maths analogies! awesome, i am using that one forever.
― dove cale (c sharp major), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 16:16 (fourteen years ago)
Wow, this thread. Holy hell. By the way, if you start your argument on the premise that a very very common turn of phrase is actually something to be taken painstakingly literally, you've already lost.
I can't deal with the multitude of points and ideas that have been on this thread since last I checked in, so I'm just gonna...
i don't know much about the trans experience or trans norms at all. i was raised by two cisgender lesbians & a hetero pair of parents, and i feel like i have some sense of what friends mean when they describe themselves as queer, but i haven't known or read of much of the trans experience. does anyone have suggestions on that?
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, February 14, 2012 6:50 AM (9 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
My friend has written a good personal column about it, if you're interested? http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/series/transgender-journey
Also, I saw someone ask for a clarification of 'cisgender' upthread, but not sure if anyone answered? I know wiki's not the best resource, but this sort of covers it. Basically, it's in contrast to 'trans' but without the highly offensive use of terms like 'normal' that people often use without thinking (I'm sure I have done in the past).
― emil.y, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 16:41 (fourteen years ago)
cis gay men seem to get especially het up about the word 'cis' ime - like i've seen a few bloggers claim they don't like the word because it sounds like "sissy" and is thus feminizing/demeaning (and yet they're content to fling the word 'tranny' around as if that word isn't extremely problematic either)
i like cis because it's both a good shorthand that dispels the idea of all trans ppl as being 'other' and bcz it's etymologically consistent
― Prince Rebus (donna rouge), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:29 (fourteen years ago)
huh I've never seen this cisgender term before, interesting.
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:31 (fourteen years ago)
Any dude, gay or otherwise, who gets het up about "feminising" being inherently "demeaning" can GTFO AFAIC.
I mean I get the negative reductive stereotypes of gay men as effete can be pretty offensive and RONG but that derives its power from an intensely misogynist worldview that sees femininity as naturally tainted as much as reductive ideas about homosexuality.
― White Chocolate Cheesecake, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:35 (fourteen years ago)
sure - otoh it isn't really that surprising that some gay men overcompensate in the masculine gender roles dept. defense mechanism etc
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:36 (fourteen years ago)
"het up" <-- also problematic :)
― mark s, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:38 (fourteen years ago)
i like cis as useful & necessary shorthand but i'm also aware of how jargony it can come across to people who haven't heard it before - the influence of academia and academic language on queer/feminist theory is not something i would dismiss but i think it's also helpful (and necessary!) to move away from it if we actually want to effect this change we talk about.
SO MANY gay men i've known have casually flung around "tranny" (and terms like "slut", "slag" too for that matter) and i fucking hate it.
― first period don't give a fuck, second period gon get cut (lex pretend), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:38 (fourteen years ago)
lol mark
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:38 (fourteen years ago)
SO MANY gay men i've known have casually flung around "tranny" (and terms like "slut", "slag" too for that matter)
lol yeah if anything that's where I've picked it up from. long-running club night called the "Trannyshack" in SF etc
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:39 (fourteen years ago)
i thought "het up" was derived from "heated up"?
― first period don't give a fuck, second period gon get cut (lex pretend), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:39 (fourteen years ago)
have any transsexual communities attempted to reclaim "tranny" incidentally? i have no idea
― first period don't give a fuck, second period gon get cut (lex pretend), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:40 (fourteen years ago)
well I can tell you from experience that most of the attendees at Trannyshack are uh, cisgendered, I guess
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:41 (fourteen years ago)
Het up is past tense of heated up, it's punny! Duh!
― White Chocolate Cheesecake, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:42 (fourteen years ago)
ooh look there's a website
maybe SFW, I dunno
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:43 (fourteen years ago)
those angry hets! ;)
re: 'tranny': the impression i have is that, much like 'fag', some ppl are fine with it, others aren't. either way, not cis ppl's place to make that call (and i personally don't feel comfortable using it in just about any context)
― Prince Rebus (donna rouge), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:44 (fourteen years ago)
i agree but there's also a thing that i recognise where you feel like someone's treating you like a stereotype of a particularly flaming/feminine gay man and i tend to respond by having to put my foot down and make it clear that's not on
― first period don't give a fuck, second period gon get cut (lex pretend), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:45 (fourteen years ago)
Sorry I forgot, I'm meant to still be participating in the Great Feminist Humour Boycott of 1973 - we will boycott humour until equality is achieved... oh wait.
― White Chocolate Cheesecake, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:45 (fourteen years ago)
I understand that, Lex, I just wish that there were a way gay men could resist the stereotype without agreeing with perpetuating the construct that being ~like a woman~ is inherently awful. Say it's incorrect, but no need to say it's demeaning?
― White Chocolate Cheesecake, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:48 (fourteen years ago)
gay men tend to have butch/femme and top/bottom dichotomies but no real useful way to describe the in-between stuff, which is why i hate both of those dichotomies
― Prince Rebus (donna rouge), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:50 (fourteen years ago)
well the thing is it's usually in situations where you can't really spell it out in those exact terms, it's something you have to convey through your own behaviour rather than a calm & sober debate about identity/gender.
which might be something to talk about, actually, b/c how these gender issues affect us in a practical way is often not in a situation like this thread, where it's entirely appropriate to be discussing these things in these terms - most of one's quotidian life isn't like this, and it's navigating those situations where the actual problems come from
or something. don't feel i expressed that quite clearly
― first period don't give a fuck, second period gon get cut (lex pretend), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:53 (fourteen years ago)
― Prince Rebus (donna rouge), Tuesday, February 14, 2012 5:50 PM (3 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
otmfm
(though i don't want to hijack the feminism thread with gay male talk, ha. btw i have always found it funny how many str8 ilxors lurk on the gay thread!)
― first period don't give a fuck, second period gon get cut (lex pretend), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 17:54 (fourteen years ago)
late replying to this but couple of xps to NV...
question tho, isn't there a more general division happening here between, for want of a better phrase, the libido-led and the intellect-led? a division that also cuts across normative gender lines?this interests me greatly because on the one hand you have 'male' logic, reason etc explicitly positioned against 'female' sentimentality, hysteria etc.
Yet with sexuality you see the opposite popular perceptions - men are passionate, sexual, unafraid etc vs women who are "not as sexual", "don't think about sex as much as men", "are more aroused by the mental than the physical" etc.*
why is that?
and yeah huge awful double standards still in play but female sexuality is a little way out of the angels vs whores box by now surely?irl yes obviously but the public perception really hasn't moved on much; you see this literally every time a rape case hits the news.
*all actual things men have said to me.
― gyac, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:07 (fourteen years ago)
i recognize what you're describing but i think associations with female sexuality are way more incoherent than that. women are also viewed as sexually voracious in a way that threatens men, especially women of color in our cultural context.
i am not actually sure the way female sexuality is understood is all the far out of the virgin-whore box, but like i said, i can be reactionary about this stuff.
― horseshoe, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:15 (fourteen years ago)
women are also viewed as sexually voracious in a way that threatens men, especially women of color in our cultural context.
this is news to me. examples?
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:17 (fourteen years ago)
i guess i'm just talking about the whore pole of the virgin-whore dynamic. "Hottentot Venus" type-stuff.
― horseshoe, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:20 (fourteen years ago)
men are passionate, sexual, unafraid
More reckless, maybe.
― le ralliement du doute et de l'erreur (Michael White), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:20 (fourteen years ago)
xxp definitely true horseshoe.
when i say about it having moved on, I was definitely not referring to the wider societal perception!
― gyac, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:21 (fourteen years ago)
right, this seems to comfortably encompass, say, Nicki Minaj or Li'l Kim or whoever. otoh I can't recall too many asian dragon-lady representations lately... and latina women are like a whole other basket of nuances when it comes to the virgin-whore axis.
xp
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:22 (fourteen years ago)
I shd also re-read this book, but even having not covered this ground in a few years, I can highly recommend it. I think I would get so much more out of it now than I did when I was mostly confused by all the historical ideas.
― one little aioli (Laurel), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:24 (fourteen years ago)
Beginning with "vamp" Theda Bara's 1915 silent-film debut in A Fool There Was, Dijkstra (Idols of Perversity), writing with passionate feminist scholarship, decodes images of women as predators, destroyers and vultures who deplete civilized males of their creative energies. He unmasks predatory females in Hemingway, H.L. Mencken, Elinor Glyn's bestselling 1907 potboiler Three Weeks, and unravels the sexist assumptions of sociologist Emile Durkheim, sexologist Havelock Ellis and philosopher of love Remy de Gourmont. Shuttling between high and popular culture, Dijkstra argues that antifeminine, racist and imperialist attitudes merge in Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Fitzgerald's The Beautiful and the Damned, in Kipling, Edgar Rice Burroughs, H. Rider Haggard, in Jung's psychology of unchanging archetypes, in the social Darwinist teachings of Herbert Spencer and William Graham Sumner. Finally, he traces a trajectory of fantasies involving men attaining supermale status from Nietzsche to Ezra Pound and Hitler.
― one little aioli (Laurel), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:26 (fourteen years ago)
sounds interesting
decodes images of women as predators, destroyers and vultures who deplete civilized males of their creative energies.
would read lol debate between her and Dave Sim
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:26 (fourteen years ago)
yeah i didn't mean that all women of color are viewed as menacingly sexual or that only women of color are--if you were raised in a monotheistic faith surely you recognize what i'm talking about when i talk about women as sexual temptresses who can destroy men. i am being very shorthandy i guess in talking about the mythology surrounding women and sex because there's so much of it and it's so directly contradictory and overdetermined.
― horseshoe, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:28 (fourteen years ago)
minority ladies like the kind you'd meet in their ~authentic~ cultural setting are freeks/subs/wildcats etc and could ruin your life with their appetites
many xps
― i love pinfold cricket (gbx), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:29 (fourteen years ago)
xxxp It's all about man as rational being who needs woman and their emotional vampirism in order to have children and have his family taken care of but should resist their appeal at all other times. Because all women crave his hot, hot, male...energy, and will sap him of it until he is a lifeless husk that does their bidding and is pitied by all clean-living, masculine men, everywhere.
― one little aioli (Laurel), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:30 (fourteen years ago)
also because it bums me out tbh
― horseshoe, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:30 (fourteen years ago)
yeah sure. I was raised Jewish, which has perhaps a more generous view of female sexuality than Islam and Xtianity. (still contains the formative adam/eve myth, obvy)
xxp
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:31 (fourteen years ago)
the succubus myth
horseshoe otm
― first period don't give a fuck, second period gon get cut (lex pretend), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:32 (fourteen years ago)
I find male-only groups/spaces somewhat alien and would be depressed to think of any of my activities as masculine-coded.
― jaymc, Tuesday, February 14, 2012 8:33 AM (3 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
^this. Sometimes I wish I didn't feel this way, I would like to be able to find camaraderie in a "guy's night", but it just doesn't work out that way.
― Jeff, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:34 (fourteen years ago)
take it to the guy's thread guys
― max buzzword (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:35 (fourteen years ago)
(if there is one I will complain about sports fyi)
Excerpt from forthcoming book about modern sexuality in the West --> http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/jan/20/first-sexual-revolution
The first sexual revolution: lust and liberty in the 18th centuryAdulterers and prostitutes could be executed and women were agreed to be more libidinous than men – then in the 18th century attitudes to sex underwent an extraordinary change
Adulterers and prostitutes could be executed and women were agreed to be more libidinous than men – then in the 18th century attitudes to sex underwent an extraordinary change
Not sure if it's shitty or not, but the excerpt was entertaining at least.
― Laura Lucy Lynn (La Lechera), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:39 (fourteen years ago)
Baudelaire trafficked in this imagery as did Coleridge. If you mess with sexuality as much as religious anti-fornicators have, you end with highly distorted views, yet the underlying human fascination remains however sublimated or perverted.
― le ralliement du doute et de l'erreur (Michael White), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:39 (fourteen years ago)
and women were agreed to be more libidinous than men
It's funny that to religitimize itself, Christian patriarchy abandoned the Eve myth and Salome, etc., and put sentimental domesticity at its center. Perhaps this is more a Northern/Protestant thing but it's a pretty weird turn-around. Healthy, well-bred men are supposed to be rational and prefer clean male company. It does fairly reek of suppressed homoeroticism.
― le ralliement du doute et de l'erreur (Michael White), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:44 (fourteen years ago)
Hey has anyone read this?
http://thecaptivereader.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/enlightened-sexism-the-seductive-message-that-feminisms-work-is-done.jpg
Read an excerpt online the other day, and it seemed good. I liked Douglas's Where the Girls Are when I read it in college, and the premise of this one kind of reminded me of Ariel Levy's Female Chauvinist Pigs, which I liked as well.
― jaymc, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:47 (fourteen years ago)
cisgender lesbiansyo hoos what does this mean?
― a hoy hoy, Tuesday, February 14, 2012 10:07 AM (8 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Kristen Schilt and Laurel Westbrook defined "cisgender" as a label for "individuals who have a match between the gender they were assigned at birth, their bodies, and their personal identity", complementing "transgender".[2] A more popular term is "gender normative".[3] However, unlike "cisgender", this term suggests that there is a single, agreed-upon system of gender norms.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:53 (fourteen years ago)
don't really know the backstory of "cis" as the prefix tho, haven't done the appropriate reading
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:55 (fourteen years ago)
The word has its origin in the Latin-derived prefix cis, meaning "to/this the near side," which is antonymous with the Latin-derived prefix "trans." This usage can be seen in the cis-trans distinction in chemistry, or in the ancient Roman term "Cisalpine Gaul", i.e., "Gaul on this side of the Alps". In the case of gender, however, "cis" refers to the alignment of gender identity with assigned gender.
― first period don't give a fuck, second period gon get cut (lex pretend), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:55 (fourteen years ago)
i am making a concerted effort to keep my mouth shut itt btw
ime straight white dudes have a bad habit of loudly disagreeing with (everyone but especially) women about what it is like to be (anything other than a straight white dude but especially) a woman instead of listening to their stories of that experience and i'd rather not play into that
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:57 (fourteen years ago)
That Guardian excerpt was fascinating, Lechera! I feel like every paragraph needs to be unpacked and supported like 10x more and it would still be interesting.
First thing, though, was story about the man who fell ill and feared his sickness was punishment for once ATTEMPTING to have sex with some young woman, who rebuked his advances, but because he besmirched her, the elders brought her from another town to stand trial and be found guilty of adultery, and hanged along with the failed rapist. The criminal injustice of it and the bottomless pit of his selfishness in pulling her down with him have me just....
― one little aioli (Laurel), Tuesday, 14 February 2012 18:59 (fourteen years ago)