonna's chosen prince was a black man is in part what made the
representation potentially shocking and provocative to a white supremacist audience. Yet her
attempt to exploit and transgress traditional racial taboos was rarely commented on. Instead
critics concentrated on whether or not she was violating taboos regarding religion and
representation.
In the United States, Catholicism is most often seen as a religion that has
[few] or no black followers and Madonna's video certainly perpetuates this stereotype with its
juxtaposition of images of black nonCatholic representations with the image of the black
saint. Given the importance of religious experience and liberation theology in black life,
Madonna's use of this imagery seemed particularly offensive. For she made black characters
act in complicity with her as she aggressively flaunted her critique of Catholic manners, her
attack on organized religion. Yet, no black voices that I know of came forward in print
calling attention to the fact that the realm of the sacred that is mocked in this film is black
religious experience, or that this appropriative "use" of that experience was offensive to many
black folk. Looking at the video with a group of students in my class on the politics of
sexuality where we critically analyze the way race and representations of blackness are used
to sell products, we discussed the way in which black people in the video are caricatures
reflecting stereotypes. They appear grotesque. The only role black females have in this video
is to catch (i.e., rescue) the "angelic" Madonna when she is "falling." This is just a
contemporary casting of the black female as Mammy. Made to serve as supportive backdrop
for Madonna's drama, black characters in "Like a Prayer" remind one of those early
Hollywood depictions of singing black slaves in the great plantation movies or those Shirley
Temple films where Bojangles was trotted out to dance with Miss Shirley and spice up her
act. Audiences were not supposed to be enamored of Bojangles, they were supposed to see
just what a special little old white girl Shirley really was. In her own way Madonna is a
modern day Shirley Temple. Certainly her expressed affinity with black culture enhances her
value.
Eager to see the documentary Truth ar Dare because it promised to focus on
Madonna's transgressive sexual persona, which I find interesting, I was angered by her visual
representations of her domination over not white men (certainly not over Warren Beatty or
Alek Keshishian), but people of color and white working-class women. I was too angered by
this to appreciate other aspects of the film I might have enjoyed. In Truth or Dare Madonna
clearly revealed that she can only think of exerting power along very traditional, white
supremacist, capitalistic, patriarchal lines. That she made people who were dependent on her
for their immediate livelihood submit to her will was neither charming nor seductive to me
or the other black folks that I spoke with who saw the film. We thought it tragically ironic
that Madonna would choose as her dance partner a black male with dyed blonde hair.
Perhaps had he appeared less like a white-identified black male consumed by "blonde
ambition" he might have upstaged her. Instead he was positioned as a mirror, into which
Madonna and her audience could look and see only a reflection of herself and the worship of
"whiteness" she embodies-- that white supremacist culture wants everyone to embody.
Madonna used her power to ensure that he and the other nonwhite women and men who
worked for her, as well as some of the white subordinates, would all serve as the backdrop to
her white-girl-makes-good-drama. Joking about the film with other black folks, we
commented that Madonna must have searched long and hard to find a black female that was
not a good dancer, one who would not deflect attention away from her. And it is telling that
when the film directly reflects something other than a positive image of Madonna, the
camera highlights the rage this black female dancer was suppressing. It surfaces when the
"subordinates" have time off and are "relaxing."
As with most Madonna videos, when critics talk about this film they tend to ignore race. Yet no viewer can look at this film and
not think about race and representation without engaging in forms of denial. After choosing a
cast of characters from marginalized groups--nonwhite folks, heterosexual and gay, and gay
white folks--Madonna publicly describes them as "emotional cripples." And of course in the
context of the film this description seems borne out by the way they allow her to dominate,
exploit, and humiliate them. Those Madonna fans who are determined to see her as
politically progressive might ask themselves why it is she completely endorses those
racist/sexist/classist stereotypes that almost always attempt to portray marginalized groups as
"defective" Let's face it, by doing this, Madonna is not breaking with any white supremacist,
patriarchal status quo; she is endorsing and perpetuating it.
Some of us do not find it hip or cute for Madonna to brag that she has a "fascistic side," a side well documented in the
film. Well, we did not see any of her cute little fascism in action when it was Warren Beatty
calling her out in the film. No, there the image of Madonna was the little woman who grins
and bears it. No, her "somebody's got to be in charge side," as she names it, was most
expressed in her interaction with those representatives from marginalized groups who are
most often victimized by the powerful. Why is it there is little or no discussion of Madonna
as racist or sexist in her relation to other women? Would audiences be charmed by some rich
white male entertainer telling us he must "play father" and oversee the actions of the less
powerful, especially women and men of color? So why did so many people find it cute when
Madonna asserted that she dominates the interracial casts of gay and heterosexual folks in
her film because they are crippled and she "like[s] to play mother" No, this was not a display
of feminist power, this was the same old phallic nonsense with white pussy at the center. And
many of us watching were not simply unmoved--we were outraged.
Perhaps it is a sign of a collective feeling of powerlessness that many black, nonwhite, and white viewers of this
film who were disturbed by the display of racism, sexism, and heterosexism (yes, it's
possible to hire gay people, support AIDS projects, and still be biased in the direction of
phallic patriarchal heterosexuality) in Truth or Dare have said so little. Sometimes it is
difficult to find words to make a critique when we find ourselves attracted by some aspect of
a performer's act and disturbed by others, or when a performer shows more interest in
promoting progressive social causes than is customary. We may see that performer as above
critique. Or we may feel our critique will in no way intervene on the worship of them as a
cultural icon. To say nothing, however, is to be complicit with the very forces of
domination that make "blonde ambition" necessary to Madonna's success. Tragically, all that
is transgressive and potentially empowering to feminist women and men about Madonna's
work may be undermined by all that it contains that is reactionary and in no way
unconventional or new. It is often the conservative elements in her work converging with the
status quo that have the most powerful impact. For example: Given the rampant homophobia
in this society and the concomitant heterosexist voyeuristic obsession with gay life-styles, to
what extent does Madonna progressively seek to challenge this if she insists on primarily
representing gays as in some way emotionally handicapped or defective? Or when Madonna
responds to the critique that she exploits gay men by cavalierly stating: "What does
exploitation mean? . . . In a revolution, some people have to get hurt. To get people to
change, you have to turn the table over. Some dishes get broken." I can only say this
doesn't sound like liberation to me. Perhaps when Madonna explores those memories of her
white working-class childhood in a troubled family in a way that enables her to understand
intimately the politics of exploitation, domination, and submission, she will have a deeper
connection with oppositional black culture. If and when this radical critical self-interrogation
takes place, she will have the power to create new and different cultural productions, work
that will be truly transgressive--acts of resistance that transform rather than simply seduce.
|