Living in the Gap Between Theory and Practice
The narrator of Michelle de Kretser's sharp-witted novel Theory & Practice, a Sri Lankan–born grad student at a university in Melbourne, has a similar, self-flagellating feeling early in the book. She has discovered that her boyfriend is cheating on her, and, to her horror, she wants the other woman—'a smart, good-looking, outspoken feminist'—dead. 'I'd raged silently, inwardly,' she recalls, 'censored by an internal critic who found jealousy a trite, despicable emotion, a morbid symptom that ran counter to feminist practice.' She is immediately ashamed of her reaction. Yet maybe her lapses and mine were not moral failings but case studies in what de Kretser (who, like her narrator, is Australian and was born in Sri Lanka) calls the inevitable 'breakdowns between theory and practice.' Feminism is a set of political principles, not social prescriptions. Ideology rarely maps neatly onto everyday existence—and it's in these gaps that we learn the most about who we are, what we believe, and what we really want.
Read: How should feminists have sex now?
The novel begins in 1986, when the narrator has just moved from Sydney to Melbourne to write a thesis about gender roles in the late novels of her hero, Virginia Woolf. Invigorated by the promise of a life of the mind, she buys a dress in a color she describes as 'Intellectual Black.' She gets an apartment in a vibrant bohemian enclave bursting with scholars and artists that sits a few steps from the beach. The nearby ocean becomes a model for the kind of knowledge she seeks: something to 'carry me beyond the limits of myself,' even at 'the risk of drowning.' But in truth, there is no escaping oneself—no city, no dress, no course of study with the power to liberate a person from who they really are.
Not long after breaking up with her boyfriend, the narrator starts sleeping with Kit, a wealthy engineering student with an equally wealthy girlfriend, Olivia. Their trysts are aboveboard, Kit says, because he and Olivia have 'a deconstructed relationship.' The narrator convinces herself that she's fine with this. She's a 'modern woman,' she thinks, 'perfectly content with his body's undeconstructed need of mine.' But that idealized self buckles under erotic strain, and the narrator soon grows obsessed with Olivia: She fantasizes about breaking into her apartment and leaves marks on Kit's body before she sends him back to her. In a nod to the epistemic value of their dalliance, Kit and the narrator refer to sex as 'studying.' Since her thesis involves thinking critically about gender roles, what better way to study than to participate in a three-sided heterosexual power struggle?
As the narrator discovers, neither our politics nor our principles preclude—or protect us from—unwieldy emotions, embarrassing impulses, or subconscious desires. What's more, the love triangle forces her to tussle with questions of not only gender but also class. A brown-skinned, first-generation immigrant, she's opposed to Kit and Olivia's inborn privilege and the socioeconomic stratification that enforces it; she also wants what they have. 'I wanted to join the bourgeoisie,' she says, 'and I wanted to destroy it.' The two truths coexist, however uneasily, rather than canceling each other out.
The narrator's research into Woolf, whose picture she tapes above her desk, reveals another fissure between her ideals—namely, the writer she looks up to—and reality. Woolf looms large in her imagination not only as a pathbreaking feminist writer but also as a fellow survivor of childhood sexual abuse. Reading Woolf's diary, the narrator is moved by her description of the inner turmoil that lingers after an experience of harm. 'What is the word for so dumb and mixed a feeling?' Woolf writes. The narrator recognizes the sentiment: 'Dumb, mixed feelings,' she muses, 'are knowledge that lives outside language and outside time.'
But the narrator faces mixed feelings of a different kind when she reads another diary entry, in which Woolf cruelly describes the Sri Lankan national hero E. W. Perera as a 'poor little mahogany coloured wretch.' It feels like a painful, personal blow. How to account for this wrinkle in her image of the beloved author? Again, by holding two truths simultaneously. The 'Woolfmother,' as the narrator calls her, is both an intellectual giant and a blatant racist. A friend suggests that instead of abandoning her study of Woolf, the narrator enter into a conversation with her blighted hero. The friend's prescription: 'Write back to Woolf.'
The narrator's white adviser, Paula, dismisses the idea of shifting her thesis to account for Woolf's racism; she suggests that the narrator focus on Woolf's public work rather than her private thoughts. But the narrator feels she must 'reckon with [the] mahogany-colored wretch' who has 'taken up squatting on a corner of my desk.' She notices that both she and Paula have the same poster of Woolf, but Paula's, notably, is 'framed and under glass.' Where Paula wants to keep her idol's legacy pristine, the narrator wants to wrestle with Woolf—even if it leaves a mark.
Paula, whom de Kretser refers to as the English Department's 'Designated Feminist,' has a rather low tolerance for complexity: At one point, the narrator learns that she once wrote a scathing pan of a woman's debut novel, tarring the book as 'unfeminist' because its female protagonist despairs over the end of her affair with a man. As it turns out, Paula's boyfriend had left her for this novelist not long before. When it comes to feminism—and to life itself—the narrator prefers to mine the 'messy, human truth' that she sees in her adviser's book review rather than worship a passed-down pantheon of 'flawless feminist heroes.' She wants to make sense of the gradations and complications of 'female experience'—that is, to go beyond theory and account for practice. Indeed, over the course of the novel, most of her learning happens outside the classroom, through encounters and conversations with other people. As fascinating and edifying as theory can be, it can rarely teach us as much about ourselves as everyday life.
[Read: Escaping the patriarchy for good]
Theory & Practice is sly, spiky, and brilliant: an intellectual coming-of-age story that accounts for all that can't be learned in the academy—or in books. The novel's meta structure bears this out: The first few pages belong to what appears to be an entirely different book, ostensibly written and abruptly scrapped by the narrator. The writing has 'stalled' because, she says, 'I was discovering that I no longer wanted to write novels that read like novels,' which she finds deceptive in their tidiness. With this observation, the line between author and narrator blurs: Aspects of the book are clearly lifted from de Kretser's own life—the novel's Australian cover even bears a picture of a college-aged de Kretser—yet it warns against drawing any neat conclusions. The story that follows flits confidently between modes: memoir and novel, personal and political, fact and fiction. Essayistic asides commingle with tender memories; heady emotions intrude on serious philosophizing. The aim, the narrator says, is to capture a sense of 'formlessness and mess'—in other words, real life.
De Kretser's attraction to chaos and contradiction made sense to me; I myself have struggled to make my disparate thoughts and desires cohere. It was only when I began reading about the formless, messy lives of various feminists in biographies and memoirs—rather than, say, their works of polemic or philosophy—that I no longer felt like a failure. Their mistakes, their resentments, and their embarrassing, often unenlightened feelings were so much like my own. I realized that this painful gap between who one is and who one wishes to be is universal—and no amount of knowledge can assuage it. The narrator feels something similar the first time she sees her own 'everyday, unglamorous world' reflected back to her in a film about a young feminist who rages against her ex-boyfriend and his new lover. 'What made my heart run like a hare,' she says, 'was hearing my mind exposed.' And it's only through this kind of exposure—of our personal lapses, of the unfairness of love, of the faults of our heroes—that we can get anywhere near the truth.
Article originally published at The Atlantic

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
8 minutes ago
- Buzz Feed
Best "Bluey" Fan Theories
No matter your age, there's something incredibly comforting about kicking back and watching a few (or a few dozen) episodes of Bluey. The hit Australian animated series consistently ranks at the top of the streaming charts. Viewers all around the world simply can't get enough of the Heeler family. Recently over on the lively r/bluey subreddit, Reddit user Rhylan209 posed a great question: "What unproven Bluey theories do you believe?" The answers are fascinating. Here are some of the most intriguing: "I think Bandit and Chili 'accidentally' double-booked babysitters on purpose to set up Rad and Frisky because they knew they needed to meet someone and would be perfect for each other." "The reason all the adults are so quick to play along is because they're dogs, and that's how dogs socialize." "Bandit wasn't actually leaving to take a new job in 'The Sign,' but he was supposed to go into witness protection. The popular fan theory that Bandit has been stealing artifacts and selling them on the black market is true. As is the theory that Chilli helps to smuggle them through airport security. What wasn't as widely known is that their neighbor Pat has been working undercover and the reason he's so close to the Heeler family is he was gathering evidence which he used to flip them to get them to testify against the ringleader." "Imagination is real in Bluey's world. By 'is real' I mean the characters, things, effects, and rule systems imagined manifest and take hold of reality. It explains why everyone is always willing to play along, even when it seems like it's a game they really don't want to play, and also why they know exactly how to play along." "Dad was stressed during 'Stickbird' because he was contemplating the potential of moving." "The whole show is just future Bluey telling her own kid/s stories of how she grew up. That's why there's actual magic (see 'Fairies' and 'Magic'), why all the grown-ups are always kind and play along with the games the kids play, why Calypso has this mystic aura about her, why the family is always having wild adventures, and why every story has a happy ending. Also explains why the house is endlessly big and always has room for their weird shenanigans." "Chilli is a massive fan of Star Wars. 'Magic' was something she, Brandy, and Mort came up with after watching the movies and seeing the Force." "Bandit, Chilli, and Pat were all in an improv comedy troupe while in university, or sometime shortly after. This explains why Pat is, without question, ALWAYS down to get in on whatever game invades his lawn. Bandit and Chilli (to a lesser extent) have been pulling him in on shenanigans for over a decade, and at some point, 'Yes, and' is just second nature." "Chippy had a DUI, and that's why Cherry had to drive him." "Judo isn't around half the time because her parents are divorced and she's with her dad sometimes." "Judo has two moms, and they are divorced. The Heelers say 'Wendy' and 'Judo's mom' and some instances (like in 'Baby Race') I think it's interchangeable, and then some instances (like 'Sticky Gecko'), I wonder if it's not." "Nana and Bob are LOADED. They bought Bandit the house as a gift when he achieved his PhD." "Neither Jean Luc nor Mackenzie is the father of Bluey's future daughter. The kid's features are easily found in other members of the Heeler family, and the dad is probably someone she met in university or something." "The child at the end of 'Surprise' is Bandit and Chilli's adopted daughter." "I believe that Stripe and Trixie are heading for a divorce." "Stripe either a) works in real estate, or b) his family moved not too long before the show takes place, which is why Muffin knows what the 'For Sale' sign is." "I like the theory that [the Heeler house] was the house Bandit grew up in, and Nana and Bob sold it to Bandit and Chilli for a reasonable price when they got married. Nana living in a condo tracks really well to a retirement downsizing, plus Bandit says he visited the creek by their house as a young kid." "Bandit was a Black Sabbath/Ozzy Osbourne fan." "All the kids that are in Calypso's daycare have some sort of neurodivergence (ADHD, autism, etc.) and she's a behavioral specialist of some sort." "Bluey is set in the 2010s." "Bandit's [new] job was in Perth, so he assumed Rad would be there to help out." "It was Brandi who freed Bandit from the jinx curse." And finally: "Bluey grows up to be Blue from Blue's Clues." Bluey is available to stream on Disney+.


USA Today
38 minutes ago
- USA Today
'Bluey' announces four new short series: When and where to watch
"Bluey" is getting four new short-form series based on core themes from the beloved children's show, BBC Studios announced Aug. 5. The Australian cartoon is launching new shorts that will be available to watch worldwide: "Bluey Tunes," "Bluey Puppets," "Bluey Cookalongs" and "Bluey Fancy Restaurant," according to a news release. The breakouts will be respectively based on dancing, puppetry, cooking and crafting, the release said. "Our strategy is all about putting fandom at the heart of everything we do by creating a variety of content that invites participation, sparks creativity, and brings families together," said Jasmine Dawson, SVP of digital at BBC Studios, in the release. "Whether it's dancing, crafting, or cooking, these series are designed to celebrate the joy and play that Bluey inspires in fans around the world." Here's what to know about the new series, including how to watch. 'Bluey' launches four new short-form series. What are they about? According to a release, the four new "Bluey" series are based on themes that are "designed to spark creativity and connection." They include: 'Bluey' short series: Release dates, how to watch The new "Bluey" series will "soon" be available to watch on Disney Jr., Disney Channel and Disney Jr. On Demand in the United States and Disney+ globally, according to a release. BBC Studios did not announce streaming release dates for the series. They will also be available to watch on the Official Bluey YouTube channel. Here are the YouTube release dates for each series: Melina Khan is a national trending reporter for USA TODAY. She can be reached at


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Dating expert reveals huge issue sparked by artificial intelligence — and what made it worse
A relationship expert has warned about the use of AI when it comes to emotional connection after a man was spotted treating ChatGPT like his lover. Blake Pavey, an Australian comedian, appeared on the On It Off It podcast and revealed he was on the train and noticed a man messaging ChatGPT 'like it was his girlfriend'. 'He was like, 'I've never been able to connect with somebody like you before'. It was like a massive paragraph,' he recalled. 'And I was like, that's so lovely — and then I saw it was a chatbot. I thought, 'That's really sad'.' He said the man was a decent looking, corporate guy, and he couldn't help but think it was 'pathetic' that he had to turn to artificial intelligence for human connection. 4 'He was like, 'I've never been able to connect with somebody like you before'. It was like a massive paragraph,' he recalled. AlexPhotoStock – 'You just made guys who fall in love with strippers cooler,' Pavey, 23, said. Samantha Jayne, a relationship expert, said what Pavey saw pointed to a much bigger problem when it comes to dating. 'People are losing the ability to connect with others. It all started with smartphones, social media, then Covid only made things worse,' she said. 4 Relationship expert Samantha Jayne weighed in on the issue. Instagram/samanthajaynedatingexpert She said the man Pavey saw on public transport potentially had a huge fear of rejection and a lack of trust — and he knew that AI wouldn't reject him. 'It is very common to see people connecting with AI as if they are connecting with a human to meet their needs for connection, intimacy, companionship and emotional support,' she said. 'You only have to look at movies such as Her, where a man falls in love with his AI. 'Theodore Twombly, voiced by Joaquin Phoenix, develops a relationship with Samantha, an AI assistant. While it meets his needs, ultimately it leads to heartache and deception, proving it is not a solution. 'Since the smartphone, many people have been connecting virtually through platforms and social media.' Jayne said there are pros and cons when it comes to artificial intelligence. One positive is that it can assist with conversation starters where people might normally become stuck. 4 Jayne said what Pavey saw pointed to a much bigger problem when it comes to dating. terovesalainen – It also helps with practicing texting. But the negatives include a lack of authenticity because when you eventually meet, the online persona is likely to be very different to the reality. She said it can also create deceptive profiles when too many enhancements are used. 'The biggest problem with AI dating is that it creates unhealthy, unrealistic expectations about real relationships,' she said. 'It can also cause too much investment in AI relationships and stunted development in real life relationships so yes, AI has the capacity to ruin human connections. 'It could be seen as the AI is just easier to correspond with and gives an immediate response so it could temporarily be the compilation of choice.' 4 Jayne said there are pros and cons when it comes to artificial intelligence. AFP via Getty Images When it comes to her own clientele, Jayne said she highlights that relying on AI is like 'riding a bike as an adult with your training wheels on'. 'There comes a point in your life where you take responsibility and grow to be a healthy adult who has a genuine relationship with self and others. Throw away the smartphone for a few hours and instead connect through eye contact, voice and physical touch,' she advised.