There
are very few occasions I have encountered vile angry hate speech in Manchester.
Last week was one of those occasions. I was invited out to a party on an open
invitation so I took my friend along. What was seemed like a lovely evening was
spoilt by some very nasty comments by a different friend who was angry with me the next
day. I will tell you why you see my first friend is transgender. A fact I neglected
to mention to my second friend who was most upset that I brought in someone she was
not used to seeing. So while my transgender friend is white and British, she
fails in another aspect of social respectability.
My
friend (the one who invited me) was angry because she could not understand why
a man would dress like a woman – clearly a disorder she says. She went on to
tell me her employers (the restaurant where we ate) would ‘think badly’ of her.
This lady said other nasty things about my transgender friend which I have no
intention of repeating. What struck me was how her hatred of my transgender
friend was not just based on her prejudices and ignorance but also on looking disreputable. My transgender friend found it strange that one should
think less of an LGBT person in Manchester of all places. My transphobic friend
went onto tell me she thinks everyone is equal and thinks everyone must be
respected equally ... wait for it she doesn't want to look like a nasty person.
I
have heard these words before 'I am not a (insert prejudice here )but ......'
'I don't want to look .......' I wish people would acknowledge their inner
prejudices rather than falsely reassure themselves of their neutrality. I also wish
people would acknowledge that these prejudices are their own and not acquired
for the sake of society (which is quite oblivious of them). In the wake of
Leelah Alcorn's death we should not use society as an excuse to justify our own
prejudices. In India where I come from I have heard this excuse being
made several times, for example parents force their children into taking
certain courses at university to look good in the eyes of society. This is the
same society that turns around and mocks them when their children go on to take
their lives. My transphobic friend did engage with this politic being a non-British white
person she would like to be accepted in British society but being heterosexual
and cisgender she wants to distance herself from another kind of minority.
However by making statements about another persons appearance and being
nasty about it she was not being very polite or well mannered (a perception she
wants others to have of her). The politics of respectability is a very
convenient one, it allows the perpetrator of any kind of prejudice to deny
their agency. For example is it okay to say I am rude to you as a woman
because society demands misogyny? If that statement seems ridiculous it is
meant to be, it is meant to show how ridiculous some of our prejudices seem
when we use the politics of respectability.
My
friend hid behind her nationality, job, heterosexuality and cisgenderness to
justify her prejudice and also her reaction. ‘How would that look to her
employers’ was my transgender friend’s comment on the issue. That is a question
that does need asking what will her employers think of her nasty reaction. Does
defending an invisible uncaring society make them love us more? Do we pass if
we point out the failings of another person? Twenty years ago it would have
been me who would have been attacked for being the wrong skin colour. It is a
fact I am always aware of, when I start passing in white society and my friends
don't I am wary of this easy acceptance. I am aware it could all turn against
me just as easily. I might be respectable as a cisgender woman of colour
when compared with a transgender woman but if the transgender person wasn’t
around I would be an outsider, this is not true equality. In another situation
those same characteristics have been used against me to show solidarity with my
transgender friend to include her into white respectable society. I have
heard similar arguments by different immigrant groups at different points of
their citizenship. Some pass the test by being good workers, some by becoming
more British, but always at the cost of outing another immigrant. My
acceptance into respectable society is not a real one it is only test in which
I have scored more respectable points than another person. I do not want to be
accepted by people who decide what is passes as based on whims. To gain the
approval of our oppressors does not make us any better than them, it only makes
us become like them. My transgender friend has a good analogy for this
situation – pulling up the ladder behind you she says. Unfortunately this is
all too true of the politics of respectability we pull ladders up when we reach
a certain stage in our lives.
I
will not apologise for my friend’s appearance (which is almost always
appreciated by those who meet her). I will not apologise for her not being
transgender enough as all these excuses pander to our oppressors. I
will not apologise for taking her out for dinner. I will not apologise for
being different.
1 comment:
Great Article Thanks Sonia
Post a Comment