Saturday 7 August 2010

Some more outrage



As with most things I bitch about on here, I know very little about Buck Angel. I first became aware of his existence through Corin, who is a fan of his on Facebook; essentially, he is reportedly the first FtM porn star, and seems pretty popular. From the little of his online presence that I have researched, I've noticed that he sees himself as a success, primarily because of the authenticity he and others perceive in his masculinity. His bio on Facebook is essentially presented as a wrong body narrative; we are encouraged to see him as an ordinary guy who was unfortunate enough to have been born into a female body.

A few days ago Corin read a status from this page to me and it's been troubling me ever since. It reads:

This was sent to me today. Pretty Cool!

"
My ass.
You have not been a woman.
That's impossible.
You have a bitchin mustasche and you could probably beat a wild
animal to death with your
bare hands.
You look like you could star as a villian in a Die Hard film.
You look like you could demolish a house by headbutting it.
You simply look to convincing to have ever been a woman."


Obviously I have several issues with this. For one thing, 'been a woman' is really problematic terminology - I recognise that this is the terminology of the person writing to Buck, but it is also terminology he tacitly supports by publishing it without criticism. The following account leads me as a reader to believe that both Buck's fan and Buck himself believe women to be inherently inferior to men, and this makes me fucking angry.

According to this quote, it is 'impossible' for women to have facial hair or, at least, facial hair that is so socially acceptable as to be 'bitchin'. Similarly, a woman could not possibly 'beat a wild animal to death'; she could not star as a Die Hard villain; she couldn't have the strength to 'demolish a house by headbutting it'. And, by she, I mean we. We, as women, are weaklings and failures. We can't impress people with our plumage (possibly because, since most women feel under pressure to present themselves in a way that indicates great care has been taken over their appearance, it just isn't special when our hair - non-facial, non-armpit, non-pubic - looks good. It's meant to look that way). We can't take on wild animals - we simply don't have the necessary testosterone levels. We are worse than ordinary - we are substandard because, in the grand competition to be entertaining that apparently is life, we barely have half the physical resources of people signified as male, or 'appropriately' masculine. We don't exist in this conversation except by omission and derision. I am not trying to say that conversations about transmasculinity ought to refer to women - sometimes women are not relevant - but, when heteromasculinity is being so revered, women become present through their silent inadequacy.

What is strength in this conversation? It is destruction, brute force, the ability to literally throw your weight around. Fuck childbirth. Fuck existing in a society that constantly undercuts you - Buck Angel has apparently made a safely-unnoticed exit from the parade of fuckery that assaults most of us who are not heteromen on a daily basis, so it's alright for him. He can become an oppressor of those less 'fortunate' (i.e. less outwardly normatively masculine) than him. I feel very self-conscious about coming across, to myself as well as others, as being transphobic in this complaint but, more importantly than that, I cannot subscribe to something that relies on the subordination of femininity to be 'successful'. Because according to this narrative I am not strong, and I do not have strength. While Buck is made a spectacle - which I do not mean to imply is okay: he is a person, not a freakshow - I am fainting somewhere in a corner, where I am either being attended to by another woman behind the scenes or ignored entirely. As is every other woman. And, essentially, it seems to be that we are being ignored because society has not awarded us the resources to throw our weight around.

This is not to say, though, that the only strengths that can be ascribed to women are separate from those ascribed to Buck (or Buck's masculinity): there are strong fucking women. There are women body builders and women wrestlers and women cage-fighters and women who pull cars with their teeth. Corin remarked, and I think this is totally feasible, that working out to the extent that you become a body builder does basically the same things to any body, be it a woman's or a man's, or male or female, or something else. Are woman-identified body builders too 'convincingly' masculine to be considered women? Are other people's gender the properties of outside critics? I find it disturbing that anyone, let alone a queer person, would endorse these ideas.

And what's 'convincing'? What exactly is being celebrated when Buck Angel is seen to pass? To me, this is not about his personal journey, or his comfort. This is about supporting a gender binary. This is about celebrating the idea that even queers can support this myth, this piece of shit idea that seems to permeate everything, that sits in so many people's heads and dictates so much about how they treat people and how they let themselves act: the idea that the genders are the (perceived) sexes and are opposite and entirely different, and that it's of the utmost importance to assert this at all times. It's fucking bullshit and I'm fucked off about it. I feel like I've probably made a lot of oversights in this blog, because there is so much about gender that I do not know, because I'm angry and when I'm angry I tend to throw rationality to the wind and often debase what I am attempting to defend by being too obtuse to understand, let alone defend, it properly. If you're reading this and you want to call me out, please do. I'd like to talk about this with someone.

6 comments:

  1. Hmmm I'm not sure... I don't think he's the best gender theorist everr... but I don't think it's necessarily anti-female to be impressed by his quote-unquote "masculinity"... some of us like the idea of brutishness sexually and want to be dominated etc... and there's no reason too why somebody who'd make such comments wouldn't make very similar comments to someone who transitioned to female... "OMG I can't believe you look so female, you're boobs are amazing, you look like you nurture bunnies"... i mean it's problematic, but I don't think it indicates a mindset of female superiority.

    I think there's a big emphasis on people "passing", in the power it has to make people think you're a cis person when you've a trans history, control over other people's reality and what it is they're allowed to know of you... when so many people are fight for the right to be trans and to be known to be trans

    All that emphasis and clear power inbalance transpeople are ridiculed for NOT passing, and then despised WHEN they pass because of "dishonesty"...

    I don't think I can blame buck for that though, he's a porn star, and a very good one... and where he is unique and awesome is not as a commentator but really an artist, who has been hugely successful in selling the idea of sex being erotic with trans people, of trans people having sexual desire, sexual pleasure and bodies that are fully capable of all of that. I really think he's awesome for that, and by doing it as a transman, he's also opened up a little what an attractive body is and how much more or different it can be for standard physical gender traits... yes it's actually pretty mainstream APART from his genetals and history. But we'd have to cross off a long list of stuff more mainstream and more problematic before getting round to criticising him for it.

    Regarding the politics of passing...

    Ever remember "there's something about miriam"
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ACJL41x3QE

    Possibly one of the most horrific moments of reality television ever. It kinda has to be seen to be believed, but infuriating. Jeez I almost want to cry with dismay... but... that's just sky1. Glad I watched it again really. It reveals so much about mainstream ideas about transfolk and the huge GULF of understanding.

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  2. It wasn't the being impressed that I was bothered by so much as the way in which it was being expressed - I felt it totally excluded people who identified as women from its construction of power and it made me grumpy, just as it makes me grumpy that, even in queer spaces, masculine privilege is such that even people who might have experienced misogyny are complicit with it if they have access to that privilege. I do not mean to say that transpeople - or anyone - has a *duty* to defend women or out themselves or anything like that; neither do I mean to suggest that Buck Angel has any 'latent' feminine identity: I think I just feel a bit abandoned as a woman.

    Re: fetishising genders and powers, I totally get that, but what I don't understand is why the gender binary is acceptable as a reference-point for anything. I can see how it could be meant as congratulations or an expression of change, but the fact of the matter for me is that the gender binary is still being utilised (as if it's necessary) in this conversation and I just want it to DIE AND NEVER COME BACK. I don't really think that any interaction with anyone, genderqueer or otherwise, about gender can be fruitful beyond a (very limited) point if the gender binary features as an absolute in those discussions.

    I don't mean to criticise Buck for being masculine in the way that he is - I certainly know that performing gender can be super-fun and, while I have never seen any of his porn, I can imagine that he performs masculinity in a transgressive way simply by having a cunt. I don't think that playing identities that feature in gender binary is a problem in itself; I think the problems start when it is imagined, or assumed, that the gender binary is prevalent, necessary, true, etc, which I feel the comment that Buck published did assume.

    I hadn't seen There's Something About Miriam. That was really harrowing! Fucking pricks. I want to cry, too! I think you're right about mainstream misconceptions - it was like all she was was a facilitator of one-upmanship. And the whole 'we're all friends here' thing was a bit weird. Agh! I hate everyone (who doesn't agree with my values).

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  3. I can't think of any transwoman I've encountered consenting to saying the words "I'm not a woman"... and yet supposedly the jokes on them/him for being so presumptuous eh?

    It was also interesting how they all instantly turned on him, shifting the blame to protect themselves "we knew all along"... and also wierd that because of the format he becomes the butt of the joke because of being most taken in or the one that she feels closest too.

    It's like a cautionary tale "never trust a woman, always be suspicious of deception, because everyone including trans folk just want to confuse and humiliate you and when they do your friends will laugh at you and exclude you"

    I'd like to rewrite it and instead of "We're all friends" he says "I don't care miriam, I really really fancy you, trans stuff is new to me, and I don't know how well I can handle it but I'm willing to try" turns round and tells the douches to fuck off, and then they sail away happily ever after.

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  4. :( I would have liked that so much better.

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  5. And afterwards all of the contestants filed a lawsuit. There's Something About Miriam was one of the most exploitative TV shows I've ever encountered. The bile Miriam received from the press made it even worse.

    =(

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