Source: Robertjensen.org
A few months after I had written an article critiquing the ideology of the transgender movement, a comrade from a progressive group told me he wanted to understand why I was challenging trans activists, whom he saw as being political allies on the left. I outlined what is now called the āgender criticalā feminist argument, which rejects the rigid and repressive gender norms in patriarchy but recognizes the material reality of human sex differences. That analysis flowed from radical feminist politics, I explained, which is essential to challenging menās exploitation of women in patriarchy, the system of institutionalized male dominance that surrounds us.
By the end of that long lunchtime conversation, he said he had no trouble following my argument and found little to disagree with. āTo tell you the truth,ā he said, āI donāt really understand a lot of what the trans movement is saying.ā
I told him I had no trouble understanding his confusion, because the transgender movementās arguments seemed unclear, sometimes even incoherent, to me as well. Then I asked him: āIs there any other issue on which you canāt make sense of a political movementās arguments but you still support its policy proposals?ā
He winced, knowing he couldnāt think of another such case. That was the end of the conversation. At the time I was being denounced by various people on the left for my writing, and we both knew he wasnāt going to publicly support me, or even ask trans activists for a clearer articulation of their arguments.
If time travel were possible, I would beam back to that moment in 2014 and hand my friend a copy of Kathleen Stockās new book, Material Girls: Why Reality Matters for Feminism. It likely would not have changed his political choices, but it would have clarified why he was having trouble making sense of trans arguments. Stock explains, carefully and respectfully, why those arguments so often donāt make much sense. I mean that not as insult but as a recognition of so many peopleās confusion. My friend was hardly the only person I have met who is perplexed by the foundational assertion of the trans movement: that a person is a man or woman, or neither or both, based on a subjective internal feeling about āgenderā (for which no viable theory has yet been presented by trans activists) rather than the material reality of āsexā (about which we have an expansive understanding from biology and everyday life).
Stockās book, on the other hand, is eminently sensible, in both meanings of the word. It is intellectually cogent and useful in helping us make personal and policy decisions. In this polarized political moment, she delivers her analysis firmly but politely, with none of the rancor that has unfortunately become so common in this debate, especially online.
For example, itās sensible to define terms in a debate, although the transgender movement shies away from being pinned down on the meaning of terms and even celebrates this ambiguity as a virtue. Stock is careful with definitions, beginning with her analysis of the four ways āgenderā is used these days. Once readers work through those options, itās clear (at least to me) that the term gender is best understood as the social meaning (captured in the terms masculinity and femininity) ascribed to biological sex differences rooted in reproduction (male and female). Sex is a function of the kind of animals that we humans are, and gender is how we human animals make sense of sex differences. Sex is biological, and gender is cultural.
Thatās the way feminists have used the terms since the 1970s, as they challenged patriarchal claims that menās domination and exploitation of women is ānaturalā because of biology. Patriarchy turns biological difference into social dominance. Feminists have long argued that gender is connected to our sex differences but is āsocially constructedā in a way that reflects the unequal distribution of power between men and women over the past few thousand years. Anything socially constructed could be constructed differently through politics.
The trans movement flips that understanding, routinely asserting that gender is not the product of social forces but is a private internal state of being, which may be innate and immutable (opinions in the trans movement vary). In other words, transgender ideology asserts that gender is something one feels and has no necessary connection to oneās body and reproductive system. Trans activists routinely assert that āsex is a social construction,ā that the biological distinctions of male and female are not objectively real but are created by societies. Stock painstakingly explains why thisāagain Iāll use the phrase, though it sounds harshādoesnāt make sense.
In the preceding paragraph, I wrote āroutinely assertā not only because there are differences of opinion within the transgender movement (which is to be expected in any movement) but because I have heard trans activists shift arguments when asked to defend a position (which is an indication of a weak argument in any movement). I once asked a trans activist, āIf sex is socially constructed, that implies that it could be constructed in some other way. Do you know of any other way for humans to reproduce other than with an egg (produced by a female) and sperm (produced by a male)? By what means would human reproduction be socially constructed differently?ā The activist offered no rebuttal to that, but simply dropped the claim, moving on to assert that trans people know what sex they āreallyā are and that any challenge to this idea was hateful and bigoted.
[A necessary footnote: There is an extremely small percentage of the human population born āintersex,ā with what are called DSDs (either Disorders or Differences in Sex Development; terminology preferences vary) that involve anomalies in genes, hormones, and reproductive organs. One of these conditions is hermaphroditism, which is still occasionally used as an umbrella term for DSDs. Stock explains those variations, noting that such conditions have nothing to do with transgenderism. Gender dysphoria (discomfort or distress when a personās internal gender identity differs from their biological sex) is a psychological not physiological condition.]
Stockās emphasis on precise language continues throughout the book. For example, she explains why the term āsex assigned at birthā is deceptive in light of the stability of the categories of male and female, evidenced by the success of human reproduction over millennia. In the vast majority of cases, everyone agrees on the sex of a newborn, which is observed not assigned. These questions about words are not trivial; how we talk about the world can change how we understand the world. Stock rejects replacing ābreastfeedingā with āchestfeeding,ā for example, because the trans-friendly term undermines our ability to name reality. Babies nurse at the breast of a female human, and the existence of women who identify as men (transmen is the common term used today) or as non-binary (rejecting an either/or choice) but still nurse a baby doesnāt change that.
Stock also offers sensible analysis of policy debates, most of which focus on the demands of men who identify as women (transwomen is the common term). For example, should transwomen be allowed into female-only spaces, such as bathrooms, changing rooms, hostels, or prisons? Stock explains why such a policy creates anxiety and fear for women, who live with the everyday reality of the threat of male violence, especially sexual violence. The problem is not that every transwoman is physically or sexually aggressive. But when claiming membership in the other sex category requires no explanation or evidence, the likelihood of abuse increases as predators find openings to target women when they are vulnerable.
Stock also explains why allowing transwomenāagain, males who identify as womenāto participate in womenās sports will undermine and potentially eliminate sex-segregated activities that create opportunities for girls and women to thrive. Separate athletic competitions for males and females exist because of the physiological advantage males have over females, and those advantages donāt disappear by identifying as a woman.
Does any of this really matter? Well, it matters to teenage girls who may not want to change clothes in a locker room next to a boy who identifies as a girl. It matters to women at a health club that allows transwomen in a āwomen onlyā space. It matters to clients in a womenās homeless shelter that refuses to restrain sexually aggressive behavior of transwomen in order to be āinclusive.ā It matters to the woman who is bumped from a countryās Olympic weightlifting team when a transwoman is allowed to compete as a woman. It matters to the women who were sexually assaulted by a transwoman who was housed in a womenās prison. It matters to the lesbians who choose not to date transwomenābecause their sexual orientation is toward female humans and not male humans who identify as womenāand are then called bigots and ostracized. And it matters to the woman who had to fight to get her job back after being fired for publicly stating that she believes āthat sex is immutable and not to be conflated with gender identity.ā
Trans activistsā responses to these challenges vary, but they can be reduced to a trans slogan so popular that an LGBT organization in the UK put it on a t-shirt: āTranswomen are women. Get over it!ā
To say the least, the meaning of the statement ātranswomen are womenā is not obvious, either intuitively or logically. Itās a claim that many people find hard to understand, not because they are bigots but because it seems at odds with material reality. It would be more accurate to say: āTranswomen are transwomen, which raises many complex intellectual, political, and moral questions. Letās work out solutions that respect everyoneās rights and interests!ā
Not the catchiest slogan, but accurate and honest. Itās a t-shirt that I think Stock would be comfortable wearing. She doesnāt condemn or mock trans people but rather seeks deeper understanding to make public policy choices as fair as possible for all.
Whether or not one embraces Stockās conclusions, she argues with precision and follows the widely accepted rules of intellectual engagement that require evidence and logic to establish a proposition. If thatās the caseāand I canāt imagine any open-minded reader accusing her of intellectual fraud or bad faithāthen why have Stock and many others with similar views been denounced on either intellectual, political, or moral grounds? She writes:
āI find it particularly telling that academics who are strongly critical of views like mine, as expressed in this book, tend not to address them with argument or evidenceāas would be expected, given disciplinary normsābut often instead resort, relatively unusually for such norms, to complaints about my presumed motives or personal failings. They also tend rhetorically to collapse criticism of the intellectual tenets of trans activism into moral criticism of trans people.ā
Stock points out why this should worry everyone, even people who may never have direct experience with transgender policies or are not interested in philosophical debates:
ātreating males with female gender identities as women in every possible context is a politically inflammatory act. In effect it sends a contemptuously dismissive message to women already conscious of unequal treatment of their interests. This message says: the interests of males with female gender identities are more important than yours.ā
In short: Many of the demands of transgender politics are anti-feminist. If thatās a plausible claim, then why have so many feminists and feminist organizations embraced the transgender ideology? Stock suggests one factor is āthe current cultural mania for ādiversity and inclusion,ā taken as some kind of mindless mantra without genuine thought being given to what it actually means or should be doing.ā The struggle for social justice is impeded, not advanced, when transwomen can insist that they must be included in any space on their terms, without explaining or justifying the policy and without regard for the effects on girls and women. Stock points out that just as replacing āBlack lives matterā with āall lives matterā undermines anti-racist campaigns by ignoring the specific threats to Black people in a racist society, demanding that transwomen always be included in the category āwomanā undermines feminismās ability to advance the interests of girls and women, who face specific threats in a sexist society.
Itās easy for people to get confused by, and frustrated with, the debate on this issue, which is too often weighed down by jargon and abstract theory. So, letās get back to the core questions:
⢠Is gender an internal subjective experience, the origins of which have yet to be explained, or is it produced by social and political systems, which can be analyzed and put in historical context?
⢠Is gender immutable and private, or are gender norms open to change through collective action?
⢠Is institutionalized male dominance best understood by analyzing individualsā internal sense of gender identities, or is patriarchy rooted in menās claim of a right to own or control womenās reproductive power and sexuality?
The reference to ārealityā in Stockās subtitle suggests that absent a clear and convincing account of sex, gender, and power from the transgender movement, the feminist and gender-critical perspectives offer the best account of biology and history, of psychology and society.
Since that first article I wrote in 2014, I have talked with steadily more and more progressive people who feel pressured by the transgender movement to embrace trans policy proposals without asking questions. Too often, that pressure works. Are we creating a healthy political culture on the left when people and organizations believe they have no choice but to adopt policy positions they either donāt understand or disagree with? Are progressive politics advance when legitimate differences of opinion are muted because people fear being accused of bigotry?
Stockās workāalong with other books such as Heather Brunskell-Evansā Transgender Body Politics and websites such as Fair Play for Womenāis a valuable resource for people who want to work their way through these questions rather than simply accept the ideology or policy proposals of the transgender movement. Even if Stockās book doesnāt change trans activistsā minds, it provides a model of principled intellectual engagement with compassion.
I say ācompassionā because Stock is trans-friendly, as are most of us who hold feminist and gender-critical positions. Stock doesnāt condemn or attack trans people but instead offers a different way to understand the experience of gender dysphoria and a different politics for challenging a patriarchal system that is the source of so much suffering and distress.
Feminist politics is not a denial of trans peopleās experiences but an alternative way to understand those experiences that does not involve drugs, cross-sex hormones, and surgery. Feminist politics is an embrace of our differences and a way to live with those differences collectively, as we struggle to eliminate the hierarchies that impede our ability to thrive.
[Note: Material Girls: Why Reality Matters for Feminism was published in the UK in May and is scheduled for release in the US edition in September.]
Robert Jensen, Emeritus Professor in the School of Journalism and Media at the University of Texas at Austin, is the author of The Restless and Relentless Mind of Wes Jackson: Searching for Sustainability (University Press of Kansas, 2021). His other books include The End of Patriarchy: Radical Feminism for Men (2017); Plain Radical: Living, Loving, and Learning to Leave the Planet Gracefully (2015); Arguing for Our Lives: A Userās Guide to Constructive Dialogue (2013); All My Bones Shake: Seeking a Progressive Path to the Prophetic Voice, (2009); Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity (2007); The Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege (2005); Citizens of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity (2004); and Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream (2001).
Jensen is host of āPodcast from the Prairieā with Wes Jackson and associate producer of the forthcoming documentary film Prairie Prophecy: The Restless and Relentless Mind of Wes Jackson.
Jensen can be reached at [email protected]. To join an email list to receive articles by Jensen, go to http://www.thirdcoastactivist.org/jensenupdates-info.html. Follow him on Twitter: @jensenrobertw
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate
1 Comment
Excellent review Robert. I wonder what you think about the use of pronouns? I believe that compelled language of any sort, espcially language that belies reality is possible the most extreme form of passive aggression possible. It also goes to the root of this matter. Do we accept that it is possible to change sex or not? If we do not then we cannot say ‘she’ or ‘her’ about a male sexed person anymore than we can say something is red when it is in fact blue. This matters for so many reasons, not least of them to do with pscyhological health and well-being. One person’s dysphoria or inner feeling cannot trump everyone else’s reality.