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GL vs. BT:
The Archaeology of Biphobia and Transphobia
Within the
Jillian Todd Weiss
From
the Journal of Bisexuality (2004) 3,
25-55
"What
will it take
for the gayristocracy to realize
that bisexual, lesbian, transgender and
gay people
are in this together
we can and will
move the agenda forward.
But this
will not happen
Until public recognition
of our common issues is made,
and a sincere effort to confront
biphobia and transphobia is made
by the established gay and lesbian leadership
in this country."
--Lani Ka'ahumanu (Speech
delivered at the March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay and Bi Equal Rights and
Liberation, 1993)
B. Discrimination As Disease
C. Political Consequences
A. The Construction of Homosexuality
B. The History of
Transphobia
C. The History of Biphobia
III.
Conclusion: Too Queer And Not Queer Enough
I am reminded of my first, puzzling experience with
“transphobia.” Having grown up as a very straight and narrow white heterosexual
male, I had no experience with the “GLBT (gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender) community.” Until I came
out at the age of 35, I viewed my longstanding transsexual impulses as a sick
fantasy that had to be contained at all costs, and assumed (and hoped) that it
would go away at some point. When my
marriage broke up in 1997, I realized it was time to transition. I looked for a new place to live. A friend of ours, a gay man, offered his
apartment as a place to stay until I found a place of my own. I liked him, and thought myself very lucky to
have him as a friend. Who better to
speak to about these very difficult issues?
I was rather incautious. Having
someone to listen (who would not run out of the room screaming) was an
aphrodisiac. I told him freely of my
plans, not dreaming of anything other than ecstatic acceptance, and was
surprised to see shock register in his face.
He was gracious about it, but clearly he thought he was offering his
apartment to a straight man. The idea of
hosting “a transsexual” in his fashionable
One could say that he that had a “problem” (meaning, in
common parlance, a psychological problem) with “transphobia” (fear of
transgenders). To locate this issue
within the psychology of an individual, however, is wholly unsatisfactory to an
understanding of this phenomenon. This
is not a bad person. He is urbane, witty
and intelligent, and went out of his way as best he could to avoid insult or
injury to me at a very difficult time in my life. I say without irony that he saved my
life. The two of us, however, were in
the grip of social forces far beyond our comprehension. When a significant portion of the population
start to have the same “psychological problem,” it is time to call out the
sociologists.
The "GLBT community" (gay, lesbian, bisexual
and transgender) appears monolithic. The
quadratic formula of “GLBT,” adding together several second-order elements to
create a single defined community, suggests communal interests. This is the understanding that most
heterosexuals in the
The difference between “homosexual”
and “GLBT” is elusive to many U.S. Americans.
The above paragraph and its plethora of specialized terms would have
made little sense to most U.S. Americans (except a few specialized
psychiatrists and psychologists) in 1950.
I suggest that most U.S. Americ mark intense personal and political
struggles. The divisions between gay and
lesbian and bisexual and transgender are far deeper and more significant to
each other than to those outside. Where
do these divisions come from?
Until the 1990s, there was little need to distinguish
between different groups within the homosexual movement. The differences between gay/lesbian and
bisexual/transgender was of no practical consequence until the attempt came in
the late 1990s to marry them together in a “GLBT” marriage of convenience. The purpose of this marriage, of course, was
political advantage through a community of interests. Bisexuals and
transgenders, however, include all sorts of groups with radically
unconventional lives: polyamorites, pansexuals, sado-masochists, Radical
Faeries, drag queens, she-males, heterosexual crossdressers, working-class
transvestite prostitutes, gender benders, genderqueers. Many of these bisexual and transgender people
have little in common with the modern construction of middle-class gay and
lesbian identities. When leaders of the
U.S. GLBT movement began to confront the inconsistent interests of the bisexual
and transgender people with whom they were now allied in the “GLBT movement,”
they were faced with a political problem. Having included bisexuals and
transgenders in the coalition, how could they at the same time argue that GLBT
people are “just like you,” wanting the same middle-class lives as other U.S.
voters (with the single exception of a same-sex partner) while being required
to politically embrace polyamory and a man in a dress?
The placement of bisexuals and
transgenders last in the GLBT acronym (or LGBT, as many prefer) is not
accidental. It is frequently thought
that gays and lesbians are natural allies with bisexuals because all share
victimization from a narrow view of sexuality.
Some gays and lesbians, however, have a narrow view of sexuality
themselves, along with the rest of society.
Questioning whether a photographer can capture on film a "bisexual
wedding" or "bisexual family" as easily as a “lesbian wedding”
or a “gay family,” one writer noted that bisexuality challenges our monosexual
culture's assumption that sexuality can be identified by appearance or by the
gender of one's partners. (Trnka and
Tucker 1995) When I attended a bisexual women’s support group at the New York
City Lesbian and
One could argue that only a small portion of the gay and
lesbian communities have heterosexist ideas about transgenders and bisexuals,
that these are not sufficiently serious issues about which to speak, and that
we should concentrate on our alliances.
While there is no data of which I am aware regarding the size of the
problem, there are serious personal and political consequences for bisexuals
and transgenders, as we shall see. We will not repair our divisions by ignoring
them and attributing them to psychological aberration. In this article, I examine the concepts of
“biphobia” and “transphobia,” attempting to begin an “archaeology” of the
concepts. I specifically refer to
archaeology in the Foucauldian sense.
C.G. Prado describes such “archaeology” as an investigation of
professional disciplines and expert idioms. It discounts received wisdom
and reconstructs the obvious and natural as suspect. It then searches out
the discontinuities that mark shifts between conceptual frameworks. It is
not a search for “Truth” but for what counts as truth in particular fields of
knowledge. (Prado 1995:29) Such a
study allows us to look at two specific concepts, “biphobia” and “transphobia,”
to see how they came to be used to describe intra-group prejudice within the
GLBT population in the early 21st century United States, and to
demonstrate the social forces and historical meanings that allowed and required
such usage. “Biphobia” and “transphobia” not only offer an inadequate
understanding of contemporary events, but also contribute to the internecine
conflicts of those who might otherwise be standing shoulder to shoulder in a
heterosexist world that grants them but little quarter.
B. Discrimination As Disease
“Biphobia” and “transphobia” sound like psychological
problems. “Phobia” is a Greek word
meaning “fear” or “flight.” Merriam-Webster’s Online Dictionary defines
“phobia” as “an exaggerated, usually inexplicable and illogical fear of a
particular object, class of objects, or situation.” As a combining noun-form, it is also defined
as “intolerance or aversion for,” giving the example of “photophobia,” an
intolerance to light.” (Merriam-Webster
2003) Merriam-Webster’s Online
Dictionary does not include “biphobia” or “transphobia.” It does, however, define “homophobia” as “irrational fear of, aversion to, or
discrimination against homosexuality or homosexuals.” (Italics
supplied) In fact, the term may first
have been used in print in a psychological context. The word was used in 1971 in an article
entitled “Homophobia: A Tentative Personality Profile,” in Psychological
Reports (Fone 2000:5). A year later, George Weinberg’s book Society and The
Healthy Homosexual” defined it as “the dread of being in close quarters with
homosexuals.” The term has been integrated into the social sciences, used by
activists, policy makers and the judiciary.
(Sears and Williams 1997:15) Yet
its current usage has expanded it far beyond the coiner’s initial intent, so
that it is applied to any act that discriminates against homosexuals, in stark
contrast to other phobias in the dictionary, such as “agoraphobia” and
“claustrophobia,” which are defined as “abnormal dread of” being in open or
public places, or closed or narrow spaces.
Some have divided homophobia into several parts, such as
personal, interpersonal, institutional and cultural. (Ochs 1996:221) Homophobia’s origins,
motivations, functions and measurement have been studied. (Sears and Williams 1987) Yet conflating fear, prejudice and
discrimination and medicalizing it into a "phobia" seems to give it a
legitimacy that "racism" and "sexism" could never
have. How did a disease descriptor come
to characterize discriminatory conduct?
Clearly, “biphobia” and “transphobia” are different from what we
commonly refer to as “phobias.” Speaking
of them as “phobias” is as inappropriate as calling racism “racephobia.” Such a usage changes prejudice, the
attribution of negative characteristics to a group, and discrimination, the
exclusion of such a group from the benefits of society, into a psychiatric
illness, a sickness over which the sufferer has little control. It contributes to such injustices as the “gay
panic defense,” in which a defendant accused of murder defends on the grounds
that the victim’s homosexual advances frightened the defendant, thereby excusing
the killing.
“Biphobia” and “transphobia” are unrelated to psychiatric
and psychological definitions of “phobias.”
Phobias are a significant medical and social phenomenon. According to a study by the National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), between 5.1 and 12.5 percent of Americans suffer
from phobias. (American Psychiatric
Association 1992) This means that
between 13 million and 32 million people in the
Psychiatrists find the most effective and longlasting
treatment for specific phobias is a behavior therapy called exposure, which
relies on exposing the person to the feared object or situation. The two most
common methods of exposure are systematic desensitization and “flooding.” In
both, the patient meets with a trained therapist and confronts the feared
object or situation. By confronting rather than fleeing the object of fear, a
person becomes accustomed to it and can lose the terror, horror, panic and
dread he or she once felt. Systematic desensitization is a more gradual form of
exposure therapy. In a series of steps, the patient first learns relaxation to
control the physical reactions of fear. Then he or she imagines the feared
object, works up to looking at pictures that depict the object or situation,
and finally actually experiences the situation or being in the presence of the
feared object. During “flooding,” on the other hand, the person is exposed
directly and immediately to the most feared object or situation. He or she
stays in that situation until his or her anxiety is markedly reduced from its
previous level. In general, this requires about two hours per session.
(American
Psychiatric Association 1992) Is the
answer to biphobia and transphobia no more than a simple matter of people going
off to therapy to spend a couple of hours with a bisexual and a transsexual to
overcome their irrational fears? I
suspect not. Biphobia and transphobia
are not good descriptions of the phenomenon of heterosexist prejudice against
bisexuals and transgenders, and are particularly inappropriate in the case of
heterosexist prejudices within the GLBT community. I suggest that gays and lesbians who
discriminate against bisexuals and transgenders are reacting to political and
social pressures, not psychological ones.
C. Political Consequences
At this point in the argument, the conflict appears to be
nothing more than a disagreement about names and categories: how are bisexuals and transgenders related to
gays and lesbians? Yet this dispute has serious real-world consequences. In
several years up to and including 2001, a bill entitled the Employment Nondiscrimination
Act (“ENDA”) had been proposed a number of times in the U.S. Congress, the goal
of which is to prohibit job discrimination against gays and lesbians. It has not yet been re-introduced at the time
of this writing, but it likely will be. Its principal organizational backer,
the Human Rights Campaign (“HRC”), a D.C. lobbying group, now estimates that
there are enough favorable votes in Congress to make passage possible in the
near future. It is more likely a matter
of when, rather than whether, such a bill will pass. Gay activists are ecstatic
about getting to this stage of political development.
Not all GLBT people are so ecstatic. Some are concerned because the legislative protection
is phrased in terms of “sexual orientation”, rather than “sexual preference,”
and deliberately does not include “gender identity.” “Sexual orientation” applies to one’s choice
of sexual partner, and does not apply to one’s gender presentation. Thus, it is not clear whether the “sexual
orientation” language would protect a transgender person who has been fired for
wearing the clothing of the opposite sex.
Furthermore, the term “sexual orientation” implies that one is oriented
in a particular sexual direction by a force or forces outside the will of the
individual. It stands in direct
opposition to the term “sexual preference,” which implies that sexuality is a
matter of choice. The displacement of
“sexual preference” by “sexual orientation” is not a matter of linguistics, but
of politics. When bisexuals, lesbians,
gays and heterosexuals are placed under the rubric of “sexual preference,”
sexual choices are represented.
When placed under the rubric of “sexual orientation,” then bisexuality
stands out as a failure of orientation or a dual orientation, a product of
confusion, promiscuity or indecision.
At the same time, it is assumed that there is no need to demarcate the social space held by bisexuals in political figurings. "Gay political groups often protest that there are no 'bisexual issues,' that bisexual rights are subsumed under gay rights, and that bisexuals will be liberated and accepted fully once gay rights are won." (Hutchins 1996:241) In fact, although bisexuals share many issues of discrimination concerning their same-gender relationships with lesbians and gay men, they are also discriminated against because they are bisexual – specifically because they upset the dichotomies in a polarized world. In addition, it needs to be understood that polyamory (multipartner relations), pansexuality (openness to all forms of sexuality) and other forms of responsible nonmonogamy are being pioneered by bisexuals. While bisexuality cannot be equated with polyamory and pansexuality, if bisexuality were to be valued distinct from gay and lesbian issues, this dimension would then need to be added to the current social debate about domestic partnership and same-gender marriages. (Hutchins 1996:241)
Bisexuals are also subject to community exclusion and
invisibility. The addition of the term
“bisexual” to “gay and lesbian” in the titles of political groups, community
centers, pride marches and other arenas is often a subject of bitter debate. For example, Northampton, Massachusetts has
long had a parade for the gay and lesbian community, but the suggestion that
bisexuals be included in the parade caused several years of strife during which
the Northampton gay and lesbian community, like many others around the country,
fought over whether to include "bisexual" in its Pride March title.
In fact, it was added in one year, and was so controversial that it was deleted
the next year. (Hutchins 1992)
The political conflict between gays/lesbians and
bisexuals/transgenders can also be found in the attempts to claim historical
territory. Prior to 1890, the terms
"homosexual," "gay," "lesbian,"
"transgender," "transsexual," and "transvestite"
did not exist. Can past historical figures correctly be described as
"gay" or "bisexual" or "transgender"? Who gets to say whether a cross-dressing man
who had sex with both men and women was "gay" or "bisexual"
or "transgender" or whatever?
Marjorie Garber notes that Sappho, Socrates, Alexander the Great, Julius
Caesar, King James I of
Thus, we begin to see the nature of the problem: there are social and political forces that have created a split between gay/lesbian communities and bisexual/transgender communities, and these forces have consequences for civil rights and community inclusion. “Biphobia” and “transphobia” are a result of these social and political forces, not psychological forces causing irrational fears in aberrant individuals.
How did “biphobia” and “transphobia” begin in the gay and
lesbian community? Undoubtedly there are psychological elements, but a purely
psychological, ahistorical explanation ignores the longstanding context of the
issue that allows for the phenomenon.
The GL vs. BT split is especially surprising because distinctions
between gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgenders developed rather recently in
history. Until the 1950s, those now called
“transgender” were classified as homosexuals by everyone, including the
physicians who specialized in their treatment, and it is only in the past fifty
years or so that transgender has been theorized as different in kind from
homosexuality. “Bisexuality” as a
concept (though not as a practice) began in the 1960s and emerged as a
recognizably separate identity in the 1970s, but it is still subsumed within
the larger context of “sexual orientation,” today’s phraseology for
“homosexuality.” Many in
A. The Construction of Homosexuality
While a basic sexual drive seems to exist instinctually in
most human beings as a matter of nature, the forms of sexuality seem to be
socially constructed. Foucault is famous
for championing the idea that, as of the 19th century, “the sodomite
had been a temporary aberration; the homosexual was now a species.” (Foucault
1980:43) This insight is useful (albeit
strongly contested, e.g., Karras 1999a, b), but insufficient to explain why we
now have four separate species (gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender) in the
homosexual community, and why there is a fault line between gays/lesbians and
bisexuals/transgenders. For this, we
must look into the specific historical context of the construction of
homosexuality in the West.
Early texts, including Greek and Roman sources, speak of
same-sex desire, but do not categorize persons solely by the sex of their
partners. There was no single identity,
which linked all men who engaged in same-sex acts. Indeed, adult patrician males were expected
to have sex with both boys and women, who were passive and expected to be so.
Homosexual behavior was not limited to some subculture that had distinct tastes
for men only. (Cantarella 1992:216)
Significantly, mirroring the distaste for effeminacy of much of modern gay male
and patriarchal culture, and the separation of what we now call “transgender”
culture, Greek texts satirized effeminate males, and both literary and legal
texts suggested it was unmanly behavior to accept a passive role in sexual
intercourse after passing a certain age.
(Fone 1998:11-15) Also in keeping
with patriarchal culture, women were believed not to have sexual feelings, and
with the exception of the poetry of Sappho, little was written or understood
about female same-sex acts. It was
assumed not to exist, its various forms were secret and did not inform the
public perceptions of same-sex relations.
(Cantarella 1992:78, Traub 1994:62, Spencer 1995:8, Fone 2000)
By the fourth century, the male same-sex acts that had been
so public were forced to go underground, creating a tension between secret
identity and public identity, between “passing” or “assimilating” (as a
non-sodomite or non-homosexual) versus being open about one’s sexuality, either
to potential partners or to the public, by declaration or behavioral
style. Those who wished to engage in
such practices risked strong social condemnation and severe judicial
punishment. In keeping with earlier
ideas, it was believed that any man who was led astray, rather than a distinct
subgroup of men who had inclinations towards men only could indulge in same-sex
behavior. However, there is evidence
that, beginning in the twelfth century, this belief began to change, and the
contrasting belief that there was a certain type of man who engaged exclusively
in same-sex behaviors slowly began to arise.
Those who engaged in same-sex behaviors were beginning to be designated
as “sodomites.” (Fone 1998:92) Nonetheless, it was “passive” homosexuals who
received the brunt of the condemnation, leaving in place an ethic in favor of
the masculine. (Cantarella 1992:221) Passing as the opposite sex occurred
fairly frequently, however, and while it was also forbidden, it was rarely
punished, as it was not considered, in and of itself, a sexual crime. (Dekker
and van de Pol 1989) It does not appear
that there was any necessary linkage in the public mind between cross-dressing
and sodomy until the eighteenth century.
By the eighteenth century,
the public understanding was that same-sex acts were connected with effeminacy
and cross-dressing, that those who engaged in same-sex acts did so exclusively,
that same-sex acts were confined to a specific group of people, and that the
propensity towards such acts was inborn.
(Fone 2000:232, Norton 1992:9)
Despite this linkage between male same-sex behavior and effeminacy in
the public mind, most men who engaged in same-sex behavior rejected effeminate
practices and role-playing. (Fone
1998:198) The public conception of
homosexuality coincided with a growing concern with effeminacy that appeared in
The nineteenth century scientific crusaders, Ulrichs and Hirschfeld, furthered the linkage between homosexuality and gender by theorizing homosexual men as “hermaphrodites of the mind,” with male bodies and female souls, though not without opposition. (Fone 1998: 440) In 1910, Magnus Hirschfeld coined the term “transvestite” to refer to one who prefers to wear the clothing of the opposite sex, to distinguish it and separate it from the phenomenon of homosexuality. Hirschfeld first mentioned “psychic transsexualism” in passing in 1923, but it was not accepted until popularized by Dr. Harry Benjamin in the 1960s. (Pfäfflin and Junge 1998)
Thus, from the nineteenth century unitary conception
of homosexuality there developed two concepts: “sexual orientation” (sexual
object choice) and “gender identity” (sexual self-identification as male or
female). This
scientific rationalism and medicalization of homosexuality confirmed it as a
unitary, monolithic phenomenon. This
created a monosexist (exclusively same-sex) “homosexual identity,” and a
corresponding tension between identification as homosexual, on the one hand,
and passing as heterosexual and/or engaging in heterosexual relationships.
The sex/gender dichotomy was deepened when, in the
mid-twentieth century, homosexuality was separated into distinct male and
female forms, each of which had different stylized behavioral styles, and
distinguished from cross-dressing and effeminacy. This formed a gender divide, and
corresponding tensions with bi-gender intermingling and gender ambiguity. After World War II, there were furtive
movements towards political action, but these were largely separated along
gender lines. The Mattachine Society, an
organization for gay men, was established in 1950. The first openly lesbian organization in the
In the context of the counterculture of the 1960s
These historical circumstances led to four areas of
tension: monosexism versus bisexism,
gender accommodationism versus gender ambiguity, open homosexual identity
versus passing as heterosexual, and a gender divide versus bigender
intermingling. Transsexuals and
bisexuals violated the tacit social understandings of the homosexual community
in the
B. The History of
Transphobia
When the story of Christine Jorgensen was published in
1951, debates began amongst these groups as to the proper response. In the first case study of Jorgensen,
published in 1951 by her endocrinologist, he referred to her "homosexual
tendencies" (Meyerowitz 2002:171).
Jorgensen herself, however, specifically distinguished her condition
from homosexuality, referring to the prevalent theory of transsexuality as
“nature’s mistake,” in which a woman is trapped in a man’s body. (Jorgensen 1967, 2000:114). She takes pains
to distinguish her situation from "a much more horrible illness of the
mind. One that, although very common, is not as yet accepted as a true
illness, with the necessity for great understanding." This “horrible illness of the mind” is a
reference to homosexuality. In this way,
she attempts to avoid the severe mid-century stigma of homosexuality, as did
many transsexuals of the time. (Meyerowitz 2002: 183-184) Jorgensen's
endocrinologist later changed his mind, deciding that Jorgensen's condition
differed fundamentally from homosexuality, and many other prominent scientists
and doctors agreed, provoking intense controversy. (Meyerowitz 2002: 171) The importance of this controversy can only
be understood in reference to the extreme intensity and pervasive ubiquity of
the stigma of homosexuality up to the 1950s.
Such extremis provokes compassion for Jorgensen’s attempts to
distinguish herself from homosexuality, and empathy for those who saw her as an
opportunist who condemned homosexuals in order to earn the acceptance of
straight society.
There was a vigorous debate in the
In 1953, for example, ONE magazine published a debate among
its readers as to whether gay men should denounce Jorgensen. In the opening salvo, the author Jeff Winters
accused Jorgensen of a "sweeping disservice" to gay men. "As far as the public knows,"
Winters wrote, "you were merely another unhappy homosexual who decided to
get drastic about it." For Winters,
Jorgensen's story simply confirmed the false belief that all men attracted to
other men must be basically feminine," which, he said, "they are
not." Jorgensen's precedent,
he thought, encouraged the "reasoning" that led "to legal
limitations upon the homosexual, mandatory injections, psychiatric treatment –
and worse." In the not-so-distant
past, scientists had experimented with castrating gay men.
(Meyerowitz 2002:177)
Meyerowitz portrays the tension between homosexuals and transsexuals as
based upon the tension between passing and openness, what she terms
"gender transgression," suggesting that it may have derived from
class differences and differing class tolerances for "swish" and
"butch." (Meyerowitz
2002:178) She notes that some gays and
lesbians associated gender transgression with undignified and low-class behavior,
while "fairies" and "butches" were more readily accepted in
working class communities. She also relates a survey from the 1960s that found
that more than two-thirds of a sample of almost 300 gays and lesbians in the
homophile movement considered those who asked for sex-change surgery to be
"severely neurotic." (Meyerowitz 2002:183)
Kay Brown
of Transhistory.org (“Transsexual, Transgender and Intersex History”) has set
forth a long chronology of the ejection of those whom we now know as
“transgendered” from gay organizations starting in the 1970s, and the following
material is drawn from her website. (Brown 2001) She notes that transgendered people played
pivotal roles in gay organizations of the late 1960s and early 1970s, including
the Gay Liberation Front and the Gay Activists Alliance (“GAA”). While the
original goals included complete acceptance of sexual diversity and expression,
by the early 70s the gay men’s community returned to the assimilationist
strategy as the lesbians turned to separatism and radical feminism. There
seemed to be no room for transgendered people in either camp. (Brown 2001) For
example, in 1971 the GAA wrote and introduced a bill to the New York City
Council to protect homosexuals from discrimination. The bill did not include any explicit
protection for transsexuals.
In early
1970’s, Beth Elliott, a founder and active member of a number of gay and
lesbian organizations, was Vice-President of the
Late in her term
of office her transgender status became a point of contention at the West Coast
Lesbian Conference, where she was outed and vilified for being a MTF
transsexual. The complaint was that Beth Elliott had insinuated herself into a
position of power over women as a patriarchal man, a propagandist ploy that was
to become common when attacking other transgendered people. At the conference
she was forced to stop her music concert due to the catcalls from the audience
by women that knew nothing more about her than that she was transsexual. She
was required to sit through a popular vote of the attendees to determine
whether they would let her finish her set. In the weeks and months to follow
she was further vilified and even betrayed by women who had once called her
friend. The treatment she received led her to become “stealth” for many years
after.
In 1973, during a gay rally, a well-known transgender activist was followed on the stage by a lesbian separatist who denounced transgenders as men who, by “impersonating women”, were exploiting women for profit. Later in the 70s, lesbian separatists made an issue of the presence of lesbian-identified transsexual women in their movement. Central to the conflict was a transsexual recording engineer working at Olivia Records. Lesbian separatists threatened a boycott of Olivia products and concerts. On the edge of profitability, the company eventually fired the engineer. Attempts to exclude transsexuals also characterized the 1977 San Francisco Gay Pride Parade.
Two years
later, Janice Raymond, a lesbian academic, wrote The Transsexual Empire, a
book based on her doctoral dissertation.
(Raymond 1979) Raymond argued
that the phenomenon of transsexuality was created by fetishistic males who
sought to escape into a faux stereotypical femininity, with the connivance of
male doctors who thought that femaleness could be medically created and
homosexuality medically vitiated.
Although "male to constructed female" transsexuals claimed to
be against the stereotyped gender system by virtue of their escape from
stereotypical masculinity, they in fact added force to the binary system by
merely escaping from one stereotype to another, or at most mixing together
different stereotypes, rather than advocating true gender freedom. They were not political radicals, as they
claimed, but reactionaries seeking to preserve a stereotypical gender system
that was already dramatically changing due to the political action of 60s and
70s feminists and gays. Transsexuals
were, according to Raymond, sheep in wolf's clothing.
Henry
Rubin argues that the creation of a separate transsexual identity and community
emerges in the 1970s in the
The blatant lack of regard for transgendered identities can
also be found in gay rewriting of history.
For example, Dr. Alan L. Hart was born
In his 1976 book, Gay American History, for example,
Professor Jonathan Ned Katz categorized Hart as “clearly a lesbian, a
woman-loving woman [who] illustrates only too well one extreme to which an
intelligent, aspiring Lesbian in early twentieth-century American might be
driven by her own and her doctor’s acceptance of society’s condemnation of
women-loving women.” O’Hartigan also
refers to Pat Califia's statement that "Katz's book 'is unfortunately
tainted with a heavy dose of transphobia." She also brings up Katz’s
footnote in his Gay/Lesbian Almanac about an unpublished paper: "Transsexualism":
Today’s Quack Medicine: An Issue for Every Body, and noting his statement
"An historical study needs to be made of the medical and autobiographical
literature on 'transsexualism'; it will, I think, reveal the fundamentally
sexist nature of the concept and of the associated medical
treatments." O’Hartigan also sets forth, disapprovingly, an
explanation for referring to Hart as female by Susan Stryker: “As an historian
favoring ‘social construction’ approaches to questions of identity, I have
reservations about using the word ‘transsexual’ to refer to people before the
mid-20th century who identify in a profound, ongoing manner with a
gender that they were not assigned to at birth.”
It is against this backdrop that, in the early 1990’s, the term “transgender,” a neologism with an unclear meaning, began to be included in the GLB coalition. The term was used as an umbrella term referring to transvestites, crossdressers, transsexuals, and other gender-variant people, who seemed to have similar and interlocking interests with gay men and lesbian women, and that had caught the imagination of the public through sympathetic portrayals of transsexuals such as Christine Jorgensen, Renee Richards and Wendy Williams. Originally, the term “transgender” was intended by its coiner to refer only to certain non-operative transsexuals, but later mutated to refer to anyone whose gender performance varied from the norm. This more open meaning, however, conflicted with the goals of the coalition builders, which was to capture public sympathy by appealing to an image of homosexuals as people “just like” the majority of U.S. voters, middle class people (or people with middle class yearnings), who held steady jobs, had long, loving relationships with partners of the same sex, and who wanted the same lives that the majority of U.S. voters wanted. As a result, some gays find themselves agreeing with straights who see in transgenders an assault on normative reality, as in the following diatribe thinly veiled as humor:
There’s something a little annoying about transgendered people insisting that they be called whatever sex they want to be called. . . Like so many transgendered people, Califia is like a bush resenting the grass for not calling it a tree. Well, if you've got bush and no trunk, are you really a tree? Before all the MTF (male-to-female) transgendered people flick their compact mirrors shut and take up their pitchforks (with matching handbags, of course), I'd like to point out that there's a reality that exists outside of ourselves. If you wear brown and insist that I call it red because you say so, then you're asking me to skew an objective reality to your liking. Enrolling people into in an illusion unsupported by facts seems manipulative to me. . . .So for all the Pattys, Pats and Patricks out there, you go boys/girls/TBA. Just don't back over us with your whoop-ass mobile because we didn't get your pronoun right. (Alvear 2003)
At the same time, some transgenders pass as heterosexuals and reject homosexual identity by calling their sexual relations heterosexual. The reaction of the gay and lesbian community, predictably, has been an attempt to limit the inclusion of transgenders. This reaction, which is often called “transphobia,” is not a result of a psychological “phobia,” but a result of the previously identified tensions between accomodationism and gender ambiguity, and between homosexual identity and “passing.”
C. The History of Biphobia
In the 1960s, homosexuality began to be referred to by a
number of terms, including “alternative lifestyles,” “sexual preference” and
“sexual orientation.” Each of these had political connotations. “Alternative lifestyles,” a term connected
with the counterculture of the 60s, connoted sexual freedom, if not
free-for-all. “Sexual preference”
connoted the right to choose one’s sexuality, rather than having it imposed by
a heterosexist and monosexist society.
“Sexual orientation” implied that one’s sexuality was inborn or fixed
early in life, and is not subject to change.
Furthermore, as noted in the introduction, the term “sexual orientation”
implies that one is oriented in a particular sexual direction by a force or
forces outside the will of the individual.
It stands in direct opposition to the term “sexual preference,” which
implies that sexuality is a matter of choice.
When bisexuals, lesbians, gays and heterosexuals are placed under the
rubric of “sexual preference,” sexual choices are represented. When placed under the rubric of “sexual
orientation,” then bisexuality stands out as a failure of orientation or a dual
orientation, a product of confusion, promiscuity or indecision.
Until the 1970s, however, there was little need to define
the precise boundaries of “homosexuality.”
While the groups had different origins, their common goals united them
despite the differing interests that militated for separation.
The gay movement, heady with the sense of liberation
following Stonewall, could afford to be utopian, and pronounced the goal of
"free[ing] the homosexual in everyone." Gay theorist Dennis Altman
argued that the gay movement would bring "the end of the homosexual
because "gay liberation will succeed as its raison d'etre
disappears." Such language and
priorities created a climate in which bisexuality was not particularly
problematized, though the only people calling themselves bisexual at that point
were swingers and free love advocates.
(Udis-Kessler 1995)
However, the balance changed, narrowing the homosexual
movement to gays and lesbians. A
separate category was needed, and “bisexuality,” first discussed as a concept
in the 1960’s, was employed to demarcate the space. (Highleyman 2003) Though pockets of bisexual organizing were
visible as early as the 1970s, and the "National Bisexual Liberation
Group" was founded in
Bisexuals, who comprised both men and women, desiring both men and women as sexual partners, represented a problem in this schema.
Udis-Kessler also notes that bisexual movements are often
gender specific. Much of bisexual
history is bisexual women's history, many bisexual activists are women who
formerly identified as lesbian feminists, and bisexual women's groups often
have mailing lists ten times the size of bisexual men's groups. Tensions between lesbian and bisexual women
are understood as much more problematic than tensions between gay and bisexual
men, caused by the politics of lesbian separatism. (Udis-Kessler 1995)
Bisexuality was seen as a sexual libertinism, politically
and emotionally uninvested, rather than a political choice. (Hemmings 2002:74) Bisexuals were
seen as privileged as non-homosexuals and stereotyped as amoral hedonistic
disease carriers and disrupters of families, indecisive and promiscuous. (Ochs
1996:217) In 1987, bisexuality
emerged in the mainstream press as a symbol of unbridled promiscuity,
threatening heterosexuals with the “gay plague” of AIDS. The bisexual was portrayed as “a homosexual
posing as a heterosexual,” as “amoral as regards sexual candor,” less apt to
fee the guilt that a gay man might “going both ways.” Newsweek featured “bisexuals” on its cover,
suggesting that bisexuals were becoming the “ultimate pariahs of the AIDS
crisis.” (Weinberg 1995:205)
In the gay and lesbian community, it was
widely assumed that bisexuals are confused about their sexual identity, and
that bisexuality was a pathological state.
From this point of view, ‘confusion’ is literally a built-in feature of
‘being bisexual.’ As expressed in one
study:
While
appearing to encompass as wider choice of love object. . .[the bisexual]
actually becomes a product of abject confusion; his self-image is that of an
overgrown young adolescent whose ability to differentiate one form of sexuality
from another has never developed. He
lacks above all a sense of identity. . . . [He] cannot answer the question:
What am I?
There was persistent pressure on
bisexuals from the gay and lesbian community to relabel themselves as gay or
lesbian and to engage in sexual activity exclusively with the same sex. It was asserted that no one was really
bisexual (Weinberg, Williams and Pryor 1995)
In addition to this invalidation of
bisexual identity, bisexuals face invisibility.
(Tucker 1995) It is very
difficult to find historical sources documenting bisexual history in any
detail. Bisexuality doesn't really
exist, bisexuals are really gay, and yet they are confused, can't make
commitments or have mature relationships.
(Sumpter 1991) As a middle
ground, bisexuality is frequently demonized for supporting and generating fixed
oppositional structures of sexuality and gender, and is dismissed in both
epistemological and ontological terms.
(Hemmings 2002:1) Within the gay
and lesbian community, there are many monosexist assumptions:
Assuming that
everyone you meet is either heterosexual or homosexual.
Automatically
assuming romantic couplings of two women are lesbian, or two men are gay, or a
man and a woman are heterosexual.
Assuming bisexuals
would be willing to "pass" as anything other than bisexual.
Expecting a
bisexual to identify as heterosexual when coupled with the "opposite"
gender/sex.
Expecting a
bisexual to identify as gay or lesbian when coupled with the "same"
sex/gender.
Thinking
bisexual people haven't made up their minds.
Believing
bisexuals are confused about their sexuality.
Using the
terms "phase" or "stage" or "confused" or
"fence-sitter" or "bisexual" or "AC/DC" or
"switchhitter" as slurs or in an accusatory way.
Feeling
bisexuals just want to have their cake and eat it too.
Thinking
bisexuals only have committed relationships with "opposite"
sex/gender partners.
Assuming that
bisexuals, if given the choice, would prefer to be within an
"opposite" gender/sex coupling to reap the social benefits of a
"heterosexual" pairing.
Expecting
bisexual people to get services, information and education from heterosexual
service agencies for their "heterosexual side" (sic) and then go to
gay and/or lesbian service agencies for their "homosexual side"
(sic).
Thinking that
bisexual people will have their rights when lesbian and gay people win theirs.
(Ka'ahumanu
and Yaeger 2000)
A particularly striking example of biphobia occurred in the
late 1980s and early 1990s in
Hemmings underlines the fact that the debates about the
inclusion of the term “bisexual” in the march emerged as a result of a conflict
within the lesbian and gay community, not outside it. In the view of those who wished to include
the term, its inclusion demonstrated that bisexuals were considered part of the
core of lesbian and gay community, in need of allies, rather than being
allies. In the alternate view on which
its later exclusion was premised, the attitude towards bisexuals demonstrated a
policy of “political affiliation,” based on the assumption that they are not
part of the community. Bisexuals are
then seen as claiming lesbian space that is not theirs. In the words of one writer, “We lesbians have
worked long and hard to create safe communities for ourselves. Bisexuals are welcome to, and should do, the
same. But do not try to grab what we
have created.” Yet those arguing for the
inclusion of bisexual in the title of
the march do so on the basis of “group unity inclusion,” rather than the desire
to create a bisexual community separate from the lesbian and gay
community. This has created an ambiguity
in the use of the often-used term community. For example, one committee member stated,
after the 1990 march “The lesbian and gay community gets on very well with the
rest of the community.” Does this refer
to bisexuals, or heterosexuals? Does reference to “bisexuals” demarcate a space
inside the lesbian and gay community, or outside it? (Hemmings 2002:71)
Another issue that must
not be overlooked regarding biphobia is the fact that the term “bisexual” is
not gendered. Bisexuals comprise both
men and women. The lesbian “reclaiming”
of the 1990 march was consistently viewed in terms of territorial rights, where
lesbian territory is understood as a space free from men. A triumphant editorial in the local lesbian
press was entitled “Take Back the March Night.”
A connection was clearly being drawn between violence against women
protested in Take Back the Night marches and bisexuals. This link was made more
explicit in a “note to the editors” of the Valley Women’s Voice that read, “The
following statement on lesbian occupied territory was in part sparked by the
recent controversy in
The experience of
Concerns about bisexuals and bisexuality remain alive and well in the gay and lesbian community. In speaking about a recent survey about the disclosure of homosexuality by patients to physicians, a gay columnist noted that it found that the bisexuals surveyed disclosed less often than the gays and lesbians surveyed:
That leads to the conclusion that for some purposes, it can be important to disaggregate gays, lesbians and bisexuals (to say nothing of transsexuals) and not talk of them as if they were a unitary "community" or have more in common than they actually do. . . . In other words, bisexuals face discrimination only because they sometimes behave like homosexuals.
But despite the identity of interests, there are important differences at the psychological and personal identity level. It seems clear from survey research that bisexuals understand their sexuality far differently from lesbians and gay men, and handle disclosure and relationship issues far differently, as the medical survey mentioned earlier suggests. . . . The question gays may then ask is how seriously these self-described bisexuals take their same-sex tricks, dates and relationships, or more fundamentally, how seriously they take the homosexual component of their sexuality.
Such findings suggest troubling obstacles for gay activists on a range of issues, from efforts to reach bisexual men with HIV information to attempts to solicit bisexual support for same-sex marriage. They also remind us that in many ways the recently coined "GLBT community" is more a semantic artifact or political term-of-art than anything like an actual community. (Varnell 2003b)
Such views reveal great
discomfort in the gay and lesbian community with bisexuality and bisexual
inclusion. Nonmonogamy, polyamory,
pansexuality, and SM conflict with the middle-class gay/lesbian claim of being
“just like you.” At the same time,
bisexuals comprise two sexes, unlike the gay community or the lesbian
community, threatening to homogenize and dilute homosexual identity. Many bisexuals also have social privileges
because they can pass as straight. The
reaction of the gay and lesbian community, again predictably, was an attempt to
limit the inclusion of bisexuals. This
“biphobic” reaction is not a result of a psychological “phobia,” but a result
of the historical tension between homosexual identity
and passing, between monosexism and bisexism.
III.
Conclusion: Too Queer And Not Queer Enough
Are biphobia and transphobia examples of phobias –
irrational fears? No, because such
heterosexist attitudes are all too rational, and they mirror the social
tensions inherent in the historical formation of the
Marjorie Garber notes her discussion with a gay male
theorist regarding her work on bisexuality, Vice Versa. This theorist expressed some concern about
what a fully theorized bisexuality would do to the project of gay and lesbian
studies. Gay and lesbian studies have sought to describe homosexuality not as
the "other" of heterosexuality, but as a locus for cultural critique,
social reevaluation and change, but now perhaps bisexuality would repolarize
hetero- and homosexuality. Gay and
lesbian studies have also famously claimed the cultural production of figures
such as Virginia Woolf, Oscar Wilde, and Anne Rice – what if we now had to
recontextualize them as bisexual?
(Garber 1995: 28) Yet they had
both opposite-sex and same-sex relationships.
Both Harry Hay, founder of the Mattachine Society, and Patricia Ireland,
president of the National Organization for Women, had long relationships with
opposite-sex partners as well as same-sex partners, but are rarely considered
bisexuals. (Garber 1995:74)
Reconceptualizing gay history as bisexual history could erase homosexual
identity.
Transgenders, too, have stepped into the safety of the
closet. They also erase gay and lesbian identities by becoming, literally or
figuratively, the opposite sex, creating or attempting to create heterosexual
identities by their inconvenient insistence that “gender identity” has nothing
to do with “sexual orientation.” One
lesbian writer described transsexuality this way: "Gays and Lesbians have
struggled for decades to be able to name ourselves and to BE ourselves. But now
in our own community we are expected to applaud Dykes rejecting womanhood and
embrace men taking it over." (Dobkin 2000)
To a transsexual man, it would say “you are not a transsexual man, you
are a lesbian woman who has mutilated herself in order to change a woman-loving
woman into a more acceptable figure.”
Some within the bisexual and transgender community see in these
attitudes an attempt to reconfigure bisexuals and transgenders into gays and
lesbians gone wrong, to erase bisexual and transgender identities, and to
absorb the differences into a greater gayness.
An example of this heterosexist attitude can be found in
the recent reaction of some gays to two recent court rulings in favor of
transsexual marriage. Here is one gay columnist's
reaction:
Both cases will be cited as gains for GLBT rights. The New York Times quoted Lynne Gold-Bikin of
the American Bar Association as saying of the
It is not clear how the
And far from benefiting gays and lesbians in any way
whatsoever, the ruling conspicuously reaffirmed opposite-sex, heterosexual marriage
as normative and exclusionary.
Ironically, the
. . . So gay and lesbian people gain nothing from
heterosexual transsexuals being able to marry.
But transsexuals, all transsexuals, would gain from gay marriage. (Varnell 2003a)
i.e., just like mainstream
As “homosexuality” became increasingly more accepted,
freeing itself from shame with the 1968 Stonewall Riots, and the 1974
declaration of the American Psychiatric Association (“APA”) that homosexuality
was not a mental disorder, the more accepted homosexual elements began to
agitate for more social tolerance and civil rights in law. In order to do so, like any political
creation, it had to drop the lead weights represented by the less accepted and
frankly unacceptable elements of the group, particularly effeminate
transsexuals and promiscuous bisexuals.
Transsexuality and transgenderism are still considered mental illness by
the American Psychiatric Association.
Homosexual rights groups, while committed in principle to inclusion of
all homosexuals, including bisexuals and transgenders, began to be led by the
more politically savvy gays and lesbians to espouse a platform that,
consciously or unconsciously, served the interests of the normative homosexual
elements, but not necessarily bisexuals or transgenders. Over time, the “GL” portion of the platform
became increasingly acceptable to the population at large, both through
increased education and desensitization of the public and by disavowing the more
unacceptable elements of the movement.
At the same time, this political success fueled a separatist culture,
which bisexuals and transgenders threatened to dilute and homogenize.
The movie “Flawless*”
(1999) contains a fictional scene in which drag queens and transsexuals
confront gay Republicans regarding the gay pride parade. While fictional, the scene accurately
portrays the tensions described here.
Gay Republican #1: Thanks for meeting with us gentlemen. We’ve been discussing this year’s gay pride parade, and we felt that it would be important, well, a good idea, to show a united front…
Gay Republican #2: Synthesis I believe.
Gay Republican #1: Right, we felt as gay republicans, we thought it would be a really good idea if we could all come together and show the world our likenesses, not our differences. To celebrate the, um…
Gay Republican #2: …synthesis…
Gay Republican #1: …right, synthesis…
Transsexual #1: You’re very good. Sorry, go ahead.
Gay Republican #1: We could march together as a united brotherhood….
Transsexual #2: What about the sisterhood, honey?
Gay Republican #2: …march on foot, no floats.
Transsexual #3: Yeah, you think if you
have no floats we won’t do drag because we can’t march in heels. Well, let me
tell you something, honey. We can march
to
Gay Republican #1: Hey let’s just calm down then.
Transsexual #1: Aren’t you guys the same group that raised a shitload of money and gave it to Bob Dole’s campaign and he sent it back, didn’t he?
Gay Republican #2: No, no, that’s because he would have lost support of the Christian right.
Transsexual #1: Exactly, because you’re gay. You’re gay, that why he sent it back. Aren’t you ashamed? All right, listen, you are right. We are different, but not in the way that you mean. We’re different because you are all ashamed of us, and we are not ashamed of you. alright, because as long as you get down on those banana republican knees and suck dick, honey, you’re all my sisters and I love you, I do. God bless you and fuck off.