đŸ Archived View for library.inu.red âș file âș amrschwarzenbach-radicalgenderabolition-1.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 07:31:50. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
âĄïž Next capture (2024-06-20)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Radical Gender Abolition Anti-manifesto Author: AMR Schwarzenbach Language: en Topics: gender abolition, gender nihilism, feminism, gender theory Notes: Response to: The Gender Nihilist Manifesto by Alyson Eschalante
Radical Gender Abolition Anti-manifesto
This is a call to action against politically impotent attempts at
characterizing, deconstructing and abolishing gender. This is a radical
feminist response to the blatant mischaracterization of our position,
the smear campaigns to paint us as reactionary and dated. This is a
vindication of womenâs anger at the systemic marginalization of our
voices. We are the class of people that foremost faces and knows the
violence of gender.
The Gender Nihilist manifesto recognizes correctly that there can be no
positive architecture of gender politics; to legitimize gender or to
create a thousand genders does nothing but produce new avenues for power
to permeate. It does not, as intended, create a platform for
emancipation or liberation. The Gender Nihilist Manifesto also correctly
upholds a politics of weaponised, radical negativity; we may never know
what comes after but we do know that we want gender gone. So what is our
contention? I will attempt to lay out how our position and even our
claim to feminism has been repeatedly vilified.
To set aside some grounds for misinterpretations, I will not argue that
sex is pre-discursive, but I will argue that tendency of queer politics
to moralize all discursively produced categories (such as biological
sex), needs to be challenged.
Butlerian assertion that subversive gender performance can reconfigure
the power structures of gender in the object world hardly makes sense.
To keep posing and reposing the question âWhat is a woman?â until the
signifier âwomanâ is completely resignified, or until it loses all its
content and is watered down to âanyone who identifies as suchâ, does
nothing to change the disciplinary or corporeal damnation that our
bodies continually endure by gender produced by male supremacist
discourse. Furthermore, the deliberate resignification of âwomanâ is a
hermeneutical, epistemic injustice being dealt upon billions of people
whose vocabularies suddenly lose their intended significations. It has
become obvious to radical feminists that this cannot be the path to
gender abolition.
Besides, non-conventional (or non-dominant) gender performances arenât
potent enough to base a political project on, for they arenât acts of
resistance and may indeed consolidate with the gender power structure.
These non-dominant performances of gender, through resignification, may
just as easily displace gender norms (to become new norms). Drag, for
example, may have started off as a mode for male gender non-conformity,
but has increasingly become a kind of mockery of the cage of femininity
that patriarchy places female bodies in. Point being that subversive
gender performance is at best a site of ambivalence-of possible
resistance to or further consolidation of power. One cannot wager their
entire politics on ambivalence. Thus, radical feminist rejects any
politics that centres its project on performance (in the Butlerian
triple sense meaning to âactâ, âembodyâ and âcite some significationâ).
Radical feminism knows that the words man and woman have connotations of
gender (performance and norms) and attached heterosexuality. For
example, historically, woman has meant- Sex: female, gender: feminine,
sexuality: heterosexual. What do we intend to do with this? We want to
rescue the signification of sex in relation to the signifiers man or
woman, while shedding the significations of gender and sexuality, not
because we necessarily believe in a pre-discursive sex, but because we
see the utility in the category of (medically defined) sex when it is
divorced from its gendered implications.
The Gender Nihilist Manifesto says âSexâŠis given an authority through
medicineâŠwe decry this violenceâ. This is the moralizing that I brought
up initially. It is not violent to describe anatomical differences and
recognition of these differences does not outcry a hierarchy. Radical
feminists use sex as a descriptor to signify corporeal reality, but do
not support the violent prescriptive application of the category of sex
to bodies who do not fit these descriptions (we vehemently oppose the
genital mutilation and loss of bodily integrity of those born intersex).
Descriptions donât always transform into prescriptive imposition;
discursively produced categories of sex and sexuality arenât inherently
oppressive and can be transformed into neutral descriptions of material
reality. Further, it is imperative to recognize anatomical differences
within medicine so that a differential treatment can be afforded
according to oneâs needs to procure equitable quality of life for
everyone. When medicine has discounted sex, women have suffered and died
(for example we do not currently know the effect of most drugs on the
female body). Sometimes, as in this case, the abolition of all
boundaries linguistically and medically, constitutes a violent injustice
for historically marginalized groups, in this case, women.
The radical feminist, now popularly derided as âTERFâ, is said to be
reactionary. To what qualification has such a heavy and offensive title
been awarded? Gender critical theory is but the belief that gender is a
tool of oppression to subordinate women, and that gender has no
ontological existence. The Gender Nihilist manifesto also comes to the
latter conclusion. Our political project seeks to abolish the power
structures of patriarchy and male supremacy that have produced the
category of gender. Following this train of thought, we conclude that
gender is a power structure and cannot be transcended by individuals
identifying in-and-out of it or by inventing new gender categories. We
do not contend the existence of transgender people, we contend the
possibility of such a trans identity in the framework of
gender-as-coercion, and we contend the political potency of
trans-identification. Since one cannot ontologically be a man or a
woman, one can only be a man or a woman (and intersex) in accordance
with their anatomical referent. There is nothing coercive or oppressive
about affording signifiers to anatomy and anatomical differences.
Radical feminists condemn the systemic attempt to erase the categories
of sex and sexualities because with this linguistic erasure goes the
possibility to account for our experiences within these categories.
After all, there is nothing beyond language. We believe that the erasure
of these categories is exponentially more oppressive than the existence
of these categories. We believe these categories are being resignified
not through discourse but deliberately through political power.
Significations organically evolve throughout history but a deliberate
reconfiguration of these significations often sets a dangerous political
precedent of unintended consequences.
Further, our experiences as homosexuals have been lost in the queer
discourse. It has been implied, and perhaps even stated explicitly, that
same-sex attraction is exclusionary. Okay. We concede, our experiences
and affections are exclusionary. Does this exclusion then imply a
marginalization and oppression of those we exclude? No. The personal is
political. The attempt of queer politics to breakdown the personal
sexual boundaries, is thus political. At this stage in political
discourse, it has become important to state that We are homosexuals. We
are bisexuals. We are not queer. We reject the nebulous, and by extent,
reactionary politics associated with âqueerâ. Our sexualities are not up
for scrutiny even if though they may be discursively produced. We will
not âre-examineâ our orientations for your failing attempts at gender
abolition. We know that the road to gender abolition lies in the radical
reconfiguration and subsequent destruction of the gender caste
structure. One cannot transcend caste individually. One can only abolish
the caste structure collectively.
We are women, not because our gender identity is woman, but because we
belong to the historic caste of those whose reproductive abilities and
anatomy have been appropriated. We reject gender, its associated
identities, norms, socializations and its disciplining of our bodies and
colonization of our minds.
We are homosexuals, not because we identify as gay, but because we have
a sexual affiliation to members of the same sex as us. We reject the
stereotypes and norms, including the new norms of queer politics, that
attempt to relegate us into a life that is opposed to our desires.
Overall, as radical feminists, as women, and as homosexuals, we reject
the constant signification and resignification of our vocabulary, and
subsequently, our boundaries done without our consultation. We know who
we are, and our political projects of liberation, whatever that may look
like, will not be dismantled by those who attempt to decentre us from
our own movements. We are not âcisâ or âqueerâ. We are women, and we are
homosexual. We will resist any and all attempts to take our definitions
and boundaries away from us.
QUEER POLITICS HAS CONSOLIDATED WITH THE CAPITALIST STATE MACHINE. THUS,
WE REJECT IT.