Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Race and the Philippines in New Imperial History

In their article “Empires and the Reach of the Global,”[1] historians Tony Ballantyne and Antoinette Burton lay out a theoretical structure for studying not only empires, but global histories. They argue that by understanding the global not as “a preexisting category”[2] but as a concept used to understand imperial spaces, historians can position empires “in relationship to an emergent and even halting or unfinished set of processes…”[3] By not taking global for granted, they can better understand the conditions in which empires and other global processes emerged without assuming that they have a natural affinity. Additionally, this allows the historian to see how imperialism looked extremely different from different points in space and time. Rather than simply examining the political or economic history of imperialism, this approach forces the historian to look at cultural histories, such as colonial home life, or histories of technology, such as communication or transportation. In his 2006 monograph, historian Paul Kramer engages in the type of imperial history that Ballantyne and Burton call for. By using the ever protean concept of race as a lens for understanding empire not only in the Philippines under American rule, but also as it was understood under Spanish rule, and as Filipinos were understood in the US, he is able to show how the imperial history of the Philippines was characterized by struggled over sovereignty and recognition, and where race was the central factor in both the colonization and the decolonization of the Philippines.  
                In The Blood of Government,[4] Paul Kramer writes a history of US imperialism in the Philippines, that focuses not on the political or economics of colonialism, but rather on the politics of race. He begins by discussing the Philippines under Spanish rule, where many of the elite Christian Filipinos hoped to be assimilated into the Spanish culture and government until they realized that rampant racial exclusions would prevent that. They then began a nationalist movement, which was temporarily interrupted by the Spanish-American War in 1898. However, when it became apparent that the United States was not going to let the Philippines rule themselves, especially after the brutal Philippine-American War, this movement strongly reemerged. Rather than simply being victims of the United States, this movement gave Filipinos considerable influence in their future as the actively resisted American rule both militarily, and in cultural and political spaces. Notably, Kramer argues that the racism practiced by American soldiers during the war was not simply a transplant of racial ideas from the United States under Jim Crow, but rather was largely created out of the complex politics of race found within the colonial dynamic. In fact, Filipinos themselves were largely split into two races, one of Christians who were evolving into self-rule, with colonial administrators arbitrating their racial progress, and one of non-Christians who needed to be ruled by the United States with no role for Filipino elites. However, though these separate categories provides a justification for colonialism, as such separate groups could not adequately rule themselves, colonial officials also grouped the two categories together when it suited them, bemoaning their unified savage reliance on guerilla warfare, for instance. This racial tension came to its zenith during the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition which sought to again justify colonization by showing a group of native Igorots in an exhibit about the process of civilization. This enraged several Filipino elites who argued that an exhibit like this did not accurately represent the people of the Philippines. In the United States, however, many Americans had different concerns about the race and the Philippines. With colonization, there was a large influx of Filipino immigrants. This caused fears of an Asian invasion, where Filipinos would not only compete for jobs with white Americans but also seek to escort and more with white women. These feelings contributed to the eventual creation of the Tydings-McDuffie Act in 1934, which provided for self-government for Filipinos and independence from the United States. In this way, in Kramer’s account, ideas of race, manifested in varying ways, were central to every step of the imperial project.
                Using race as a lens fits Kramer’s work neatly within Ballantyne and Burton’s ideal of a global imperial history. For them, questions of race and ethnicity “are crucial to this project…because they were utterly instrumental to how empires unfolded,” especially as they are “implicated in the inequalities and power struggles of colonialism.”[5] Rather than assuming that the Philippines was some sort of global space, he shows how discussions of race actually molded its interactions with Spain, the United States, and even racial discourse within its own populations. Though this method of imperial history definitely gives voice to the Filipino population, which is often simply victimized in these types of colonial history, the idea that the global is a constructed vestige of imperialism is somewhat problematic. It ignores the idea that there is a physical world where people are not the only agents in historical change and where the global, in the form of the environment or other things out of human control[6] matter a great deal, beyond imperial constructs.



[1] Ballantyne, Tony, and Antoinette Burton. “Empires and the Reach of the Global.” In A World Connecting: 1870-1945, edited by Emily S. Rosenberg. First Edition. Belknap Press, 2012.
[2] Ibid., 300
[3] Ibid., 301
[4] Kramer, Paul A. The Blood of Government: Race, Empire, the United States, and the Philippines. The University of North Carolina Press, 2006.
[5] Ballantyne and Burton, 304
[6] See any text on Actor-Networks or Agential Realism.  The following text is a good start.
Barad, Karen. “Agential Realism: Feminist Interventions in Understanding Scientific Practices.” In Biagioli, Mario (ed.). The Science Studies Reader. NY: Routledge. 1-11

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Comparing Tissue Economies and Culturing Life

In their 2006 monograph Tissue Economies, Catherine Waldby and Robert Mitchell examine the ways that human tissue such as blood, cell lines, and organs have gained commercial value, what they call “biovalue,” (32) in the marketplace. Setting up their text as a response to Richard Titmuss’  1970 text on The Gift Relationship in blood donation, they begin by focusing on the role of tissue banks in the negotiation between the communal values associated with voluntary donation and the market values arising from the growing commercial use for human tissue. They argue that this role originated in the tainted blood scandals of the 1980s where blood banks began active screening policies to filter out undesirable donors. Around the same time, people began depositing blood into tissue banks for their own future use, which would in theory help them to avoid the risk of tainted blood, but also changed the tissue banks from being a point of redistributing blood into a place for storing one’s own private tissues. They also explore the history of the UK Stem Cell Bank, which due in part to its particularly problematic ethical significance, strategically worked to manage the relationship between donors, recipients, and commercial agents. They then discuss how the designation of some tissues as medical ‘waste’ which have no value, severs their identity from that of their donors and gives them the opportunity for profitable circulation. This issue, (explored at length in the Michael Critchton novel Next) is highlighted in the case of John Moore, a citizen who unsuccessfully attempted to establish property rights over his cells. They also revisit the idea of tissue banking in the context of umbilical cord blood. Rather than being donated for scientific research or discarded, many parents are banking their children’s cord blood for their future use. Finally, they examine two situations previously designated as part of a gift system, namely biotech patents and organ donations, and how they fit into the fabric of a market economy. Biotech patents in particular hold a paradoxical status which both allow for the circulation of some types of knowledge in a sort of scientific commons, and also which can limit the use of other knowledge types through high license fees and strict policing. The inadequacy of dead donor organs has produced a rather extensive black market for kidneys, mostly provided by the global South which suggests that some kind of regulated kidney market could ease this exploitative system. However, this too is not without problems given the potentially unlimited demand for more organs.

The most important major theme in this text is the commercial value of human tissues which until recently, had no monetary value. This recalls similar issues in Hannah Landecker’s 2007 text Culturing Life. Landecker traces the history of cell culturing, which previous to the 20th century were thought to be unable to live outside the body. Alexis Carrel soon created a so-called “immortal” line of chicken heart cells which were shared around the world for scientific research. Later, the human HeLa cell line was similarly distributed around the world and aided in the development of many medicines including Salk’s polio vaccine. Though George Gey, the doctor who cultured Henrietta Lacks’ cells for the HeLa line, did not receive a profit for his work, the cells were later commercialized without either the permission of or compensation to her family, foreshadowing the results of the John Moore case. Though Landecker does not focus on commercialization in her text, attempting instead to show how “cells had become flexible tools, easily accessible, available, and manipulable,” (201) the objectification of living tissue into a technology that can be used by anyone is important in understanding the historical trajectory of the commodification of human tissues. Additionally, the idea first pioneered by Ross Harrison that human life can live outside the body can be linked to the sense of ownership that people feel over their own tissues, leading to the rise in tissue banks. Rather than just seeing tissue banks as holding centers for bodily fluids, they become points of access to longer and healthier lives which can live independently and healthily outside of the body. Also, like Harrison changed the way that people thought about life, this commercialization also has created a new world where life could theoretically become immortal, where people can just swap out their damaged tissues with healthy ones.