(very long) history of the relationship between queerness and medical science
@ghost_bird yes, so it’s a bit complicated! in the 18th and 19th century, a major goal of science was essentially, like you say, positioning white people (and particularly white men) as “most/highest evolved”, in order to justify their continued colonialism of other peoples and lands; consequently, it was necessary to figure other bodies as lacking or less‐developed in various ways.
HOWEVER, with respect to gender and sexuality in particular, this required a denial of sorts, since scientists of this time included the gender binary as a marker of being “well‐evolved”. this resulted in a fundamental assumption that any gender variance within white people was a result of degeneracy “from the outside” and not endemic to white people themselves. so you would have queerness frequently being racialized as other, and consequently outside of the scope of white medicine.
this didn’t REALLY start to change until around the turn of the 20th century, when scientists started refiguring queerness in terms of mental illness, and importantly, a mental illness which it might be possible to “cure”—the white queer no longer was someone outside the scope of white medicine, but rather someone who it might be possible to “recondition” for participation in productive white society. AT THIS TIME, gender and sexuality were still largely conflated, and one theory was that homosexuality was the result of a sexual “inversion”, which we might think of as transness.
gender and sexuality wouldn’t really be split in a medical sense for another half‐century, when white gay men… basically threw trans people under the bus by saying “sexuality is a personal choice unrelated to gender; we are perfectly capable of upholding normative masculine gender norms and being a part of productive (white) male society”. by splitting up gender and sexuality, white gay men were able to align themselves with the white cis male norm and code themselves as productive and healthy (unlike transsexuals, who were still pathologized/Other). this culminated in homosexuality being removed from, for example, the DSM, in the 70s.
so this is why “mid twentieth century” is the date cited here. prior to that point, gender and sexuality were not distinct concepts, and they were only recently considered within the scope of white medicine AT ALL. but that all derives from the same notions of medicine you discuss as happening in centuries prior.
as for my initial critique, many of these changes (the splitting of gender and sexuality; the splitting of gender and sex—these are two VERY DIFFERENT models of gender btw) were the direct result of agitations BY AND WITHIN gay male (in the former case) or feminist (in the latter case) theorists/activists/people. so treating them as independent inventions of science feels, to me, to be disguising their real roots.
(for more on this subject, I would recommend the book “Imagining Transgender” by David Valentine.)
@astraluma the unfortunate truth of art is that anyone can get good at it if they put in enough time, even bigots
@ghost_bird the idea that gender has always been defined in reference to some abled norm is one i find a little troublesome. certainly that was the impetus for its inclusion in medicine, but that inclusion follows upon, rather than generates, the split between gender and sex which was already happening in feminist circles (starting with The Second Sex in 1949; “gender identity” was not coined until 1964). THAT split was politically motivated, aimed not at trans people at all, but rather at understanding how “womanhood” came to be constructed as an oppressed class (and how it might be constructed differently): if the woman/man binary is not equivalent to the female/male binary, then we can more easily imagine a world free of woman/man, even as biology constrains us to female/male (the latter has since been problematized).
so while the article accuses those who paint gender as nonpathological of being ahistoric, i return those claims: by positing gender as an normalizing invention on the part of medical professionals, it ahistorically erases its more radical and political roots.
@ghost_bird Right to Maim is definitely thought-provoking; in particular Puar talks about how trans bodies are explicitly excluded from disability accommodations in the Americans with Disabilities Act (if I remember right, as a compromise for covering AIDS), and she introduces a concept of “piecing” as a neoliberal alternative to “passing” (where “proper” trans bodies are those who are able to correctly piece together identities through their purchasing decisions in a neoliberal market)
@ghost_bird if this topic interests you, you should read “The Right To Maim” by Jasbir Puar, or maybe just my “Fuck Pride | Folks Died | 2019” here: https://www.u2764.com/NFIC/2019-06-24/pride19/ (activate Reader View if you find this difficult to read)
♪ When the mouth is kept hidden,
The mask shows the truth :—
OBEY and CONSUME
—: But here in the booth,
We peer deep in the cracks:
Break through the Surface
And get to the facts. ♪
@monorail i think the reason why it seems that way is that there isn’t much in the way of visual cues in terms of how long your limbs actually are (presumably long)
so the brain is like “oh these are short and tapering rapidly” instead of the correct “these are long and covering a large distance”
which is a perpetual problem of 2D art in general lol. the only real visual cue you have for lines of perspective in this case are like, the difference in angle between the top and bottom of the house
my perpetual issue is that i am very much NOT a portland anarchist type but i actually DO seem to perpetually find myself in spaces adjacent to portland anarchist types
@Satsuma Avenue Beat and their recently‐released ‘the debut farewell album’
@monorail always good
it’s hard when you’re really tall though
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