Quote from: PoeticHeart on May 14, 2014, 02:43:42 PM
what are the stances of the author?, what kind of voice will I have?, what issues are we addressing?
Quote from: aleon515 on May 14, 2014, 05:52:45 PM
Can you find out what she thinks on stuff and if she is really an ally? To me it would make a difference?
I've heard her speak about her book before and have met her in person.
Her "book learning" on trans is ok. She's read all the books, knows the words, etc. But her book was written about a decade ago based on speaking with people who were educated about transgender even before that. She seemed clueless about the modern thinking on trans. She had a very medicalized view of transition, for example. Her impression seemed to be that it was more about hormones and surgery than it was about social stuff. On the whole I thought she had a lot of knowledge, and not a lot of insight.
Thank you all for your input and comments. I think the true issues are crystalizing in my mind. Here's the way it boils down:
* I'm making a sacrifice by outing myself in front of a crowd.
* I will only do that if I think it will have a commensurate impact.
* The fact that I'm making a sacrifice entitles me to set some conditions on my involvement.
* Following an author who is the main event, being time limited, and with no visual component, I question whether I will make enough of the points I want to make to justify it.
* I don't want to out myself simply to provide color to what essentially seems like a book promotion.
The fact that the author is cisgender is probably not relevant to any of that, except in so far as it EATS AT ME that cisgender people believe that they know enough about us to tell us who we are.
It's at the root of pretty much ALL the problems I read in these forums - gatekeeping, acceptance by families, schools, workplaces, problems with changing documentation, issues with insurance, anti-bathroom bills, all of it.
It all boils down, IMO, to the fact that cisgender people feel perfectly comfortable appointing themselves and each other experts on our lives and identities.
And I'm sick of it. I really don't want to be part of it, and I'm really, really disappointed at the leadership of our PFLAG chapter. I've talked to them about this and I think subordinating the two trans people on the panel to a cisgender "expert" is such a POWERFULLY NEGATIVE MESSAGE, that nothing, NOTHING, I say there could adequately counter it.
I think I might actually do more effective educating by explaining why my being on the panel won't be helpful or effective, than anything I might say as part of it.