Source: Feminist Current
In the current squabble on the liberal/progressive/left side of the fence over so-called ācancel culture,āĀ in which one open letter in favor of freedom of expression led to a rebuttal open letter in favor of a different approach to freedom of expression, I can offer a report on the experience of being canceled.
Several times over the past few years Iāve been asked to speak by university or community groups, only to see those events canceled by organizers after someone complained that I am ātransphobic.ā At a couple of events that drew complaints but were not canceled, including one in a church, critics tried to disrupt my talk. None of the events was actually a talk on transgender issues. The complaint was that I should not be allowed to speak in progressive settings ā about other feminist issues, the ecological crises, or anything else ā because what Iāve written about the ideology of the transgender movement is said to be bigoted. A local radical bookstore that denounced me publicly went so far as to no longer carry my books, which I had given them free copies of for years.
If I were, in fact, a bigot, these cancellations would be easy to understand. I have never invited a bigot to speak in a class I taught or at an event I helped organize. I have invited people to speak who held some political views with which I did not agree (after all, if I only invited people who agreed with me on everything, I would be bored and lonely), but I have no interest in giving bigots a public platform.
The curious thing about these canceled/disrupted events is that no one ever pointed to anything I have written or said in public that is, in fact, bigoted. If transphobia is the fear or hatred of people who identify as transgender, nothing I have written or said is transphobic. Most of my critics simply assert that because I support the radical feminist critique of transgender ideology, I am by definition a bigot and transphobe.
Let me be clear: Iām not whining or asking for sympathy. I am a white man and a retired university professor with a stable income and a network of friends and comrades who offer support. I continue to do political and intellectual work I find rewarding and can find places to publish my work. While I donāt enjoy being insulted, these verbal attacks donāt have much effect on my life. Iām not concerned about myself but about the progressive communityās capacity for critical thinking and respectful debate.
In that spirit, here is my contribution to that debate on transgenderism and the value of open discussion:
One of the basic points that feminists āĀ along with many other writers ā have made is that biological sex categories are real and exist outside of any particular cultural understanding of those categories. The terms āmaleā and āfemaleā refer to those biological sex categories, while social norms about āmasculinityā and āfemininityā reflect how any particular society expects males and females to behave. That may seem obvious to many readers, but in some progressive and feminist circles itās routine for people to say that those sex categories themselves are a āsocial construction.ā I have been told that because I assert that biological sex categories are immutable, I am transphobic.
Is that claim defensible? Are sex categories a social construction?
Letās think about reproduction. Some creatures reproduce asexually, through such processes as fission and budding, and some animals lay eggs. Most mammals, including all humans, reproduce sexually through the combination of a sperm and an egg (the two types of gamete cells) that leads to live birth.
Now, letās think about respiration. Most aquatic creatures (whales and dolphins, which are mammals, are an exception) take in oxygen through gills. Mammals, including all humans, get oxygen by taking air into our lungs.
These descriptions of creaturesā reproduction and respiration are the result of a social process we call science, but they are not social constructions. We describe the world with human language, but what we describe doesnāt change just because we might change the language we use.
The term āsocial constructionā implies that a reality can change through social processes. An example is marriage. What is a marriage? That depends on how a particular society constructs the concept. Change the definition ā to include same-sex couples, for example ā and the reality of who can get married changes.
But again, at the risk of seeming simplistic, these descriptions of reproduction and respiration systems cannot be changed by human action. We cannot socially construct ourselves into reproducing asexually or by laying eggs instead of reproducing sexually through fertilization of egg by sperm, any more than we could socially construct ourselves into breathing through gills instead of lungs.
When it comes to respiration, no one suggests that ālung-based respiration is a social construction.ā If someone made such a claim most of us would say, āIām sorry, but that doesnāt make any sense to me.ā Yet when it comes to reproduction, some people argue that ābiological sex is a social construction,ā which makes no more sense than claiming respiration is a social construction.
To be clear: Humans do create cultural meaning about sex differences. Humans who have a genetic makeup to produce sperm (males) and humans who have a genetic makeup to produce eggs (females) are treated differently in a variety of ways that go beyond roles in reproduction. [Note: A small percentage of the human population is born āintersex,ā a term to mark those who do not fit clearly into male/female categories in terms of reproductive systems, secondary sexual characteristics, and chromosomal structure. But the existence of intersex people does not change the realities of sexual reproduction, and they are not a third sex.]
In the struggle for womenās liberation, feminists in the 1970s began to use the term āgenderā to describe the social construction of meaning around the differences in biological sex. When men would say, āWomen are just not suited for political leadership,ā for example, feminists would point out that this was not a biological fact to be accepted but a cultural norm to be resisted.
To state the obvious: Biological sex categories exist outside of human action. Social gender categories are a product of human action.
This observation leads to reasonable questions, which are not bigoted or transphobic: When those in the transgender movement assert that ātrans women are women,ā what do they mean? If they mean that a male human can somehow transform into a female human, the claim is incoherent because humans cannot change biological sex categories. If they mean that a male human can feel uncomfortable in the social gender category of āmanā and prefer to live in a societyās gender category of āwoman,ā that is easy to understand. But it begs a question: Is the problem that one is assigned to the wrong category? Or is the problem that society has imposed gender categories that are rigid, repressive, and reactionary on everyone? And if the problem is in societyās gender categories, then is not the solution to analyze the system of patriarchy āĀ institutionalized male dominance ā that generates those rigid categories? Should we not seek to dismantle that system? Radical feminists argue for such a radical change in society.
These are the kinds of questions I have asked and the kinds of arguments I have made in writing and speaking. If I am wrong, then critics should point out mistakes and inaccuracies in my work. But if this radical feminist analysis is a strong one, then how can an accurate description of biological realities be evidence of bigotry or transphobia?
When I challenge the ideology of the transgender movement from a radical feminist perspective, which is sometimes referred to as āgender-criticalā (critical of the way our culture socially constructs gender norms), I am not attacking people who identify as transgender. Instead, I am offering an alternative approach ā one rooted in a collective struggle against patriarchal ideologies, institutions, and practices, rather than a medicalized approach rooted in liberal individualism.
Thatās why the label āTERFā (trans-exclusionary radical feminism) is inaccurate. Radical feminists donāt exclude people who identify as transgender but rather offer what we believe is a more productive way to deal with the distress that people feel about gender norms that are rigid, repressive, and reactionary. That is not bigotry, but politics. Our arguments are relevant to the ongoing debate about public policies, such as who is granted access to female-only spaces or who can compete in girlsā and womenās sports. They are relevant to concerns about the safety of puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and surgical interventions. And radical feminism is grounded in compassion for those who experience gender dysphoria ā instead of turning away from reality, we are suggesting ways to cope that we believe to be more productive for everyone.
Now, a final prediction. I expect that some people in the transgender movement will suggest that my reproduction/respiration analogy mocks people who identify as transgender by suggesting that they are ignorant. Let me state clearly: I do not think that. The analogy is offered to point out that an argument relevant to public policy doesnāt hold up. To critique a political position in good faith is not to mock the people who hold it but rather to take seriously oneās obligation to participate in democratic dialogue.
In a cancel culture, people who disagree with me may find it easy to ignore the argument and simply label me a bigot, on the reasoning that because I think the ideology of the transgender movement is open to critique, I obviously am transphobic.
But I want to make one final plea that people not do that, with two questions: If my argument is cogent ā and there certainly are good reasons to reach that conclusion ā why is it in the interests of anyone ā including people who identify as transgender āĀ to ignore such an argument? And how can people determine whether my argument is cogent if it is not part of the public conversation?
Robert Jensen, an emeritus professor in the School of Journalism at the University of Texas at Austin, is the author of several books, including, The End of Patriarchy: Radical Feminism for Men and Plain Radical: Living, Loving, and Learning to Leave the Planet Gracefully. His 2007 book, Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity, is available as a free PDF online. He can be reached at [email protected] or via his website: robertwjensen.org.
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1 Comment
I have not though specifically about these arguments about transphobia, so I would refrain from commenting on that,
However, I want to make another point which seems of crucial importance for today and for the future.
I am not a trans-person, but for reasons that I wonāt go into, I have faced the most virulent form of transphobia and homophobia all my adult life. I know what it feels like and the damage that it does.
Keeping that in mind, my question is: What wold be preferable? Transphobia (or any other such tendency) to be expressed to some extent (without condoning it, of course) so that we at least know that it exists and can point it out and fight against it, assuming it really is transphobia, or is it preferable to shutdown all remotely potential transphobic (or any such) human expression and make it go below the surface, where it is intact in practice through covert means, which are familiar to all those who have ever faced discrimination/oppression/demonisation/dehumanisation etc.?
The big question is, and has been, and will continue to be, in many spheres of life: How do we fight against something (like transphobia or homophobia or sexism or racism etc. or indeed covert oppression by states or technology perversion by both states and corporations), something that isnāt even supposed to exits, but actually does very much so?
We can fight against something that is visible in some sense, but how do we fight against something that is covert and the dominant people ensure that it remains covert?
This is not a hypothetical scenario. There are many places in the world where things like homosexuality or even sexuality, for all practical purposes of discourse and dialogue, are not supposed to exist at all. Think of the Victorians pretending that there was no sex going on in their society. Or, in some cases (place-times), this was so even for rape, except when it was committed by the enemies (which included all the marginalised people or those who were dissenters in some sense).
If the society you live in pretends that homosexuality doesnāt even exist and therefore there can be no question of discrimination based on it, how can anyone fight for gay rights. The same goes for some other identities,
Let me state from my experience that when a society pretends that some wrong doesnāt exist at all, then it is almost impossible to resist against that. Such a society is far worse than where the wrong is visible in human expression, although this is a complex matter and I am not suggesting an exclusive direct relationship between the two.
The point, obviously, is not to condone all such bigoted behaviour and practice, but that we can counter it only if the are manisfested in human expression or in some visible form.
I think it is dangerous to drive idea underground, even the ideas one finds abhorrent or offensive. That can lead to unpredictable consequences for which we will have no defenses. There are many example of this from history. I can give specific examples and argue this pont more, but it would need a longer writeup.