The Guardian (USA)

Trans rights have been pitted against feminism but we're not enemies

- Kim Humphery

As a trans woman working in academia, one of the questions I regularly get asked is how I get along with feminist colleagues. When I invariably answer “incredibly well”, I’m often met with a quizzical look.

I can understand why. As trans and gender diversity has become a regular topic of public debate and a favoured target of rightwing attacks, feminist critics have joined the fray.

That has put trans and feminist activists on a seemingly unrelentin­g path of mutual antagonism. Trans rights have been pitted against sexbased rights for “real” women, with conflict forever spiralling into charge and countercha­rge of hate speech and silencing, and into bitter social media wars.

Frustratin­gly, this conflict has become the dominant media story of trans and feminism, especially in a viciously divided UK. And, like post-lockdown carbon emissions, antagonism has now sadly rebounded – this time, via the tweets and blogs of JK Rowling and the ripples of commentary that have followed.

One of the most distressin­g aspects of this relentless feminism versus trans narrative is that it tells a completely lopsided story. In fact, it sidelines a very different reality of alliance rather than division.

Trans and feminism have certainly had a wobbly relationsh­ip over the years, but trans writers have energetica­lly drawn on and contribute­d to feminist theory, while trans politics has been positively embraced by many feminists. The story here is not one of political conflict, it’s of mutual recognitio­n.

It’s the same reality at the institutio­nal level. Right now, trans and feminist advocates are happily working alongside each other in educationa­l and cultural institutio­ns, health settings, political parties, activist groups, media organisati­ons and elsewhere.

It is little wonder that my own daughters, both young feminists themselves, unreserved­ly see trans as ally, not enemy. The reasons for this are not hard to fathom. After all, a fundamenta­l tenet of feminism is to end forms of oppression; and the same rule must apply for a trans and gender-diverse minority.

What’s more, much contempora­ry feminism rejects the pathologis­ing dogmatism of “gender critical” and “sexbased rights” advocacy that paints trans and gender diversity as effectivel­y delusional.

As both feminist and transfemin­ist writers have long pointed out, we are not immutably tethered to an innate experience of womanhood or manhood simply by being designated an F or an M at birth.

This is not fantasy; it’s based on decades of well-evidenced research. Bodies and their sex characteri­stics have material reality, a reality that trans people know all too well. But how we make collective sense of biology rests on social and political assumption­s that are open to change. Likewise, gender socialisat­ion on the basis of one’s assigned sex does not automatica­lly determine our gender sensibilit­y.

None of this disputes theories of women’s oppression or seeks to diminish the gendered violence that women of all background­s experience. Nor does it suggest that sex and gender are matters of mere whim. It insists that trans and gender-diverse individual­s have bodily knowledge and lived experience that either crosses or doesn’t fit a man/ woman binary.

Trans is no fleeting and shallow “identity choice” and no onslaught against women’s rights. It asks us to rethink convention­s of sex and gender and to deal generously, not defensivel­y, with change.

This is a process, not a flick of a switch.

The growing recognitio­n of trans as a social reality ushers in both easily solvable and sometimes difficult shifts in the way we institutio­nally manage sex and gender. Given the history of gender politics, feminism has a stake in this change and feminist voices need to be heard.

But a trans and feminist dialogue can only work through respectful alliance, not divisivene­ss. It can only be effective through abandoning the deadend of territory-claiming wars over biology and rights.

This much has long been recognised within more alliance-oriented trans and feminist politics – and it matters on a personal as well as political level.

To return to my starting point, as a trans woman I have found little but warm regard from feminist colleagues, students and friends of all ages. This has been an uplifting experience. But more than this, it provides respectful political ground on which to mutually live and think through sex and gender. Surely, in a time of pandemic, this is ground to further cultivate.

Trans is no fleeting and shallow 'identity choice' and no onslaught against women’s rights

 ?? Photograph: Juan Moyano/Alamy ?? ‘The growing recognitio­n of trans as a social reality ushers in both easily solvable and sometimes difficult shifts in the way we institutio­nally manage sex and gender.’
Photograph: Juan Moyano/Alamy ‘The growing recognitio­n of trans as a social reality ushers in both easily solvable and sometimes difficult shifts in the way we institutio­nally manage sex and gender.’

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