Visible Man: The politics of passing
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Jamison Green offers a man's POV on life in the trans lane. Opinion,
advice, and information from an internationally respected leader of the
FTM community.
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Transgender Tapestry Magazine, published quarterly by the International
Foundation for Gender Education, has instituted a new feature over the
past year or so called "The Journal." Editor Ms. Dallas Denny solicits
topical essays and then asks other writers to respond to the ideas in a
subsequent issue. The format has yielded some very thought-provoking
content. In Issue #95, Fall 2001, the topic was Passing, and the
invited contributors were Holly Boswell and Jessica Xavier, two longtime
trans activists with very different personal and political styles. I
admire and respect them both. They use divergent entry points on the
concept of passing, but both lead to acknowledging the harm that is
couched within the seductive lure of passing and the emptiness of the
privilege with which passing tempts us. Here is my own response to some
of the issues they raised.
Ms. Boswell quotes Leslie Feinberg: "It is passing that's historically
new. Passing means hiding. Passing means invisibility. Transgendered
people should be able to live and express their gender without criticism
or threats of violence. ..." I must disagree with the premise that
passing is historically new. This is an unprovable statement, and there
is considerable anthropological and historical evidence to the
contrary. Feinberg's statement is a rhetorical device intended to
invoke compassion for those who cannot or do not "pass," and to
challenge those transpeople who do pass to step out of the closet; it is
not a statement of absolute truth. Passing does not unequivocally mean
hiding or invisibility. Everyone has some aspect of their life that is
hidden, one perhaps for which they might fear vilification if it were
common knowledge in certain circles. This situation is not unique to
gender-variant or sexual minority people. Further, I understand that
many trans people are terrified of not passing, and that this is a
horrible fear to live with. What we need to be working toward, on the
political as well as the social front, is freedom to realize "a greater
sense of congruity between our inner and outer being" (which is what
Holly advocates beyond passing) regardless of what this looks like to
others!
I don't agree, either, with Holly's statement that "Passing inevitably
reinforces sex-role stereotyping, sexism, and gender duality." Why is
this inevitable? Women who pass as women have been quite successful at
breaking down sex stereotyping, sexism and gender duality in the
feminist movement. Men who pass as men can do the same thing with
respect to breaking down sex-role stereotypes, and some have been
working hard to do just that. You don't have to look gender-queer or
even be gender-variant to understand and speak up for freedom of gender
expression. Holly's right, though, that many transpeople "who pass
report new forms of disconnection," and we have to work to ameliorate
that situation. Our ability to hide and assimilate is not new, though,
and it is not difficult to understand why, facing the reactions of those
who oppose and ridicule us, so few transpeople "out" themselves or
demand dignity and equality in spite of our difference.
Ms. Xavier's piece discusses how passing privilege for gay men,
lesbians, and bisexual people has "dumbed down" the identity politics of
the GLB movement, reducing it to the "we're just like you, we just do
something different in the privacy of our own bedrooms" argument, and
perhaps passing transpeople have fallen prey to the same rhetoric,
trying hard to believe that the privacy of their genital difference
should be glossed over politically and they should have equal rights,
too, just leave their bodies covered, thank you. I have long agreed
with Jessica that this line isn't going to work for transpeople. Our
collective variance is much greater than that, and if we are truly to
achieve social justice, we cannot fight only for the ones who look
"nice." We have to fight for everyone, because our issues are more
pervasive throughout our lives than just who we have sex with in
private. And many GLB people have the same social issues as we do, even
if they don't regard themselves as trans, and whether they pass or not.
I am grateful for Jessica's observation that (she estimates) "90% of
transsexual men eventually gain passing privilege [Ébut that] spending
half their lives developing queer consciousness within their lesbian
communities, many transsexual men are not only aware of but also
ambivalent about their passing privilege." However, though I don't
think she meant this exactly, I feel compelled to point out that there
is no statistical proof that a majority of transmen have prior lesbian
experience. Ms. Xavier's text also implies that most FTMs are straight
(attracted to women post-transition); this is also not statistically
verifiable. My exposure to transmen causes me to estimate that only 60%
have had any lesbian experience or connection to queer culture, and that
roughly 30% of FTMs identify as gay men, whether they had exposure to
queer culture prior to transition or not.
I would not generalize that exposure to queer culture prior to
transition predisposes one's posttransition sexual orientation toward
homosexuality. I would generalize that most of the few transmen who are
politically active and most willing to be publicly "out" have been
through the political mill in queer culture, have had their
consciousness raised, and bring to their trans-activism considerable
organizing experience. Some of us, though we may be new to the trans
scene, have been doing political activism around sexism, racism and
homophobia for decades. If we are the only transmen that are visible,
it is not surprising that Jessica and others would draw conclusions like
these, but I assure you that transmen are more diverse that that. We
have our sexist pigs, homophobes and transphobes, too.
Jessica points out something else I've often said: "We will never be
nontranssexual" (or nontransgendered), whether we pass or not. When our
sense of congruity between our inner and outer being is stronger and we
feel more at home in our bodies, regardless of the shape or sex of those
bodies, and we no longer have to fear having our difference discovered,
then we can rest. Until then, whether we talk about passing as if it's
either "important/necessary to pass" or "politically incorrect to pass
because it's bad to look good," all that does is continue to make
everyone feel bad.
We need to be talking about passing as if it doesn't matter, as if it is
not what is important. Because what is important is that for all of us
the goal is freedom to be who we are, regardless of our difference or
variance, regardless of what we look like or what gender we identify
with for what part of the day, so long as we are not harming another
person. What our genitals look like, or whom we love, or how we need to
change our bodies (or not change them) should not matter with respect to
our ability to live safe, productive, rewarding lives as full members of
society. To that end, I think invisibility is more dangerous than
passing per se. It's one thing to be invisible and have people react in
shock, shame, intolerance and hatred when your difference is exposed,
whether or not that exposure happens against your will; it's another
thing to pass and have your difference understood and respected even if
it is not exposed all the time.
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