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The Idea That Gender Is a Spectrum is a New Gender Prison.

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The idea that gender is a spectrum is a new gender prison | Aeon Essays

What is gender? This is a question that cuts to the very heart of feminist theory and practice, and is pivotal to current debates in social justice activism about class, identity and privilege. In everyday conversation, the word ‘gender’ is a synonym for what would more accurately be referred to as ‘sex’. Perhaps due to a vague squeamishness about uttering a word that also describes sexual intercourse, the word ‘gender’ is now euphemistically used to refer to the biological fact of whether a person is female or male, saving us all the mild embarrassment of having to invoke, however indirectly, the bodily organs and processes that this bifurcation entails.The word ‘gender’ originally had a purely grammatical meaning in languages that classify their nouns as masculine, feminine or neuter. But since at least the 1960s, the word has taken on another meaning, allowing us to make a distinction between sex and gender. For feminists, this distinction has been important, because it enables us to acknowledge that some of the differences between women and men are traceable to biology, while others have their roots in environment, culture, upbringing and education – what feminists call ‘gendered socialisation’.

At least, that is the role that the word gender traditionally performed in feminist theory. It used to be a basic, fundamental feminist idea that while sex referred to what is biological, and so perhaps in some sense ‘natural’, gender referred to what is socially constructed. On this view, which for simplicity we can call the radical feminist view, gender refers to the externally imposed set of norms that prescribe and proscribe desirable behaviour to individuals in accordance with morally arbitrary characteristics.
Not only are these norms external to the individual and coercively imposed, but they also represent a binary caste system or hierarchy, a value system with two positions: maleness above femaleness, manhood above womanhood, masculinity above femininity. Individuals are born with the potential to perform one of two reproductive roles, determined at birth, or even before, by the external genitals that the infant possesses. From then on, they will be inculcated into one of two classes in the hierarchy: the superior class if their genitals are convex, the inferior one if their genitals are concave.

From birth, and the identification of sex-class membership that happens at that moment, most female people are raised to be passive, submissive, weak and nurturing, while most male people are raised to be active, dominant, strong and aggressive. This value system, and the process of socialising and inculcating individuals into it, is what a radical feminist means by the word ‘gender’. Understood like this, it’s not difficult to see what is objectionable and oppressive about gender, since it constrains the potential of both male and female people alike, and asserts the superiority of males over females. So, for the radical feminist, the aim is to abolish gender altogether: to stop putting people into pink and blue boxes, and to allow the development of individuals’ personalities and preferences without the coercive influence of this socially-enacted value system.

This view of the nature of gender sits uneasily with those who experience gender as in some sense internal and innate, rather than as entirely socially constructed and externally imposed. Such people not only dispute that gender is entirely constructed, but also reject the radical feminist analysis that it is inherently hierarchical with two positions. On this view, which for ease I will call the queer feminist view of gender, what makes the operation of gender oppressive is not that it is socially constructed and coercively imposed: rather, the problem is the prevalence of the belief that there are only two genders.

Humans of both sexes would be liberated if we recognised that while gender is indeed an internal, innate, essential facet of our identities, there are more genders than just ‘woman’ or ‘man’ to choose from. And the next step on the path to liberation is the recognition of a new range of gender identities: so we now have people referring to themselves as ‘genderqueer’ or ‘non-binary’ or ‘pangender’ or ‘polygender’ or ‘agender’ or ‘demiboy’ or ‘demigirl’ or ‘neutrois’ or ‘aporagender’ or ‘lunagender’ or ‘quantumgender’… I could go on. An oft-repeated mantra among proponents of this view is that ‘gender is not a binary; it’s a spectrum’. What follows from this view is not that we need to tear down the pink and the blue boxes; rather, we simply need to recognise that there are many more boxes than just these two.
At first blush this seems an appealing idea, but there are numerous problems with it, problems that render it internally incoherent and politically unattractive.

Many proponents of the queer view of gender describe their own gender identity as ‘non-binary’, and present this in opposition to the vast majority of people whose gender identity is presumed to be binary. On the face of it, there seems to be an immediate tension between the claim that gender is not a binary but a spectrum, and the claim that only a small proportion of individuals can be described as having a non-binary gender identity. If gender really is a spectrum, doesn’t this mean that every individual alive is non-binary, by definition? If so, then the label ‘non-binary’ to describe a specific gender identity would become redundant, because it would fail to pick out a special category of people.

To avoid this, the proponent of the spectrum model must in fact be assuming that gender is both a binary and a spectrum. It is entirely possible for a property to be described in both continuous and binary ways. One example is height: clearly height is a continuum, and individuals can fall anywhere along that continuum; but we also have the binary labels Tall and Short. Might gender operate in a similar way?

The thing to notice about the Tall/Short binary is that when these concepts are invoked to refer to people, they are relative or comparative descriptions. Since height is a spectrum or a continuum, no individual is absolutely tall or absolutely short; we are all of us taller than some people and shorter than some others. When we refer to people as tall, what we mean is that they are taller than the average person in some group whose height we are interested in examining. A boy could simultaneously be tall for a six-year-old, and yet short by comparison with all male people. So ascriptions of the binary labels Tall and Short must be comparative, and make reference to the average. Perhaps individuals who cluster around that average might have some claim to refer to themselves as of ‘non-binary height’.

However, it seems unlikely that this interpretation of the spectrum model will satisfy those who describe themselves as non-binary gendered. If gender, like height, is to be understood as comparative or relative, this would fly in the face of the insistence that individuals are the sole arbiters of their gender. Your gender would be defined by reference to the distribution of gender identities present in the group in which you find yourself, and not by your own individual self-determination. It would thus not be up to me to decide that I am non-binary. This could be determined only by comparing my gender identity to the spread of other people’s, and seeing where I fall. And although I might think of myself as a woman, someone else might be further down the spectrum towards womanhood than I am, and thus ‘more of a woman’ than me.
Further, when we observe the analogy with height we can see that, when observing the entire population, only a small minority of people would be accurately described as Tall or Short. Given that height really is a spectrum, and the binary labels are ascribed comparatively, only the handful of people at either end of the spectrum can be meaningfully labelled Tall or Short. The rest of us, falling along all the points in between, are the non-binary height people, and we are typical. In fact, it is the binary Tall and Short people who are rare and unusual. And if we extend the analogy to gender, we see that being non-binary gendered is actually the norm, not the exception.

If gender is a spectrum, that means it’s a continuum between two extremes, and everyone is located somewhere along that continuum. I assume the two ends of the spectrum are masculinity and femininity. Is there anything else that they could possibly be? Once we realise this, it becomes clear that everybody is non-binary, because absolutely nobody is pure masculinity or pure femininity. Of course, some people will be closer to one end of the spectrum, while others will be more ambiguous and float around the centre. But even the most conventionally feminine person will demonstrate some characteristics that we associate with masculinity, and vice versa.

I would be happy with this implication, because despite possessing female biology and calling myself a woman, I do not consider myself a two-dimensional gender stereotype. I am not an ideal manifestation of the essence of womanhood, and so I am non-binary. Just like everybody else. However, those who describe themselves as non-binary are unlikely to be satisfied with this conclusion, as their identity as ‘non-binary person’ depends upon the existence of a much larger group of so-called binary ‘cisgender’ people, people who are incapable of being outside the arbitrary masculine/feminine genders dictated by society.

And here we have an irony about some people insisting that they and a handful of their fellow gender revolutionaries are non-binary: in doing so, they create a false binary between those who conform to the gender norms associated with their sex, and those who do not. In reality, everybody is non-binary. We all actively participate in some gender norms, passively acquiesce with others, and positively rail against others still. So to call oneself non-binary is in fact to create a new false binary. It also often seems to involve, at least implicitly, placing oneself on the more complex and interesting side of that binary, enabling the non-binary person to claim to be both misunderstood and politically oppressed by the binary cisgender people.

If you identify as pangender, is the claim that you represent every possible point on the spectrum? All at the same time? How might that be possible, given that the extremes necessarily represent incompatible opposites of one another? Pure femininity is passivity, weakness and submission, while pure masculinity is aggression, strength and dominance. It is simply impossible to be all of these things at the same time. If you disagree with these definitions of masculinity and femininity, and do not accept that masculinity should be defined in terms of dominance while femininity should be described in terms of submission, you are welcome to propose other definitions. But whatever you come up with, they are going to represent opposites of one another.

A handful of individuals are apparently permitted to opt out of the spectrum altogether by declaring themselves ‘agender’, saying that they feel neither masculine nor feminine, and don’t have any internal experience of gender. We are not given any explanation as to why some people are able to refuse to define their personality in gendered terms while others are not, but one thing that is clear about the self-designation as ‘agender’: we cannot all do it, for the same reasons we cannot all call ourselves non-binary. If we were all to deny that we have an innate, essential gender identity, then the label ‘agender’ would become redundant, as lacking in gender would be a universal trait. Agender can be defined only against gender. Those who define themselves and their identity by their lack of gender must therefore be committed to the view that most people do have an innate, essential gender but that, for some reason, they do not.

Once we assert that the problem with gender is that we currently recognise only two of them, the obvious question to ask is: how many genders would we have to recognise in order not to be oppressive? Just how many possible gender identities are there?
The only consistent answer to this is: 7 billion, give or take. There are as many possible gender identities as there are humans on the planet. According to Nonbinary.org, one of the main internet reference sites for information about non-binary genders, your gender can be frost or the Sun or music or the sea or Jupiter or pure darkness. Your gender can be pizza.

But if this is so, it’s not clear how it makes sense or adds anything to our understanding to call any of this stuff ‘gender’, as opposed to just ‘human personality’ or ‘stuff I like’. The word gender is not just a fancy word for your personality or your tastes or preferences. It is not just a label to adopt so that you now have a unique way to describe just how large and multitudinous and interesting you are. Gender is the value system that ties desirable (and sometimes undesirable?) behaviours and characteristics to reproductive function. Once we’ve decoupled those behaviours and characteristics from reproductive function – which we should – and once we’ve rejected the idea that there are just two types of personality and that one is superior to the other – which we should – what can it possibly mean to continue to call this stuff ‘gender’? What meaning does the word ‘gender’ have here, that the word ‘personality’ cannot capture?

On Nonbinary.org, your gender can apparently be:
(Name)gender: ‘A gender that is best described by one’s name, good for those who aren’t sure what they identify as yet but definitely know that they aren’t cis … it can be used as a catch-all term or a specific identifier, eg, johngender, janegender, (your name here)gender, etc.’

The example of ‘(name)gender’ perfectly demonstrates how non-binary gender identities operate, and the function they perform. They are for people who aren’t sure what they identify as, but know that they aren’t cisgender. Presumably because they are far too interesting and revolutionary and transgressive for something as ordinary and conventional as cis.

This desire not to be cis is rational and makes perfect sense, especially if you are female. I too believe my thoughts, feelings, aptitudes and dispositions are far too interesting, well-rounded and complex to simply be a ‘cis woman’. I, too, would like to transcend socially constructed stereotypes about my female body and the assumptions others make about me as a result of it. I, too, would like to be seen as more than just a mother/domestic servant/object of sexual gratification. I, too, would like to be viewed as a human being, a person with a rich and deep inner life of my own, with the potential to be more than what our society currently views as possible for women.
The solution to that, however, is not to call myself agender, to try to slip through the bars of the cage while leaving the rest of the cage intact, and the rest of womankind trapped within it. This is especially so given that you can’t slip through the bars. No amount of calling myself ‘agender’ will stop the world seeing me as a woman, and treating me accordingly. I can introduce myself as agender and insist upon my own set of neo-pronouns when I apply for a job, but it won’t stop the interviewer seeing a potential baby-maker, and giving the position to the less qualified but less encumbered by reproduction male candidate.

Here we arrive at the crucial tension at the heart of gender identity politics, and one that most of its proponents either haven’t noticed, or choose to ignore because it can only be resolved by rejecting some of the key tenets of the doctrine.
Many people justifiably assume that the word ‘transgender’ is synonymous with ‘transsexual’, and means something like: having dysphoria and distress about your sexed body, and having a desire to alter that body to make it more closely resemble the body of the opposite sex. But according to the current terminology of gender identity politics, being transgender has nothing to do with a desire to change your sexed body. What it means to be transgender is that your innate gender identity does not match the gender you were assigned at birth. This might be the case even if you are perfectly happy and content in the body you possess. You are transgender simply if you identify as one gender, but socially have been perceived as another.

It is a key tenet of the doctrine that the vast majority of people can be described as ‘cisgender’, which means that our innate gender identity matches the one we were assigned at birth. But as we have seen, if gender identity is a spectrum, then we are all non-binary, because none of us inhabits the points represented by the ends of that spectrum. Every single one of us will exist at some unique point along that spectrum, determined by the individual and idiosyncratic nature of our own particular identity, and our own subjective experience of gender. Given that, it’s not clear how anybody ever could be cisgender. None of us was assigned our correct gender identity at birth, for how could we possibly have been? At the moment of my birth, how could anyone have known that I would later go on to discover that my gender identity is ‘frostgender’, a gender which is apparently ‘very cold and snowy’?

Once we recognise that the number of gender identities is potentially infinite, we are forced to concede that nobody is deep down cisgender, because nobody is assigned the correct gender identity at birth. In fact, none of us was assigned a gender identity at birth at all. We were placed into one of two sex classes on the basis of our potential reproductive function, determined by our external genitals. We were then raised in accordance with the socially prescribed gender norms for people of that sex. We are all educated and inculcated into one of two roles, long before we are able to express our beliefs about our innate gender identity, or to determine for ourselves the precise point at which we fall on the gender continuum. So defining transgender people as those who at birth were not assigned the correct place on the gender spectrum has the implication that every single one of us is transgender; there are no cisgender people.

The logical conclusion of all this is: if gender is a spectrum, not a binary, then everyone is trans. Or alternatively, there are no trans people. Either way, this a profoundly unsatisfactory conclusion, and one that serves both to obscure the reality of female oppression, as well as to erase and invalidate the experiences of transsexual people.

The way to avoid this conclusion is to realise that gender is not a spectrum. It’s not a spectrum, because it’s not an innate, internal essence or property. Gender is not a fact about persons that we must take as fixed and essential, and then build our social institutions around that fact. Gender is socially constructed all the way through, an externally imposed hierarchy, with two classes, occupying two value positions: male over female, man over woman, masculinity over femininity.

The truth of the spectrum analogy lies in the fact that conformity to one’s place in the hierarchy, and to the roles it assigns to people, will vary from person to person. Some people will find it relatively easier and more painless to conform to the gender norms associated with their sex, while others find the gender roles associated with their sex so oppressive and limiting that they cannot tolerably live under them, and choose to transition to live in accordance with the opposite gender role.

Fortunately, what is a spectrum is human personality, in all its variety and complexity. (Actually that’s not a single spectrum either, because it is not simply one continuum between two extremes. It’s more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly, humany-wumany stuff.) Gender is the value system that says there are two types of personality, determined by the reproductive organs you were born with. One of the first steps to liberating people from the cage that is gender is to challenge established gender norms, and to play with and explore your gender expression and presentation. Nobody, and certainly no radical feminist, wants to stop anyone from defining themselves in ways that make sense to them, or from expressing their personality in ways they find enjoyable and liberating.

So if you want to call yourself a genderqueer femme presenting demigirl, you go for it. Express that identity however you like. Have fun with it. A problem emerges only when you start making political claims on the basis of that label – when you start demanding that others call themselves cisgender, because you require there to be a bunch of conventional binary cis people for you to define yourself against; and when you insist that these cis people have structural advantage and political privilege over you, because they are socially read as the conformist binary people, while nobody really understands just how complex and luminous and multifaceted and unique your gender identity is. To call yourself non-binary or genderfluid while demanding that others call themselves cisgender is to insist that the vast majority of humans must stay in their boxes, because you identify as boxless.

The solution is not to reify gender by insisting on ever more gender categories that define the complexity of human personality in rigid and essentialist ways. The solution is to abolish gender altogether. We do not need gender. We would be better off without it. Gender as a hierarchy with two positions operates to naturalise and perpetuate the subordination of female people to male people, and constrains the development of individuals of both sexes. Reconceiving of gender as an identity spectrum represents no improvement.

You do not need to have a deep, internal, essential experience of gender to be free to dress how you like, behave how you like, work how you like, love who you like. You do not need to show that your personality is feminine for it to be acceptable for you to enjoy cosmetics, cookery and crafting. You do not need to be genderqueer to queer gender. The solution to an oppressive system that puts people into pink and blue boxes is not to create more and more boxes that are any colour but blue or pink. The solution is to tear down the boxes altogether.
 

Poki

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Anima and Aminus...This isn't new stuff...we have just started using "gender" and creating all these "color" words. Its like RGB color scale where instead of R-240 G-180 B-30 we use Crayola technique and name every single color something different. Imagine trying to name a color that has a hex code of #459055, everyone is gonna argue what it reminds them of or what they wanna call it. I have better things to do with my time then learn 50 million new names. I see people as people, not "names" or "groupings" I prefer a spectrum of male/female vs all these complicated names.
 

Forever

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An emancipation from gender is what America needs.

There are just male bodies and female bodies. (and intersex too but.. that's just biology) That's it. No further.
 

Totenkindly

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People worry too damn much about trying to tell other people what they are or constructing laborious philosophical frameworks to justify what they are.

We don't need a box. There is nothing "magical" about your gender. We all come from the same template and then differentiate to some degree based on what biochemical processes kick off, based on environment and genetics working in tandem. People should just take the personal responsibility to find that state of being where they are best able to function and thrive, and there should not be any shame about any of it.

Of course, that only works if everyone agrees to lay off each other.
So then we get all this junk to argue about.
 

Lord Lavender

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N-no more gender?

Gender is a clear biological concept that exists in most vertebrates in order to facilitate breeding but I was wondering why do we have only two genders when we could have possilby more genders and therefore more breeding chances but I guess its to keep things simpler. On a biological level its black and white for mammals as if ya a XX your a girl and if your a XY your a boy (Intersex expections but rule of thumb). However birds funny enough have a different gender system with boy birds being ZZ and girl birds being ZW.
 

Lark

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To be honest I really like the old dichotomy of male and female. Works for me.
 

Poki

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Gender is a clear biological concept that exists in most vertebrates in order to facilitate breeding but I was wondering why do we have only two genders when we could have possilby more genders and therefore more breeding chances but I guess its to keep things simpler. On a biological level its black and white for mammals as if ya a XX your a girl and if your a XY your a boy (Intersex expections but rule of thumb). However birds funny enough have a different gender system with boy birds being ZZ and girl birds being ZW.

Because we cant have squares trying to fit in a circle...it would just be to painful. That's why we are all circular...kapeesh
 

Magic Poriferan

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Oh my sweet Jesus. I've been saying stuff like this for years, and this is the closest I've ever seen another human being come to saying what I've been saying.

Yes...

I think gender is entirely socially constructed.

I think transexuality is a real neurological state relating to actual physiology.

I think transgenderism is a mistake of a term that never should have come into existence, because one cannot be innately or trans- a thing that is socially constructed. To do so unavoidably reifies and reinforces gender normativity. If you feel "innately" uncomfortable with your gender, you actually just don't want to do the things conventional forces in society are assigning you based on your sex category. That's it. That's all it means.

I think that it's unlikely one could ever use terms like masculinity or femininity in a way that has become culturally removed from their association with sex, from which they were born. It's kind of the whole idea behind those words. The assumption we have personalities rooted in our sex.

I think a gender dimension is useless even if it were somehow uprooted from sexist assumptions, because it obviously constitutes an invalid variable cluster. Masculinity might assume being both stoical as well as competitive, therefore femininity is neither. But obviously, some people competitive without being stoical, and some people are stoical without being competitive. Even if you could somehow disjoint these terms from sexism, they'd still be useless, burdensome restrictions (also, I kind of hate it when people say they want to get in touch with their "fem side" or "masc side". There's no such fucking thing).

I think that if one could separate gender from all of these things, it would indeed render gender terms so pointless that we'd have no reason to use them anyway. In other words, they can be used for bad reasons, or have no reason to be used. There's no good reason for gender.

You know. What it immediately makes me think of, is this thing that's come up in recent years that really drives a lot of people on the left crazy. That's comparing transgenderism to transracialism (like Rachel Dolezal). They tend to react very angrily to this comparison, and accuse you of being wrong and horrible, but do a very poor job of actually explaining their position. It seems to me they are the same. But the really useful distinction, and one that the author of this essay also picked up on, is as follows:

Transracialism is nothing like transexuality.
Transracialism is exactly like transgenderism.

Sex is physiological. Gender is not, and neither is race (contrary to the opinion of many a poorly informed "racial realist"). Sex is your anatomy, gender and race come from how you are socialized and/or how other people in your culture identify you. It seems pretty clear to me. I cannot find a rational obstacle to this conclusion. As such, I do not find its opponents rational.

So, anyhow. Yes, I completely agree, this modern, spectral, rainbow approach to gender is insidiously a limitation on sexual progress disguised as liberation.

- - - Updated - - -

Gender is a clear biological concept that exists in most vertebrates in order to facilitate breeding but I was wondering why do we have only two genders when we could have possilby more genders and therefore more breeding chances but I guess its to keep things simpler. On a biological level its black and white for mammals as if ya a XX your a girl and if your a XY your a boy (Intersex expections but rule of thumb). However birds funny enough have a different gender system with boy birds being ZZ and girl birds being ZW.

As is already outlined in the essay, gender and sex are not the same thing in this field of discourse, and gender is not biological.
 
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This seems ideal, actually. In fact, this essay reminds me of a time when Morgan Freeman claimed in order to stop racism, everyone should stop talking about it altogether, to stop casting labels onto one another and to see people simply as human beings rather than as a color. Creating more boxes would overemphasize the gender spectrum and not only complicate matters, but create problems in areas where there shouldn't be.
 

Magic Poriferan

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This seems ideal, actually. In fact, this essay reminds me of a time when Morgan Freeman claimed in order to stop racism, everyone should stop talking about it altogether, to stop casting labels onto one another and to see people simply as human beings rather than as a color. Creating more boxes would overemphasize the gender spectrum and not only complicate matters, but create problems in areas where there shouldn't be.

I don't think not talking about it altogether is going to help, and I don't think that's what this article is advocating either. What is important, is talking about it for what it is; a social construct.

A thing may not be real, and yet have many believers. And when that happens, one has to engage in the delicate process of talking about it because people believe in it, even though it's not real.This is because while the belief may not be real, the believers, and their actions, and the consequences of their actions, are real.

When it comes to gender, to race, to all of these identity politics things, I feel like I'm torn between people who refuse to address the damage done by the lie, and people who want to address the damage by pretending the lie is real.
 
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I don't think not talking about it altogether is going to help, and I don't think that's what this article is advocating either. What is important, is talking about it for what it is; a social construct.

A thing may not be real, and yet have many believers. And when that happens, one has to engage in the delicate process of talking about it because people believe in it, even though it's not real.This is because while the belief may not be real, the believers, and their actions, and the consequences of their actions, are real.

When it comes to gender, to race, to all of these identity politics things, I feel like I'm torn between people who refuse to address the damage done by the lie, and people who want to address the damage by pretending the lie is real.

Well, yes, I do think we have to talk about it now because it's an issue that is not going to just vanish on it's own. I guess I meant it would be ideal in the long run as an end goal and not in this current time when it's still an ongoing problem.
 

Coriolis

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So, for the radical feminist, the aim is to abolish gender altogether: to stop putting people into pink and blue boxes, and to allow the development of individuals’ personalities and preferences without the coercive influence of this socially-enacted value system.
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This view of the nature of gender sits uneasily with those who experience gender as in some sense internal and innate, rather than as entirely socially constructed and externally imposed. Such people not only dispute that gender is entirely constructed, but also reject the radical feminist analysis that it is inherently hierarchical with two positions. On this view, which for ease I will call the queer feminist view of gender, what makes the operation of gender oppressive is not that it is socially constructed and coercively imposed: rather, the problem is the prevalence of the belief that there are only two genders.

I don't see how the idea of not putting people in boxes - whether of gender or anything else - is that radical, especially in this day and age. I also don't see how it is necessarily at odds with the second paragraph suggestion that gender, or at least some aspects of it, may be innate. If we stop putting people in boxes and externally imposing any sort of gender-based expectations, than whatever manifestation of gender people exhibit will be "naturally occurring" and not forced/imposed. In fact, only in such an environment could we be sure it is in fact innate.
 
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Mole

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You do not need to have a deep, internal, essential experience of gender to be free to dress how you like, behave how you like, work how you like, love who you like. You do not need to show that your personality is feminine for it to be acceptable for you to enjoy cosmetics, cookery and crafting. You do not need to be genderqueer to queer gender. The solution to an oppressive system that puts people into pink and blue boxes is not to create more and more boxes that are any colour but blue or pink. The solution is to tear down the boxes altogether.

The war between parasites and their hosts has been raging almost from the beginning of life. As one side attacks, the other side defends, back and forth, like the influenza virus and our vaccines, it is a never ending struggle.

Until we had a signal victory: we invented gender, where we mix up our genomes, and so confuse the parasite enemy.

We are here not because we use gender to procreate, but we are here because gender gives us a signal advantage in the struggle between hosts and parasites.
 

Doctor Cringelord

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Oh my sweet Jesus. I've been saying stuff like this for years, and this is the closest I've ever seen another human being come to saying what I've been saying.

Yes...

I think gender is entirely socially constructed.

I think transexuality is a real neurological state relating to actual physiology.

I think transgenderism is a mistake of a term that never should have come into existence, because one cannot be innately or trans- a thing that is socially constructed. To do so unavoidably reifies and reinforces gender normativity. If you feel "innately" uncomfortable with your gender, you actually just don't want to do the things conventional forces in society are assigning you based on your sex category. That's it. That's all it means.

I think that it's unlikely one could ever use terms like masculinity or femininity in a way that has become culturally removed from their association with sex, from which they were born. It's kind of the whole idea behind those words. The assumption we have personalities rooted in our sex.

I think a gender dimension is useless even if it were somehow uprooted from sexist assumptions, because it obviously constitutes an invalid variable cluster. Masculinity might assume being both stoical as well as competitive, therefore femininity is neither. But obviously, some people competitive without being stoical, and some people are stoical without being competitive. Even if you could somehow disjoint these terms from sexism, they'd still be useless, burdensome restrictions (also, I kind of hate it when people say they want to get in touch with their "fem side" or "masc side". There's no such fucking thing).

I think that if one could separate gender from all of these things, it would indeed render gender terms so pointless that we'd have no reason to use them anyway. In other words, they can be used for bad reasons, or have no reason to be used. There's no good reason for gender.

You know. What it immediately makes me think of, is this thing that's come up in recent years that really drives a lot of people on the left crazy. That's comparing transgenderism to transracialism (like Rachel Dolezal). They tend to react very angrily to this comparison, and accuse you of being wrong and horrible, but do a very poor job of actually explaining their position. It seems to me they are the same. But the really useful distinction, and one that the author of this essay also picked up on, is as follows:

Transracialism is nothing like transexuality.
Transracialism is exactly like transgenderism.


Sex is physiological. Gender is not, and neither is race (contrary to the opinion of many a poorly informed "racial realist"). Sex is your anatomy, gender and race come from how you are socialized and/or how other people in your culture identify you. It seems pretty clear to me. I cannot find a rational obstacle to this conclusion. As such, I do not find its opponents rational.

So, anyhow. Yes, I completely agree, this modern, spectral, rainbow approach to gender is insidiously a limitation on sexual progress disguised as liberation.

- - - Updated - - -



As is already outlined in the essay, gender and sex are not the same thing in this field of discourse, and gender is not biological.

I think that you and I, despite having disagreed and argued about feminism a lot in the past, actually have very similar points of view on gender.

To the final bolded point, this is part of the source of my distaste with "identity politics" but I often have a difficult time convincing many on the left and right why I have such a distaste. Take a philosophy like white nationalism or "racial realism" and you have something that involves a very limiting imposition of boxes or stations on people and that is usually imposed with a disregard for factors such as individual traits/characteristics/quirks, socioeconomic background, et al. The "many genders" approach, where people become obsessed with creating hundreds of different types of gender identities, is in my opinion, just as limiting and reduces people's sense of identity what is determined by arbitrary and superficial categorizations that are rooted in some traditionalist social system, despite seeming to be a rebellion against and/or a fix to said social system. It's just a diffusion of binary male/female gender identity into a bunch of sub-categories and I don't see how it really gets at the heart of fixing or abandoning the social conditioning of the old binary gender socialization of previous generations.

Now I certainly believe there are some basic sex differences between male and female, but I don't see those as needing to determine an enforced construct of how/what/when/why/where people should behave, live their lives, etc. I'm not going to get into how I think feminism (some varieties, at least) go wrong in addressing all of this because that would take another long post entirely and it's tedious, dead horse beating for me at this point.
 

Coriolis

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To the final bolded point, this is part of the source of my distaste with "identity politics" but I often have a difficult time convincing many on the left and right why I have such a distaste. Take a philosophy like white nationalism or "racial realism" and you have something that involves a very limiting imposition of boxes or stations on people and that is usually imposed with a disregard for factors such as individual traits/characteristics/quirks, socioeconomic background, et al.
People who object to "identity politics" overlook the fact that such perspectives came about because group identity has long been used as a basis for limiting or denying rights and opportunities to subsets of humanity. Professions were closed to women; schools and businesses were closed to blacks; marriage and adoption rights were denied to gays; violence/vandalism was directed at buildings used by Jews or Muslims; etc. If everyone stopped using group identity to exclude people, members of those groups wouldn't need to assert that they should have the same rights and opportunities as everyone else.
 

prplchknz

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People worry too damn much about trying to tell other people what they are or constructing laborious philosophical frameworks to justify what they are.

We don't need a box. There is nothing "magical" about your gender. We all come from the same template and then differentiate to some degree based on what biochemical processes kick off, based on environment and genetics working in tandem. People should just take the personal responsibility to find that state of being where they are best able to function and thrive, and there should not be any shame about any of it.

Of course, that only works if everyone agrees to lay off each other.
So then we get all this junk to argue about.

unless your gender allows you to shoot magical rainbows, which i'm not saying mine does or doesn't.
 

Doctor Cringelord

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People who object to "identity politics" overlook the fact that such perspectives came about because group identity has long been used as a basis for limiting or denying rights and opportunities to subsets of humanity. Professions were closed to women; schools and businesses were closed to blacks; marriage and adoption rights were denied to gays; violence/vandalism was directed at buildings used by Jews or Muslims; etc. If everyone stopped using group identity to exclude people, members of those groups wouldn't need to assert that they should have the same rights and opportunities as everyone else.

No shit. That's why I call out the white supremacists as well. Because they're representative of beliefs or mindsets tied to the historical oppression of other groups.

I think it's important for people to be aware of their privilege and where they come from, and to be aware that others' experiences and circumstances won't necessarily match their own due to some of those past biases, prejudices and other factors.
 

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People who object to "identity politics" overlook the fact that such perspectives came about because group identity has long been used as a basis for limiting or denying rights and opportunities to subsets of humanity. Professions were closed to women; schools and businesses were closed to blacks; marriage and adoption rights were denied to gays; violence/vandalism was directed at buildings used by Jews or Muslims; etc. If everyone stopped using group identity to exclude people, members of those groups wouldn't need to assert that they should have the same rights and opportunities as everyone else.

Starting for a good reason doesn't make something a good idea, though.

This is pretty long, so I don't want obligate anyone to read it. But I think this is the best writing I've ever seen on the subject of identity politics. It is informed, and understanding, but it is ultimately very critical.

Identity Crisis

It may be worth noting that the author is radically leftist and a Pakistani Muslim. So the most typical attacks on the perspective of authors of these things really fall flat in his case.

[MENTION=19700]asynartectic[/MENTION] this would probably interest you, too, if you can find the time to read it.

EDIT: Also, I just felt like the essay in the OP was the sister piece to this one. They complete my feelings about how the left-wing approaches identity, and they belong together, like The Gate Keeper and The Key Master (but without that part about causing the apocalypse).
 
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