Hello hello hello, time for the next essay in Transgender Marxism!

The PDF is here - https://transreads.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/2021-07-15_60f0b3d5edcb7_jules-joanne-gleeson-transgender-marxism-1.pdf

The intro discussion with links to all the essay discussions is here - https://lemmygrad.ml/post/395378

Feel free to join in on the discussion, I hope we all have a chance to learn something new together <3

Today’s essay is The Bridge Between Gender and Organising by Farah Thompson.

Farah Thompson is a Black, bisexual trans woman who lives in San Diego. She advocates for anti-imperialism, LGBT rights, decriminalisation of drug use and sex work, and self-determination of Black and colonized peoples. Her writing is found on longpaleroad.com

Edit: The discussion continues with an essay by JN Hoad here - https://lemmygrad.ml/post/424986

  • Seanchaí (she/her)OPM
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    22 years ago

    “Sometimes I hate myself for not adhering to the performance of what a woman is supposed to be. I find myself falling short of matching an ever-shifting ideal, whether that’s docile or hypercritical, because of a battle between my survival and what wider society allows.”

    • Seanchaí (she/her)OPM
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      22 years ago

      “I saw in real time how socialist organising gave people frameworks to care for others and advance their interests in a common struggle, from people striking against student debt and crowdfunding for basic/debt payoff, to online communities where sex workers detailed encounters with police who preyed on them in the name of ‘public good’”

      Despite the prevalence of online Marxists trying to decry “sex work” as some liberal white woman erasure of the victims of trafficking, it’s important to remember that the majority of Marxist feminists understand that sex work is the ultimate expression of capitalist appropriation of labour and reduction to bodies as a resource.

      Especially in queer and Black socialist theory, sex workers form an integral part of the proletariat, and have been at the forefront of radical and revolutionary struggles. As Marx said: sex work is “only a particular expression of the universal prostitution of the worker."

      • Seanchaí (she/her)OPM
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        22 years ago

        “As marginalised as I am, without people bringing together the totalising nature of class struggle into the streets and through media, I would have been even more isolated. Without class consciousness, my work would be much more limited.”

        • Seanchaí (she/her)OPM
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          22 years ago

          “While cis people like to parade around us, get some fashion tips and illicit pleasure from us, show support for us in the abstract, we are still treated like either dirty secrets or used to buttress their own egos.”

          “Angela Davis in Reflections on the Black Women’s Role in the Community of Slaves spoke of Black women being both gendered and depersonified to fulfil particular roles as ‘women’, but in a manner much different to white women. Their affirmation as ‘women’ was in service of extracting labour from them, for capital and white supremacy.”

          • Seanchaí (she/her)OPM
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            22 years ago

            “Trans women are often placed front and centre. In the media we’re represented as objects of prurient fascination, illicit transgression, or more often, vilification, and sometimes we’re even invited to do the work. But that is not the same as being seen as human. We serve some purpose which is not our own, proving a point about the experiences of those who do not share our experiences (the more reliably human). And then, we’re gone”

            • Seanchaí (she/her)OPM
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              22 years ago

              “Expressions that were once tolerated, even cherished, in some pre-colonial societies are now subject to debates about them being ‘Western influences’ by reactionaries”

              “The only way trans women can answer all these pressures is by force, force alongside other marginalised peoples, because force is all we are allowed to be defined by. Force from dominant actors sets the limits of our subjugated life. If every step we make forms craters anyway, why retreat? If we displace space and time, and a presumed peace, just by standing around, where can we really hide? In this shifting context, poverty and pathologisation become the only stable things, and from that ethereal ground, we blossom”

              • Seanchaí (she/her)OPM
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                22 years ago

                That line is so fucking stellar. “If every step we make forms craters anyway, why retreat?”

                • Seanchaí (she/her)OPM
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                  22 years ago

                  “As much as some may be repulsed by me using the canvas of force to help enact positive change, there are limits to eloquent words and gentle pleas. Not all our battles can be won through deflating conflicts, clearly worded reasoning, and reconciliation. Fascists respond to power more than they do other people being right”

                  • Seanchaí (she/her)OPM
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                    22 years ago

                    “The gun control laws and the minimal amount of welfare US citizens get today are responses to the power of the Black Panther Party organising alongside drug users, children, mothers, and perpetually unemployed people in Watts and beyond, who mobilised people that orthodox communist parties in the US dismissed.”