What is Woman? What is Man?
I made the mistake of getting into an MWMF discussion and used up most of my rhetoric for the day. I was also thinking about the discussion from yesterday’s post, when DaisyDeadhead asked
A lot of that is just nonsense, though… what are “real women”? A William Faulkner character made it clear that post-menopausal women like myself were not “real women” either. I can no longer menstruate or reproduce, which BTW, doesn’t bother me at all. But seriously, that is obviously what the character was thinking, yes? Lots of people have historically taken that view. Faulkner gave the character this attitude to illustrate that he was backward. Like the stuff Jennifer Roberts is saying here.
Until these terms are fully defined, as far as I am concerned, they are totally subjective and don’t mean shit.
And they won’t be… if you are going to start issuing orders like: must have uterus, must menstruate, blabbity blah, well, someone assigned female at birth and is as XX as the dickens, will STILL fall outside of your definition. As a child, I lived next to a girl born without a uterus. Poor girl, her mother told everyone and the neighborhood gossiped about her and how she would never have babies. But, it would never have occurred to ANYONE that she was not a girl. In fact, she was pretty girlie, which made it all the more “tragic” to the busybodies…
So, is it supposed to be the presence of uteruses (uteri?) or what?
I’ve been thinking about it, because, you know, transition from one side to the other, I should know definitively what “woman” is, right? Well, I don’t. I mean, I don’t have an easy answer. I know I’m a woman, just as any woman does. There’s no part of me that thinks “am I other than a woman?” and such thoughts are just nonsensical to me, like random passersby who tell me I should try being a man. They may as well shout “Banana orange rutabaga toothpaste!” for all the weird moon language they’re spouting at me.
I know someone may call this essentialist, but at this stage, I really don’t care. I’m talking about my self-awareness, not my politics.
But seriously, when I think of “woman,” I can’t distill the concept down to breasts, or vagina, or womb, or any part of the anatomy, even though those are parts of a woman’s anatomy. That reduces womanhood to, well, breasts, vagina, or womb. Even if I use all three, plus the ovaries, and name everything from the clitoris to the cervix, I’m not going to define womanhood, but I will get a hell of a lot more porn searches hitting my blog. I can’t define it as XX chromosomes. It’s bad enough to define womanhood on the basis of physical traits like breasts, but no one can see chromosomes. Plus, you have things like Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome and transsexualism messing that up by giving us perfectly good XY women. Never mind chimera, who might have different genes in different organs. A woman’s liver might be XY, or heck, even her uterus.
I guess we could define “woman” by who can have babies (and thus, who menstruates when she’s not having babies). One radical feminist defined women as “the tribe that bleeds.” This fails because not all women can have babies. Yes, a healthy cissexual woman will be able to carry a baby, but if we can’t really define a woman by having a womb, then we can’t define her by the ability to give birth. We can say that the majority of women can, but those who can’t remain women. Menstruation may be a bit tougher, because it’s often described as a “rite of passage” into womanhood. But, this goes back to defining a woman as having a womb, rather than as [i]very likely[/i] to have a womb. We still have women who do not menstruate, who are still women. If a woman can’t be defined by her body parts, she can’t be defined by the function of those body parts.
Julia Serano says on page 239-240 of Whipping Girl:
Another popular excuse for our exclusion is the fact that some trans women have male genitals (as many of us either cannot afford or choose not to have sex reassignment surgery). This “penis” argument not only objectifies trans women by reducing us to our genitals, but propagates the male myth that men’s power and domination somehow arise from the phallus. The truth is, our penises are flesh and blood, nothing more. And the very idea that the femaleness of my mind, personality, lived experiences, and the rest of my body can be somehow trumped by the mere presence of a penis can only be described as phallocentric.
It’s distressing that such phallocentric arguments, along with related arguments that harp on the idea that trans women “physically resemble” or “look like” men in other ways are so regularly made by lesbian-feminists, considering that they are based in the society-wide privileging of male attributes over female ones. In what is now considered classic research, sociologists Suzanne Kessler and Wendy McKenna showed that in our culture, when people (both women and men) gender others, we tend to weigh male visual cues as more significant than female ones, and almost invariably consider the penis as being the single most important gender cue of all (i.e., its presence trumps all other gender cues; the presence of a vagina does not elicit a similar effect). In their words,”There seem to be no cues that are definitely female, while there are many that are definitely male. To be male is to ‘have’ something and to be female is to ‘not have’ it.” Kessler and McKenna view this privileging of male cues as resulting from male-centrism (similar to how people often favor using the pronoun “he” when speaking generically). Taking this into account, it becomes rather obvious that when cissexual women deny trans women the right to participate in women-only spaces because of their own tendency to privilege any “mannish” or “masculine” traits we may have over our many female attributes, they are fostering and promoting male-centrism.”
So we gender people by whether we see masculine traits, but this doesn’t define us as men or women. We can gender men as women or women as men for any number of reasons. Women can have visibly masculine features and men can have visibly feminine features, so perception cannot define whether the person we’re looking at is a man or a woman.
So I’m kind of stuck. I can’t define woman in a way that won’t trip me up. I could try to define man, and then pretend everything not-man is woman, but that would be stupid. Not everyone who isn’t a man identifies as a woman, even though people might subconsciously gender them as women. And, I’m stuck defining man, which I find is problematic as well. If I can’t really reduce womanhood to the vagina, or the breasts, I sure as hell can’t reduce manhood to the penis. Based on what I said about XX not being a firm definition for women, I’m stuck with not defining men as having XY chromosomes. I mean, sure, you can expect men to have those, but trans men will have XX, and you can have guys running around with XXY as well.
I think the problem is that man and woman are culturally and biologically axiomatic, and proving axioms is a pain in the ass. I also believe that gender is social - It’s not just who you are, but how you’re treated. Men are treated as men, reinforcing the man thing. Women are treated as women, reinforcing the woman thing. Trans people experience both sides of this - we grow up being treated one way, transition, and are treated the other. So, gender is something you are, but your perceived gender is how people treat you, for lack of a better phrase. To borrow one of the radical feminists’ favorite offensive stereotypes, for example, one way in which trans women show our inherent and ineradicable male privilege is by “taking up a lot of social space.” That is, we talk over other women, dominate social settings, and try to be the center of attention.
This has two elements. The first is that the man doing it has internalized that it’s okay to do this, and so he does it. The second thing is women have internalized that it’s expected* for men to do this, and let him do it. In other words, for this trick to work, everyone participates. Now, in my experience, I find that around women, no one really dominates the conversation like that. I don’t. When we talk over each other, we stop, apologize, and one of us keeps talking. We acknowledge when this happens. I’m not generalizing that all women do this, I’m just saying this is how the dynamic works when I’ve been with women and no men. When men are around, they just talk over you and when you say “Dude, wtf? I was talking,” he didn’t even realize you were still talking.
Of course, the thing is, before transition, I wasn’t the “talk over women” person. I didn’t operate that way, I didn’t have the expectation that this was the way I should deal with people, and I didn’t do it. It wasn’t a conscious thing, it’s just not what I did. Boys didn’t try to talk over me the way they would someone they saw as a girl, and I didn’t really talk over girls - if I and a girl started talking at the same time, we’d apologize and one of us would continue.
But, I’m back where I started: What the heck definitively lays out “this is a woman,” and “this is a man?” I don’t think it’s really that easy to get there from here. I don’t have a short answer, not one that encompasses all women and all men. One that accounts for the variety of men and women, including intersexed and trans people who identify as men or women but are not anatomically exactly male and female. I definitely don’t have an answer that accounts for two-spirits, genderqueers, transgender people who do not identify as strictly male or strictly female, or for those on the transfeminine or transmasculine spectrum.
I’m sure many people reading this will say “what are you smoking? I know I’m a (wo)man,” and I’ll just point back up to where I admit I know I’m a woman, and I expect most people know what their gender is, even if they don’t really think about it. I’m not talking about whether you “feel like a man” or “feel like a woman,” although people are certainly welcome to feel that way if they want. I’m not here to judge.
I know I’m a woman, I’ve known all my life - well, I knew I was a girl at a young age. I wasn’t socially seen as one, and that can really be frustrating and even traumatic, but I’m talking about what I knew about myself, not what people saw when they looked at me (although lots of people who saw me before puberty thought I was a girl, so nyah). If I trust my own self-knowledge, I guess it’s fair to trust everyone else’s self-knowledge. It’d be fair of them to trust mine, assuming they trust their own.
I realize that Daisy reached this conclusion in about 1500 fewer words.
What do you think?
*I don’t know many women who think it’s okay - it’s bloody annoying
November 8, 2007 at 8:37 pm
Yknow, the funny thing to me, Lisa, is I have no freaking *idea* what a woman is. I thought feminism would make that clear for me, and for a while it seemed like it did — I was swept up in this sisterhood thing and felt for a while that I’d finally discovered my womanhood and things made sense.
When it all collapsed, I realized I still have no idea whether I’m a “real” woman or not, unless “woman” is taken to be a sloppy synonym for “female” — which it actually isn’t, unless we want to get into that icky essentialism stuff that says trans women aren’t women (and many other people aren’t either depending on how we draw the line.)
So I feel kind of like I’m wearing too many layers on a hot day — “female” which is the nice short-sleeved shirt it makes sense to have on, and this “woman” thing, which is another layer that makes me wonder.
I really don’t know. I’ve never felt like I really understood what woman is. I’ve fought to be called it, just because in some people’s minds it seems that I either count as woman or count as some sort of weird “it”, and I’d rather be woman than alien. But that’s about as far as it goes. De-gendering me is dehumanizing me, and I’m fairly sure I’m not “man” (though I sometimes have wondered if I might be), so “woman” it is, by process of elimination…
…it must be interesting to be sure you are one and have this be obvious *laugh*
November 8, 2007 at 8:41 pm
interestingly though i never had problems with “girl.” so for me it may be primarily something about the role expected of adult women. i don’t know. i’ve never quite disentangled the messy snarl in my head.
but anyway, i am making this all about me and i shouldn’t be doing that and have already talked too much *shuts the fuck up*
November 8, 2007 at 9:44 pm
I don’t have any idea how you can talk about what women are without making it about you. All we have are our own experiences.You have a good point about ungendering that I should have made when I joked about just defining men and leaving the rest for women, which is something I think may be actually true when it comes to perceptions.
Also, I can clearly say that I am a woman, I can’t describe what that means. I mean, I know who I am.
I’d also argue that “male” and “female” aren’t really hard and fast categories, that trans women are largely female, and trans men are largely male. I think hormones make a really big difference - they change how you smell, your skin, your hair, your body shape, they affect your brain.
November 8, 2007 at 10:19 pm
I personally don’t care what people use to define “real man,” “real woman,” or whatever — so long as they respect what I’ve chosen to do with my life…
November 8, 2007 at 10:52 pm
I agree, really. That was kind of my roundabout point. :) I was more trying to deconstruct the idea of defining “real man” or “real woman” than anything else.
November 8, 2007 at 11:17 pm
“Also, I can clearly say that I am a woman, I can’t describe what that means. I mean, I know who I am.”
I hope it doesn’t sound like I was disputing this — I totally wasn’t. I’m just saying that for me, there’s a whole lot of “what’s all this, and how does it apply to ME?”
I sometimes wonder if for some of these radfems who are simultaneously very adamant that they never defined themselves as “woman” and that’s all an evil society’s doing AND absolutely graspy about defining who gets to BE a woman, some of the motivation is unsureness about what “woman” means too. “How does that person I define as MALE know she’s a woman, where I feel like patriarchy MADE ME a second-class thing, and that’s how I’m a woman?”
I don’t know that to be a fact, but it’s interesting how they can only define it as shared oppression, shared things that happen TO them all (well, supposedly them all — many of these sort aren’t big on intersectionality and so universalize grossly.)
November 8, 2007 at 11:18 pm
“I’d also argue that “male” and “female” aren’t really hard and fast categories, that trans women are largely female, and trans men are largely male. I think hormones make a really big difference - they change how you smell, your skin, your hair, your body shape, they affect your brain.”
That’s a really, really good point.
November 8, 2007 at 11:27 pm
You didn’t sound like you were disputing that, I was just saying “being certain that you are a woman doesn’t really grant special insight,” which is to say that I was agreeing with you from a different perspective.
Anyway, I also agree that they don’t care about intersectionality, and usually deny it exists. I’ve seen a radical feminist tell a woman of color that a particular problem - involuntary hysterectomies for women of color - was a racial problem, not a feminist problem.
As for that “How can they know they’re women when the patriarchy made me a second-class thing, and that’s how I know I’m a woman” argument, I’ve seen it made on the MichFest forum, on the Ms. Magazine forum, on a Particular Yet Nameless blog, and a few other places.
November 9, 2007 at 4:13 am
I keep feeling haunted by this sense that having to define “woman” in the context of a transphobic society and transphobic feminism is somehow like that question of what “causes” people to be gay.
I feel like that gay question is already set up so we can’t be fully human to start with since the question itself positions us as deviants needing explanation. And then there are all these allies who feel like they are doing us a favor because they assert “they are born that way!” and for me it’s like ***STFU*** okay? Because the question/topic itself is so loaded with bias against our full humanity to begin with that there is no way to really talk about it and be fully ok,. Because even the supposedly better answer reproduces homophobia.
I don’t know why exactly I feel that issue as related, it could just be me not getting what is going on, and certainly it feels totally vague to me — like “this feels so familiar but I can’t quite see why”
Anyway, here’s me being vague.
November 9, 2007 at 4:22 am
Well, I don’t think there is any reason we should try to nail down “woman” or “man,” at all, and I tried to run away from doing that in this post. My main point is that we just need to trust people when they tell us who they are.
I do get what you’re saying - trying to nail things down so thoroughly doesn’t help. Arguing “it’s not a choice” or “we’re born that way” doesn’t really help, because it implies that you need to prove something to validate your personhood.
November 9, 2007 at 6:22 am
“My main point is that we just need to trust people when they tell us who they are.”
yes. sometime i really think we need less ANALYSIS and more TRUST.
November 9, 2007 at 6:42 am
A woman or a man is someone who identifies as a woman or a man resp. I don’t see anything problematic with these classifications.
However, I don’t really know much about people who don’t identify as either and how they feel, so I can’t really say anything about people who fall out of the binary.
November 9, 2007 at 10:19 am
I spent about 1800 words saying that!
Darnit, I wasted my time. ;)
November 9, 2007 at 11:32 am
I am renowned for my powers of brevity. :)
November 9, 2007 at 6:27 pm
If being a “real woman” is the shared experience of being oppressed by the patriarchy, then what type of woman is it who is oppressed by the patriarchy AND the matriarchy: a woman of colour? A poor woman? An immigrant? A t-woman? A woman who doesn’t immediately fit gender norms? PCOS women?
I personally think that gender identity seems to be the only consistant (I hate to use this word) scientific standard - it is the one intersex and DSD use, it is the one doctor’s around the world use for a host of sexual identity issues. Because as you point out, XY women aren’t that uncommon, nor are XX men, XXY men and women. And even in what we would consider “average” medical population you can have, just in variation, a woman with more androgene in her than the man standing next to her. But they both seem to know who they are and how they wish to be (and have been) seen in society.
Maybe that is the second aspect beyond, gender identity, which is how does a person wish to be seen in that society (which doesn’t mean adopting stereotypes); but let’s face it, if facial hair was any indication of masculinity, there would be VERY few women around (and non of certain ethnic groupings). There was a good article in curve a few months back about “My girlfriend and her beard” - which, as you pointed out with the uterus, takes another of the “Gender markers” and shows that really, many women have to constantly try to maintain their place within that boundry in one form or another.
November 11, 2007 at 1:19 am
Hi, Elizabeth - sorry I didn’t respond sooner.
I wish I’d thought to talk about “how does a person wish to be seen,” because that’s where a lot of women complain about cisgender (well, that and those who hate terminology that puts them on equal terms with transgender) - that they don’t feel gender normative, but they’re not transgender, and feel that the two labels create a binary opposition with no room for anything else.
So, you have butch lesbians, who are women and see themselves as women, but like to present as masculine as possible - and many are taken to be men. But they do not identify as transgender, and some say they are not comfortable with cisgender, either. That’s in addition to people who may not identify as transgender but do identify as genderqueer and other variations.
Thanks. :)
May 5, 2008 at 2:40 am
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