Dedicated with love to Dotty Ballan who urged me to forge my anger into a language of persuasion, but who defended me long before I had the words. I wish she’d lived to read this pamphlet. For me, her memory resonates in every word I’ve chosen.
Acknowledgment of thanks:
To Bob McCubbin for showing me how to use an old key to unlock new doors. To Preston Wood for his consistent understanding and encouragement. To the transgendered members of our Party for their clear vision and tensile strength. And to the Buffalo branch of Workers World Party for tirelessly raising consciousness about transgender and for creating a “liberated territory” where I rejuvenate when I feel battered and raw.
Illustrations:
Front cover (clockwise from top left): “cross”-dressing Mummers, rural England, c. 1900, (see p. 16); Barcheeampe (Crow “Woman Chief”), c. 1850, (p. 7); Jack Bee Garland (born Elvira Mugarrieta), c. 1897, (p. 19); transgendered prisoner, Walla Walla, c. 1970; “cross”-dressed South Indian Bhoota dancers; Conquistadors setting dogs on Native berdache, (p. 8); title page: Craig Klose; photo of author: Eugene Charrington.
Back cover (clockwise from top left): modern-day Singapore transvestites; two photos of Ralph Kerwinieo (born Cora Anderson), South American Indian, c. 1914, (p. 20); Osh-Tishe, Crow Nation, c. 1900, (p. 8); Joan of Arc, executed for transvestism in 1431, (p. 12); Stella (Ernest) Boulton and Fanny (Frederick) Park, 1890, (p. 18); “cross”-dressed celebrant in Brazil honoring trangendered diety; jazz musician Billy Tipton, died 1989, (p. 6); “cross”-dressed priest in Abomey, West Africa, c. 1950.
Leslie Feinberg came out as a young butch lesbian more than 25 years ago and came of age in the factories of Buffalo, N.Y. She has written extensively about her experiences as a woman who has “passed” as a man.
Feinberg has been a member of Workers World Party for 20 years. She is an editorial assistant on Workers World newspaper and on the editorial staff of Liberation and Marxism magazine.
Two of her short stories about gender oppression are included in The Persistent Desire: A Femme-Butch Reader. Her novel on the same subject, Stone Butch Blues, is due to be released by Firebrand Books in 1992.
Breaking the silence
This pamphlet is an attempt to trace the historic rise of an oppression that, as yet, has no commonly agreed name. We are talking here about people who defy the “man”-made boundaries of gender.
Gender: self-expression, not anatomy.
All our lives we’ve been taught that sex and gender are synonymous—men are “masculine” and women are “feminine.” Pink for girls and blue for boys. It’s just “natural,” we’ve been told. But at the turn of the century in this country, blue was considered a girl’s color and pink was a boy’s. Simplistic and rigid gender codes are neither eternal nor natural. They are changing social concepts.
Nevertheless, there’s nothing wrong with men who are considered “masculine” and women whose self-expression falls into the range of what is considered “feminine.” The problem is that the many people who don’t fit these narrow social constraints run a gamut of harassment and violence.
This raises the question: Who decided what the “norm” should be? Why are some people punished for their self-expression?
Many people today would be surprised to learn that ancient communal societies held transgendered people in high esteem. It took a bloody campaign by the emerging ruling classes to declare what had been considered natural to be its opposite. That prejudice, foisted on society by its ruling elite, endures today.
Yet even in a society where there are harsh social penalties for not fitting, a large part of the population can’t or won’t change their nature. It is apparent that there are many ways for women and men to be; everything in nature is a continuum.
Many of the terms used to describe us are words that cut and sear.
When I first worked in the factories of Buffalo as a teenager, women like me were called “he-shes.” Although “he-shes” in the plants were most frequently lesbians, we were recognized not by our sexual preference but by the way we expressed our gender.
There are other words used to express the wide range of “gender outlaws”: transvestites, transsexuals, drag queens and drag kings, cross-dressers, bull-daggers, stone butches, androgynes, diesel dykes or berdache—a European colonialist term.
We didn’t choose these words. They don’t fit all of us. It’s hard to fight an oppression without a name connoting pride, a language that honors us.
In recent years a community has begun to emerge that is sometimes referred to as the gender or transgender community. Within our community is a diverse group of people who define ourselves in many different ways. Transgendered people are demanding the right to choose our own self-definitions. The language used in this pamphlet may quickly become outdated as the gender community coalesces and organizes—a wonderful problem.
We’ve chosen words in this pamphlet we hope are understandable to the vast majority of working and oppressed people in this country, as a tool to battle bigotry and brutality. We are trying to find words, however inadequate, that can connect us, that can capture what is similar about the oppression we endure. We have also given careful thought to our use of pronouns, striving for both clarity and sensitivity in a language that only allows for two sexes.
Great social movements forge a common language—tools to reach out and win broader understanding. But we’ve been largely shut out of the progressive movement.
It was gay transvestites who led the 1969 battle at the Stonewall Inn in New York City that gave birth to the modern lesbian and gay movement.
But just as the lesbian and gay movement had to win over the progressive movement to the understanding that struggling shoulder to shoulder together would create a more powerful force for change, the transgendered community is struggling to win the same understanding from the lesbian and gay movement.
Many people think that all “masculine” women are lesbians and all “feminine” men are gay. That is a misunderstanding. Not all lesbians and gay men are “cross”-gendered. Not all transgendered women and men are lesbian or gay. Transgendered people are mistakenly viewed as the cusp of the lesbian and gay community. In reality the two huge communities are like circles that only partially overlap.
While the oppressions within these two powerful communities are not the same, we face a common enemy. Gender-phobia—like racism, sexism and bigotry against lesbians and gay men—is meant to keep us divided. Unity can only increase our strength.
Solidarity is built on understanding how and why oppression exists and who profits from it. It is our view that revolutionary changes in human society can do away with inequality, bigotry and intolerance.
In the spirit of building that fighting movement, we offer this view of the sweeping patterns in history, the commonality of women and men who have walked the path of the berdache, of the transgendered—walked that road whether we were held in high esteem or reviled.
Look at us. We are battling for survival. Listen. We are struggling to be heard.
Transgender predates oppression
Jazz musician Billy Tipton died in 1989 at the age of 74. He will be remembered most not for his music, but for the revelation that Tipton was born a woman. Tipton died of an untreated bleeding ulcer rather than visit a doctor and risk exposure.