
Genesis P-Orridge: The Body Politic
Genesis Breyer P-Orridge founder of the bands Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV has been an icon of the psychedelic and industrial rock music underworlds for some 30-odd years. S/he's amassed a catalog of substantive and provocative sounds and visuals that draw influence from a wide swathe of musical and social sources, including the cut-up theories of personal friends William Burroughs and Brion Gysin. With the prompting of worldwide followings, both bands have resurfaced over the years through tours and special one-off events, and Psychic TV's current incarnation, PTV3, has recently released the new CD/DVD set, Mr. Alien Brain vs. The Skinwalkers.
It's a pleasure to speak with the affable and imaginative P-Orridge, and our recent conversation touched on topics from the fanciful (the possibilities of human hibernation) to the tragic (the loss of one's life partner). The latter is still particularly fresh since it's just a year on since the passing of P-Orridge's "other half," Jaye Breyer (best known as Lady Jaye), due to heart failure. The two had previously embarked on a years-long pursuit of pandrogyny, undergoing painful plastic surgery procedures in order to become gender-neutral human beings that looked like each other. As s/he explains, this was not about achieving a standard of beauty. Once the body is no longer viewed as sacred, the possibilities are endless.
It was really interesting one day when we decided that I would have work done on my face and have cheek implants put in so my cheeks would be more like Jaye's. We were standing in the bathroom, looking in the mirror before the surgery and saying out loud, "This is the face that you got naturally through DNA, and tomorrow you'll have another face and you don't even know what it's gonna look like! How weird is that? In 24 hours' time, this face will have gone, and we don't know what the other is gonna be." And then we just shrugged and thought, it doesn't matter what it looks like! It was an interesting moment to realize how arbitrary it really is, the way that we look.
The body is just a container. And that's where the big disconnect has happened in the media here, and it's happened in reverse. That the body is you and the body is your logo, your brand, and the body has to be perfected in really traditional ways, which is very oppressive and is not the way to evolve change and grow as a species. It's regressive, it's traveling back in times almost to medieval days, when women were just decorative property. There's a real strong aspect of that in the way people view looks and the body, especially in the west. It's a fascinating area, the clash between the ongoing war for the male to dominate the species and the new options that are becoming available to challenge that in new ways, as we've been trying to do.
We've been through a long phase, for maybe 30 years or so, or even back to the Sixties, of people wanting to reclaim their individuality. That's why things like tattooing and piercing took off, [because] people were reasserting their rights to control their own bodies in the same way as [being able to choose] abortion was a way for people to have control over their own body.
For some reason, society has always tried to legislate and police people's bodies. So that must mean it's a very powerful place. The human body is a place of warfare in society. If we can start to see ourselves as individuals, that's the first battle. And that's been going on for quite a while now. But what we feel is, that at a certain point, that separation into becoming a self-chosen individual somehow seems to require the responsibility to then re-enter and become part of the whole species again with the responsibility to guide, to explore, to propose new ideas and to set new examples.
If we don't start to view ourselves as part of the human species, then we're gonna doom ourselves. If we separate, there's friction, there's violence, there's bigotry and there's conflicting ideas of social organization and politics and economics. We'll be trapped in this loop of competition and fear and paranoia. We really feel very strongly that people have to let go of that obsession with self at some point and then use the power they've regained by getting themselves back to actually give to society as a whole.
The Clintons tried to bring in universal health care and they were shot down almost immediately. There's this huge inertia from these lobbyists and the corporations who just think in terms of their own profits and not the wellbeing of the nation. And that's going to be a real problem in the United States. It shocks me that when people talk about having health insurance for everyone, a lot of people that you wouldn't expect go, "Well, that's communism! That's socialism!" What? That's humanism! That's a precious gift that a government can give to its people, housing and health care. There has to be a huge rethink and that's why it's good that there's someone like Obama.
We are really at a crossroads, in my opinion: We either regress into a new Dark Age, where everybody is just fighting each other for what little bit of resource there is or because somebody has a different view of God. We'll either do that or we'll have to have a completely new, evolutionary rethink and take the miraculous abilities of humans to create and make technologies and tools that are amazing and almost beyond imagination and focus on the wellbeing of all and progress towards a new, utopian future. There really doesn't seem much point in being here if you're not trying to make the world a better place.
There's been this sense of feeling, not exactly threatened, but that we're betraying their struggle for the right to change gender by not being so concerned about gender. For them, that's the big issue. And we're saying, it doesn't matter. That's the only community that's sort of been aggressive towards us, which surprised us at first. We weren't expecting that at all. But when you look back at the struggle they've been through for any kind of acceptance, it's been very recent that people are starting to be aware of that general issue through television programs and so on. And it would be wrong to belittle that struggle that so many people have.
We've been very fortunate, coming from a context where life is art and art is our life and we're self-employed and so we can create our own fantasy life with the minimum interference. Other people don't have that, they're trapped in mundane jobs and they're trapped in small towns maybe and they suffer in terrible ways from violence and humiliation and ridicule. But we're not the enemy. We're there to embrace and include them, too.

