Quoteit's like saying a vagina can exist only to accept a penis-- if a woman is born with a vagina, how dare she withhold it from men and reserve it only for other women? That's what this attitude implies.
I'm not sure its possible to leave the water and live if one is a fish. Lotsa people, probably everywhere, have difficulty imagining why a transsexual would want to be with someone of her, or his, same sex.
In fact, lotsa people probably agree with the major psychoanalytic bias that Bailey and Blanchard bring to their writings: that women are 'objects,' meant to be acted upon sexually, but to have no 'will to have sex,' that agency is suplied by males. Thus, to keep that basis in-line they pretty much MUST argue that TSes who practice as lesbians are truly men who have fetishized their own feminized bodies for the purpose of sexual gratification (->-bleeped-<-TS): they still have an 'agency' in their sexuality and, so,
cannot be women.
OTH, the TSes who crave sexual objectification by males (HSTS) have a much lower, or non-existent, drive to agency. They wish to be passive, vulnerable, possessed objects. Although they are born with male genitalia, they do not have the agency-factor at work and so, to make the first distinction, B&B are 'forced' to make the second, that HSTS are men who are extremely 'gay' and desire objectification due to their lack of agency. From the psychoanalytic perspective that they operate with, B&B would both have to believe that there is some "problem" or "mental disorder" with both types.
Given their biases they
cannot accept anything but a binary distinction. Anything else would break the paradigm and they'd have to form a new basis of practice. Besides, the HSTS quality gives Bailey an 'in' to working with trans people. His speciality is 'homosexuality.'
I think what we lose track of is the importance of those distinctions from the psychoanalytic schools. To think of anything except a distinct and exclusive binary is to break the theoretical model and cause the psychoanalysts to make a new paradigm. In most science this seems to be an awfully difficult way to go. Bohr, Schroedinger, Heisenburg and other early 'quantum' physicists were not easily accomodated to begin with. Their ideas were not 'practical' and could not be used to further weaponry and gadgetry that was possible to make at the time.
Even Einstein, who understood their work, could still not accept that 'God plays dice with the universe' even though his theories played directly toward the quantum understanding. He held on to the Newtonian clockwork universe as much as he could. There is a conservative element in most of our major academic and cultural work that makes it hard for 'breakthrough' theorizing to be accepted. 'Revolutions' tend to come from those that 'must' make them or from gadgetry that works and is 'practical.'
As to Redfish's notion about whether or not there were transsexuals before the terminology was made to accomodate them. Obviously there were, just as there were, just ss obviously, mountain gorillas long before westerners had the Linnean classification for them or had even seen them. 'New' species have a history before they are 'discovered' and classified.
How they viewed themselves? More difficult to imagine when we have no testament from the individuals themselves to indicate that. Although we do have some diaries and some reports and stories about transsexuals prior to the 1930s, Lili Elbe's is the first that would encompass the transsexual term as Hirschfeld had coined the term by 1923.
Societies and cultures tend toward being very exclusive and very constricting 'for the common good.' They are innately conservative as the world as defined can only be seen and acted on in prescribed ways without causing 'social problems.' Thus, one tends to swim in her own water and doesn't recognize always that another cultural perception might be coopted for her own personal good and would fit, in some ways, her own personal narrative better.
This is what you see, Hypatia, in your world travels. There is no overall transsexual culture as we are always embedded in the cultures we are born into.
An interesting topic and excellent replies with some good sources cited for reading some day? *smile* Especially
Toms and Dees, Lia. Thanks.
N~