Let us be free from
“academentia”
Seamos
libres de la “academencia”
Laura Favaro
|
lfavaro@bournemouth.ac.uk
|
Bournemouth University -
Reino Unido
|
Received: 22-02-2024
Accepted: 16-05-2024
Abstract
“Survivor of academentia” is how one
former lecturer in sociology described herself when I interviewed her for my ethnography
of academia. In particular, the research
was exploring the “gender wars”,
namely the disputes around sex and gender that have escalated
dramatically since the mid-2010s in Britain and increasingly also in many other countries.
This article builds on feminist
and other critical uses of the term academentia
with original insights from interview and document data about the detrimental
impact of queer theory and politics. The hope is to stimulate further inquiry into the
push towards queering at universities,
and beyond, as well as into the connections
between the transgender and mad movements.
Keywords: gender wars, feminism, queer, transgender, mad studies, university.
Resumen
“Superviviente
de la academencia” es como se describió a sí
misma una exprofesora de sociología cuando la entrevisté para mi etnografía del
mundo académico. En particular, la investigación exploraba las “guerras del género”,
es decir, las disputas en torno al sexo y el género que se han intensificado
drásticamente desde mediados de la década de 2010 en Gran Bretaña y cada vez
más también en muchos otros países. Este artículo se edifica sobre usos
feministas y otros usos críticos del término academencia
con aportaciones originales derivadas de entrevistas y documentos acerca del
impacto perjudicial de la teoría y las políticas queer.
Se espera suscitar más indagación sobre el impulso hacia el queering
en las universidades, además de otros ámbitos, así como sobre las conexiones
entre los movimientos transgénero y loco.
Palabras clave: guerras del
género, feminismo, queer, transgénero, estudios locos,
universidad.
1. Introduction[1]
It
drives me insane. It drives
me mad.
(Interviewee,
“gender wars” in academia project)
Only two years after
the media celebrated 2015
as “the year trans finally went mainstream” (Welsh,
2015), a number
of British commentators began
to express concerns about a “cultural backlash” and a
“moral panic” (Barker,
2017), quickly
followed by widespread talk of how the “Gender
debate sparks bitter divide
among trans and feminist groups” (Cotter and
Hitchcock, 2019). For others, the launch
in 2018 of the UK government’s
public consultation into the Reform
of the Gender Recognition Act 2004, including whether to allow for self-declaration
of legal sex, prompted a much
broader “culture war”
comparable only to Brexit
(Strudwick, 2018)[2].
Manifestations of what is often known
as the “gender wars” subsequently exploded in growing numbers of countries worldwide, cutting across the spheres of politics, law, social policy, education, healthcare, sport, and
more.
Most
visible, persistent and trenchant
were the tensions between
transgender and some women’s rights groups, as well as, seemingly, within feminism itself, leading to high levels of polarisation not just in activist
but also in academic spaces. Particularly notable was the drastic change
in academic discourse on sex and gender, in addition to codes of professional conduct. At first primarily in English
academia, from the
mid-2010s onwards there were increasing testimonies pointing to “a worrying pattern of intimidation and silencing of [...] feminists critical of the sex industry and of some demands made by
trans activists”, accompanied
by calls for universities to “affirm their support
for the basic
principles of democratic political exchange” (Campbell et al., 2015)[3].
In contrast,
others dismissed these claims about
a silencing of feminists in
academia not only as giving “false impressions” but even as a “mechanism of power” (Ahmed, 2015).
It is against this
backdrop that the gap in empirical research on the
“gender wars” became increasingly conspicuous, and which I sought to address with an ethnographic study of academia.
From the very conception of the project in 2016, warnings that the
field was far too risky
to investigate, not least for a junior scholar, were constant,
as were predictions that it would
lead to the end of my career, in addition
to abuse online or worse. But this only
corroborated my sense that something
deeply problematic was taking place, and that there was
a pressing need to shed
light—empirically—on the “gender wars” in academia. As I entered the field
in 2020, many previously enthusiastic supporters of my work vanished
from sight, as did the usual invitations
to collaborate, speak or apply for
jobs. In the safety of the interview space, many would ask
whether I was not “terrified” to conduct the research,
seeing that the climate around
this issue was unprecedentedly “toxic”, “hostile” and “vitriolic”.
This was precisely the
nature of some of the responses to my first report on
my findings in September 2022, published in the form of an
article for Times Higher Education entitled «Researchers are wounded in academia’s gender wars». Drawing on interview and document data, the article outlined the main orientations
in the dispute. These were on the
whole in opposition, and I put forward the usefulness of differentiating between feminism and “genderism”. For the former, as the article explained:
“There is a clear
difference between ‘sex’, which refers to biological categories that are binary and immutable, and ‘gender’, which describes the roles, behaviours and attributes that a given culture deems appropriate for people by
virtue of their sex. Recognising this difference is important
because, as well as constraining both sexes, gender serves
to justify the subordination of females. This group of academics
also noted that their perspective
was, until recently, largely shared across feminism,
as well as within many academic disciplines.” (Favaro, 2022)
For the
avoidance of doubt: the political subject
of feminism is women (and girls), understood as a sex
class,
and the aim is to liberate them from patriarchal
systems, which are considered to be partly rooted in men’s interest in controlling their reproductive capacities. Therefore, feminism, a centuries-old movement, recognises that sex is a biological
reality that matters in certain contexts[4],
while striving to abolish the socially
constructed mechanism that functions to naturalise, enforce and perpetuate the subordination of female people to male people, that is,
gender (or what before the
1970s was referred to as
sex roles and stereotypes, among
other terms[5]).
On the other hand, genderism is a much more recent—queer theory-inflected—movement that is sex-critical and pro-gender. Its political
subject encompasses all those (who
feel) subjected to gender oppression: a phrase that is
redefined to mean lack of
individual choice and external
affirmation relating to a person’s “gender identity”. This is a term that
came to replace “psychological sex” (Wilson, 2021) as
part of the theories pioneered in the 1950s and 1960s by psychologists, sexologists and others in medicine and academia working
with what was then called
hermaphrodites (infants in
particular), transsexuals, and others
including “sissy boys” (e.g. Green, 1987; Money, 1973; Stoller, 1968). The core concept in genderism, together with its associated
clinical model of “gender affirmation”, is rejected by
feminists as lacking scientific basis, and as constituting instead a sexist, homophobic and harmful experiment, especially when it comes to children (e.g. Brunskell-Evans and Moore, 2018;
Moore and Brunskell-Evans, 2019)[6].
Infused with
a new, seemingly progressive,
cultural life by queer theory (Cameron, 2016), the term gender identity
is used in my data to describe a sense of oneself as a woman, a man, both, neither,
or something else, which is
internal, hence “not visible to others”[7],
and which can change. Nonetheless,
the concept is prioritised over sex, which in genderism is understood as a social fiction (notably of colonialism), a malleable biological spectrum, paradoxically both or, simply, a “transphobic dog-whistle”. Gender is also
understood in different ways: as socially or discursively constructed (performative model); as an inseparable combination of biological, psychological and social elements
(biopsychosocial model); or, to a much lesser
extent, as innate subjectivity, evoking notions of sexed brains (psychobiologist model). Adding to the conceptual confusion, the word is
at times used as a synonym for gender identity.
On the whole, gender is
valued as a source of diversity, pleasure and creativity, indeed as a “vast and wonderful landscape” (Iantaffi and Barker,
2017: 60). What genderism problematises is “naming and assigning categories”, considered to be “the ultimate exercise
in power”[8].
In line with
queer theory, it is argued
that the oppression of “any group”—both past and present—“is ultimately attributable to binary thinking” (Marinucci, 2010: 109). Anyone who identifies as transgender is regarded as an oppressed subject
of systems of power, not least colonialism,
capitalism, and purportedly
associated ideologies such as cisgenderism[9].
These individuals are celebrated as “authentically divine” or as “the superheroes of our time”[10],
with attendant calls to flaunt with pride the
scars or “battle wounds”[11]
from their elective irreversible surgeries, including to remove healthy tissue and organs.
My article additionally outlined general patterns in the dynamics of the “gender wars” in academia, arguing that “a culture of discrimination, silencing and fear has taken hold across universities”
(Favaro, 2022). Reporting on the experiences
of academics with feminist, genderist and “middle ground” views, the article
showed that this toxic environment
had been generated by those
supportive of genderism, directed at those who disagree with—or raise any critical questions
about-any of its tenets. This
predominantly affects women, with feminists
in particular being actively
persecuted[12].
«Researchers are wounded in academia’s gender wars» received extensive public and private support, including from several research
participants, as well as many other academics
beyond who expressed gratitude for visibilising what they corroborated
was a reality in academia today in Britain and elsewhere. This positive response
was matched, however, by a backlash
from those supportive of genderism. Public reactions included a colleague who identifies as a transgender woman describing the article on Twitter as an “attack piece
on trans people”, and condemning our employer for giving
ethical approval to my project, as allegedly it “clearly
intended to cause harm”[13].
Some interviewees disclosed their participation in order to express regret at taking part in the research, “having read the press
article”,
and to issue apologies to “the trans people who will
be harmed as a result” of my “article aiming
to legitimise discrimination
and hate”[14].
Others with no association whatsoever with the research
called for an end to my
career, or for “the retraction
of the research findings, but also
censure for the researchers [sic]”[15]. Still others made complaints to my (then) workplace.
These reactions were consistent with the patterns identified
in the “gender wars” project, whose findings also pointed to a broader detrimental
impact of queer theory and politics in academia
(and beyond), which this article begins
to consider. To explore the
queering[16]
of academia, it brings together the interviews previously analysed with an extended document dataset. Overall, the discussion
that follows is inspired by,
and builds on, the concept of “academentia”, which, after outlining
the methodology in the next section,
I introduce in relation to feminist
thought and the research findings. The article provides
additional insights into the dynamics
of the current “gender wars”, which
are then contextualised with a discussion of the “sex wars” towards the end
of the last century. An exploration
of the rise to prominence of queer theory leads me to consider a range of associated fields, including porn studies, transgender
studies and mad studies, alongside the connections between their tenets
and tendencies. The following section critically raises the question of “what is next”.
By way of conclusion, I return to academentia as a useful
concept, this time in relation
to contemporary critiques of neoliberalisation
processes, contributing additional questions for future, more systematic, scholarly inquiry.
You want to
open a can of worms, and good
luck with that.
(Interviewee, “gender
wars” in academia project)
In March 2020 I began my postdoctoral project on the “gender
wars”, with a particular focus on feminism
and academia in England. Research
objectives pertained to shedding light on the following areas:
Content, history and groups;
Manifestations, dynamics
and impact; Individual perspectives
and experiences; Reasons for its emergence
and specific expressions; Potential avenues for ways forward. An ethnographic approach was selected
due to its suitability when seeking holistic, in-depth and contextualised insights into meaning,
experience and practice within a particular social or
cultural group (Skeggs, 2001; Kramer and Adams, 2017). In addition to its focus on
cultural patterning
and critical interpretation, ethnographic
research is “particularly useful for gaining understandings
of the dynamics underlying conflict situations” (Adams, 2012: 343). Moreover,
I was able to maximise fieldwork by conducting an
“at-home ethnography”, where
I was thus an observing participant—rather than a participant-observer—of
naturally occurring events in the cultural setting under study
(Alvesson, 2009). That is, my understandings both of the “gender wars”
and life in academia more generally
are additionally informed by my own
everyday experiences at work[17].
The following techniques were employed to generate data:
·
Field notes and research diary
writings. These recorded field-oriented
activity, including informal communications and my own experiences throughout
the various stages of the project.
·
Document
review. This was
ongoing but principally
involved academic publications in gender studies across different perspectives
or approaches, and was complemented by a non-systematic review of campaigning,
journalistic and other relevant materials such as policy documents. The
subsequent, extended exploration of the push towards the queering of academia
led me to create an additional substantial dataset comprising academic works in
associated fields, particularly mad studies.
·
Social
media analysis.
Data consisted of field
notes alongside a retrieved sample of representative and otherwise significant
tweets. These mostly derived from an eighteen-month non-participant
observation from 2020 to 2021 of public Twitter
accounts held by key players in the “gender wars”.
·
Initial analysis of the
document and social media data informed the semi-structured interviews
described below.
·
Findings from the
qualitative data informed the development of an online mixed survey
questionnaire examining views and experiences regarding the “gender wars”, as
well as working conditions and censorship in academia more generally.
Representative samples of social scientists working at universities in England
and Ireland were invited to complete the survey, and over 600 responses were
collected in June-July 2022.
·
Finally, the research
also used a case study approach to
the academic event «Feminist
Dilemmas, Feminist Hope?», which will be discussed in the next section. Evidence
gathered included documents, Tweets, videos, informal conversations and formal
interviews.
The interviews aimed to explore different perspectives and experiences regarding the “gender wars”
among academics working at universities in England who self-defined as feminist
and whose research and/or teaching related
to gender studies (broadly understood). From October 2020 to December 2021, fifty-one semi-structured interviews averaging
1 hour 20 minutes in length
were conducted via the online video platform Zoom, with the exception
of three telephone
interviews[18]. From
my perception, the sex of all but one participant
was female. Participants self-reported as female (primarily), woman, cis woman,
non-trans or a combination thereof, except for the following:
androgynous (1); non-binary
trans (1); queer non-binary
(1); queer woman (1); trans
masculine non-binary (1);
trans woman (1).
At the time of the interview, participants were based at twenty-seven different universities across England, apart from six
participants who were key players
but had either
retired or left academia, along with six other
key informants such as journal editors who were
based at universities in Wales, Scotland, New Zealand,
and, in three cases, the
US. Included in the final sample were acting
editors and/or editorial board members at fourteen peer-reviewed journals in feminist, gender and/or sexuality
studies. Reflecting my interest in those with greater
influence in academic institutions and cultures, thirty-five
interviewees held posts at
senior lecturer/associate professor level and above.
Three participant categories
were created to assist recruitment of a diverse sample in terms of perspectives and experiences[19].
The first two comprised individuals
whose views were publicly available,
for example through their academic
work or (public) social media engagement,
as supportive of what at the time I heuristically called gender affirmative
(GA) and gender critical
(GC) feminism. A third category was reserved
for those who had—to the
best of my knowledge—never publicly expressed views regarding the dispute. As discussed in the introduction, upon analysis of the data I renamed the two main
orientations as genderism
and feminism, respectively.
Many of those in the “unknown” category
described their views as somewhere “in the middle”. No participant put forth or named
a discrete, alternative,
position.
The different final numbers
within each of the recruitment categories, namely GA (20), GC
(14) and Unknown (16), correspond
to the differing moments when sufficient
information or understanding was considered to have been obtained, rather than reflecting
the ease of recruitment. On the contrary, recruiting
individuals categorised as
GA was considerably more challenging. Some explicitly refused to take part in the
research because it was an
open sociological inquiry[20]
rather than a pro-transgender advocacy project, or because
the sample did not exclude
those with “gender critical” views, deemed by
one potential participant to entail an “eugenicist approach to transness”.
Interviewees were invited
to customise their modality of participation. Two did not
wish to be recorded, one of whom identified
as transgender, and the other as non-binary, with the latter
withdrawing from the study some
time after the interview (hence no longer included in the final sample). The other
forty-nine interviews were
audio-recorded and later transcribed with permission. Almost all in the GA and Unknown recruitment categories opted for anonymisation in outputs, while ten interviewees in the GC category preferred to be named. These decisions are respected in the discussion that follows.
“Survivor of academentia”
is how one
interviewee for my research on
academia’s “gender wars” described herself. This was
Julia Long, a lesbian radical feminist,
activist, and author of Anti-Porn: The Resurgence
of Anti-Pornography Feminism
(2012). Formerly a lecturer in sociology, at
the time of the interview
Long was no longer working in the sector. When explaining her decision to leave, she emphasised
“the politics of the elimination of radical feminist voices from academia”, and more generally
the “really stultifying atmosphere”.
Epitomising these politics and atmosphere is the incident
that took place in 2019 at an event run by
City, University of London to launch
its Gender & Sexualities Research Centre and
to celebrate thirty years of the Feminist
and Women’s Studies Association (UK & Ireland)[21]. Over ten of the academics I interviewed had been at this
event, holding different
roles and perspectives.
Julia Long had attended
the event as a member of the audience.
In response to her comments
during the Q&A period, she was
subjected to an aggressive and physically intimidating reaction from an academic
who identifies as a woman, sociologist Ruth Pearce. Following this, as the organisers
explained in a public statement: “The majority of the audience left the
lecture theatre in protest at this attack whilst security
was brought in to remove the person
responsible”[22].
The person
removed was not Pearce. It was
Long. On top of the “very
aggressive male harassment”, which included “shouting in my face”, she
was then made to walk through
a crowd of academics “all whooping and saying ‘shame’ and jeering and cheering that we were
leaving”. Her companion, Sheila Jeffreys, a former professor of political science and long-standing lesbian feminist scholar and activist, similarly recalled how “all
turned against us raising their
fists and chanting”. “I have never come across anything like that before”,
she observed, “to walk the plank
through all of these people screaming”.
“It was frightening”,
Jeffreys added[23].
“What did
it feel like
when academic after academic, at a Feminist and Women’s Studies conference, told her how
nasty a scum she was?”, feminist
writer and campaigner Raquel Rosario Sánchez (2019) would later ask.
In our interview, notwithstanding
the abuse she suffered, Long pointed to the significance of what took place in terms of providing a “rare moment of clarity” about the “level of delusion”
and anti-feminism in academia today.
The above account of events was corroborated by the other
interviewees that were there, including
those supportive of genderism. These academics framed their actions “as an act of solidarity
with the trans and non-binary community”. “You need to be accountable for the things that
you say” was the statement
of an academic with a role at an organisation involved in the event. “I had no trouble excluding them”, one journal
editor told me. In her opinion, “universities are not democratic spaces”.
“Very defensive
and rightly so” was how another genderist
interviewee described Pearce’s reaction. However, when asked
what Long had said, in contrast to the feminist interviewees,
those supportive of the genderist perspective
struggled to offer tangible
recollections. What is more, some admitted
to not even knowing on the
actual day. “I said, ‘it’s interesting to hear about all
this anti-feminist backlash’”, Long recounted during our interview, “it was something
like, ‘but I’m surprised you
haven’t mentioned the most obvious
one, which is the phenomenon
of men pretending to be women and taking over feminism’”.
“In light of this event”, announced the organisers, “both the FSA and the GSRC will create
a code of conduct in order to try to prevent this from happening again”. The event
was entitled «Feminist
Dilemmas, Feminist Hope?», so the
issue raised by Long could not
have been more relevant. In what retrospectively can only be read as doublespeak, the event had
been publicised as follows: “We want
to speak particularly to
ideas of making space for feminism in the academy”[24]. “It was fascinating
to watch. Almost the entire room
just turned on this person”,
related an interviewee involved in the event during
our interview. “It was fascinating to see”, she clarified,
in the sense that a clear message
was sent (to feminists): “you don’t belong here
anymore”.
The term academentia was coined by another
lesbian radical feminist scholar, the late professor Mary Daly, to capture the stultification of the mind in patriarchal
education (Daly with Madsen, 2000). In 1974, when asked about
problems that women were facing
in academia at the time, Daly
(with Dezell) responded that, with respect
to the Women’s Movement, “every attempt to co-opt and destroy it will
be made”, adding: “This is especially
true in universities”.
Julia
Long’s phrase—survivor of academentia—stayed with me because it powerfully
captures what I have documented and experienced in the field. It
points to the exodus of female academics with feminist views from gender studies
due to persecution, for self-preservation or to escape “scholarship that is Thought
Police”, as one interviewee put it. It brings
to mind those who claim to hold
middle ground positions feeling “anxious”, “depressed”, “frightened”, “alienated”, and in a state of scholarly paralysis.
One senior scholar in psychology with views she
described as “in the middle” compared the environment that genderists have created at universities to authoritarian regimes and their policing of thought and speech. Evoking this, one sociologist
said: “are there things that I could
write? Yes. Do I think that they could
make a difference, that they could
offer something? Yes. Will I write about
it? No”. She went on to declare: “I’m too scared.
I’m too scared”.
Even speaking freely in a research interview that would later
be anonymised was a cause for concern. “Because
when you say certain words”,
I was told, “you’re on a slippery
slope to TERFdom”[25].
“And you don’t want to be associated with that, but
you want to point out the
complexity. So, that’s why I’m stuck”,
she clarified.
But it
was those supportive of the genderist position in particular who
had difficulties discussing the issues involved in the “gender wars”.
This included providing their own definitions of sex and gender. “It’s difficult” because “I don’t
have clarity of thought”, explained one journal
editor. Observing her “own inabilities to defend what I think
is right, or to justify it”,
an experienced
media studies scholar told me that she
was relying on her “instinctive politics”,
in addition to the assumption that those she is
guided by “do
understand all of the complexities”. “I know I’m on
the right side”, declared a late-career academic in education, similarly acknowledging that this was not
after having reflected upon the issues but
rather “somehow intuitively”. “You’ve got to be for your
team and toe the party line”, she also told me, besides
noting the absence of “honest conversations” among genderists.
For some
genderist academics, it was the
fact that they did not
have a personal experience
of identifying as transgender
that prevented them from interrogating
the concepts or issues as would
be expected (seeing that their academic
expertise is precisely the study of gender). “What is
trans? How do you understand it?”, I asked one interviewee
with a role at a relevant academic organisation. “I
use a queer theory perspective”, she responded. For her, this
means using “trans
as an inclusive category” while “recognising my own position as a cis woman”, which
entails “trying very hard to stay
in my own lane”. Her priority
was to be a good political ally, and a central part of this is
policing her own speech to avoid
causing any sort of “harm” to “trans folk”. I
asked another interviewee about reconciling her queer approach with her support
for the idea that gender is
an innate identity or essence.
She responded: “it’s
difficult, because I am a woman, and I was assigned woman at birth”; and then said: “but
I can tell you, in my politics, that if a student
or anyone came to me and said, ‘I am a woman’, I’d be like, ‘cool’”.
In other words, not
all personal experiences carry the same
weight in academentia, an
androcentric psychosociality
where political
activism overrides knowledge production. In another case, one editor explained the acceptance
of the concept of gender identity (as innate) in the journal she
leads—despite radically opposing its express anti-essentialist position—in terms of: “strategies, political strategies”.
“There are gaps in my knowledge”, observed
a sociologist, “because I
am focused on protecting the students […] or supporting the friends that I have who are trans”. Central to this is the
avoidance of encounters with academic interrogations
or the “intellectualising”
of sex and gender. An interviewee who identified as “non-binary trans” condemned academics who consider “robust
intellectual debate as appropriate”.
Feminist ideas especially are
a form of epistemic or symbolic violence
against those who identify as transgender, I was repeatedly told by genderist academics,
who at the same time were strikingly ignorant with respect to the nature of such
ideas (Favaro, 2022, 2023). This
was unsurprising given their refusal
to debate with—or even read—those
with divergent views, opting instead
to remain within their “echo chamber”, as they described it.
“We need to step
back from expecting to find the right
answer”, another journal editor told me when discussing her support for
medical interventions on children, which she acknowledged “have long-term impacts”. According
to her, “what we need to do is
to be kind to people” (who identify as transgender), rather than aim at “finding
the solution around things” from an intellectual
or scientific point of view. Perhaps this is
an easy enough
task for someone in thrall to conceptual nihilism. “How do you understand gender?”, I asked, and her response was: “but I don’t. I’m
a post-structuralist, so I don’t
understand gender”. She went on:
“I don’t understand any of the words
I use per se”. Further
to the mechanism of reversal[26],
the emptying of meaning from language
is crucial to the operation of genderism, facilitating obfuscation and (thus) manipulation.
In essence, for genderist
interviewees, when it comes to dealing with transgender, as one interviewee put it: “it’s
a matter of politics, not of scholarly elucidation”. Instead
of fulfilling their roles
as researchers and educators,
many academics prioritise ensuring that the desire
of those who identify as transgender is “affirmed by
the rest of the world”, as urged by Judith Butler (2014). Revered and reviled in equal measure, the UC Berkeley Distinguished Professor was perceived
by interviewees as a key piece of a puzzle that spans
decades.
In many ways
the current “gender wars” are a continuation of the “sex wars” of the 1980s: a clash between feminism
and the “new sexual movement”
for the “erotic justice” of “sexual radicals”, “sexual dissidents”, “erotic minorities” or “exotically sexed individuals”, as described by Gayle Rubin in what is
widely considered the founding text
of queer theory. Her essay «Thinking Sex» called
for a new “theory and politics specific to sexuality”, rejecting feminist perspectives in this area as “misleading
and often irrelevant” (Rubin, 1984: 170). Moreover, the feminist critique of sadomasochism,
transsexuality, prostitution,
pornography and “cross-generational activities” was decried as
rooted in “a very conservative
sexual morality” or “erotic chauvinism” that has commonalities
with racist ideologies and ultimately
offers “less a sexology than a demonology” (Rubin, 1984:
166). The essay condemned an alleged “anti-porn fascism”
and “child porn panic”, together with the stigmatisation
of paedophiles[27]. Feminists could continue
to study gender, Rubin (1984: 172) suggested, but “progressives” now had an
alternative, radical and exciting
theory with which to “update their sexual educations”.
A few years later, another
seminal text in queer theory, Gender Trouble, proposed that the “construct
called ‘sex’” might be “as culturally constructed as gender”, which would therefore mean that there is
“no distinction at all” between the two
(Butler, 1990: 7). Another key
feminist concept, that of patriarchy, was also challenged, as was “the notion of a generally shared conception of ‘women’”, which
Butler (1990: 4) lamented was
proving “much more difficult to displace”. Fast
forward thirty years, and
Butler, who now uses they/them pronouns,
claims to have never known what
a woman is, but does know
that “the TERFs” are “an excuse for a narrow and hateful project” (2023) and
must be prevented from speaking in the name of the
mainstream (with Ferber, 2020). The abolitionist position of the “feminist police” is rejected on
the grounds that gender is
a “domain of pleasure for many people”
(Butler, 2014).
There was no shortage
of critique[28], or warnings about
what would come. “‘Women’ are being deconstructed out of existence”,
wrote Stevi Jackson in 1992. “This may earn
kudos within male-dominated academia”, the now Emeritus Professor
also observed, “but it plays
into the hands of those who […] have no interest in women’s liberation” (Jackson, 1992: 148). For many feminists it was
evident that the rapid rise
to prominence of queer theory was facilitated
by the corporatisation—which involved a re-masculinisation—of the university, along with the broader
anti-feminist backlash (Jeffreys, 2020).
The gradual suffocation
of feminism in academia was
reflected in the shift from women’s
studies to gender studies, which institutions valued as “less feminist, more respectable and less threatening” as well as “more
inclusive” (Jackson, 2016). The (new) field not only
now included men as objects of study but also
centred on a theory inspired by “the post-structuralist boys
who came to the rescue”, particularly
the late Michel Foucault, with
their associated politics “founded upon
a traditional masculine notion of sexual freedom” (Jeffreys, 2003: 35, 33). Unpacking Queer Politics equally problematised
Rubin’s “ploy to insulate sexual practice from feminist discussion”
and “Butler’s determination
to hang on to gender” (Ibid.: 30, 40). In explaining this, Jeffreys (2003) pointed to their self-declared investment in butch/femme and sadomasochism[29].
In another feminist critique of Butler, the 1999 essay
«The
Professor of Parody» condemned how “a sense
of public commitment” towards “lasting material or institutional change” to end the suffering of the most oppressed
groups was replaced by an
elitist and narcissistic focus on personal self-presentation that reduces political resistance to verbal
and symbolic gestures, and which, moreover, eroticises the alleged immovability of power structures: “What a bore equality is! No bondage, no delight”. Regarding Butler’s writing style, Martha Nussbaum (1999) argued that “obscurity
fills the void left by
an absence of a real complexity of thought and argument”. It also
serves to create “an aura of importance”. Indeed, Butler’s imagined reader is “remarkably docile”, requiring little in the form
of clear explanations or robust rationale.
Echoing the dynamics observed in my interviews with genderist academics, Nussbaum (1999) concluded: “Mystification as well as hierarchy are the tools of her practice”.
6. Queering
academia
The queer approach
thrived with the consolidation of the “neoliberal academy” (Gill and Donaghue, 2016), offering a veneer of intellectual sophistication, political rebellion and exciting sexiness while reproducing the dominant ideologies
of the time – not least
fierce individualism, ever-expanding marketisation and antipathy towards feminism. “Outside the academy, too, queer has caught the public
imagination in a way feminism never has”, observed Sue Wilkinson
and Celia Kitzinger in 1996. “The enthusiastic appropriation of queer in both academic and popular contexts”, they further wrote in «The Queer
Backlash», “might lead one to
be suspicious” (Wilkinson
and Kitzinger, 1996: 379). Even some sympathetic scholars, such as David Halperin (2003:
341), observed
that “there is something odd,
suspiciously odd, about the rapidity
with which queer theory […] has been embraced by,
canonised by, and absorbed into our (largely
heterosexual) institutions of knowledge”.
In turn, Teresa de Lauretis (1994: 297), credited with
coining “queer theory” in 1990 to serve as the title of a conference at the University of California, Santa Cruz, just three
years later renounced it as “a conceptually vacuous creature of the publishing industry”.
Queer theory
would often come to be perceived as an “upgraded” version of feminism, when in fact it was
“centrally antagonistic” to it
(Wilkinson
and Kitzinger, 1996: 379) and erased its very
political subject. Consider the statement
made by a genderist interviewee: “I
feel strongly that feminist theory
isn’t about women”. This journal editor
clarified: “I draw from people like
Judith Butler”. Another important
aspect of the “flight from feminism”
that queer theory entailed was the “re-privatisation
and de-politisation [sic] of
personal life” (Bar On,
1992: 55, 56). At first this primarily concerned the domain
of sexuality, but with the emergence
of transgender studies in the 1990s (Stryker
and Whittle, 2006), the reprivatisation of gender soon followed with
equal determination. Resurfacing as a personal identity
rather than a patriarchal system, gender was now
equally “off limits for political analysis”
(Jeffreys, 2003: 30). From the
2010s onwards, and with escalating force, feminism would come to be persecuted at universities on account of allegedly
being not just outdated or,
moreover, bigoted, but supportive of nothing less than
a “genocidal project”, as the interviewee who identified as a trans woman put it.
Leading authors would openly declare their intent to “dispel” or “eliminate”
the feminist perspective on gender, arguing
that it “runs counter to the ability to fulfil a livable life or,
often, a life at all” (Hines, 2019: 155) or that it aims
to “eliminate people”
(Ahmed, 2015).
Porn studies is another field
that developed on the back of the success of queer theory. A journal article entitled «The Queer Heart
of Porn Studies» explains
the similarities as follows: “Both epistemological projects are deeply indebted to Foucauldian thought, poststructuralist methodologies,
and unabashed interest in perversion. Both emerged in dissent to and reconfiguration of
second-wave feminism, both share an objective
to denaturalise sex” (Stadler,
2018: 170). Both additionally
involve the eroticisation of women’s oppression,
which again takes us back to transgender: “Sissy porn did make
me trans”, declares Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Andrea Long Chu about a genre consisting
of men being “forced to wear makeup, wear lingerie,
and perform acts of sexual submission” (2019: 76), also known as “forced feminisation porn”
(2018: 1).
Examples of links between
adult male transgender identifications and pornography (Gluck, 2023), along with the
fetishisation of women’s subordination more generally (Jeffreys, 2014), are easy to find, including in academic contexts[30].
Several US universities have
invited Chu (2018: 5) to disseminate the following message: “Getting fucked makes you
a woman because fucked is what
a woman is”. For Grace
Lavery (2019), a female-identifying
Berkeley professor: “There is something about
being treated like shit by
men that feels like affirmation
itself, like a cry of delight”. One final example is the “fantasy”
that drove the “desire to be female” of Julia Serano (2007), an
influential author and former researcher at Berkeley: “being
sold into sex slavery and having strange men take
advantage of me”. “It is about turning
the humiliation you feel into
pleasure, transforming the loss of male
privilege into the best fuck
ever”, Serano
(2007) further wrote in what is hailed
as a “transfeminist” manifesto
and a foundational text in transgender politics.
Meanwhile, it is increasingly difficult to articulate a feminist analysis of prostitution, let alone pornography, as sexual exploitation symptomatic of the subjugation of women in patriarchal systems. Academic discussions on these issues, in contrast, largely revolve around desire, choice and self-determination, that is, the same
individualistic, market-friendly
and androcentric principles
that inform the genderist approach
to transgender[31].
Equally, there are repudiations of the feminist perspective as an attack on
members of the queer community, namely “sex workers”, or for prioritising
female victims over their traffickers
and pimps, who are reframed as “people who facilitate
their travel and work” (Phipps, 2020: 148). Much like TERFs police
the borders of womanhood, Alison Phipps (2020:
155) contends, “anti-trafficking
is border policing”. The professor of sociology explains how “Feminists see the [sex] industry as a pillar of
patriarchy” and consider that “sex cannot be changed or traversed”
(Ibid.: 141). For Phipps (2020: 135), these
positions demonstrate
“political whiteness” and ultimately a “necropolitical desire for annihilation”.
Other forms of “policing” or “enforcement” of borders
condemned by some queer theorists
involve the categories of adult-child[32], or “those whose eroticism transgresses generational boundaries” (Rubin, 1984: 151). In 1996, feminist sociologist Liz Kelly raised concerns about the use of the term “intergenerational sex”, for instance
in Rubin’s work, speaking of a deliberate attempt “to disguise the power differentials
involved”. She also observed the
“resurgence of the label ‘paedophile’”,
in particular to refer to “a specific,
and minority, ‘sexual orientation’”,
alongside its broader framing within a “sexual freedom
position”. Kelly (1996) considered this a “self-serving construction” that had provided
those who “seek to justify their wish to abuse” greater possibilities for political organising
and “even to seek the status of an ‘oppressed sexual minority’”. According to Kelly (1996), this
(re)framing “acts as a useful distraction to both the widespread
sexualisation of children,
and girls in particular, in western cultures and the prevalence of sexual abuse”, besides being indicative
of “resistance to feminist analysis”.
“Queer is by definition
whatever is
at odds with the normal, the legitimate, the dominant. There is nothing in particular to which it necessarily
refers”, explains David Halperin (1995: 62; emphasis
in original). His book Saint
Foucault further clarifies
that it “is not a positivity
but a positionality
vis-à-vis the normative”, which is “available to anyone who is
or feels marginalised because of his or her
sexual practices” (Halperin,
1995: 62). Further to the (thus inevitable) inclusion of individuals within the (ever-expanding) community of “erotic dissidents”, “nonconformists” and
“miscellaneous perverts”[33], paedophilia apologism follows logically—conceptually and politically speaking—from the
queer impetus to challenge social norms or boundaries without
concrete guiding value systems, goals or principles (Cameron and Scanlon, 2010) beyond
“permanent rebellion” (Seidman, 1994: 173). The defence of child sexual abuse was explicit in a number of seminal and other influential texts, and it is also
present in some contemporary queer literature[34],
which tends to favour the “less-stigmatising umbrella term” of “minor attracted persons” (MAPs) (Walker and Panfil, 2017:
38). According to one paper
in Critical Criminology:
“Minor attraction is a sexual orientation” (Walker
and Panfil, 2017: 37). From
the point of view of a “queered criminology”, the authors argue, “MAPs” are like “other folks with non-normative sexual identities” and
“can be considered a queer population” (Walker and Panfil,
2017: 38).
There is
little critical discussion of these developments in academic contexts, where queer theory is
hegemonic. By contrast, within the new wave of feminism (Jeffreys, 2020) there are growing attempts to raise awareness about this resurgent
movement of child abuse apologism, alongside
increasing assertions that there are “undeniable links” with “gender ideology”, both past and present,
as observed for instance in the campaigning for the “transitioning of children” (Bindel, 2023). Concerns about safeguarding are central to the mounting feminist resistance to the queering of childhood, as manifested in other spreading practices such as “drag queen
storytime”, also critiqued as regressive
and misogynistic, as well
as a form of indoctrination into queer
tenets and “porn culture” (Bartosch, 2020; Bindel, 2022; Cormier, 2022). Conversely,
these developments
are being sanctioned—indeed, to a large
extent, instigated—within academia. For example, one
paper in the journal Curriculum Inquiry argues
for “drag pedagogy” and a “camp curriculum”
in early childhood education as a “model for learning […] how to live queerly”, as it notes that this “counters
dominant thinking about child development”
(Keenan and Hot Mess, 2020:
444; emphasis in original). Another
in Global Studies of Childhood explains that according
to the queer perspective “normative theories of childhood development”—alongside the “rhetoric of innocence”—constitute “violence”
against “queer futurity” with a colonial legacy, hence the
“recent attempts to meld the fields of childhood
studies and queer studies” (Dyer, 2017:
291, 290). Similarly, an article
in the journal Sociology by a queer theorist and a “gender identity therapist” advocating “transgender education” in primary schools contests the
“discourses” that “children are ‘innocent’ and in need of protection, that caution must be exercised in exposing them to the subversive”
(Morgan and Taylor, 2019: 31).
The queering
of childhood involves the call “to break as many rules as possible”, along with “a preparatory
introduction to alternate modes of kinship”, which deviate from
“reproductive futurity” and
the family (Keenan and Hot Mess, 2020: 448,
455). It also entails a push for “bodily autonomy”,
emphasised apropos sexuality and most visibly regarding medical interventions associated with “affirmation” of transgender identifications (which will indeed
hamper “reproductive futurity”). For instance, the transgender
organisation Gendered Intelligence ran a campaign entitled Bodily Autonomy for Every Body—BÆB
in short and pronounced as “babe”—advocating
medical interventions including
for children under 16 years of age[35]. Another illustration
comes from a Trans Health Manifesto[36]
demanding access to
“hormones & blockers at any
age”, along with “mandatory
education, written & taught entirely by trans people, at all educational stages” (starting
at nursery). “We are all self-medicating”, informs the manifesto,
which additionally
declares: “We are not too ill, too
disabled, too anxious, too depressed,
too psychotic, too Mad [or]
too young [to] make decisions about our bodies”.
One feminist
interviewee working in the field of early
childhood education described these queering efforts as “unsettling” and “a red flag”. She also pointed
out that the “affirmative” model conflicts with well-established theories of child development. Yet, she told me: “I would not want
to get involved in that debate”. She explained: “You’re going up against potentially a whole field of people who would see
it as transphobic […] It would just
be too terrifying for me […] It would
take a very brave academic to go against the
grain in early childhood education”. Several other interviewees
across various fields of expertise expressed concerns about the “affirmative”
medical approach to children
identifying as transgender,
not least due to the high
risk of irreversible harms,
but also on the understanding
that the model is informed
not by the
wellbeing of children or the scientific
evidence but by misogynistic, homophobic and financial interests.
Those who
positioned themselves as
“in the middle” by and large also
expressed concerns about “what is
happening with children”, notably with respect to “rushing into things that
can’t be changed”,
but were “afraid to open their mouths” over accusations
of transphobia, peer ostracism,
job loss, online abuse or physical violence.
One such interviewee said the following regarding
the phenomenon of girls identifying as boys: “They can be trans. It could also
be, though, simply sexism [...] It could also be homophobia”.
She continued: “And all I want is
that we have
a debate about all three things and that I can say these things without
being accused of being transphobic”. “I would even be afraid
of saying that in a lecture theatre”, she remarked, and went on:
“I just don’t feel
safe. It makes me so emotional. [Upset] I came to academia because I wanted to… I don’t know why
I’m crying right now, but
it feels so alienating because it should be about
discussing and exchanging
ideas, and it’s not. It’s not in our
context. And it’s not just alienating,
it’s also incredibly anxiety provoking because I don’t want to lose my job. I don’t
want to put my kids at risk.
I know they could be put at risk. And I don’t have extreme views at all.” (Interviewee, “gender wars” in academia project)
More
generally, in academia today
it is difficult
to raise concerns around the queering
of childhood without being associated with “think of the children”
rhetoric, which is not only
dismissed disdainfully as conservative but also denounced as fundamentally anti-queer. Consider, moreover, the proposition in No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive that “queerness names the side
of those not ‘fighting for the
children’” (Edelman, 2004: 3; emphasis in original). Lee Edelman (2004:
29) also made the following appeal to “the queer”: “Fuck the
social order and the Child in whose name we’re collectively
terrorised”. In addition,
there is now a persistent charge of “political whiteness”. “The defence of (cis) heterosexual white women and children is fundamental to contemporary
global colonial racial formation” (Hunter, 2020: 5),
declares one paper in the journal feminists@law
advocating resistance against this “anxiously
defensive culture”. And there
is more: yet another manifestation of colonialism is the very defence
of sanity, contends the growing body
of literature explored next.
Queer studies also inspired—and shares a vision with—mad studies: an emergent field
“pioneered by Mad people within
academia” (Spandler and Barker, 2016; emphasis in original) that aims to
produce “mad knowledge” in
“defence of madness” (Rashed, 2019) and
ultimately in search of “mad futures” (Aho, Ben-Moshe and Hilton,
2017). The word mad is
reclaimed politically
to describe “the group of us
considered crazy or deemed ill
by sanists” (Fabris, 2013: 139). As was also done with
queer, along with others like fat
and crip (Mills and Sanchez,
2023), negative
connotations are subverted,
with allies of the movement being
labelled “mad positive” (Church, 2013). One central aspect of this
“activist scholarship” is challenging “sanist prejudices” and epistemic injustice against “psychic diversity”, which are posited as indissociable from “colonial violence” (e.g. LeFrançois, Menzies and Reaume,
2013). Indeed, the
liberation from “sane supremacy” is considered to also involve “the end
of colonial domination” (Johnk and Khan, 2019: 35).
One paper in the International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education denounces the “sane-centricity” of higher education institutions, which “demand civility, and reasoned and rational orderedness” (Procknow, 2019: 517). In this
manner, these “sanestitutions” might work for
“unidimensional phonies” but are coercive for “students
in crazed states of mind”, argues the
author, who writes as “a psychiatric consumer diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder”, and whose “psychotic ‘Other’” is an “anti-sane ideologue” with “violent rhetoric” (Ibid.: 515, 514, 511, 518).
The mad studies classroom “centres
mad knowledge and is informed by
mad positivity” (Snyder et al.,
2019: 496). One central aim
is to “engender student unlearning” (Ibid.:
497). Another is “enlisting them as allies”, which involves
an expectation to “educate
themselves” about their “sane privilege” (Wolframe, 2013; see also Snyder et al., 2019).
According to an article calling
for “the maddening
of social work”, processes of knowledge production established by “sanist” logics and paradigms must be disrupted (Cranford and LeFrançois, 2022). “We need mad
studies in universities”, argue Jennifer Cranford and
Brenda LeFrançois (now Bren, with they/them pronouns),
“to breakdown [sic]
longstanding enlightenment notions of rationality” (2022: 73). It will also
help ensure that white European people “remain accountable to the role played by their
country in advancing colonialism
and imperialism” (Ibid.: 77). In turn, the
article «Unlearning through Mad Studies: Disruptive
Pedagogical Praxis» advocates the widespread centring of madness across higher education
to dismantle “the university space as a sphere of expert knowledge” (Snyder et al., 2019: 497).
As an
illustration of what “mad scholarship” (Wolframe, 2013) might look like, consider the article published
by the Canadian Journal of Children’s Rights entitled «Between World Borders» (Tavares, 2019). Applying a mad studies perspective,
and inspired by Butler’s theory of gender performativity, it advances the
notion of “mental performativity”
to “carve out mad child subjectivity”,
in particular concerning children
diagnosed with schizophrenia (Tavares, 2019: 26). “I self-identify
as mad”, writes the author, who
condemns “parents who cannot accept
as normal their children’s
performances of voice hearing”
(Ibid.: 35, 27). As is the case with queering,
attempts to “madden” established knowledge and practice appear to pay particular attention to childhood. Another example is an article by
“a queer, mad, neurodivergent, non-binary scholar” in Contemporary
Issues in Early Childhood (Davies, 2023: 126). The
article argues against developmental psychology and critiques safeguarding
procedures by accrediting governing bodies as an exclusion of “mad educators”, calling instead for the
“maddening” of early childhood education and care (Davies, 2023). The section
entitled “Results; or, whatever you
want to call it” features “autobiographical
poetic writing”, part of which reads
as follows: “when i walk in the room
madness walks in with me […] i forgot to take my Ritalin.
i can’t focus […] remember. my. pronouns”
(Davies, 2023: 136, 139; spelling and punctuation in
original).
“Mad Studies is increasingly being taken up within universities, often within existing departments, such as disability studies, sociology, social work, or humanities”, celebrates the International Mad Studies Journal[37],
which is “proudly majority mad-identified”[38].
“The massification of higher education” has facilitated this development, suggest professor Helen Spandler (they/she) and former senior lecturer Meg-John Barker (they/them), “as has the user/survivor/mad (and LGBT+) movements”, which have “encouraged
people to be ‘out’ about their madness
(and sexuality)” (2016). For those
unfamiliar with the movement, a 2022 Mad Pride event
in London announced: “The
lunatics are back in town”[39].
The purpose was to “celebrate our insanity” and send the following
message to “sane society”:
“We’re here, we’re insane, and we’re ready to burn down the
system!”
“Mad and Queer
Studies have lot of common ground”,
Spandler and Barker (2016) additionally explain, “especially in terms of challenging existing binaries [and] critiquing prevailing normativities”. As seen above, mad
studies also has commonalities with critical race theory
and decolonial studies, in addition
to other (queer-inflected) fields such as crip studies, critical
autism studies, asexual studies and fat studies[40]. However, there are particularly close connections with transgender studies and politics – a fact palpably revealed by the similitude
in discourse, the frequency of transgender identifications among proponents[41],
and their confluence within the new “plurality” movement discussed below.
There are substantial
similarities between the transgender and mad movements, including the way
in which both prioritise
subjective perceptions over objective facts, bluntly detest the “psy”
disciplines, push for depathologisation across the board, perceive
their political subjects as victims of European colonialism, and are influenced by queer
theory and politics. What is more, the
two movements are interrelated. A quick search online
for gender identity labels—all with their
own flags—makes this tangibly
evident. Take those under the
umbrella term “neurogender”. One is “bordergender”
(also known as “borderfluid”): “a fluctuating gender experienced exclusively by people with BPD” (Borderline Personality Disorder). “Cavusgender” is for those
with depression, while “skhizeingender” refers to “a gender that is strongly
connected to schizophrenia”.
Another addition to the seemingly endless
list is “genderfake”, which refers to “feeling that your gender
is part of your hallucinations or delusions”[42].
It is “the mutually
constitutive character of madness, queerness, and transness” that leads the chapter «Reclaiming the Lunatic Fringe»
to call for (more) scholars to use a “mad-queer-trans lens” (Pilling, 2022: 30). One example of work applying such
a lens is an article published
in the Journal of
Arts and Humanities on “autoethnographic tales of neuroqueer intimacy” (Trento, 2023: 21). It is written by a “neuroqueer
and non-binary individual [who
is] seeking intimate, sexual connections [and
whose] obsessions include the interspecies
sociality of urban animals such as capybaras and raccoons” (Ibid.: 26, 27, 29).
“Perhaps
the most notable trans development in recent history has been the emergence of a clear and vocal non-binary movement”, declares a chapter from the 2018 book
Trans Britain: Our Journey from the
Shadows (Barker,
Vincent and Twist, 2018: 292). One of the authors
is Barker, who in Gender: A Graphic Guide explains
how a non-binary identity can, among other possibilities, be “fluid”: changing “over years, months, or the course
of the day” (Barker and Scheele, 2019: 122). It can also be “plural”: “like having two
or more alter egos or
personas” (Ibid.: 123).
Central to the mad
movement in recent years is “gaining
rights, recognition, and pride for those
who experience themselves as plural” (Barker,
2020a: 2)[43], namely,
those who (claim to) share “the same physical body
with other individuals”[44].
The term “relates to gender and sexuality [as well as] the wider
queer endeavour”, not least with
respect to “overlaps between plural and trans/non-binary
experience” (Barker, 2020a:
1, 4). Barker, who identifies as “a mad queer person” (2020b), as well as non-binary and plural, additionally explains: “Many (but not
all) plural people have selves of different genders, and often ages too”
(2020a: 4). Those who “change age back and forth” are labelled “agesliders”[45]. The identity plural also includes those
who “identify as species other than
human”: “Dragons, ordinary housecats, trees, vampires, elves, lionesses, or any
other species on Earth or
off can be part of a system”[46].
“Depathologising plurality follows similar endeavours in relation to (homo)sexuality, kink, and (trans)gender” (Barker, 2020a: 1), asserts the author
of numerous publications, including the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy Guide for Good
Practice across the Counselling Professions on Gender, Sexual, and Relationship Diversity[47]. Regarding the link between plurality and sexuality, Barker (2020a: 4) expounds: “One key root into
exploring my plurality came when I recognised that a familiar cast of characters showed up in my fantasies”. “What began as an
exploration into my gender and erotic
fantasies, ended up as a much more clear sense of plurality”, in
particular, “of living in a family of 7” (Barker, 2020b). This comprises “three guys, three lasses,
and one non-binary creature” (Barker, 2022: 12). “I’m a system of seven people”, Barker (2020b) thus announces, “and hear all their voices”.
Indeed, the influential author publishes texts involving “a series of conversations
between my own plural selves” (Barker, 2022: 5).
“Just
two of my plural selves shooting the breeze about
plurality, no biggie [...]
James: So dammit here we
are again out in the deep fucking
waters talking about an experience
that a lot of people are going to struggle with.
As if
it wasn’t enough to be openly bisexual when everyone had
a problem with that, and then writing about being
non-monogamous in ways that got us
in trouble, and then trans
and non-binary.
Do we
always have to do this? What the
fuck is next?
Beastie: I think you know the
answer to that one. Ah but we
love it really,
don’t we?.”
(Barker,
2022: 15)
What next? I agree with
“James” about the pertinence of this question. “Age-related self-determination”, suggests
a journal article by a professor and Associate Pro Vice Chancellor (Peel and Newman, 2020: 21), as part of The
Future of Legal Gender project, which received over £500K from the Economic
and Social Research Council (UK) (Somerville, 2022). This evokes what
seems like a spreading proviso for those wanting a successful career in academia today: queer or quit.
What else might be next?
Well, there is the “new queer movement” (Theobald, 2017) of “ecosexuality”[48]. The term refers to a “sexual orientation” or “modality of desire” which forms part
of a broader project for “a queer futurity” (van den Hengel,
2022). “We make love with
the earth”, reads the most
recent Ecosex Manifesto, “and talk erotically to plants” (Stephens and Sprinkle,
2020). One of the authors is a professor at the University of California Santa Cruz, which hosted
a large symposium for audiences consisting
of “LGBTQIE folks” and other “sex positive communities”[49],
along with sessions on “tree-huggers”, “settler sexuality” and “ecosexphobia”[50].
Discussing what she
described as a “ridiculous”
paper on “queer-identified ecosexuals” that was published by Feminist
Theory[51], one interviewee who positioned herself as “in the middle” regarding
the “gender wars” affirmed that the peer-review
process is “compromised”. “The hoax people are right”, she told me[52].
An editor herself, she was critical
of the way in which academic journals determine “hot topics of the day”
at the same time as others are repudiated as “old, anachronistic, passé”. This is a “horrible academic machine”, she argued, which “completely skews
the nature of the knowledge that
we produce”. And “the
trans trend”, she explained, “is what sells now”.
“I’m with
the margins”, one late-career academic in development studies told me. She said: “For
me, ‘women’ was the margins, but,
actually, it’s not the margins
anymore”. Rather, at present it is
those who identify as transgender. “And I’m listening to those voices now”,
she clarified. Who will be next?
Presumably it won’t be all those
struggling to pay rent or put food
on the table.
As is the case with women, the
poor appear to have been largely
relegated to the status of
“passé topic”. It is also far
too large a population to be valued politically as “margins”, or as “niche” in terms of research. With its focus on
marginality and deviance, the queer approach
helps academics get ahead in the
compulsory race for an external
grant or journal publication.
In other words,
queer or quit fits within
the political economy of knowledge production in contemporary
academia. Besides, queer is about permanent rebellion
in relation to “social organisation
as such” (Edelman, 2004: 17),
and even “the annihilation
of the social order” altogether (Schotten, 2018: 168). That is, there will always be norms
to disrupt or boundaries to transgress, or indeed a social order to “annihilate”.
What might be next in the roadmap
towards “queer futurities”?[53] In 2022 Routledge
published a queer manifesto for “dismantling academia” (Breeze and Leigh, 2022: 97). “We demand wages for
the work of being queer in the university!”, write the authors,
who clarify that this includes
the work of “documenting and raising complaints
about” colleagues with “anti-sex work” or “anti-trans” views (Ibid.: 107, 104). “Pay us”, their
manifesto further reads, “Every time a pride flag
is flown” (Ibid.: 107). Another demand for queers at university: “Every pride month: triple our salaries, immediately
transfer all queers to permanent contracts, and half [sic] our workloads” (Ibid.: 108). “Unlimited time off at full pay
for any reason
whatsoever” is yet another (Ibid.: 109). There is likewise an
extensive list of demands for changes
on campus, which includes the provision
of “safe houses for sex work”, “cruising spaces”, a “free sex toy library”, “bathhouses in every building”, “needle exchanges” and “free on-demand
self-prescribed medication”
(Ibid.:
110). The intentions are clear: “We want,
are coming for, and will take unless
they are given to us […] We will
not negotiate” (Ibid.: 111,
112).
The manifesto also states an
intention to run self-defence
training and distribute weapons
(Breeze and Leigh, 2022), evoking the violent
nature of much discourse in transgender activism (Favaro, 2023). More generally, this is in consonance with the queer
anti-social project and its politics of negativity, namely an opposition to “every form of
social viability” (Edelman,
2004: 9). Prominent queer scholar Judith Halberstam—now known
as Jack—articulated such a project as follows:
“We must be willing
to turn away from the comfort
zone of polite exchange in order to embrace a truly political negativity, one that promises, this time, to fail, to make a mess, to fuck shit up, to be loud, unruly, impolite,
to breed resentment, to bash back, to speak up and out, to disrupt, assassinate, shock and annihilate.”
(Halberstam, 2008: 154)
I expect that
many would downplay the threat
this entails on the grounds
of absurdities by a zealot minority with no significant wider impact. This
was the very
assessment of my
postdoctoral research proposal
on transgender by a (male) professor
back in 2016. It can be easy
to miss the signs or even changes
around us with the ever-growing
pressures of fast-paced
academia, as some interviewees
told me when discussing the political demands, and successes, in the name of transgender. Others jump on
the bandwagon in the quest for
self-preservation or out of self-interest. Still others remain
quiet in the hope that sanity will
prevail, as they watch those who
do speak up suffer ostracism, abuse and more. Rare is the month
these days when I don’t hear
about an academic wanting to leave the sector or retire early to escape this—now more literal than ever—lunacy.
The term academentia usefully connects the subjective
with the systemic, reminding me of one area of consensus
among my interviewees: processes of neoliberalisation are resulting
in a toxic atmosphere and causing serious detrimental effects across the board.
Much has been written about the
fast-paced, market- and metrics-oriented cultures of the contemporary university, where on top of generalised job insecurity, academic workers endure excessive workloads and ever-growing scrutiny,
pressures and competition. These structural transformations have led to a
decline in solidarity (Feldman and Sandoval, 2018), a rise in
bullying (Zawadzki and
Jensen, 2020), and, more generally, a “psychosocial and somatic catastrophe amongst academics” (Gill and Donaghue, 2016: 91).
In our interview, Lynne Segal observed that the neoliberal university encourages “a climate of fear around saying
the wrong thing”. She also
spoke about a “terrible policing” or “overzealous
monitoring” of “political etiquette”. “I really feel lucky that
I’ve retired”, the Anniversary Professor of Psychology and Gender Studies told me.
She mentioned that, at
her leaving event at Birkbeck, senior colleagues remarked how “many of us
are leaving […] as a strike against
all that’s happening in universities”.
Recently, academentia
has been used in the context of critiques of university governance today[54]. The term is
employed to describe how the takeover of “excessive and manic managerialism” has led to “a state
of organisational insanity”
that negatively impacts the ability
of academic workers to function as scholars and educators, increasingly reduced as they are to “income-generating productivity units” (Kilkauer and Young, 2021;
see also Tomaselli, 2021) and customer
service providers of the McUniversity (Hayes and Wynyard, 2002). Perhaps the escalating repudiation of empiricism, objectivity and materialism in favour of the pseudo-religious,
subjective and idiosyncratic
is at least in part a symptom of disenchantment with the McUniversity. Or it might
be a manifestation of the therapeutic culture that has recently come to complement the McDonaldisation of universities, where, among other things,
“emotions are prioritised over the intellect”
(Hayes and Wynyard, 2022:
84) and there is an
“invitation to being ‘not well’”, thus
becoming “part of many people’s identity” (Furedi, 2017). Meanwhile, the assault on
sanity intensifies with literal calls to “madden” academia. I dread to think how university
policies would adapt to appease the mad movement
or a cohort of plural-identifying students and staff.
What we are witnessing more generally—in no unequivocal terms[55]—is the pinnacle
of the revolt against the legacy
of the Enlightenment. We are witnessing (the ideals of) reason, empiricism, knowledge, debate, consensus and freedom of expression being supplanted with new myths, rituals, notions of souls, holy days, unquestioned divine rights, the desecularisation of institutions, sectarianism, compelled speech, infantilism,
and the persecution of infidels and heretics. “The notion of views, opinions, or beliefs makes
it seem like
we live in some fantasy of the Enlightenment”, an interviewee who identified as a trans woman told me when criticising feminists
who are pushing back against the tactic
of “no debate”. Contrary to the
“Eurocentric liberal
[…] impulse for debate and civility
and an airing of ideas”, “as a Foucauldian” this scholar considers that “truthfulness is the outcome
of political struggle”. The current persecution
of feminists at universities
was located as part of “a political battle over an
institutional space” by “insurrectionary movements”.
***
“Tread
carefully”, I am advised by concerned colleagues
as I explain that I am writing about child
sexual abuse apologism among
other problematic aspects of queer theory and politics. I have, of course, been here before;
and now I know all too well
how warranted the warnings were
about what could happen if
I continued to dig into the “can of worms” that was
the “gender wars” in academia (Favaro and Özkırımlı, 2024). “Not
all queer theorists”, I am told. Well, indubitably; yet as a feminist I am familiar with this discursive
move (“not all men”) against
critical scrutiny to defensively undermine legitimate concerns about embedded or emergent (patriarchal)
ideologies or practices. And I reaffirm what I wrote in the article that
so drastically changed my life (Favaro,
2022): “Of course I fear
harms to my career and more for instigating, as interviewees repeatedly put it, ‘difficult conversations’ […] But, at the same time, why would I want
to work in academia if I cannot do academic work?”
It is precisely academic
work that this article is
calling for to counter the untouchable
status that queer theory is by
and large enjoying – as was the case with
the transgender movement until very recently. There is a conspicuous
scarcity of academic inquiry into the
queering of culture and institutions.
This is despite
the series of potentially
grave implications, which include the dismantlement
of child safeguarding and hard-won rights for women, in addition
to the basic principles and purposes of
academia. As this article
has shown, there is no shortage of explicit articulations of these destructive efforts, of the desire for “queer
terror” (Schotten, 2018).
“To speak out against sanity is to militate against the social fabric that binds
societies together”, unabashedly recognises an article advocating
the “maddening” of higher education (Procknow, 2019: 518). It is high time to speak out with
equivalent resolve against this academentia.
Acknowledgements:
Thank you, firstly, to all the participants that took part in the
“gender wars” study.
Thank you also to the director, reviewers and special editor at Cuestiones de Género
for the honour of featuring alongside such esteemed feminist
thinkers, who bravely continue
to exercise their freedom of expression despite the hostile context that is
Spain at present. I am grateful to Jonathan Parker,
Umut Özkırımlı and Christian Fuchs for their
useful feedback on an earlier
version of this article, together with their encouragement
to publish
it. Much appreciated
proofreading and moral support
was generously given by female
colleagues who prefer to remain anonymous over concerns
for their careers.
Finally, I would like to acknowledge that when preparing
this article, I was especially inspired by Sheila Jeffreys and Julia Long.
References
Adams,
Kathleen M. (2012). “Ethnographic
Methods”. In: Larry Dwyer,
Alison Gill and Neelu Seetaram.
Handbook of Research
Methods in Tourism: Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, pp. 339-351.
Ahmed, Sara (2015). “You are oppressing
us!” Available at: https://feministkilljoys.com/2015/02/15/you-are-oppressing-us/ [21/02/2024].
Aho, Tanja; Ben-Moshe, Liat and Hilton,
Leon (2017). “Mad Futures: Affect/Theory/Violence”. In: American Quarterly, 69, pp. 291-302.
Alvesson, Mats
(2009). “At-home ethnography: Struggling
with closeness and closure”. In: Sierk Ybema et al. (Eds.): Organizational Ethnography:
Studying the Complexity of Everyday Life. London: Sage, pp.
156-174.
Bannerman, Lucy (2018). “Trans Goldsmiths lecturer Natacha
Kennedy behind smear campaign against academics”. In: The
Times. Available at: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/trans-goldsmiths-lecturer-natacha-kennedy-behind-smear-campaign-against-academics-f2zqbl222 [22/02/2024].
Bar On, Bat-Ami (1992). “The Feminist Sexuality Debates and the Transformation of the Political”. In: Hypatia,
7(4), pp. 45-58.
Barker, Meg-John
(2022). “Plurality 1: Team
MJ Barker”. Available at: https://www.rewriting-the-rules.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Plurality-1.pdf [21/02/2024].
Barker, Meg-John
(2020a). “Plural selves, queer,
and comics”. In: Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics,
11(4), pp. 463-474.
Barker, Meg-John
(2020b). “So Many Wings
mental health podcast”. Available
at: https://www.rewriting-the-rules.com/self/so-many-wings-mental-health-podcast/ [21/02/2024].
Barker, Meg-John
(2017). “A trans review of 2017: the
year of transgender moral panic”. In: The Conversation. Available at:
https://theconversation.com/a-trans-review-of-2017-the-year-of-transgender-moral-panic-89272 [21/02/2024].
Barker, Meg-John
and Scheele, Jules (2019). Gender:
A Graphic Guide.
London: Icon.
Barker, Meg-John
and Scheele, Julia (2016). Queer:
A Graphic History.
London: Icon.
Barker, Meg-John; Vincent, Ben and Twist,
Jos (2018). “Non-binary Identity”.
In: Christine Burns (Ed.): Trans Britain: Our long
journey from the shadows. London: Unbound, pp. 292-303.
Bartosch,
Jo (2020). “The Casually Regressive Message of Drag Queen Story Hour”. Available at: https://genspect.org/the-casually-regressive-message-of-drag-queen-story-hour/ [21/02/2024].
Bindel, Julie (2023). “Gender ideology and child abuse apologism: The undeniable links”. Available at: https://juliebindel.substack.com/p/gender-ideology-and-child-abuse-apologism [21/02/2024].
Bindel, Julie (2022). “What a Drag!” Available at: https://juliebindel.substack.com/p/what-a-drag [21/02/2024].
Breeze, Maddie
and Leigh, Darcy (2022). “Wages against inclusion!
Full inclusion now! Towards a queer manifesto against LGBT+ inclusion in universities”. In: Churnjeet Mahn, Matt Brim and Yvette
Taylor (Eds.): Queer Sharing
in the Marketized University. London: Routledge,
pp. 96-114.
Brunskell-Evans, Heather and Moore, Michele (Eds.) (2018).
Transgender children and young people: Born
in your own body. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars
Publishing.
Butler,
Judith [Talk]
(2023). “Sara Ahmed in conversation with Judith Butler
at Christ’s College”. University of Cambridge, 28 of April,
Audio available at:
https://sms.cam.ac.uk/media/4330800 [21/02/2024].
Butler,
Judith (2014). “Gender Performance: The TransAdvocate interviews Judith Butler”. Available at: https://www.transadvocate.com/gender-performance-the-transadvocate-interviews-judith-butler_n_13652.htm [21/02/2024].
Butler,
Judith (1990). Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity.
London: Routledge.
Butler,
Judith and Ferber, Alona (2020). “Judith Butler on the culture wars, JK Rowling and living in ‘anti-intellectual
times’”. In: The New Statesman.
Available at:
https://www.newstatesman.com/long-reads/2020/09/judith-butler-culture-wars-jk-rowling-living-anti-intellectual-times [21/02/2024].
Califia, Pat (1992). “Feminism, Pedophilia, and Children’s Rights”. In: Paidika: The Journal of Paedophilia, 8(2/4), pp. 53-60.
Cameron,
Debbie (2016). “A brief history of ‘gender’”. Available at: https://debuk.wordpress.com/2016/12/15/a-brief-history-of-gender/ [21/02/2024].
Cameron, Debbie and Scanlon, Joan (2010). “Talking about Gender”.
In: Trouble and Strife.
Available at: https://www.troubleandstrife.org/new-articles/talking-about-gender/ [21/02/2024].
Campbell, Beatrix and Signatories
(2015). “We cannot allow censorship and silencing of individuals”. In: The Guardian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2015/feb/14/letters-censorship [21/02/2024].
Chu, Andrea Long (2019).
Females: A Concern.
New York: Verso.
Chu, Andrea Long (2018).
“Did Sissy Porn Make Me Trans?” In: Queer Disruptions,
2, Columbia University. Available
at: https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5a9b1c0812b13f48e686fdc4/t/5a9c17e1f9619a449856c4fe/1520179170246/Chu-Did+Sissy+Porn+Make+Me+Trans%3F+%28QD2%29.pdf [21/02/2024].
Church, Kathryn
(2013). “Making madness matter in academic practice”. In: Brenda A. LeFrançois,
Robert Menzies and Geoffrey
Reaume (Eds.): Mad
matters: A critical reader in Canadian Mad Studies. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’
Press, pp. 181-190.
Cormier, Alline (2022). “Why do children need ‘Drag Queen Story Hour’?” In: Feminist Current. Available at: https://www.feministcurrent.com/2022/06/26/why-do-children-need-drag-queen-story-hour/ [21/02/2024].
Cotter, Lucy and Hitchcock, Amy (2019). “Gender debate sparks bitter divide among trans and feminist groups”. In: Sky News. Available
at: https://news.sky.com/story/line-18-gender-debate-sparks-bitter-divide-among-trans-and-feminist-groups-11439676 [21/02/2024].
Cranford, Jennifer M. and LeFrançois, Brenda A. (2022). “Mad Studies is Maddening
Social Work”. In: Issues in Social Work, 27(3), pp. 69-84.
Daly, Mary and Madsen, Catherine (2000).
“The Thin Thread of Conversation: An Interview with Mary Daly”. In: Cross Currents,
50(3), pp. 332-348.
Davies, Adam W. J. (2023). “Maddening pre-service early childhood
education and care through poetics: Dismantling epistemic injustice through mad autobiographical poetics”. In: Contemporary
Issues in Early Childhood, 24(2), pp. 124-146.
de Lauretis, Teresa (1994). “Habit
Changes”. In: Differences:
A Journal of Feminist
Cultural Studies, 6, pp. 296-313.
Donnini, Eugene Alexander (2021). “The Sordid Origins
of Transgender Theory”. In:
Quadrant Online. Available
at: https://quadrant.org.au/magazine/2021/07-08/the-sordid-origins-of-transgender-theory/ [21/02/2024].
Downing, Lisa; Morland,
Iain and Sullivan, Nikki (2014). Fuckology:
Critical Essays on John Money’s Diagnostic Concepts.
Chicago, IL: University of Chicago.
Dyer,
Hannah (2017). “Queer futurity and childhood innocence: Beyond the injury of development”.
In: Global Studies of Childhood,
7(3), pp. 290-302.
Edelman, Lee (2004). No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive. Durham, NC:
Duke University Press.
Fabris, Erick (2013). “Mad Success: What Could
Go Wrong When Psychiatry Employs Us as ‘Peers’?” In: Brenda A. LeFrançois,
Robert Menzies and Geoffrey
Reaume (Eds.): Mad
matters: A critical reader in Canadian Mad Studies. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’
Press, pp.130-139.
Favaro, Laura [Talk]
(2023). “‘Gender Wars’ in
Academia”. Open University Gender
Critical Research Network,
16 of March, Video available
at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4uQ0MN66es [25/04/2024].
Favaro, Laura (2022). “Researchers are wounded
in academia’s gender wars”. In: Times Higher Education. Available at: https://www.timeshighereducation.com/depth/researchers-are-wounded-academias-gender-wars [25/04/2024].
Favaro, Laura and Özkırımlı,
Umut (2024). “Gender wars and cancel culture in academia: Umut
Özkırımlı in conversation with Laura Favaro”. In: Teknokultura. Journal
of Digital Culture and Social Movements, online first, pp. 1-13.
Fazackerley, Anna (2020). “Sacked or silenced: academics
say they are blocked from exploring
trans issues”. In: The Guardian. Available
at: https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/jan/14/sacked-silenced-academics-say-they-are-blocked-from-exploring-trans-issues [21/02/2024].
Feldman, Zeena and Sandoval, Marisol (2018). “Metric Power and the Academic Self:
Neoliberalism, knowledge
and resistance in the
British university”. In: tripleC:
Communication, Capitalism
& Critique, 16(1), pp. 214-233.
Furedi, Frank (2017). “The Therapeutic University”. In: American
Interest. Available at:
https://www.the-american-interest.com/2017/03/08/the-therapeutic-university/ [21/02/2024].
Gill, Rosalind and Donaghue, Ngaire (2016). “Resilience, apps and reluctant
individualism: Technologies of self
in the neoliberal academy”.
In: Women’s Studies
International Forum, 54, pp. 91-99.
Gluck, Genevieve
(2023). “How pornography forged the trans movement”. In: Spiked. Available at: https://www.spiked-online.com/2023/08/16/how-pornography-forged-the-trans-movement/ [21/02/2024].
Green,
Richard (1987). The “sissy boy syndrome” and the development of homosexuality. New Haven: Yale University
Press.
Halberstam, Judith (2008). “The Anti-Social Turn in Queer Studies”. In: Graduate Journal of
Social Science, 5(2), pp. 140-156.
Halperin, David
(2003). “The Normalization
of Queer Theory”. In: Journal of Homosexuality,
45(2-4), pp. 339-343.
Halperin, David
(1995). Saint Foucault: Towards a Gay Hagiography. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
Hanisch, Carol et al. (2013). “Forbidden Discourse: The
Silencing
of Feminist Criticism of
‘Gender’.
An open statement from 37 radical feminists from
five countries”. Available at: https://feministuk.wordpress.com/2013/08/19/forbidden-discourse-the-silencing-of-feminist-criticism-of-gender/ [18/12/2023].
Harper, Craig A. et al. (2022). “Humanizing
Pedophilia as Stigma Reduction: A Large-Scale Intervention Study”. In: Archives of Sexual Behavior, 51(2), pp.
945-960.
Hayes,
Dennis and Wynyard, Robyn
(Eds.) (2002). The McDonaldization
of Higher Education.
New York: Praeger.
Hayes,
Dennis and Wynyard, Robyn (2022). “The McDonaldization of higher education updated: The therapeutic turn”. In: James E. Côté and Sarah Pickard (Eds.): Routledge Handbook of the Sociology of Higher Education (2nd Ed.). London: Routledge,
pp. 78-90.
Hines, Sally (2019). “The feminist frontier:
On trans and feminism”. In:
Journal of Gender
Studies, 28(2), pp. 145-157.
Hunter,
Shona (2020). “Cisgenderism’s
Move Beyond Anxious Defence: Commentary on ‘Gender’s Wider Stakes: Lay Attitudes to Legal Gender Reform’”. In: feminists@law, 10(2). Available at: https://journals.kent.ac.uk/index.php/feministsatlaw/article/view/946/1824 [21/02/2024].
Iantaffi, Alex and Barker,
Meg-John (2017). How
to Understand Your Gender: A Practical Guide for Exploring
Who You Are. London:
Jessica Kingsley.
Jackson, Stevi (1992). “The amazing
deconstructing woman”. In: Trouble and Strife, 25,
pp. 25-35.
Janssen, Diederik
F. (2017). “John Money’s
‘Chronophilia’: Untimely
sex between Philias and Phylisms”. In: Sexual Offender Treatment, 12(1),
pp. 1-17.
Jeffreys, Sheila (2020). Trigger Warning. My Lesbian
Feminist Life. Australia: Spinifex.
Jeffreys, Sheila
(2014). Gender Hurts:
A Feminist Analysis of the Politics of Transgenderism. London: Routledge.
Jeffreys, Sheila (2012). “Let
us be free to debate transgenderism
without being accused of ‘hate speech’”. In: The Guardian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/may/29/transgenderism-hate-speech [21/02/2024].
Jeffreys, Sheila
(2003). Unpacking queer
politics: A lesbian
feminist perspective.
Cambridge: Polity.
Johnk, Lzz and
Khan, Sasha A. (2019). “‘Cripping the Fuck
Out’: A Queer Crip Mad Manifesta
against the Medical
Industrial Complex”. In: Feral Feminisms,
9(Fall), pp. 26-38.
Keenan, Harper
and Hot Mess, Lil Miss
(2020). “Drag
pedagogy: The playful practice of queer imagination in early childhood”. In: Curriculum Inquiry,
50(5), pp. 440-461.
Kelly,
Liz (1996). “Weasel words: Pedophiles and the cycle of abuse”. In: Trouble
and Strife, 33. Available
at: http://www.troubleandstrife.org/articles/issue-33/weasel-words-paedophiles-and-the-cycle-of-abuse/
[21/02/2024].
Kilkauer, Thomas and Young, Meg (2021). “Academentia: The Organization Insanity of the Modern University”. In: Counterpunch.
Available at: https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/07/28/academentia-the-organization-insanity-of-the-modern-university/ [19/02/2024].
Kramer, Michael W. and Adams,
Tony E. (2017). “Ethnography”. In: Mike Allen (Ed.): The
SAGE Encyclopedia of Communication
Research Methods.
London: Sage, pp. 458-461.
Lavery, Grace (2019). “Comme Une Femme: On Returning to France Post-Transition”.
In: Them. Available
at: https://www.them.us/story/returning-to-france-post-transition [19/02/2024].
LeFrançois, Brenda A.; Menzies,
Robert and Reaume, Geoffrey (Eds.) (2013). Mad Matters: A Critical Reader in Canadian Mad Studies. Toronto, ON: Canadian Scholar’s
Press.
Lewis,
Sophie (2017a). “SERF ‘n’ TERF”. In: Salvage. Available at: https://salvage.zone/serf-n-terf-notes-on-some-bad-materialisms/ [19/02/2024].
Lewis,
Sophie (2017b). “Defending Intimacy against What? Limits of Antisurrogacy Feminisms”. In: Signs: Journal of Women in Culture & Society,
43(1), pp. 97-125.
Lowbridge, Caroline
(2021). “The lesbians who feel pressured
to have sex and relationships
with trans women”. In: BBC
News. Available at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-57853385 [22/02/2024].
Marinucci, Mimi
(2010). Feminism is
Queer. London: Zed Books.
Merrett, Robyn
(2020). “Jazz Jennings Proudly
Shows Off Scars from Her Gender Confirmation
Surgery: ‘My Battle Wounds’”. In: People. Available at: https://people.com/tv/jazz-jennings-proudly-shows-off-scars-from-her-gender-confirmation-surgery-my-battle-wounds/ [21/02/2024].
Mills,
Mara and Sanchez, Rebecca (Eds.) (2023). Crip
Authorship: Disability as Method. New York: NYU Press.
Money, John (1973). “Gender role, gender identity, core gender identity: Usage and definition of terms”. In: Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 1, pp. 397-403.
Moore, Michele and Brunskell-Evans,
Heather (Eds.) (2019). Inventing
Transgender Children and
Young People. Newcastle upon
Tyne: Cambridge Scholars
Publishing.
Morgan, Ellis and Taylor, Yvette
(2019). “Dangerous Education: The Occupational Hazards of Teaching Transgender”. In: Sociology, 53(1),
pp. 19-35.
Mounk, Yascha
(2018). “What an Audacious Hoax Reveals About Academia”. In: The Atlantic. Available at: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/10/new-sokal-hoax/572212/ [21/02/2024].
Murphy,
Meghan (2017). “‘TERF’ isn’t just
a slur, it’s hate speech”. In: Feminist Current. Available at: https://www.feministcurrent.com/2017/09/21/terf-isnt-slur-hate-speech/ [21/02/2024].
Nussbaum, Martha C. (1999). “The Professor of Parody: The hip defeatism of Judith Butler”. In: The
New Republic. Available
at: https://newrepublic.com/article/150687/professor-parody [21/02/2024].
Oakes, Guy
(1995). “Straight Thinking about Queer Theory”.
In: International Journal of Politics,
Culture and Society, 8(3), pp. 379-388.
Peel, Elizabeth and Newman, Hannah J. H. (2020). “Gender’s Wider Stakes: Lay Attitudes to Legal Gender Reform”. In: feminists@law,
10(2). Available
at: https://journals.kent.ac.uk/index.php/feministsatlaw/article/view/953 [21/02/2024].
Pereira, Maria
do Mar (2017). Power, Knowledge and Feminist Scholarship: An Ethnography of Academia.
London: Routledge.
Phipps, Alison (2020).
Me, not you: The trouble with
mainstream feminism.
Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Pilling, Merrick D. (2022). Queer and Trans Madness:
Struggles for Social Justice. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Procknow, Greg (2019). “The pedagogy of saneness: a schizoaffective storying of resisting sane pedagogy”. In: International Journal
of Qualitative Studies in Education, 32(5), pp. 510-528.
Rappaport, Scott (2017). “Environmentalism
Outside the Box: An Ecosex Symposium”.
Available at: https://news.ucsc.edu/2017/05/arts-ecosex-symposium.html [21/02/2024].
Rashed, Mohammed Abouelleil
(2019). “In Defense of Madness:
The Problem of Disability”. In: The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy,
44(2), pp. 150-174.
Reed,
Jennifer Jean (2019). “In Pursuit of Social Justice
at the Postmodern Turn: Intersectional Activism through the Lens of the Ecosexual Movement”. Unpublished doctoral dissertation,
University of Nevada. Available
at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/thesesdissertations/3747/ [20/02/2024].
Renold, Emma
(2005). Girls, boys
and junior sexualities: Exploring children’s gender and sexual relations in the primary school.
London: Routledge.
Rosario
Sanchez, Raquel (2019). “Misogyny
and anti-intellectualism in academia”. Available at: https://womansplaceuk.org/2019/12/08/misogyny-and-anti-intellectualism-in-academia-raquel-rosario-sanchez/ [20/02/2024].
Rubin, Gayle
(1984). “Thinking sex: Notes for
a radical theory in the politics of sexuality”. In:
Richard Guy Parker and Peter Aggleton
(Eds.) (1999): Culture, Society, and Sexuality: A Reader. London: UCL Press,
pp. 143-178. Originally published
in: Carole S.
Vance
(Ed.): Pleasure
and Danger: Exploring Female Sexuality. New York: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Rycenga, Jennifer and Barufaldi, Linda (Eds.) (2017). The
Mary Daly Reader. New York: New York University Press.
Schotten, C. Heike
(2018). Queer
Terror: Life, Death,
and Desire in the Settler Colony. New York:
Columbia University Press.
Seidman, Stevan
(1994). “Queer-ing sociology,
sociologizing queer theory: An introduction”.
In: Sociological Theory,
12(2), pp. 166-177.
Serano,
Julia (2007). Whipping Girl: A Transsexual Woman on Sexism and the
Scapegoating of Femininity.
New York: Seal Press.
Skeggs, Beverley (2001). “Feminist Ethnography”.
In: Paul Atkinson et al. (Eds.): Handbook of Ethnography.
London: Sage, pp. 426-442.
Slatz, Anna (2022). “John Money: The Pro-Pedophile Pervert Who Invented
‘Gender’”. In: Reduxx.
Available at: https://reduxx.info/john-money-the-pervert-who-invented-gender/ [20/02/2024].
Snyder, Sarah N. et al. (2019). “Unlearning through Mad Studies: Disruptive
pedagogical praxis”. In: Curriculum
Inquiry, 49(4), pp. 485-502.
Somerville, Ewan
(2022). “Census could ask ‘do you
menstruate?’ instead of
‘are you female?’ to be
inclusive of trans people”. In: The
Telegraph. Available
at: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/06/04/census-could-ask-do-menstruate-instead-female-taxpayer-funded/
[22/02/2024].
Spandler, Helen and Barker,
Meg-John (2016). “Mad and Queer studies: interconnections and tensions”.
In: Mad Studies
Network. Available at: https://madstudies2014.wordpress.com/2016/07/01/mad-and-queer-studies-interconnections-and-tensions/ [20/02/2024].
Sprinkle, Annie and
Stephens, Beth (2021). Assuming the Ecosexual Position: The Earth as Lover.
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Stadler, John Paul (2018). “The Queer Heart
of Porn Studies”. In: Journal of Cinema and Media Studies,
58(1), pp. 170-175.
Stephens,
Beth and Sprinkle, Annie
(2020). “Ecosex Manifesto 3.0”. Available
at: https://sprinklestephens.ucsc.edu/files/2021/04/manifesto-3point0.pdf [20/02/2024].
Stoller, Robert J. (1968). Sex
and gender: On the development of masculinity and femininity.
New York: Science House.
Strudwick, Patrick (2018). “Meet the Feminist
Academics Championing Trans
Rights”. In: BuzzFeed
News. Available at: https://www.buzzfeed.com/patrickstrudwick/meet-the-feminist-academics-championing-trans-rights [20/02/2024].
Stryker, Susan and Whittle, Stephen (Eds.)
(2006). The
Transgender Studies Reader.
New York: Routledge.
Sullivan, Alice and Suissa, Judith (2019). “The gender wars,
academic freedom and education”. In: British Educational
Research Association Blog.
Available at: https://www.bera.ac.uk/blog/the-gender-wars-academic-freedom-and-education [20/02/2024].
Tavares,
James (2019). “Between World
Borders: Situating the Reality of a Child Labelled Schizophrenic as Real”.
In: Canadian Journal of Children’s
Rights, 6(1), pp. 24-38.
Theobald, Stephanie (2017). “Nature is your
lover, not your mother: meet
ecosexual pioneer Annie Sprinkle”. In: The Guardian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2017/may/15/nature-ecosexual-annie-sprinkle-porn-star-queer [20/02/2024].
Tomaselli,
Keyan G. (2021).
Contemporary Campus Life:
Transformation, Manic
Managerialism and Academentia.
Cape Town: Best Red.
Trento,
Francisco (2023). “Neuroqueer intimacies
in online dating apps”. In: Journal
of Arts and Humanities, 12(4),
pp. 20-32.
van
den Hengel, Louis (2022). “Queer
Ecologies of Love: Ecosexuality and the Politics of Nonhuman Desire”. In: Emma Rees (Ed.): The Routledge Companion to Gender, Sexuality and Culture. London: Routledge,
pp. 330-345.
Walker,
Allyson and Panfil, Vanessa
R. (2017). “Minor Attraction:
A Queer Criminological Issue”. In: Critical Criminology, 25, pp. 37-53.
Welsh, Kaite
(2015). “Why 2015 was the year trans finally went mainstream”.
In: The Telegraph. Available at: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/women/life/why-2015-was-the-year-trans-finally-went-mainstream/ [21/02/2024].
White, Francis Ray (2012). “Fat, Queer, Dead: ‘Obesity’ and the Death Drive”. In: Somatechnics, 2(1), pp. 1-17.
Whitworth, Lauran
(2019). “Goodbye Gauley
Mountain, hello eco-camp: Queer
environmentalism in the Anthropocene”. In: Feminist
Theory, 20(1), pp. 73-92.
Wilkinson, Sue and
Kitzinger, Celia (1996). “The
queer backlash”. In: Diane
Bell and Renate Klein (Eds.): Radically
Speaking: Feminism Reclaimed. Melbourne: Spinifex Press, pp. 375-382.
Wilson,
Ara (2021). “Gender Before
the Gender Turn”. In: Diacritics,
49(1), pp. 13-39.
Wolframe, PhebeAnn
M. (2013). “The madwoman in
the academy, or, revealing the
invisible straightjacket: Theorizing
and teaching saneism and
sane privilege”. In: Disability
Studies Quarterly,
33(1). Available at: https://dsq-sds.org/index.php/dsq/article/view/3425/3200 [21/02/2024].
Zaino, Karen and Bell, Jordan (2023).
“Editorial Introduction to
the Special Issue: Queer and Trans* Futurities in Educational Research, Theory, and Practice”. In: Theory, Research, and Action in Urban Education, 8(1). Available
at: https://traue.commons.gc.cuny.edu/editorial-introduction-to-the-special-issue-queer-and-trans-futurities-in-educational-research-theory-and-practice/ [01/05/2024].
Zawadzki, Michał
and Jensen, Tommy (2020). “Bullying and the neoliberal university: A co-authored autoethnography”. In:
Management Learning, 51(4), pp. 398-413.
[1] This research
was conducted in association with the international project “The mediatisation of women’s rage” (Grant
PID2020-113054GB-I00 funded by
MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033).
[2] The level of feminist
resistance to transgender politics has led to Britain being dubbed as “TERF Island”.
[3] See also Sullivan
and Suissa (2019) and Fazackerley
(2020), together with earlier warnings in Jeffreys (2012) and Hanisch et
al. (2013).
[4] Not just politically
for the women’s
movement but also for purposes
that range from healthcare to policymaking to data collection
and much more. See, for example, human-rights charity Sex Matters (https://sex-matters.org/). and feminist organisation Women’s Declaration
International (https://www.womensdeclaration.com/en/).
[5] For discussions of different and shifting uses of the term gender,
see Cameron
(2016) and Wilson (2021).
[6] See also the
organisation Transgender
Trend: No Child is Born in the
Wrong Body. Available at: https://www.transgendertrend.com/ [03/05/2024].
[7] “Gender Diversity Terminology”. Available at: https://studentaffairs.psu.edu/csgd/explore-lgbtq-resources/identity-based/gender-terms [03/05/2024].
[8] Twitter thread
by writer Flavia Dzodan (2020) available at: https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1269530880458067969.html [13/05/2024].
[9] Cisgenderism is a term used to refer critically
to ideas that limit “what it means to be male/female, or to be a woman, to the biological
sex someone is born with” (Peel
and Newman, 2020: 16), which are viewed
as “fundamental to the enactment
of whiteness within a
global colonial context” (Hunter, 2020: 5; emphasis in original).
[10] Screenshot of Instagram post by transgender charity Gendered Intelligence
(2020) available at: https://www.bayswatersupport.org.uk/a-history-of-affirmation/ [03/05/2024].
[11] As described by global poster child of transgender, Jazz Jennings (in Merrett, 2020).
[12] Consider, for example,
the collective creation of an all-female list “to accuse non-compliant professors of hate crime”, a smear campaign orchestrated by a trans-identifying male lecturer at Goldsmiths, University of London
(Bannerman, 2018). See also footnote 25 below on the
term TERF.
[13] Screenshot available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmDZm36imEo [02/05/2024].
[14] See appendix in Favaro and Özkırımlı (2024).
[15] Original tweet available at:
https://twitter.com/nkalamb/status/1570733079286906880 [02/05/2024].
[16] The book Queer:
A Graphic History explains that the
word queer is used as a noun,
an adjective and, particularly, a verb (Barker and Scheele, 2016).
[17] This was particularly
useful given the restrictions to in-person contact during the COVID-19 pandemic,
which, among other things, involved
a decreased reliance on data valued by ethnographers such as “corridor talk” (Pereira,
2017).
[18] Prior to the start of the study,
ethical approval was obtained from
the Sociology Research Ethics Committee at City, University of
London.
[19] Albeit within the
limitations posed by the method
(and available resources), some of which were
addressed with the survey that
followed.
[20] I entered the field
with genuine sociological curiosity, as well as a willingness to change my own
views.
[21] The word “women”
has since been removed from the name,
a decision agreed at that very event.
[22] “Statement re: 16 October ‘Feminist Dilemmas, Feminist Hope’ event”, Feminist Studies Association and Gender & Sexualities Research Centre
(2019). Available
at: https://the-fsa.co.uk/2019/10/22/fwsa-and-gsrc-joint-statement-feminist-dilemmas-feminist-hope-event/ [21/02/2024].
[23] See also
her recollections of the event in Jeffreys (2020).
[24] “FWSA AGM 2019 and
FWSA’s 30th Anniversary Celebration (joint event with City, University of London’s Gender and Sexualities Research Centre)”, Feminist
& Women’s Studies Association (2019). Available
at: http://fwsablog.org.uk/fwsa-events-2019/
[21/02/2024].
[25] The acronym
TERF stands for “trans-exclusionary
radical feminist”. The term is widely
rejected by those to whom it
refers, namely feminists, notwithstanding some recent defiant
appropriations in grassroots
activism and online (where there is merchandise
on offer with messages such
as “TERF is the new punk” or “TERFology: Believe in reality”). First, it fails
as a descriptor. The feminist
movement includes all women, regardless
of their identifications
(as “transgender men” or any other
label). Furthermore, those that TERF purports to describe represent a range of perspectives, not only those
of radical feminism. Second,
it is “a word that has come to signify a modern witch […] imposed on women to shut
them up, bully them, condemn them,
smear them, humiliate them, and dismiss them. But
more than that: it is a threat”
(Murphy, 2017). The term is often used
alongside threats of and calls for violence,
including death and rape. See, for example,
the website “documenting the abuse, harassment and misogyny of transgender identity politics”: https://terfisaslur.com [02/05/2024].
[26] See the
concept of “patriarchal reversals”
in Rycenga and Barufaldi
(2017).
[27] See also
the writings of Rubin’s collaborator, Patrick Califia (known as Pat prior to identifying as a transgender man), another key
actor in the “sex wars”. Califia (1992) condemned feminism as a “social-purity movement”, extensively critiqued the so-called “kiddy-porn panic” and age-of-consent laws, and supported paedophiles, also labelled
as “boy-lovers” and “girl-lovers”.
[28] For an academic
critique of queer theory at
the time outside of feminism, see Oakes
(1995).
[29] Like Jeffreys (2003), Wilkinson and Kitzinger (1996: 380) problematised the “continuing fascination with violence and degradation”, and
more generally the queer celebration of practices that are not just characteristically
patriarchal but also heterosexual. Beyond the damage to women
as a whole, there was concern about
the detrimental impact on lesbians
resulting from the queer embrace of “queer heterosexuals” and how “the biological
sex of sexual partners is dismissed in favour of gender as performance” (Wilkinson
and Kitzinger, 1996: 378). Decades later, the pressuring of lesbians to engage sexually with transgender-identifying
males is such that it has reached
the mainstream national news (Lowbridge, 2022).
[30] See journal articles
published in TSQ: Transgender
Studies Quarterly: https://read.dukeupress.edu/tsq [02/05/2024].
[31] In fact, coexisting with TERF is the
slur SWERF, which stands for “sex-worker exclusionary radical feminist”.
More recently, queer author Sophie Lewis (2017a) has coined “Surrogate-Exclusionary
Radical Feminist” (SERF) to oppose
the feminist analysis of the practice as reproductive exploitation and child trafficking, in favour of the queering of embodiment, sex, kinship and work (see also
Lewis, 2017b).
[32] One book aiming to “encourage what could be described
as a ‘queering’ of childhood”
explained how by the mid-2000s there was an
“expanding body of research queering childhood sexualities”, and how this involved
disrupting “the sedimented generational binary of child/adult” (Renold, 2005: 8-9; see also Dyer, 2017).
[33] Rubin (1984: 172) explained: “I use the term ‘pervert’ as a shorthand for all
the stigmatised sexual orientations”.
[34] By no means
it is implied
that all queer theorists would agree with
this position, or indeed that it
is exclusive to queer theory/politics. In academia, the field of
sexology is worth a mention in this regard. One particularly infamous and
relevant case is that of “fuckologist”—as he self-defined—John
Money, cited above in relation to the origins of the concept of gender identity and the “affirmative” medical approach. He has been accused of being “pro-paedophilia”, and even a “child abuser” himself
in relation to his “experiments” (Slatz, 2022), leading some to argue that: “Paedophilia,
from the beginning, has been an integral component of the theory and practice of transgenderism” (Donnini, 2021). More sympathetic accounts observe his “ambivalence to paedophilia” and how his career
was “beset by ethical controversy” (Downing et al.,
2014; see also Janssen, 2017). For a contemporary example, see the
Archives of Sexual Behavior paper on “improving attitudes and reducing stigmatisation toward […] people with paedophilic sexual interests” (Harper et al., 2022: 945).
[36] “Trans Health Manifesto”, Edinburgh Action for Trans Health (2017). Available at: https://www.tumblr.com/edinburghath/163521055802/trans-health-manifesto [10/12/2023].
[37] “What is Mad
Studies?” Available at: https://imsj.org/what-is-mad-studies/ [03/02/2024].
[38] “Welcome to the International Mad Studies Journal”.
Available at: https://imsj.org/ [03/02/2024].
[39] “The Lunatics are Back in Town: Bringing Mad Pride
Back”, Freedom (2022). Available
at: https://freedomnews.org.uk/2022/07/01/the-lunatics-are-back-in-town-bringing-mad-pride-back/ [21/02/2024].
[40] For example, see
the “theorisation of fat as queer” in
White (2012).
[41] Some uses of gender identity pronouns are included in this article to illustrate this phenomenon.
[42] “Neurogender”, Gender
Wiki. Available at: https://gender.fandom.com/wiki/Neurogender [10/02/2024].
[43] See also Plurality
Resource: Online education
center by & for Plurals, Multiples, Medians & Many More… Available at: https://pluralityresource.org/our-movement/ [03/02/2024].
[44] “A Definition of Plurality and Overview of the Community Individuality”. Available at: https://pluralityresource.org/plurality-information/ [22/02/2024].
[45] Ibid.
[46] Ibid.
[47] Available at: https://www.bacp.co.uk/media/18213/gpacp-001-gsrd-interim-update-2023.pdf [01/05/2024].
[48] See Sprinkle
and Stephens (2021) and Reed (2019). See also Annie Sprinkle and Beth Stephens: The Collaboration website. Available at: https://sprinklestephens.ucsc.edu/ [05/01/2024].
[49] The letter
E refers to “ecosexuals” (see Rappaport, 2017).
[50] “E.A.R.T.H. Lab Presents!” Available at: https://earthlab.ucsc.edu/ecosex-symposium/ [05/01/2024].
[51] See Whitworth (2019).
[52] The interviewee was referring to the experiment by James Lindsay, Helen Pluckrose
and Peter Boghossian, who “wrote 20 fake papers
using fashionable jargon to argue for ridiculous conclusions, and tried to get them placed in high-profile journals in fields including gender studies, queer studies, and fat studies”, achieving
a high success rate (Mounk, 2018).
[53] See, for example,
Zaino and Bell (2023).
[54] It is disappointing
that these publications, primarily by male authors,
do not acknowledge the feminist origins
or previous uses of the term.
[55] See, for example, Cranford and LeFrançois (2022) and Davies (2023).