
Dear Gentle Readers,
Toronto has recently started its Pride celebrations. Personally, I have a somewhat mixed feeling about the function of Pride. Often, it seems to just be a celebration of sex, reducing an interesting and diverse community to what happens in the bedroom. Sadly, this is the problem of most LGBT politics - ultimately the queer rights movement is about sex.
Ok, ok, readers. I know too simple, too reductive. If queer theory has taught us anything, it is the the interesting thing about the LGBT community and its push for rights is that it has served to question many of the established institutions of society. LGBT rights not only questioned bigoted hetronormative strictures, it even served to undermine some of the limitations created through other rights movements such as the Feminist and African American. Specifically, Pride can be and at some points is a moment of communal unity in opposition to majority forces that try to marginalize. Pride can be a carnivalesque, topsy-turvy revelry. Sadly, often when Pride is not about fucking, it seems that it becomes a problematic push for tolerance. Tolerance, my dear friends, is not enough.
So what is the point of my post? Well, to be honest, readers, I am not certain, but I think I want to consider the state queer politics - its impact, its limits, and ultimately where to move forward.
I want to be clear about my terminology a bit. The problem is that in queer politics many different groups are represented and, disappointingly enough, not equally. For instance, queers of colour and trangendered individuals often are ignored in order to put forward the gender-stable, white, gay male face for the political movement. So getting back to terms, the word queer is a huge umbrella term that is purposefully inclusive, but the key is to remember that inclusively also tends to smooth out differences, flatten out the plane. Having this in mind, I will try my best to be careful with how I am using these terms. Often, I feel that queer has lost any purpose - many a times have I sat in a class and heard someone say "Everyone is queer." Great - so why say it? (ok, again I am being a bit antagonistic. The point in saying that everyone is queer is to point out that everyone has the potential in their methods of self-identification to undermine greater social narratives and structures. No one fulfills the requirements of society totally - no one is "perfect").
Again back to terms - so queer is less about an identifier as more of a subject position, and in this, it still has power. Who cares if some individual is queer when everyone is queer? But when we start understanding queer as a descriptor of a fundamental societal role - of the great societal gremlin, who tinkers and screws up the gears - we can start seeing the potentialities of the queer rights movement. This movement must move away from identity politics, which can never serve to adequately encompass all that need it. I am tired of minorities within the queer community being thrown under the bus for the sake of the greater cause. Never should a trans woman be told her rights have to wait. It is time for a real queer movement, one that test structures and actively demands change on its own terms.
I am not exactly sure what this movement will look like, but I know that this movement will not wait for the right president to make all the changes. This movement will have at its center an understanding that a real citizen has the requirement to demand the rights afforded to her. Obviously, these demands must come through legal means - overt radicalism accomplishes nothing. What I want is a queer rights movement that does not just demand marriage rights for gays, but even questions the role of marriage in society. Do we need it? Are there better alternatives? More importantly, does it actually serve the country's best interests?
In someways, the queer rights movement is oddly a patriotic one. I think after years of Bush's rhetoric, it is hard to talk about patriotism without a gagging (and personally, I don't think Obama's rhetoric has helped). What does patriotism mean? Who in the hell knows...but I hope it has something to do with truly understanding the true values underpinning this nation. Yes, these values are often generalized in grand words such as freedom, and at that point they lose all meaning. But if we understand patriotism too as a structural position, then once again, we see something more substantive. Patriotism is about getting back to the something. Specifically, I think true patriotism is true patriotism is loving you country so much that you are willing to change it and its traditions when they are no longer socially viable. If being queer has taught us anything, it is that America must not accept a state of affairs where it's citizens are denied basic rights and acceptance (note I did not say tolerance). I think then that demanding these rights is a strong patriotic move.
So to summarize a bit: I would argue basically that identity politics worked for a bit, but it is now failing. Tolerance, which I think has been the end goal of many LGBT groups, is unacceptable. I know it is a step in the right direction, but damn it, queers deserve more than that. There is absolutely nothing wrong with homosexuality, and I think it is time to be a bit more intolerant of people who believe so. Like I said, I am not certain what I want the new queer rights movement to look like, but its appeals will be more about basic American tenets and foundational virtues. It will realize that to actively and openly and even somewhat radically demand your rights is not just acceptable, but appropriate. Quit waiting for the whims of politics, queers!
I have tons more to say on this topic. But I am not sure I am being entirely clear, so I want to post this and get some feedback before I go further. Please do feel free to share this and respond.
Your Humblest Author.
P.S. This post is definitely a very raw draft of my current thoughts. I plan to do tons of research and work on what I have presented here, so please feel free to comment and give me research suggestions. Also, I apologize that my first real post in months is so polemical. Also, for my Canadian readers, this post was written primarily for an American audience and political environment. Although, I would love to see how it relates to Canada.
http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=192369935076
ReplyDeleteAfter I wrote this Obama came out with his guilty apology gift. Awarding various gay federal employees with rights that cost the government virtually no money. He's been a disapointment to the gay community.
You're right, we need to fight this fight with or without the perfect political spectrum. The queer movement needs a few strong leaders, not hrc, and fight the good fight. '
Have you seen 'Iron Jawed Angels'? Most people compare the gay rights movement to the civil rights movement in the 60's. But I like looking at it from the women's right movement in the 1900s. Currently we're slowly being awarded rights in various states, building up momentum and power. Gay officials are seen more and more. Gay is becoming a word okay to use and talk about. This is like the women in 1900, who slowly were granted the right to vote in states until 1919 in which wilson ordered a national admendment. There's a lot women still fight for and I feel we will also be fighting for a while. Especially with thoughts about the 'gay lifestyle.'
Keep up the good fight.
p.s. sorry if this seems like a ramble. I'm done editing. haha.
I don't know what to say. I'm pissed and sad, but in some ways, I'm still apathetic. Our generation sucks, and I'm no exception.
ReplyDeletePS. My girlfriend would probz kill me if she saw me writing that I'm somewhat apathetic. Save the gayz thru the study of the politikz!
I am interested in your linkage of the queer rights movement to patriotism, in particular this bit: "Like I said, I am not certain what I want the new queer rights movement to look like, but its appeals will be more about basic American tenets and foundational virtues." this seems a stem of a very common american rhetorical strategy which i must confess we seem to altogether lack in canada - some grand notion of the idyllic vision of our forebears, to which we must return, to which we have an obligation of fulfillment.
ReplyDeleteand i mean, please. why is the vision of a bunch of wealthy white dudes who didnt want to pay their taxes and had an inferiority complex about being lowly colonials worth two fucking figs? does anybody believe thomas jefferson would have been like "two dudes kissing? fine by me!" but more importantly: who the fuck CARES what thomas jefferson thinks about ANYTHING?
if america, and by extension the queer rights movement in america, has a problem, it is precisely this: the insistent, desperate cling to the outmoded and the antiquated. america has a dreadful disease, and that disease is nostalgia.
You're right: the queer rights movement didnt fulfill the vision of the founding fathers. But thank god it didn't. America is not a unidirectional project begun with the signing of a document by a bunch of men in periwigs in some musty front parlour; instead it is a manifestation and evolution of what DID work from their dream (freedom, equality, liberty of conscience), turned not toward a drunken foreign potentate in england, but incisively and unceasingly inward. The first stage of the birth of a nation is emancipation, but the second is always civil war. America, unlike canada, is done the first step (though we have begun our first rebellious teenage grumblings about our domineering "neighbour" to the south), but she is a long way from reconciling her crises of conscience.
you said "when we start understanding queer as a descriptor of a fundamental societal role - of the great societal gremlin, who tinkers and screws up the gears - we can start seeing the potentialities of the queer rights movement." You're right. And the first gear I hope he yanks out of the machine is the monolithic cog of patriotism. You dont work for America; America works for you. And if America DOESN'T work for you, then you don't bemoan her fallen greatness. You slash and burn. You tear out, without sympathy and without sentimentality, what doesnt work.
Patriotism is the belief that the nation, the system, however broken, must come first. It is the belief that the values and the law should shape the people. it is the belief in My America - Right or Wrong.
The queer rights movement is, without question and without compromise, the most pernicious and most dangerous enemy of patriotism there is. That it has failed so thoroughly in its objectives is because it let itself forget. it wanted to play house, to pretend to be part of the hegemony, to borrow mommy's pearls. No. If your hand offends, cut it off. If your eye offends, sear it out.
the queer rights movement fundamentally should not and cannot see itself as labouring to improve america, because "america" is just the name for the broken system. the movement is the barbarian at the door, the man in the gunpowdered cellarage, and the sword of damocles.
if you want to celebrate july 4th, celebrate this: once upon a time, a group of people got so sick of being abused by their government that in a violent rage they tore it from their hearts and from their soil. THAT is the virtue that founded america: a willingness to discard, a willingness to unseat tyranny, and a willingness to start fresh WITHOUT all the mistakes and jingoistic chauvinism that hobbled them to begin with. America doesn’t need a return to its roots; it needs to remember it doesn’t have any.
@Emily: I think that your analysis is spot on. The queer rights movement is like the women's rights. My problem is that I think that to approach queer rights in the same manner doesn't work. More importantly, I am not willing to wait for small wins over the next few decades. It is time we demand our rights now.
ReplyDelete@Laura: I understand the apathy...
@Anthony: I totally agree with most of what you said. I want a more militant, strong rights movement. I even want a total restructuring. However, I think that this tearing apart and rebuilding is based in the basic tenets of America. America is not a broken idea - what is broken is the system that does not fulfill that idea.
You wrote: "Patriotism is the belief that the nation, the system, however broken, must come first. It is the belief that the values and the law should shape the people. it is the belief in My America - Right or Wrong. " I am sorry, but I think particularly in the American case this is wrong.
The one thing I liked about Obama's rhetoric is that he did some tactful reworking of patriotism. At least during the campaign, his patriotism was for a country that could be, a country that would change to be better. This is the patriotism I am talking about. Quit listening to Stevens. For me, patriotism demands the nation to live up to its ideals. So freedom is no longer just an abstract concept but a criterion of necessity. A true Patriot would not stand for an America that commits human rights violations. A true Patriot would force this America to change, to strive to be better. A true America would have put Bush and Cheney on trial and would demand acceptance for the queer community. The basic tenets and virtues are not those of some old dead white guys - I agree. Who gives a fuck about what Jefferson would do? - but those virtues are the foundation structures that help us to rebuild when we must tear things down.
Freedom, Justice, Liberty, Intellectual thought, the Arts, Love, even Mythos are all important factors to what America is, and patriotism demands that these be upheld even if we must turn today's America on its head. And Damn it, I think it is time we made these changes!
I wanted to add to my comments. I think that further Patriotism does not support the system over the people. The joy of America is that it is found on a notion of the people first. I can't say the government and laws have always fulfilled this notion, but it is still there. American Patriotism then is not about supporting as system that shapes the people but rather the reverse. True American Patriotism demands the people's right to create a system that is best for them; true patriotism always puts the people first. Yes, ultimately legal means must be used to change the system - this is just a matter of holding off total chaos - but oddly enough the whole system can be changed from within. Further, if that fails, then patriotism, I believe, would allow for more drastic measures. I think I want to tread lightly here, but yes I think if the government and laws governing America truly quit serving the people, than rebellion is a viable option.
ReplyDeleteall i want to comment on is how you said you weren't sure what pride is about. and by comment, i mean, leave this link:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.qardiology.com/compose.php?imageid=77