Shemanifesto
NO LESS TRANSGENDERED
Ivan E Coyote / Vancouver / Thursday, August 26, 2010
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I have been writing this column for nearly 10 years now.

This is how it usually works: I rumble an idea around in my head for a couple of months, feeling its edges with my tongue and running my thoughts around the shape of it before I set anything to paper.

Often I wrestle with the words for a couple of days, and eventually the new story is born, slippery and bloody and wobbling on its unfit legs for a bit, and then I tweak it, spank its ass a little, take a deep breath and hit the send button. I hope the people who read it will be moved in some way; I hope the story will be shared; I hope that it will be received and read with the same open heart I tried to hold up when I wrote it.

A couple of months ago I wrote a piece called “A Word’s Worth,” about my journey through pronoun land, at the end of which I settled on the word she as a suitable enough title for myself, given our English language’s lack of workable options. I went through more than my usual labour pains with this piece, and spent an inordinate amount of time fretting about what kind of response this column would receive.

I got a lot of positive feedback, and the piece got a lot of hits. But some of the concerns I had about this column have come to rest in my inbox, and so I feel the need to clarify a few things.

The fact that I have chosen to use the pronoun she does not mean I am always comfortable with the word, or that it has ceased to chafe me in certain places. I make this choice for more practical reasons. She fits better than he does, and I am interested in stretching and expanding what the word she can encompass.

My friends and lovers and intimates are free to continue using whatever pronoun they have always chosen to call me, and I continue to reserve the right to answer to both.

She is what reporters and media and the teachers in the schools I visit can use to identify me. I will pointedly and intentionally use she to describe myself in the public realm, in an attempt to get the mainstream media to get over their tired “she looks like a he” obsession and concentrate on my actual literary and artistic accomplishments. I would like them to ask questions about what is between my ears instead of my legs, just to change it up a little.

The fact that I have chosen to use the pronoun she does not change my politics, my perversions, my preferences or my mind about anything. I am no less transgendered than I was. I am no less of an ally to my transsexual brothers and sisters. I will continue to fight for their right to define and own and control their identities and their bodies, just as I always have. I have always believed that a trans person’s right to self-determination and access to medical treatment is a feminist issue, as much as a woman’s right to safe and legal abortion and birth control is a feminist issue.

To my butch brothers and sisters and genderqueer and FTM family: I will not draw a line in the sand between us. I refuse to let one little “s” divide us, ever. Not ever. My choices do not trump yours. I will celebrate your uncovering yourself and becoming who you need to be as I have always done. Anything less would be unbecoming.

A butch friend of mine recently posted this quote by Audre Lorde on his Facebook page, and it jumped right off the screen and into my throat: “When we define ourselves, when I define myself, the place in which I am like you and the place in which I am not like you, I’m not excluding you from the joining — I’m broadening the joining.”

So, to the separatist lesbians who took my words and held them over their heads to advance an agenda that is not nor will ever be mine, I must remind you of who I am and what I believe. My name is Ivan, and you can call me she.

I am, among other things, a proud butch. I will never believe that gender is a choice between two boxes. Do not use my words and reality and truth against my own people; I will not have it. Trans men and women are my family, and you know how I feel about my family.

I was at the queer film festival last night, and I saw a trailer for a chosen family photo project. It got me to thinking.

My chosen family photo would be kind of like my biological family ones: too many cousins to squeeze into just one frame. Faces of all sizes and colours. A drag queen with a run in her stockings and rum breath, a carpenter butch with calloused hands and a ponytail, femmes in high regalia, femmes in track pants, a lesbian wearing sensible shoes and a Ferron T–shirt: my sisters. A 20–year–old trans man with his breasts still bound until he has saved enough, a hairy bear with tattooed hands wearing a flour-caked apron, a nellyboy in skinny jeans and a tiara, a straight-acting accountant wearing ladies’ underwear beneath his navy blue three-piece suit: my brothers. Gender transgressors, every one of them.

So once again, this idea has kicked around in my belly for a couple of months, and once again, I pull it from me, steaming and unsure of itself.

I will check my spelling and ignore the grammar advice and hit send. And once again, I will hope it finds your heart open and your hands waiting, just like I always do.

>> Read more by Ivan E Coyote on Xtra.ca


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Reader Comments


 
Always
Always, always open. Thank you.
Jenz, San Diego CA, US
08/26/10 2:46 AM EST
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Love
By the feminist godz, I love you Ivan~! <3, with only half of that love being directed towards your hot butch, genderfuck sensibilities :3
Tara Chee, Surrey British Columbia
08/26/10 3:41 AM EST
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She is a gender warrior
What your choice to use "she" means to this lesbian femme is that you recognize that "she" is just as queer as he, that "she" is not a compromise when it comes to being a gender warrior, that "she" means more than lesbian separatist or 1950s hetero. There are always agendas and others will always hijack your words and thoughts, especially if you have the courage to use "SHE" in subversive and liberating ways. Rock on Ivan.
Heart, Brooklyn NY
08/26/10 9:02 AM EST
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Insight
I admire you for being able to address and confront your ideas about your sexuality. A lot of butch/transgendered women don't have the inner strength to put a focus on their sexualities, and accepting the inner "she". Instead,they walk around with this masculine bravado, emulating the worst parts of masculinity (i.e. womanizing!!).
Debra, Rochester USAT
08/26/10 9:41 AM EST
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Beautiful Words
Thank you. So much. For being yourself, for sharing your words with us(and for those of us who desperately need to hear them, such language makes this world an easier place to walk, even if the path is hard. I beamed at the way you described your writing process, and the tears started at the quotation, continuing freely when you describe your chosen family. Your words mean so much. Thank you. *loves*
Will Morgan, Sydney Nova Scotia
08/26/10 11:07 AM EST
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Debra
While I agree with the notion that some trans MEN have not confronted themselves on the misogyny inherent in walking "around with this masculine bravado, emulating the worst parts of masculinity", I find it highly disrespectful to refer to them as butch/transgendered women. Most trans men do not identify that way, and would in fact be quite offended by being called 'women' anything, nor do all of them have a inner 'she'. Furthermore, disparaging the majority of trans men over a perceived lack of 'inner strength' to see the 'she' in themselves is exactly the kind of contextual conjecture into her pronoun use that Ivan is attempting to discourage. Lastly, please do not conflate struggles with notions about gender with ones over sexuality, even if both struggles are often intertwined.
Tara Chee, Surrey British Columbia
08/26/10 12:13 PM EST
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of course
Oh my Dear, Your writing, your strength, your consistent clarity leave me in tears again! Of course you would muddle your way through to this conclusive essay. You work so hard to help the rest of us through. You are blessed among beings! I thank you deeply yet again! Forever and always!
Cath, Halifax NS
08/26/10 5:16 PM EST
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Thankyou Ivan
Thank you again Ivan for your wonderful writing, but also, this self-identified ''straight-acting'' gay man (who does not wear women's underwear) would also like to thank you for having the balls to write such an inclusive message and also criticize the more ''separatist'' elements of our communities. Your views on masculinity are quite refreshing and far more productive than the usual ''anti-masculine'' diatribes that other GLBTQ authors shoot off. Thank you again. You are a trully brilliant artist.
George, Barrie Ontario
08/26/10 8:03 PM EST
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you rock ivan
I feel the same about "he" as you feel about "she"... it's close enough and it works. I'm not offended or annoyed if people use she, unless they are specifically doing it to provoke a response. I didn't spend thirty years as a "different" woman to go and turn my back on women now that I've transitioned. Though some people may see male and female as opposites, I see them as colours in a palette. They can be used alone or blended, and whatever word you want to use to describe your colour is your own choice. My blue-green could be your turquoise and we can both be right. ~Reyl http:\\reyl.livejournal.com
Reyl, Ottawa Ontario
08/26/10 9:22 PM EST
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Thanks
Great writing, Ivan. Thanks
Anna, London UK
08/26/10 11:02 PM EST
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never could embrace separatism
few years back,you & I ran into one another in the Credit Union on the Drive.I was unsure how to address you & fumbled around with he/she pronouns during our conversation.Your gracious,inclusive responses helped me to understand even more deeply that separatism doesn't work on any level anywhere.Your present column informs again that divisiveness only exacerbates our daily lives.Thank you again.
elizabeth smeader, montreal pq
08/26/10 11:28 PM EST
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bad example
a hairy bear with tattooed hands wearing a flour-caked apron --- How on earth is this "gender transgressive"??? Chefs and cooks and foodies have nothing to do with gender! Are you implying that aprons and other cooking items are "feminine". Wow. Your attempt to fit anyone gay into your gender transgressive world (YOUR world not everyone's) failed with this example. Try again.
loogie not, toronto ON
08/27/10 7:40 AM EST
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Woot, Woot!
People who feel that Ivan is discriminating against foodies, here's a thought: Ivan may of simply meant the hairy bear to sound unidentifiable by appearance. That bear could have been making pasta and would have just as much flour on his apron. Thank you again for a column well done, Ivan!
Rochelle, Richmond BC
09/01/10 12:12 AM EST
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what I meant
Actually, when I wrote that comment, I had someone in mind. My friend Mike, the foodie, the writer, the trans man. He is an amazing chef, if his facebook updates are to be even partly believed. Of course loogie had no way of knowing this, but sometimes it is hard to capture everything I want to say in one thousand words. Also, I happen to believe that all gay people are gender transgressors, in a way, as they transgress what society expects of their assigned gender by the simple fact of their sexuality. I am aware not all people share this opinion with me. What is telling to me is loogie's transphobia, as I read it. A sign to me that there is much work to be done within our queer community to combat this kind of bigotry. My queer community IS made up of gender transgressors, in all senses of the word, and this is something I am very proud of. I would not have it any other way. Drag queens and butches and trans people started the Stonewall Riots and birthed the whole gay rights movement, a fact that the conservative gays amongst us seem to like to forget. I do not forget. Of course I don't think aprons are feminine, any more than I think tools belts are masculine. If there is one thing I have learned after ten years of writing this column, is that I cannot be responsible for what someone reads into my words, no matter how well intentioned they might be, especially if said person is looking for something to find fault with. It is also easy to say whatever nasty comments you like when you have the option of remaining anonymous and therefore not accountable for your words. I am, however, accountable for mine. Loogie not, I dare you to comment like that next time and sign off with your actual name, and be accountable for your thinly veiled problems with trans people or gender transgressors. News flash: if you are in any way homosexual, then you are just as fucking queer as I am, in the eyes of the gay bashers.
Ivan Coyote, Vancouver BC
09/01/10 3:50 AM EST
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Pioneer...
Ivan, I see you as a pioneer in the world of the &amp;amp;quot;pronoun wars&amp;amp;quot;. Refusing to be put in a box is like refusing to be enslaved, refusing to be caged, refusing to be raped by the world. You are She....you are He....you are any and every word that means Freedom. As a femme lesbian with butch attitude, and a friend of people of all gender identities, I see you as a protector, a spokesperson for the right to be fluid in our identities and our words. As a journalist with Examiner.com, I would love to interview you either on the phone or in person. Email me and let me know if you would be amenable. Mela Malone
Mela Malone, Portland Oregon United States
09/04/10 2:03 PM EST
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Why?
"Drag queens and butches and trans people started the Stonewall Riots" Huh? People who do drag and butch women are by definition trans so why say it twice? Trans is just another way of saying tg without sounding like one is, sort of, pushing a label on them. All under the queer umbrella also languish under the trans/TG umbrella as well. Which, I believe, is much of what you've said in your writing.
femme, Toronto ON
09/06/10 10:13 AM EST
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Thank you!
I think that it's a wonderful thing that you are proud to be yourself, and to not box yourself into whatever general society or even mainstream queer culture would like to see you in. Some people are trans, some people are genderqueer, some people are something else for which no word fits. Yet, as you so elegantly point out, we are all brothers and sisters. We should all be supportive of each other, regardless of what the mainstream thinks at this juncture in time. Thank you for sharing your strength.
Julien McArdle, Ottawa Ontario
09/09/10 5:02 PM EST
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'he' or 'she' - we've all got to start somewhere..
Hey Ivan, Some might think that I fit into the 'she' box more than you, being that I'm straight and I guess traditionally, that's true. But that doesn't necessarily make the box comfortable or descriptive of who I am. I don't like boxes, I don't think anybody feels like a box fits - and I know that's relative. But why am I glad that you use the pronoun 'she'? Because it stretches the box - it makes room for differences, room to fully be who we are, room for hope. Maybe it's not a box anymore, maybe it's a spectrum. And we can choose to be part of the 'she' spectrum in all it's diversity, colour, strength and outrageous glory. I'm glad to share that spectrum with you and every other 'she' who defines herself in her own terms - instead of being defined by others - and who also defends the right of anyone else to do the same, he or she. Thank you for your ever thoughtful, gracious and inclusive perspective - you make the world a kinder place.
She, Victoria BC
09/16/10 1:19 AM EST
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There is power is "She"
Firstly, I've only just discovered you....and now I can't get enough of you....well your writing. ;) You are phenomenally you, whether you take a 'label' or not. I feel you represent a beautiful, intelligent, compassionate, self-identified 'She' who can also be butch, transgendered, perverse, or anything else you choose to be. Your writing is thoughtful, inclusive and I think intended to challenge people's thinking of themselves, their stereotypes, beliefs, pre-conceived notions...and I for one am grateful for that. Thank you for the gift of your writing and for owning 'She' however you define it.
Tania, Toronto Ontario
10/08/10 10:01 PM EST
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In Support of Our Similarities, Sameness
Ivan, I did not see this until today, 10/14/10. I think and feel very similar to your ideas express here. I just recently spoke on a panel at Butch Voices, Los Angeles, "The Many Faces of Butch." I basically said the same thing. I use the pronoun "he" and it gives me great satisfaction to see their are others that will not separate out from our shared heritage of Butch.FYI, I have "transitioned" and still I.D. as a Butch, "Transmasculine Butch."
Greyson, Albany California
10/14/10 4:07 PM EST
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