FULL DISCLOSURE: I have a degree, and a Master’s, and am
studying for another Master’s. My first degrees were in English Language and
Literature, and my second MA will be in International Politics and Human
Rights. I am – literally – qualified to understand terms such as cis and
intersectionality. I acknowledge that. I have read Kimberle Crenshaw’s
excellent work, and I am a long-time lurker and very, very occasional commenter
on Shakesville, which is where I first saw the term, ‘cisgender’. Now, given my
academic background and general nerdish passion for language, it is perhaps
understandable that when I saw these terms I got intruiged, then excited, then
educated. That’s my reaction and I fully understand that is not everyone’s
reaction. Learning new terminology is not fun or even easy for everyone, and I
can understand someone saying, basically, ‘I don’t want to have had to gone to
University to understand someone’s argument’.
I get that.
But here’s the thing – I promise you you don’t have had to. The way I have
explained the two concepts up in that first paragraph there? I am fairly
confident that pretty much anyone who doesn’t have a cognitive learning
disorder or bad faith would understand what they mean. Some of the more
academic articles on intersectionality will indeed be difficult to understand –
that is because they are academic articles. That’s fine, they should be complex
and challenging. Some of them will be easier to understand because they have
been written more in the style of a blog post, or a newspaper column. That’s
fine too. The conversation isn’t finite or monolithic, and it shouldn’t have to be. Because
basically, what does this all come down to in the end but respect for what
people are telling you about their lived lives?
Here’s the first thing I think about all this, and I’ve made
much the same argument before in these pages. If you are white, and a person of
colour says to you, ‘you know, that thing you said – it’s kinda racist’; or if
you are straight, and a gay person says to you, ‘that was a little bit
homophobic’, or any other example of this kind, basically you have two
available reactions. You can be all, I AM SO VERY OFFENDED I CANNOT BELIEVE
YOU’VE CALLED ME [insert insult here]. Or you can say, my god, I am really
sorry, I will really have to think about that and try to make sure I don’t say
or do anything like that again.
And you know, if you want to use the first reaction, I get
that. I’ve done that. You might very well feel a bit hard done by and
defensive - no-one likes being called out, it makes you feel shitty. But you
know what? The ONLY FUCKING ACCEPTABLE OPTION is the second reaction. Even if
you really, genuinely feel like the person is wrong and you have never ever in
your whole perfect-ally life done or said anything that might be slightly
morally dubious. Because the thing is that every time this has happened to me
and instead of automatically replying with an indignant retort I have actually
gone away and done a little bit of actual thinking,
whaddya know, turns out I have said or done something fucking wrong. Admitting
you might be wrong, for most people, myself included, is really hard. Saying sorry
is hard. We humans, we are not very good at this kind of deal, most of us, and
that’s ok – but it’s not an excuse not to stop trying to be better. Being a
good ally doesn’t magically occur overnight, like any decent relationship it is
worth some time and effort.
And here’s the second thing I think: I just do not believe that using the terms ‘intersectionality’, ‘cis’,
‘privilege’, ‘WoC’, ‘non-binary’, ‘trans’ and so on excludes me from the
feminist discourse. I don’t think this excludes anyone. These are not words that have been invented just so that Twitter
users can call other people out (and yes of COURSE there will be some of that,
and some of it will be bloody well deserved), they have been invented because
language is so fucking exclusionary of anyone
not in the ‘normal’ binary that we need these words. And some of the
people who label themselves with these words really fucking desperately need us to use them, way more than straight white feminists
like me need to cling on to some fixed terminology because otherwise the world
will be too complicated for us.
Last time I checked the world was pretty fucking complicated,
after all. That’s good for us; it forces us to engage and learn. Is that always
a walk in the park? No, of course not. Does that mean we give up and go home,
to our familiar comforts, while people who might need us to be fighting this
fight alongside them are literally shut out at the front door?
Well, I don’t know about you, but I call bullshit on that.
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