{"id":6143,"date":"2011-06-21T09:00:10","date_gmt":"2011-06-21T08:00:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=6143"},"modified":"2011-06-21T09:00:10","modified_gmt":"2011-06-21T08:00:10","slug":"slutwalk-where-are-we","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/06\/21\/slutwalk-where-are-we\/","title":{"rendered":"SlutWalk: Where Are We?"},"content":{"rendered":"
I went to
SlutWalk<\/strong> on Saturday. It was a lovely thing; banners, posters,
chanting, brilliant footwear and some truly magnificent outfits all around
and about in the inspiring and fun atmosphere. I wore a tank top and
spray-on jeans and cooked to death, but the BadRep banner was proudly borne
aloft through the heat and the billions of photographs that were taken of
it, and I think I did us justice.<\/p>\n
Mostly, it was lovely to see so many people rallying to the cause of
(primarily, but not exclusively) women being able to wear what they want
in public without it being seen as consent to harassment and assault.
It’s true. Consent to sexual activity is divorced from anything
other than what we say. Nothing else consents for us.<\/p>\n
Later, we went clubbing, and on the way home on the tube, some men used me
as their paid-for amusement for the evening against my will.<\/p>\n
I was wearing this: <\/a><\/p>\n
So I stood out, yes. Get
in.<\/em> I looked the fucking
business<\/em>, people. We’d just been to a club whereby
anything went as far as costume went, and I’m a guy that will
jump at any opportunity to tart up. Thus, tarted up I was.<\/p>\n
I was hassled for photographs by some young men who only cursorily
asked whether they could get a picture of me before pawing me and
grabbing me and threatening me. But that’s fine, if awful
– I could deal with that. I’ve dealt with that before.
They were young and quite drunk, for what it’s worth, not that
it\u2019s an excuse.<\/p>\n
I clocked a group of people, some men and some attached women,
checking me out and talking amongst themselves further down the
carriage. As I watched, one of them – a young man,
approximately a few years older than me – stalked down towards
me, looking at my body as he went. He looked at my face, my jawline,
my throat, my chest, my waist and my hips. He continued past me, and
continued his observation of my body from behind. He said nothing,
and got out his phone and started fiddling with it.<\/p>\n
Intimidated, I moved to put my back to the wall of the carriage,
next to the door, and told him that if he wished to take my picture
as well, he could ask.<\/p>\n
He looked up. “Oh,” he said, “I didn’t want
to take your picture. It’s just that my mates have a bet on as
to whether you’re male or female.”<\/p>\n
It couldn’t have hurt me more suddenly or sharply if
he’d slapped me. He had been assessing my body to see whether
I was of the female-assigned-at-birth or male-assigned-category. I
bristled. “Firstly, I’m male,” I hissed,
“and secondly, I’m not a fucking
zoo<\/em> exhibit. I am actually quite offended.”<\/p>\n
“Hey, calm down,” he started, before my best friend
Mim stepped in to ask him, in my defence, what sort of entitled
arsehole he thought he was, and what gave him the right to use
me as his amusement? Would he put bets on whether someone was
gay or straight?<\/p>\n
“I just wanted to know what
she<\/em> was dressed as,” he said.<\/p>\n
Not only had I been gawped and ogled at like a caged animal,
he didn’t even take my own word for my own gender.
Apparently, his opinion based on his flawed assessment of my
physicality over-rode my own identity. I had my identity
casually erased before my eyes. Despite my protestations, I
wasn’t human to him. I wasn’t a person. I was a
freak, an indeterminate outsider, and therefore he found it
acceptable to treat me like subhuman filth.<\/p>\n
This may sound minor to some of you. He never touched me, he
never hit me, raped me, spat at me, threw a beer can at me
– none of the things he could have done. I got off
lightly. I’m still intact, aren’t I? No swabs,
police reports or bruises.<\/p>\n
But he’ll have got home and laughed with his friends
about how they hassled this weird girl on the tube who
thought she was a man and forget all about it. I
won’t. I’m not going to forget. Every time I
wonder if there’s a place for me in society,
it’ll be his face and words I remember. I’ll
remember how he looked at my body – the very thing I
fret about every morning to dress carefully around so that
people won’t see my tiny waist and curvy bottom and
think, “That’s a girl” – and how his
cissexist assessment of my shape nullified my
identity.<\/p>\n
We had a march that very morning about this, didn’t
we? Women marching, unified by their contempt for the
assumption that they are somehow to blame for their own
assault and victimisation. A Facebook event was made, and it
ballooned! We had a whole march! And do you remember the John Snow Pub gay kissing incident<\/a>
and all the clictivism that happened for that? Hundreds of
people kissed all over the pub in defence of those
kicked-out guys.<\/p>\n
And that’s
brilliant<\/em>. But where are we? Where is the mass
anger and outrage for the trans* people? It’s still
the Seventies for us in many respects. The internet-based
feminist communities are slowly but surely opening their
arms to us, but we’re still widely invisible. The beating of a trans woman in
Baltimore<\/a> earlier this year prompted the only bit of
mass internet activism concerning a trans* person I have
seen in years. We don’t get outraged marches or
supportive column-space in newspapers. We’re still
the circus freaks of popular culture, the strange deviant
unicorns that get exoticised or demonised by turns. Look at the media shitfest over the
gender-free baby Storm<\/a>. Look at how many publications misgender
Chaz Bono when they talk about him<\/a>. Would have that
entire carriage of silent passengers stood up in my
defence if it was overt racism being displayed instead of
transphobia? It’s just not taken as seriously,
at all<\/em>.<\/p>\n
I appreciate that there aren’t many of us. If
there was a march of trans* people in London tomorrow,
there’d be about three people there. 2010’s Brighton TransDOR<\/a>
was woefully under-attended, and the only cisgender
people there were friends and family – people
who were directly in contact with a trans* person.
We’re invisible. But we’re here. And as
the social atmosphere changes from hostility to
acceptance, more of us will have the courage to live
openly and come out.<\/p>\n
Bring that on, say I. And that all starts with basic
visibility and
people<\/em>
giving a shit<\/em>. So here I am, being as
visible as I can be (without blogging continually
about living trans* as there’s people that
do it better than me!) and I’m asking you to
start giving a shit about trans* people right now.
Please.<\/p>\n
Here are some of my favourite read-think
links:<\/p>\n
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