BEING GAZED UPON
by
G. L. MIND
Georgia
Lee Mind was born in Moncton, New Brunswick. She now lives near
Helena, Montana where she works as an independent writer and
scholar.
____________________-
In
a tavern only a short walk away from the University of Chicago,
I caught a man gazing upon me. My husband had asked me to wait
there for him while he visited an old colleague at the Divinity
School. I sat at a small table by the window reading Pat Barker’s
Resurrection Trilogy, happy to be reading, even happy
to be waiting. Then, when I glanced up for a moment, I noticed
a man looking at me, steadily and contemplative. An unpleasant
feeling, like dirty water seeping up a wick, rose through my
body. Would he speak to me? Was he going to say something provocative?
Something insulting? From a small table, eight or ten feet away,
his shallow eyes lingered upon me, wide and apparently unblinking.
I glanced back at him, looked away, and then, feeling a small
twinge of shame, I let my eyes return to his. I knew that returning
his gaze, even for the briefest instant, was a mistake. Yet
the urge to look back was irresistible. In the corner of his
right eye, nestled between the bridge of his nose and the eye
itself, he had a tattoo of a spider. Spreading in its descent,
the web fell down his acned cheek. His thick shock of urinous
blond hair straggled down his temples, lank and unkempt. His
nose seemed slightly twisted, perhaps misshapen from a blow.
He wore a stained tee shirt. His upper arms bulged as he supported
his head in his hands. On his tuberose forearms, tattooed bats
hung, fur-brown and dangerous, from the crook of each elbow.
(Though now, his arms held erect in a chin-bearing position,
they appeared to be standing upright, their tiny rodent heads
hooded within the cusps of their folded wings.) His arms were
skewed outwards so that I would not miss the bats. In unbroken
silence, he preened, he strutted: gaze on my works.
What
did his gaze mean? I looked away once more, and then, again,
hesitantly, I met his eyes. I was drawn to them, compelled,
though I found them disturbing, even menacing. The second time
I glanced at him, I could see that his irises were inky blue,
like the scales of a cold-water fish. In one eye, red threads
criss-crossed the white ball. Someone, I guessed, had struck
him solidly and hard. No doubt, he would have deserved that
blow. Sitting uneasily at my table, Pat Barker now resting spine
up on the tabletop, I knew instinctively that this large man
could easily overpower me or, if we met on a street, drag me
into a waiting car. Watching him gaze at me, I tried to figure
out what I should do next. I could get up quickly and flee.
I could return his challenge and wait to see what happened.
I could verbally admonish him and, most likely, precipitate
a violent outburst, a string of filthy words. If I challenged
him, I might inspire him with the idea of waiting for me outside
the tavern. In the way of violent men, he might even wait for
Nick to come back and attack him in my place. I could also try
to ignore him. Unless he actually spoke, I would not have to
acknowledge him. Mentally huddled, I sat across from him, silent,
doing my best not to return his gaze, hoping that someone else
would distract his attention. Eyes down, pretending to concentrate
on my glass of merlot, I tried to work out his intention. It
was a combative gaze, though obviously not an invitation to
personal conflict. It was not evident that it was an invitation
to have sex with him, either. He wanted to intimidate me, but
probably not to seduce me. He may have seen me as a contemptible
bookish woman. Perhaps I struck him as a woman lacking a genuine
sexual drive or as one, too accustomed to academic neighborhoods
such as this, who had forgotten, or had never known, how a “real”
man could perform.
There
was something about me, no mistaking that, which provoked him,
urging his challenge. His frank gaze invited me to become intimidated.
He seemed to be inviting me to create a fictional world in which
his part would be to stand out as dangerous, singularly volatile.
His imagined voice, hushed and minatory, thrust itself through
my mind. “Now I have become” (I felt sure he would
gleefully say) “your worst nightmare.” Within my
own fictional world, that which I had just been invited to create,
I would feel uncertainty, fear and anxiety. I might, or might
not, feel sexual desire. For him, that might not have mattered.
There
are many kinds of looks, but a gaze is peculiar. It is a steady
look. It is not a dirty look, though it may be “dirty”
in some sense. (The man’s gaze made me feel dirty, among
other complex sensations, but it was hardly a dirty look.) A
gaze is never wild, though it may be mad. A gaze may not actually
last long, but it is never a blink, neither hasty nor abrupt.
It cannot be confused with a glance or a glimpse. There may
be a battle of gazes. The gazer may “avert his gaze”
under pressure or threat. I was afraid, and had no way to explore
this option in Chicago. A gaze’s steadiness reflects thoughtfulness.
It indicates a mind at work (somewhere, unknown and remote)
thinking, drawing inferences, contemplating. It is the opposite
of a stare. A stare shows dispassion, even an implacable lack
of emotional connection. It is the look of an animal contemplating
prey, or that of an android. (Tracking and identification data
scroll down a head’s-up screen covering its field of vision.)
A stare, heartless, without empathy, is the way you might expect
a psychopath to consider you before making his kill. Men seem
to understand the weight of intimidation that a stare can convey:
in many sports, such as boxing, the initial stare-down is a
ritual of domination. Even in make-believe, a stare displays
an aggressive contempt and indifference: pitiful bug, I am going
to destroy you. However brief, a gaze indicates thoughtfulness.
The gazer seems to contemplate the person he gazes upon and
even to invite connection.
Many
gazes, perhaps most, are sexual. You will be kidnapped into
an alien world where you, or a mental image of yourself, will
be stripped, tortured and raped. This is the gaze that feminist
thinkers, since Laura Mulvey’s 1991 essay in the New
Left Review, have insisted upon: transgressing, violating,
male kidnapping. Such gazes are aggressive, predatory and proprietary.
They project the gazer’s physical strength, his potential
power (over you). His unwanted interest, precisely because unwanted,
may be intensely disturbing. You may begin to tremble, free-floating
anxiety flooding through your body, and to wilt, sweat trickling,
like drops of ice-water, down your ribs. You may experience
yourself as vulnerable, captured, already trussed up. In this
way the gaze exerts power, as feminist theorists argue that
the patriarchal gaze invariably does. The male gaze implies
the gazer’s superiority. (He can look at you in this way;
you can only grow angry, turn away, hide, seek to flee. He can
possess you.) Even if the gazer is small, a lecherous runt,
the mere fact of gazing makes him tower over you. You will know,
even without being told, that, in his mind’s-eye, he is
looking at your unclothed body. Being on the receiving end of
such gazes is always a terrible moment.
Still,
you may be drawn towards the gaze, succumbing to the gazer’s
proclamation of mastery. This may happen when a gaze also suggests
a compliment. Then (no matter how you respond) the gaze proclaims
the gazer’s amazement, his wonder at your presence, his
understanding that you are spectacular. This distinction may
seem a trifle, a difference without import. Yet it does illustrate
that the act of gazing may proceed from very different motivations
and, like other similar insults (such as stalking), may engage
you on a high as well as on a low level.
What
does it mean to be “gazed upon”? It may be either
a threat or a compliment and even both at once. You may feel
exposed, even undressed (if the gaze is of a certain kind, if
it seems to exert a certain kind of power), reduced, rendered
contemptible, raped. Another’s gaze may seem ominous,
threatening, abrasive. You may sense yourself on the edge of
violence, watching death eyeball you. As well, there are gazes
that seem only to worship, or to gaze in wonder or awe in honor
of your beauty or style. That kind of gaze will not be hostile,
though it may be disturbing and unwanted. If you try to imagine
how the gaze works for the gazer, to grasp its interior structure,
it may turn out to be vastly more complex than a simple threat,
or even a determined exercise in domination. After all, you
have been invited into a kind of play. You have been asked to
join a game of make-believe, even if you would have preferred
to refuse the invitation. You have been invited to play the
role of a character in someone else’s fictional world.
In a sense you have been kidnapped. You have been snatched out
of your own world to play a part in another’s imaginative
world.
What
has happened is analogous to having a writer, perhaps even a
good friend, transform you into a character. Looked at in this
way, being made the subject of someone’s gaze, even if
it seems hostile, might act like a tribute. It will be a reward
that has been graciously extended towards you because your beauty,
your physique, your personal demeanor has drawn someone’s
eyes. The man with the spider and bat tattoos who gazed upon
me was intimidating, though I did not much fear actual in-the-world
violence. His physical bearing made a powerful impact, constructing
an interpretive frame around his act of gazing. The world into
which he appeared to invite me was not one I wanted to visit.
Considering the implications of the threat that had been made,
and the interpretive frame that I had been offered (the spider,
the bats), I felt that I had been terrorized, carried off, transformed
into the unwilling participant in a scenario that I did not
understand, nor even have a means to grasp. When the terrorist
kills or maims you, it is quite impersonal. You have simply
been invited to play a role in his terror-scenario. The script
requires an unsuspecting victim. Knowing that the man in the
Chicago bar had fixed his gaze upon me, I could only guess at
his script, but my guess terrified me. When I glanced up to
return his gaze, I saw myself reflected in his imagination,
splayed-out and helpless beneath him.
The
man in the tavern was doing something else as well. He was inviting
me to imagine him. This act turns Mulvey’s hypothesis
upside down. What happens when someone solicits another’s
gaze? He calls out to you to look, to fix your gaze upon him
(or her). Look at me! Gaze upon me! Gaze on my works. Now the
polarities of the gaze are reversed. Now you are being invited
to create your own fictional world in which the other person
can play a distinctive role. You are not being asked to become
a terrorist since the gazed-upon person has volunteered. He
wants to be kidnapped, carried off into some brilliant scenario
within your imagination. But what would the point be? Suppose
that you have been invited to gaze upon someone whom you have
never met, never before seen. This person will have sent out
signals, or perhaps laid a snare—a hairstyle, a body part,
an ornament (tattoo, ring or stud, even a brand or scar), a
corporeal style, accomplishments, works. Your gaze will fix
upon some aspect of this person: size, good looks, style, talent.
At this moment, you will have been invited to create a world
in which the other person proves to be a magnificent lover,
an overwhelmingly desirable person, someone quite unlike your
previous experience. Human beings often wish to be imagined.
(There can be pleasure, if equivocal, in finding yourself re-imagined
as a character in someone else’s tale.) They may receive
a nip of pleasure from seeing their names in print or from figuring
in someone else’s narrative. To-be-looked-at-ness, never
a simple motivation, runs through many human activities shaped
as a desire for celebrity in fashion, sports and entertainment
or politics and war.
A soliciting
gaze invites you actively to play another person’s game.
Take me to live with you and be your love. Imagine my always-ready,
my never-failing Jovian tumescence. Imagine my lush openness,
my Venusian warmth. Expressed in its simplest terms, the game
is to invite you, a stranger, to kidnap the gazer. In the world
that you will imagine, the gazer’s proffered set of features,
the symbols of her or his desirability, will contrast to your
memories of other people, to your daily experience. You will
have been nudged into making a comparative judgment upon other
people whom you know and may hold dear. (Who knows? You may
be motivated to step out of your new imaginative world to introduce
yourself within the actual one. In that event, the gazed-upon
person will have snared you, led you, perhaps against your better
judgment and even all your disciplined habits, into an in-the-world
situation in which he may become your actual lover, or murderer.
By analogy, a chat-room seduction is a stylized context for
soliciting a virtual gaze.) Soliciting another’s gaze,
through visible plumage or cyber-avatars, involves a complex
courtship, like a peacock strutting or a bower bird building
fancy dream-nests. The works become evident, having been thrust
out into full view, but the intention only slowly manifests
its shape.
I do
not know whether the tattooed man in Chicago wanted me to imagine
him or was fulfilled by imagining me. At the time, I felt a
woman’s normal sense of violation, of sensing that I was
being undressed, fondled and raped in an unknown man’s
imagination. Now I am less certain. The tattoos were intended
to attract attention. The way he turned his arms outwards to
expose the hanging bats indicated that he wanted me to imagine
him, regardless of whatever he was doing with my image in the
same moment. Looking back, the best reading I can give for his
gaze is that, primarily, he wanted me to imagine him, even though,
secondarily, he may also have been imagining me. It was an equivocal
situation, impossible to categorize precisely, but it did illustrate
the double-sidedness of the gaze.
I can
make the concept of the soliciting gaze clearer by reference
to an explicit instant. The most theatrical solicitation of
another’s gaze that I have ever observed happened in Broome,
an old pearl-diving port and now a tourist “destination”
on Australia’s northwest Indian Ocean coast. Here is how
it took place.
A young
man working behind the boutique bar at the Cable Beach International
Hotel told us that once everyone swam in the nude, but now people
conscientiously wear bathers on Cable Beach. Nick believed him.
I had doubts. Surely, not everyone, even in Australia, likes
to swim in the nude. Not everyone, surely. If he was telling
the truth, then the triumph of swimming suits might show the
impact of Civilization. More likely, the new Cable Beach International
Hotel cast an invisible force field. Tourists, American and
Japanese, mostly, stay in the hotel and swim on the beach. The
thinking in Broome must be that the sight of naked locals would
be disturbing to the foreigners and, indirectly, hurt commerce.
Sometime in the past ten years, nude swimming on Cable Beach
mostly ceased (though who knows what happens after dark when
the lifeguards have gone home?). Nick and I had come to the
wild Northwest only to encounter international modesty.
Quite
a way north of the wide, white sand beach where most of the
tourists swim, the local people do, I learned, occasionally
disrobe and swim happily naked in the surf. Walking north, past
a collection of scattered black rocks exposed at low tide like
the indeterminate bones of an extinct species, I found them.
They were bare and bronzed, indifferent to ultra-violet rays,
in the late afternoon and early evening. Their vehicles were
parked on the sand. There, out of sight or nearly so, Broome’s
traditional beach-ways survived in fragments.
Walking
along that part of the beach, I noticed a young man, in the
nude, wading parallel to the beach. When I came back a hour
later, heading for the bar at the Cable Beach International
Hotel, where I had agreed to meet Nick, the man was walking
naked on the beach. It took me several minutes to catch up to
him while he stepped back into the water, where he stood ankle
deep in the swishing surf, occasionally walking a few steps
one way or the other. Over to the east, under the sand hummocks,
the evening camel train of tourists was forming. A dozen or
more, mostly young men and women, guests at the hotel were taking
the chance to ride camels a mile or two northwards along the
beach. Each one of them would have been told, as we had been
told two evenings earlier, that feral camels were common in
the Australian outback, especially in the Kimberley. Harnessed
and kneeling, the camels they were preparing to ride were anything
but feral, but why worry about reality when you have been given
a legend? Broome nearly chokes on its own legend-making. The
local tradition of bronze-skinned, healthy nude surfers is a
central legend.
As
I watched the tourists scramble up on the kneeling camels, gaudy
in their red harness and trappings, I suddenly understood why
the man was walking, so prominently exposed, through the ankle-deep
surf. He was there to reveal himself, to be a sexual epiphany
for the tourists. He had a muscular upper body with thick, Captain
Aussie biceps and lush, razor-cut black hair. He had, I saw
immediately, a working-man’s body. Only his forearms and
a v-shaped wedge of skin below his neck were tanned. His legs
were a dead give-away. They were maggot-pale, thin and spindly
as mulga, strikingly in contrast to his sun-darkened arms. The
toothpick ordinariness of his legs showed that he did not work
out in gyms. His heavy, upper-body musculature could only have
come from hard, physical work. His flaccid penis hung impressively
thick. I couldn’t remember ever having seen one quite
like it.
I walked
by him looking away towards the camel-train that was forming.
Actually, I felt a strong urge to gaze, to weigh and measure
him in my imagination, but I had determined not to give him
satisfaction. I cloaked my imagination in rational analysis.
After I had passed him, I met another woman in a red Speedo
one-piece suit, cut high on her hips. She was walking along
the sand from the direction of the Cable Beach International
Hotel towards the exhibitionist. She possessed an athlete’s
body—a woman in her late thirties, trim, muscular, tanned
all over, unmistakably healthy and close to the local mythology.
Unlike the naked man, she evidently worked out in gyms. I sat
down on a flat, exposed shelf of rock so that I could observe
how she would confront the man with the hero-sized member. She
handled the situation well. As soon as she saw him and guessed
his intentions (to call her attention to his endowment one way
or another), she turned into the water, making a distinct disgust
face, her nose crinkling and her mouth pursed. She swam out
for about twenty meters and then swam back in beyond the stretch
of beach where the man was pretending to walk. He would get
no pleasure from shocking her. Nothing about him would excite
her.
What
kind of reaction would he have been expecting? If the athletic
woman in the red one-piece had looked at him, perhaps stared
for a moment, or, better yet, gasped and jerked away, it would
have been a bonus. What he clearly hoped for was to be noticed
by one of the young women climbing onto the camels. Perhaps
when she saw him she would be so dazzled, so consumed by desire,
that she would send her card over. Her hotel room number would
be written on the back. Perhaps he kept his hopes modest and
only waited for a young Japanese woman, equipped with the inevitable
camera, to take a photo or two. (I observed two of the young
women take out binoculars and train them upon the exhibitionist.)
He may only have wanted a foreign woman to compare him favorably
to her under-equipped lover. Watching him preen himself, I suspected
that he must feel that, given his natural gift, he should have
had better luck in life than he had yet scored. He had come
to the beach, not in the usual truck, UTE or SUV, but on a little
red Yamaha 250cc motorbike. The affable young man at the bar
would have said, I guessed, that he was a no-hoper attempting
to compensate. He had a natural advantage that, in some other
world, might have brought him a Dirk Diggler success. In this
world, never fully esteemed if never unnoticed, his endowment
may have given him only a corrosive sense of resentment. On
that day on Cable Beach, as he strutted in the surf, no women
seemed to give him a second thought or even to look at him more
closely than at the sea itself.
An
exhibitionist struggles through personal flamboyance to evoke
in others a world that has not yet (and may never) come into
existence. Flamboyance lends imaginary wings to the mud-bound.
Through the startling to-be-looked-at-ness that the exhibitionist
creates, a path opens and a fictional world appears. In the
imaginary worlds that he sought to solicit, the exhibitionist
on Cable Beach must have hoped to star, his cape wrapped gracefully
about him, the desired of all desiring. He must have dreamed
that he would startle the Japanese girls on the hotel’s
camel train out of their sexual complacency, seeming for them
to be masterful, exceeding all familiar proportions, irresistibly
desirable. In his dreams, he would have been well worth the
trouble of inviting into their rooms.
Was
he wrong to think this? Perhaps not. At least two young Japanese
women had taken the trouble to examine him through binoculars.
Two women who had encountered him posing had gone out of their
ways to ignore him, but one at least had felt an nagging desire
to look. Leave aside the sleazy crassness of exposing himself
to young women whom he couldn’t have known (and, after
all, it was a beach where nudism was still quietly practised),
and concentrate upon the problem of soliciting another’s
gaze. Flamboyance is a visual rhetoric: an exaggerated case
of flaunting at least one impressive feature. Visual rhetorics
exaggerate details and highlights a small range of features
at the expense of all other possible ones. In a similar manner,
if in a different medium, the internet chat-room constitutes
a place of personal streamlining and enhancement: age, looks,
availability, all subsumed in the need to capture another’s
attention and to become, in that unseen person’s mind,
an exalted image of oneself.
A spider
nesting in the corner of the eye? Bats hanging from the crook
of the elbow? I read these as the corporeal expression of desire.
Look at me! the man in the Chicago tavern strutted about (without
moving) silently commanding, gaze on my works: I am capable
of all, I cross all boundaries; beyond both disgust and fear,
I transgress social order. Watching him invite me to imagine
him, I could overhear his silent whisper: I lead life to its
excess. It was a kind of seduction. He invited me to contemplate
his striking tattoos, his demeanour and general bearing. He
prompted an aesthetic, far more than a sexual, response. The
young man on Cable Beach, without clothes, with no feature to
boast other than his penis, was startlingly flamboyant in a
narrow, specialized manner. What made the difference? The man
in the Chicago tavern was not attractive, his hair was unkempt
and the color of morning pee. Still, his tattoos were entrancing
works of art. His flamboyance, which he might not have recognized,
was aesthetic, a visual rhetoric. The man on Cable Beach was
handsome, his hair was professionally cut and black as the collied
night. His flamboyance, which was genuine if rather local, hung
upon his sexual promise. He displayed his single magnificent
endowment as a lure. In his own self-seeing, he had transformed
his penis into a beacon to compel women’s eyes into a
ravished gaze. His was a wholly a corporeal rhetoric. He wanted
to compel women to invite him to penetrate their minds, taking
up residence within their imaginations.
The
soliciting gaze is very different from the aggressive, kidnapping
gaze. Still, it is not innocent. It may even be intensely disturbing.
You may not want a stranger, however gorgeous his features or
impressive his parts, residing, perhaps for life, in your imagination.
Think again of the two instances I have given in this essay:
each man’s flamboyance lay in the act of preening himself
in an effort to attract another’s gaze. Strutting into
a stranger’s vision, each displayed himself where, before,
he had not been noticed. At least one of the men did not gaze
upon the women he met in order to kidnap them, but sought to
tempt others into kidnapping him. Each offered himself as the
glamorous material from which to build an imaginative world.
Such offers are common. Many people, it seems, desire to be
imagined and to occupy a well-lit nook in someone else’s
mind. Taunting and baiting, the man in Chicago is still there,
glowering at me. His works, his tattoos, remain as vivid as
fire. Once you have returned the other person’s gaze,
accepting his invitation and constructing his suggested world,
he will be yours, private and disturbing, for as long as your
mind imagines.
This
article first appeared in
Archipelago.